Most Racist Thing You've Seen?

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Lil devils x_v1legacy

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May 17, 2011
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mattaddhall said:
Lil devils x said:
Res Plus said:
Lil devils x said:
chocolate pickles said:
Lil devils x said:
chocolate pickles said:
PsychicTaco115 said:

Title explains it all

For me, it's all that Ray Rice costume bullshit... Who thought THAT would be a good idea??


WARNING: If anyone mentions GamerGate, I'll get mi mod friends to ban you. I've got 69 proxies and 420 firewalls and browse in incognito mode, you'll never know it was me
Forgive me: As a non-American, what was supposed to be racist about this?
The kid is in black face pretending to be a black wife beater guy dragging his black unconscious fiance around.

http://www.tmz.com/videos/0_c5nk3w3n/
OK. thanks for clarification. I'm gonna be honest, though, i don't really find that racist - poor taste? oh yeah, like dressing up as Hitler. But not really racist. It seems more like making fun of an individual rather than of a race.
I see it as being in poor taste AND racist, as well as a Hitler costume. I mean you knock on a an elderly Jewish woman's door on Halloween dressed as Hitler, can you imagine how upsetting that would be?

The reason the costume is not only in poor taste is that it also mocks and perpetuates the racist stereotypes of blacks.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereotypes_of_African_Americans
Hmm.. not really sure making an elderly Jewish woman upset is "racist" per se, it's just very unpleasant. Seems to be an urge to lump all "offense" as an "-ism" these days. I also don't see how making a costume of a person known to have committed an offence, which specifically refers to that individual's offence, can be racism, if that person has committed the offence. Logically, you'd end up with a situation where people are protected from satire or criticism solely due to their race, which is wrong.

OT - I didn't see it first hand but in the 70s my Dad was stationed in Singapore and he claims Singapore customs had a colour chart which they matched against people's skin and they simply refused entry if you were the "wrong" colour. Now that is genuine racism.
It is racist because Hitler tried to exterminate her due to her race. Someone trying to exterminate you due to your race would definitely be classified as racism, and to pretend to be that person is extremely racially offensive. No, it isn't a matter of trying to lump everything into an " ism" category, but when it is hate related due to race, racism is a sub category specifying that is what it is, but not the only category it falls under, just one of them.
I would say that for it to be considered racist there would have to be some intent behind it. For example, blacking your face and dressing up as a stereotypical black person from the ghetto and carrying around fried chicken and a bottle of cool aid or a watermelon would be racist because you are specifically picking out all of the negative or generic stereotypes of that race. Dressing up as a Hitler isn't saying that being Jewish is a bad thing, it's just being dressed as a recognisable historical figure.

Dressing up as Ray Rice isn't saying that all black men are wife beaters, just that Ray Rice is. So while it is indeed bad taste, it isn't racist.

Remember that racist is against a whole race of people, not a specific member of that race.
I think you may misunderstand racism, intent is pretty irrelevant to whether or not something is racist. Most of the history of racism has nothing to do with intent, it is more of ignorance of other races and ignorance is not harmful intent, it is lacking education and understanding of other races. It can be hatred, but it can also be ignorance of how those actions affect other races.
 

Furbyz

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I honestly don't know if this counts considering the circumstances, but one of my Dad's rants a few years ago was just...god awful and depressingly filled with hate and rage.

Y'see, he's been a paramedic for 30 years. It's no exaggeration to say he's seen the absolute worst humanity has to offer and has saved dozens of lives in the process. I'd never seen anything from him that was particularly racist, maybe the occasional slur, but frankly, he's from a different time and it never seemed to mean the same thing to him as it did to me.

Then he got called to the scene of his friend's murder. He was stabbed in the neck with a screwdriver at the gas station he worked at. All for $23 and the keys to his falling apart, barely running car. The guy who did it was black (and literally crazy, he'd been in and out of institutions his whole life) and I guess he took all that pain and anger, misplaced it, and forged real, honest to god, hatred for the vast majority of the black community. He looked back and started recalling some of the worst things he'd seen and apparently everything came up black people. Personally, I think he was cherry picking his experiences to justify what he'd already concluded, but I digress.

