let's be real here [in america]
racism is a word, and like any word, it can change meaning, usage, intent, emphasis, etc based on who, where, when, and how someone uses the word - it exists in many states
if you're going to reduce it to its essential meaning: a prejudice against a specific race
so, why do some leftists say racism can't be done against white people? it tends to follow that the institutions - the economic, governmental, scholarly, familial, and religious - of society are inherently and averagely biased in favour of white people with various degrees of negative bias towards all other races. the most blatant example of this is that, when controlling for socioeconomic factors in america, black people are put to jail more often and for harsher sentences than white people. unless there is some factor that can be pointed out except an existent societal prejudice against black people, then this shouldn't be happening.
okay, but why do some right wingers say racism doesn't exist anymore? my most viewed example of this argument stems from the lack of state racism - the systems of government and society enforce and strive for racism. it's pretty clear that from the 1970s and on in the us, we've largely eliminated these forms of direct state racism that literally gives you two dots and a line to put between them of how it is racist.
there is a lot lot lot more to this, like colour blindness being something that some claim to work by while others claim it is a way to refuse to examine reality, or implicit racism from someone who had a few bad experiences with a particular race, only those experiences (or worse: their only experience is a few passed down stories and not real experience) and uses that as a foundation for a whole race, but i'm more interested in how -w can or cannot juggle the existence of this word in its broad spectrum and how useful it is to call certain things racism, while not calling others racism.
for the record: i do think that you can be racist as an individual towards any race, but until that is a culturally significant viewpoint, it is a nonissue in discussions of racism because we have much larger problems to solve that will be distracted by fostering individual problems that even more rarely develop into the kinds of violence racism promotes.
racism is a word, and like any word, it can change meaning, usage, intent, emphasis, etc based on who, where, when, and how someone uses the word - it exists in many states
if you're going to reduce it to its essential meaning: a prejudice against a specific race
so, why do some leftists say racism can't be done against white people? it tends to follow that the institutions - the economic, governmental, scholarly, familial, and religious - of society are inherently and averagely biased in favour of white people with various degrees of negative bias towards all other races. the most blatant example of this is that, when controlling for socioeconomic factors in america, black people are put to jail more often and for harsher sentences than white people. unless there is some factor that can be pointed out except an existent societal prejudice against black people, then this shouldn't be happening.
okay, but why do some right wingers say racism doesn't exist anymore? my most viewed example of this argument stems from the lack of state racism - the systems of government and society enforce and strive for racism. it's pretty clear that from the 1970s and on in the us, we've largely eliminated these forms of direct state racism that literally gives you two dots and a line to put between them of how it is racist.
there is a lot lot lot more to this, like colour blindness being something that some claim to work by while others claim it is a way to refuse to examine reality, or implicit racism from someone who had a few bad experiences with a particular race, only those experiences (or worse: their only experience is a few passed down stories and not real experience) and uses that as a foundation for a whole race, but i'm more interested in how -w can or cannot juggle the existence of this word in its broad spectrum and how useful it is to call certain things racism, while not calling others racism.
for the record: i do think that you can be racist as an individual towards any race, but until that is a culturally significant viewpoint, it is a nonissue in discussions of racism because we have much larger problems to solve that will be distracted by fostering individual problems that even more rarely develop into the kinds of violence racism promotes.
Get it by your own hands.
MFGG Staff Slaying Expert
Kill List
Assist List
MFGG Staff Slaying Expert
Kill List
Spoiler:
Spoiler: