"You're condoning the racial profiling of "white cops" as all possessing group-think - as if all white cops see race & color the same way - the way you do - because you are the one racially profiling people based on their "whiteness" - which is a genetic condition."
— Harry Hindu
:rofl: If only we lived in a world where dragons actually did exist, or in a country where systematic racism did exist.
— Harry Hindu — fdrake
f social constructions have very little to do with anything material, then how is it that they influence our social behaviors? — Harry Hindu
↪180 Proof I’m not entirely sure what your argument is ... The constant bolds don’t really help. — I like sushi
Thus, "racial color-blindness" is a luxury wary nonwhite survivors of racial color-discrimination cannot afford so long as many, if not most, upper/over class (privileged) whites talk "racial color-blindness" but still walk the racial color-discrimination walk as systemic agents (or functionaries) and/or prejudiced individuals. — 180 Proof
The answer to the OP is simply this: because (predominately, though not exclusively, elite) Whites have dropped the pretense of "racial color-blindness" vis-à-vis Nonwhites, etc. — 180 Proof
↪180 Proof Do I understand correctly that your take is that the problem is not so much doing color-blindness, but talking color-blindness while not doing it? — Pfhorrest
So people who do actually do it should be free to talk it too then, right?
Police may be more prone to shooting black men and boys, compared to whites of the same, because of the perceived degree of threat that police officers have of black men and boys, and not because the officers are racist. It would be responsible for police officers to be aware of their biases and deal with them as best they can. — praxis
Riiiiiiiiight ... Ok, Shrek. :up: — 180 Proof
To whom?
And if you say my (s)kin doesn't matter, but I say it does, who decides? — Banno
(1) Harryhindu posts in a thread regarding a prejudice or systemic injustice.
(2) Harryhindu attacks all narratives which affirm the relevance of the prejudice and the existence of systemic injustice by trying to beat them at their own game: the people highlighting said prejudice or systemic injustice are the real prejudiced people.
Move along people, move along.
— fdrake
Then define "prejudiced". — Harry Hindu
Then define "prejudice". Is this really that difficult? You're the ones throwing around this word inconsistently. How exactly are you using it? It seems to me that you believe the "prejudice" is only a characteristic of people with a certain genetic condition of having pale skin. Is that not an example of prejudice?But If it weren't, you (or the worldview you promote) exhibits the prejudice. — fdrake
No, you haven't missed anything.In the latter quote he's questioning whether there is systemic racism in the US, by which I assume he means racism that is an aspect of the system. With a narrow definition of "system" as the government, Harry is right. If there is some other system that is exhibiting racism, someone should just point it out to Harry. My own opinion is that racism is primarily the same as sexism: it's a way that people make themselves feel better about themselves, so it's personal. There is a portion of the US population that would like racism to become systemic. They're white supremacists and neo-Nazis. At present, they aren't in charge. I don't think Harry wants them to gain that control. I agree with about 5% of Harry's philosophical ramblings, but he's never struck me as a neo-Nazi. Did I miss something? — frank
Logic. Your skin color only matters in biological/medical contexts (except between group vs within group variability when classifying by sociological race doesn't vindicate them as biologically relevant categories), and should not not matter in political/judiciary contexts (fiat equality vs equality of opportunity & systemic discrimination aside). — Harry Hindu
This is the typical "squeaky wheel gets the grease" political tactics where the loudest groups get the special treatment, while the silent majority gets their rights trampled on. — Harry Hindu
This is the typical "squeaky wheel gets the grease" political tactics where the loudest groups get the special treatment, while the silent majority gets their rights trampled on. — Harry Hindu
The OP doesn’t seem to disagree. Maybe he edited the first post? Looks like it.
I’m sure you can understand the OP is making the claim that talking about racism benefits racists. This is true. What I think the OP is not taking into account is that talking about racism also combats racism and helps equip the victims of racism with a means to combat it and to expose to others who aren’t victims a problem they are ‘blind’ too.
So the OP was basically condemning racism?
"By the way, racism is bad. Sincerely, NOS4A2."
In the latter quote he's questioning whether there is systemic racism in the US, by which I assume he means racism that is an aspect of the system. With a narrow definition of "system" as the government, Harry is right. If there is some other system that is exhibiting racism, someone should just point it out to Harry. My own opinion is that racism is primarily the same as sexism: — frank
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