That was awhile back, and I think he's gotten over it by now, but I can't be certain. I love my Dad and he's a good man, but that experience seemed to be entirely toxic and poisonous to him. I was very worried about him. This wasn't stereotypes or slurs, it was a real true loathing borne not of era or ideology, but personal experience.

Other than that, I haven't witnessed much overt racism in my life, and I live in Texas. That certainly doesn't mean it isn't happening around me though because my best friend is black and there are still cities he won't go to after dark for a reason.
 

jamail77

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Solsbury_Grille said:
I live in Texas, and contrary to popular belief, it is not the seething cauldron of racism everyone seems to believe it is. Mostly because Latinos and whites have intermarried so often over the last few decades that no one can really afford to be racist. You might be offending your own cousin.
I can believe that. I never fully bought the stereotype about Texas being like that anyway. However, are you so sure there aren't concentrations of racism unique to Texas, a city here or there? There aren't certain places that attract racism? You might say all states have a place like that, but you don't think there is anything unique about Texas in attracting it when it comes to certain areas?

I'm not doubting you; as I said, I don't really believe the stereotype anyway. Plus, it's not like I live there. Although, my Dad did move there for a bit and I would visit him, my step mom, and my half sister until they moved to West Virginia...then Kentucky...and now Colorado...that's a story for another thread, another time. Obviously, it's not the same as living there of course. Either way, I'm just asking because I'm genuinely curious to hear from a Texan's perspective. While I'm at it how much of Texas have you seen? What are the two most contrasting places of Texas that just so happen to be within the borders? I find those comparisons in the same state kind of funny. That's not to say I want to detract from the thread, but I'm just really curious.

OT: I don't really see racist things too much, at least in daily life versus the Internet. I grew up in a sheltered community and have gone through life in such a way that I don't seem to see that much unless it's online. So, I'll try my best to think of top contenders even though they'll be mild in comparison to far more racist things. I can't pick a "Most Racist Thing" because I'm not good at picking #1 above all else regardless of topic. This is probably going to get pretty long as I don't write concisely so sorry/warning in advance.


1) I work at McDonald's. I guess you could say I fit a certain stereotype of lazy gamer even though I'm responsible and all that. Well, early in my time working there an employee was sent from another McDonald's to help us on a night shift. We make our ice cream cones, relatively, much smaller than other McDonald's. I charged a black man for one and then made him it. He thought it was a little small and asked if I could make it slightly bigger. I agreed, it was quite small, so I made it bigger without going overboard so that any one of the numerous managers there wouldn't disapprove. If the supervisor was there, he'd flip out regardless, being more anal about that, but luckily he wasn't. Anyway, hen the black man left the employee said to try and avoid doing that especially since, "I'm not racist, but black people tend to be selfish". I didn't know how else to respond other than "Dude, everyone complains our cones are too small" and "Yeah. Sure, you aren't". Most people, of any race, who think our cones are oddly small either stare at it with a puzzled face and then leave or question us and then accept it though 1/2 the time with some last minute bitter complaints before they walk out or drive off in the case of drive-thru. In the latter case, they often remark "Oh, so that's why the cashier told me there's only one size for cones" (many customers expect there to be a kids size and an adult size because every other McDonald's does that but us).

More recently, I was at the drive-thru cash register window and a customer drove by, saw me, and exclaimed while smiling, "Oh good, a white boy!". He then said some stuff about that meaning no mistakes and stupid lack of communication, which is usually more on the customer honestly for not being able to understand what the employee meant because they often speak very good English believe it or not. He then asked if I "knew what he meant, right?" and I just sort of slightly frowned at him, took his money, gave his change, and just acted in a robotic manner because I didn't know how else to react. Didn't say anything as he left either. I think I might have accidentally slightly smiled at first because I thought he was going to say something else and tried to over-correct it with the slight frown, but I don't remember. Some of you might say he might have been joking and didn't mean it, but I could tell from his posture and tone that was not the case.

