Q for Hanover: Bannon I agree that a lot of people have casually racist attitudes. I think people who are educated in
certain ways have racist attitudes that are more than casual, i.e. more than reactions to personal experiences and casual bigotry based on superficial differences or stereotypes. They have systematic, ideologized racist ideas that are deeply ingrained in them and that they are actively seeking to spread.
Casual racists who grow up around it, and don't have it inflicted upon them as a matter of curriculum, are not dangerous in the way that educated racists are. I personally don't like the casually racist ideas, and don't participate in them. But whereas I think those are uncouth or unproductive, or even mean or sometimes a pathway to violence (and I think these attitudes also come from being educated in a certain way), I think the educated attitudes are seriously dangerous. Casual racism comes from contact with other ethnicities, noticing differences, having ingrained biologically-driven preferences, and having bad experiences with an out-group. All of that is unfortunate, but it's part of life. The educated racism is not, it's pathological and insane. I'm just really, really tired of these sorts of people.
But yeah, the Avenue Q song doesn't resonate with me. I mean, look at this:
https://youtu.be/vqn9rXu1TCM?t=3m1s
The joke is literally that South African languages have clicks in them (the name, so far as I am aware, is made up, and is a parody of Xhosa). How is that funny? I mean, it doesn't offend me, but there does seem to be this weird sort of racism to it in that the very notion that a language might make use of a sound that yours doesn't is enough material for a standup routine. Likewise, how is it 'funny' that Mandarin speakers sound like Mandarin speakers?