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Is it okay to be racist against white people?

Is it OK to be racist to black people.

I mean, do they have anything to lose?

:roll:


We have all the ground we covered the past 60 years


I don't know about the good sisters HuntNeo and DatGorl but I'm not here for marches.

These hightops don't walk well.


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Louis CK.... "they are gonna hold us down and fuck us in the ass.... but for now Weeeeeeee!!"

Awesome...
 
Not all white people progress towards stability and prosperity however.

Here's the "white privilege" we hear so much about:

http://www.economist.com/node/8089315

What is confused for a race problem is often a class problem and an issue of opportunity denied to poor people no matter what their ethnicity. And again because pointing that out can lead to random accusations of racism, though it seems self-evident, I am compelled to repeat that racist incidents still occur and there is nothing noble in trying to pretend otherwise, just that it isn't the whole picture.
 
But whatever happened to those 40 acres and a mule tho?

tumblr_m1vaazOsET1ql5yr7o1_400.gif
 
But Refuji, the OP's question is the other side of the coin.

Where is the survey that reveals what percentage of racial prejudice exists against whites among black Americans?

good point. maybe someone might feel justified if half of the white americans in this country feel that way about black people. almost like a sense of hopelessness like they feel that they're not going to escape it so the only solution is to be racist themselves. in no way am saying it's right but i can see why someone would feel that way. it serves as a shield of some sort. "you hate me for this so i hate you too for this". it's no different than a gay person becoming prejudiced towards straight people because they feel that no matter what they do, straight people are going to hate them regardless.
 
Back in college, I was schooled (poorly) on something called "power context". One of the tenets was that one can't truly be "-ist" to those in power, or at least it can be explained away as a common and natural phenomenon. Therefore, "homophobia" is an uneducated, knee-jerk reaction towards an underprivileged group, but "heterophobia" is a natural response to living in a heteronormalist and queer-oppressive society. The first invariably should be fought, but the second one is sort of accepted, and only some would argue that it should be fought (or even worked on).

Also, any "pride" movements events are reserved for the minority groups. Any majority group that attempts a "pride" movement is, like it or not, displaying a hatred or fear of the minority groups. Therefore, "white pride" is inherently racist, "male pride" is inherently sexist, and "straight pride" is inherently homophobic.

Lex


Bump for this quote


4d8oeb2m
 
Back in college, I was schooled (poorly) on something called "power context". One of the tenets was that one can't truly be "-ist" to those in power, or at least it can be explained away as a common and natural phenomenon. Therefore, "homophobia" is an uneducated, knee-jerk reaction towards an underprivileged group, but "heterophobia" is a natural response to living in a heteronormalist and queer-oppressive society. The first invariably should be fought, but the second one is sort of accepted, and only some would argue that it should be fought (or even worked on).

Also, any "pride" movements events are reserved for the minority groups. Any majority group that attempts a "pride" movement is, like it or not, displaying a hatred or fear of the minority groups. Therefore, "white pride" is inherently racist, "male pride" is inherently sexist, and "straight pride" is inherently homophobic.
What an utter load of pretentious bollox!
 
And it's not okay to be racist against anyone else. Racism is easy, convenient, great for reliance as a pair of crutches but ultimately directed at ANYONE racism is wrong.
 
My grandmother was bi racial and she got shit from everyone...black people were no better than white people if you were mixed race back then....

So did black people being racist make it OK or more acceptable? Hell NO.
 
Back in college, I was schooled (poorly) on something called "power context". One of the tenets was that one can't truly be "-ist" to those in power, or at least it can be explained away as a common and natural phenomenon. Therefore, "homophobia" is an uneducated, knee-jerk reaction towards an underprivileged group, but "heterophobia" is a natural response to living in a heteronormalist and queer-oppressive society. The first invariably should be fought, but the second one is sort of accepted, and only some would argue that it should be fought (or even worked on).

Also, any "pride" movements events are reserved for the minority groups. Any majority group that attempts a "pride" movement is, like it or not, displaying a hatred or fear of the minority groups. Therefore, "white pride" is inherently racist, "male pride" is inherently sexist, and "straight pride" is inherently homophobic.

Lex

Did you not question what you were hearing? The most obvious flaw with "power context" theory is that power is….contextual… The assumption that all white people are part of a context where they can exercise power is itself racist. The assumption that all non-white people are confined to powerless contexts is also racist.

That kind of "power context" theory has discredited academia; sociology in particular. It traces its roots to marxist class warfare nonsense. It is inherently anti-liberal.
 
I think the white moniker is a convenient mask for some blacks and others to use when it suits them.

It really hasn't been about white for some time now. It has been about wealth and privilege, and there hasn't been any absolute Jim Crow power in some decades.

Black, Latinos, Chinese, Japanese, and others have been admitted into the elite caste and have wielded social and cultural power in America without great opposition. Admittedly, the poor are disadvantaged by social friction between cultures, which has been mostly the legacy of slavery.

But, on balance, the Chinese, and Irish, and Polish were brought in as a sub-class too, and they have progressed, as now Latinos are doing rapidly. The blacks I have known who have succeeded at it have not necessarily done so against all odds, or even greater odds than very poor whites face. They have done so because they believed it was possible and because they persisted.

Various European groups have begun in slums and squalor here, and they have progressed beyond it to be included, and not all have given up their ethnic and cultural identity to do so.

I won't make excuses for the atrocities of the past, but the whole story is not being told here. The black race is no more sacrosanct than any other when it comes to oppression, genocide, and accountability. It wasn't the Europeans who were rounding up each other in the 16th century and selling them to American plantation owners -- it was the African people who hunted each other down and enslaved them and SOLD them. Does that make them worse or inferior? No, but it doesn't make them victims only, either.

Endlessly playing the victim card is a losing game, by definition, and only serves to institutionalize the permission to fail. Racial tensions, both legitimate and gratuitous, will always be with us in some degree, but in the end, you have to ask yourself if it is really a hard stop to the opportunity and progress that has been seen since the 60's.

I have experienced racism from various minorities, and it wasn't blocking my path to education or vocation, but it was there nonetheless, and had the desired effect in that it made me unwelcome and disrespected without being bothered with knowing who I am. It is never right to do it, so promoting it at any turn is a giving up and return to tribalism. Our culture isn't as fractured as it is discussed to be, or at least not as much as it is by economic caste, and wealth is NOT limited to European-descended groups here.

OMG.

I just upchucked my Cheerios.
 
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