2) My old high school Government teacher posted a story on Facebook about a young black man returning to his place in line at Costco that his friend saved for him. An old man, right behind where the black man had cut in line, started acting unnecessarily angry towards him because he believed he cut in line. When it was explained he wasn't truly cutting the old man said something along the lines of, "Be careful because that's what happened to Trayvon Martin". Regardless of your perspective on that case, that comment is immensely disrespectful and I don't see how that doesn't stink of racism. You can believe what happened to Travyon was perfectly justified and not respond to something as mildly as a cut in line like that. I honestly don't think they are mutually inclusive and I don't see how that response has any justification as something not racist. Luckily, while the man was taken aback he just responded to the effect of "I'm sorry you feel that way". My teacher found it very inspiring how he responded with such class when he, who wasn't even insulted, was shaking with anger.

3) I follow somebody that I don't personally know, though this is also via Facebook, who used to be kind of known in the tech world in a unknown, but known niche way. I don't really know how to describe him any better without giving away his identity and I'd rather not do that out of respect for his privacy. I know he used to work for Facebook and that he is Cuban American and that's all I'm saying about him. That's probably going too far anyway.

I occasionally see him post his thoughts on certain matters that have a tinge of racism. While he thinks classifying entire races in a bad light has no scientific basis he does believe certain races have an overall trend to leaning towards unsuccessful lives and slightly lower intelligence. That might sound incredibly racist, but he believes in a bizarre mild effect in this regard and does attribute it more to sub-cultures that persist among certain races rather than inherent to a race itself. Or something. It can get kind of confusing.

He has also endorsed Amy Chua's/Tiger Mom's book The Triple Package, which is full of a subtle tinge of racism. It's not as overt as some of the racism examples on here are because it's coated in acceptance of certain subgroups of races (If you define black very broadly, she thinks Nigerians are great, just for example) and ambiguous clarifications. I admittedly haven't read her book and some of it does have evidence when it's not being subtlety racist. For example, did you know if your culture aggressively encourages hard work you'll be hard working?!? Gasp. *Roll eyes* Sorry, that came off kind of patronizing. I have read her opinions in depth that relate to the sociopolitical issues addressed in the book however and read certain excerpts published freely online with her blessing that the full context there. With all that in account, there is just so much flimsy evidence and weak anecdotes. Luckily, as I said, this is mild racism: Nothing compared to the my Government teacher's experience or examples cited and to be cited in this thread by other posters and future posters respectively.

I do find it odd that she speaks highly of Jews. I can't help wondering if her husband, who is Jewish and co-wrote the book, influenced that aspect. As a Jew, I just find a lot of silly assumptions and beliefs about the successful lives and intelligence of Jews. Yes, you see a lot of Jews become successful entertainers, doctors, lawyers, and programmers and there is a lot of truth to that stereotype, but people can't seem to separate these Jews apart from the majority of Jews. I mean, how many of them self-identify as a Jew? For those that do, do they self-identify seriously, religiously, culturally, and/or by some sort of need, necessity, or peer pressure? Did they convert? How much of their success can be directly attributed to any Jewish values or bias towards Jews in a particular profession's typical hiring procedures? These aren't considered and it bothers me because, from my point of view, I see a lot more Jews who either aren't successful or are successful and don't deserve it. Of course, when you're part of a group you might be more critical of it when others outside the group are not.

Nonetheless, I enjoy following the guy as he is sometimes quite pleasant (though more often he confronts those he disagrees with very disrespectfully), has an interesting perspective, gives me insight on matters I don't know much about, and argues in a very intriguing matter. Plus, the dissonance it causes me to see him express his subtle racism and slightly conservative leaning viewpoints and then post articles from Salon or Huffington Post is kind of entertaining. Of course, he often posts articles not related to social issues, but it's still interesting to see considering many people who share beliefs in line with his shun those sites though Huffington Post really is garbage. It's fascinating to see as I'm used to seeing people with his beliefs in regards to social issues (though he has a better stance on the state of the poor than many conservatives I know do) shun sites generally considered more liberal. His take on so many varied things and his willingness to go to many sources just interests me to so end. For someone so polarizing, he is also so non-polarizing. I just try to steer clear and resist commenting whenever he is being subtlety racist.

