smartestnumber5
<font color=blue>Then it's just a fun time<br><fon
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2006
- Messages
- 2,916
Does it bother anyone else that everytime there is a thread about racism directed at black people there are inevitably two seemingly unrelated issues that are brought up:
1) "Well I've known some black people who are just as racist as any white person."
and
2) "Why do black people get to use the N word and white people don't?"
Most of the time, I don't understand how these comments relate to the original post. The point of these threads are usually "some horrible thing happened involving racism toward black people." Does it make that horrible thing less horrible because some rap lyrics have the N word and because some black people are prejudiced?
And besides the off-topicness of the comments, I also just don't understand them. The complaints about the N word seem to imply an attitude of "It's not fair. If black people get to use that hateful word without public condemnation, why shouldn't I get to as well?" Are people actually upset that they're not allowed to say the N word??? (same goes for all other types of racial slurs, anti-gay slurs, anti-woman slurs, etc.) Is it some kind of matter of fairness that the dominant group in each of these cases doesn't get to call marginalized group names? Or is the point supposed to be that black people are actually racist towards other black people?
I also think that interchangeably talking about hatred of marginalized groups and hatred of dominant groups is dangerous and completely ignores history. Imagine if someone started a thread about neo-Nazi groups and someone came on and said "I know some Jews who are just as prejudiced against Christians as Nazis are against Jews." What? Did I miss a systematic slaughter of millions of Christians at the hands of Jews? Sure on an individual level hatred is hatred, but the problems of racism, sexism, and homophobia are not simply problems of individuals who just happen to be hateful in a certain way--they are problems of power. Things like slavery, the Holocaust, lynching, and discrimination against women and glbt people are not the results of a handful of people who just happened to be hateful. These events happened because 1) those particular hateful views were shared amongst a large portion of the dominant group, 2) the majority group had such a stronghold of control of state appartuses that they were able to transform their personal prejudices into law, 3) those in the majority who did not outrightly affirm the hateful views either did not do enough to counter their being made into law or did not have big enough numbers to stop it. I don't think we can talk about racism/sexism/anti-Semetism/homophobia without considering these histories.
(ETA: while I've seen these issues come up on a couple current threads, I think actually it's been worse on past threads--I've been noticing it for months now and just was thinking about it against because of recent threads)
1) "Well I've known some black people who are just as racist as any white person."
and
2) "Why do black people get to use the N word and white people don't?"
Most of the time, I don't understand how these comments relate to the original post. The point of these threads are usually "some horrible thing happened involving racism toward black people." Does it make that horrible thing less horrible because some rap lyrics have the N word and because some black people are prejudiced?
And besides the off-topicness of the comments, I also just don't understand them. The complaints about the N word seem to imply an attitude of "It's not fair. If black people get to use that hateful word without public condemnation, why shouldn't I get to as well?" Are people actually upset that they're not allowed to say the N word??? (same goes for all other types of racial slurs, anti-gay slurs, anti-woman slurs, etc.) Is it some kind of matter of fairness that the dominant group in each of these cases doesn't get to call marginalized group names? Or is the point supposed to be that black people are actually racist towards other black people?
I also think that interchangeably talking about hatred of marginalized groups and hatred of dominant groups is dangerous and completely ignores history. Imagine if someone started a thread about neo-Nazi groups and someone came on and said "I know some Jews who are just as prejudiced against Christians as Nazis are against Jews." What? Did I miss a systematic slaughter of millions of Christians at the hands of Jews? Sure on an individual level hatred is hatred, but the problems of racism, sexism, and homophobia are not simply problems of individuals who just happen to be hateful in a certain way--they are problems of power. Things like slavery, the Holocaust, lynching, and discrimination against women and glbt people are not the results of a handful of people who just happened to be hateful. These events happened because 1) those particular hateful views were shared amongst a large portion of the dominant group, 2) the majority group had such a stronghold of control of state appartuses that they were able to transform their personal prejudices into law, 3) those in the majority who did not outrightly affirm the hateful views either did not do enough to counter their being made into law or did not have big enough numbers to stop it. I don't think we can talk about racism/sexism/anti-Semetism/homophobia without considering these histories.
(ETA: while I've seen these issues come up on a couple current threads, I think actually it's been worse on past threads--I've been noticing it for months now and just was thinking about it against because of recent threads)

but first let me say I love everyone. 
) My college has a huge list of scholarhships that target various people. There are some for black, white, spanish, Jewish, Catholic, single moms, women, men, foregin students, Americans only, certain age groups... the list goes on and on.