An Australian alt-right figure, Pauline Hanson, said that 'Islam is a disease' and that Australia has to 'vaccinate itself against it'. It was reported both nationally and internationally.Give me a template — Judaka
and you have been repeatedly asked for an example of this alleged double standard, and have failed to supply a single example. — andrewk
The fact is that the whole field of identity politics and multiculturalism simply veers the debate into issues about race, simply because it's all about race, racial identity, ethnicity, the differences of ehtnicity or race. This is the problem. There is no emphasis on people as individuals and the so-called 'colorblindness' is deeply rejected as hypocrisy. And that especially in our time of extreme globalization cultures are quite close to each other is perhaps heresy. And everything bad is because of white people, slavery, colonization, white racism. So much, that I like sushi gave the perfect examples of 'racism' is defined solely to be a white trait, thanks to a different new definition.They share the racialised perspectives, they emphasise racial differences, they think in terms of racial/ethnic histories and their defence is a historical interpretation. White people talking about how to advance some kind of agenda for furthering the wealth and success of white people is wrong but they are advocating for doing that for black people and they see no hypocrisy. — Judaka
There is no emphasis on people as individuals and the so-called 'colorblindness' is deeply rejected as hypocrisy — ssu
Anaxagoras suggested, I would have been better off not talking about the alt-right to begin with. — Judaka
Tolerance, for me, must be met with an active force not a mute acceptance. — I like sushi
You can't just extrapolate me disagreeing with racial/ethnic pride and histories to... — Judaka
Like honestly, what do you want to do? Nobody here is denying the past, blacks as a group are disadvantaged by their history but once you strip the racial focus and start caring about individuals and towns/cities, what is the advantage in continuing the same racialised thinking that created the very problems you're talking about? — Judaka
By the way (a bit off topic), to compare the US with anything else is challenging, but to compare an US state to separate countries does give a comparative perspective. Actually I found that by population size and by many other variables the closest equivalent to my country, Finland, would be... Minnesota. Before you laugh, just hear me out:Part of my take on race relations derives from living in Minneapolis, MN. — Bitter Crank
Reducing povetry happens with creating prosperity. Yet usually what policies we are talking about when "reducing povetry" are welfare policies, wealth transfers etc. These policies, who gets money and who doesn't, create these arguments when race is used to decide who gets what, just like with 'affirmative action'.Helping to reduce poverty becomes a political, racialised issue with all kinds of unnecessary baggage. — Judaka
You've laid out the problem but you haven't told me what you want to do. — Judaka
My answer is to reduce the interpretative relevance of race, stop focusing on whether those struggling in poverty are white and black and aim to tackle problems without racialising them. So let's lay things out: — Judaka
1. We're both trying to reduce poverty
2. We both recognise that a variety of problems within society that impact people and need to be fixed
You want to add:
3. Prioritise poor black communities over poor white communities?
4. Make special rules and exceptions that only apply to people based on race? — Judaka
As for culture, I don't know, if they weren't poorer than the majority, they'd try to make better lives for themselves, I know that. — Judaka
Yet it isn't so simple. If there wasn't any difference between racial groups and being a welfare recipient or unemployed, it wouldn't matter. But the difference is there, and differences are large.Debating wealth redistribution is another thread but provided there's no racial element, I am a strong believer in it. — Judaka
What wasn't an accident? I accept the historical grounding for the imbalance in wealth between whites vs blacks as groups. — Judaka
This is actually one crucial issue. Here one of the most successful welfare policies has been right from the start the avoidance of concentrating subsidized housing for the poor in one place. If you would concentrate welfare accomodation in one place, it would create social problems and give the area a bad name, basically you would have the possibility of creating a ghetto in the future. Hence you have had subsidized housing in the more affluent parts of Helsinki. It has eradicated differences between areas and even if some parts of Helsinki are seen less prestigious than others, the real estate prices don't differ so much.What was not an accident is the racial distribution of populations and home ownership in metropolitan areas (where most Americans live). As Richard Rothstein shows in The Color of Law, the FHA (Federal Housing Administration) pursued a strict policy of racial segregation from its inception in the 1930s going forward. — Bitter Crank
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