4) People in my family have expressed some subtlety racist things as well.

For example, my sister has a black friend who commented on how she worked hard to get where she is, but she still sees so many capable black people, particularly males and particularly in her family lazying around and blaming the racist system. This black friend wonders if there's something different about Jewish culture that makes this not happen to that extent. My sister was relaying this story to my Mom for some reason I can't remember and my Mom commented how true this is, but you're not allowed to say this. I found this shocking because, while my Mom has her prejudices, I've always considered her pretty accepting and my sister has even less prejudices. Never mind how this is just one successful black person's perspective versus what the stats say. Or how she might be cut off, to an extent, from the experience of black males because, well, she is not a black male. It could be a coping mechanism to not face the reality of what her unsuccessful black family members are going through. It could be a lot of things, but my sister didn't even mention these possibilities. That's not to say there might not be truth to some of this, but it's a lot more minor of a culture issue than my sister's anecdotal conversation would imply. I don't say of this to act as a white knight as is so often the go-to response, but because it comes off to me as close-minded to not wait for more evidence or be more open about the possibilities. As I said, it's not like there isn't truth to this to a certain extent, but all stigmas have a small grain of truth that are irrelevant in the end.

5) Friends have done this too, but they've all grown out of it or had some sort of revelation. Although, my autistic brother has a friend, who is also somewhere on the autism spectrum, that expressed some irrational and disturbingly anti-German sentiments on Facebook, not directly but via comments and posts to others' profiles, pages, and groups that showed up in my news feed. He deactivated or deleted his account though to dedicate himself more to his commitment to Orthodox Judaism. What made it so disturbing at the time is I knew he helped young kids and I knew he was passing some of this on to them.

The reason I mentioned he is autistic is because that might have influenced his opinion somewhat. I'd explain how, but it's been a long time since I saw those statements he made and talked to him, so I can't coalesce my theory clearly without it coming out incoherent and lacking detail. I don't say any of this to beat down on autistic people just to be clear. This is a circumstantial thing especially since his family didn't exactly know how to raise an autistic child. There's always the possibility his family believes what he does as well and just passed it on to him, but I don't remember them every expressing such sentiments.

I actually brought this up to my sister and brother and she got really mad. I believe she said something along the lines of how I don't know what he's going through. That may be true, but his sentiments and his influence on children, neither of which I know if he still holds since it's been a while since I have seen or talked to him, are dangerous all the same and his unfortunate life problems don't excuse that.
 

Leonardo Huizar

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I once said something on a deviantArt page and openly mentioned "Im not into trans, thanks." Then some SJW [at the time didnt know who or what they/xhe were] flipped their shet at me. I took it all in stride, didnt say anything anti-LGBTQ just to spite them, and it ultimately ended the one who got pissy about it calling me a "Fat Ethnic Bigot" to a personal photo Ive posted. Which I find hilarious because prior i have been making a parody comic series with one of the characters being an openly gay/crossdressing teenager and a few trans & bi friends of mine gave me their blessing to make all the "dick jokes" i wanted to make with the character.

Even though I am still a "Fat Ethnic" I am also one of these supporters of drug testing for welfare & unemployment. I am absolutely pro-medicinal marijuana, but unless you got that doctor's note, my taxes shouldnt go to someone who doesnt need it even if it is predominately some groups of people over the other.

Working in retail for a long time, having to deal with so many effing new guys who clearly went lazy through most of their lives, and living in a diverse community, I find myself openly having to admit I dont agree with a lot of Affirmative Action hiring. Mostly because as my employers have pointed out to me its basically making Racial Quotas. Im not one BTW. Ive demonstrated my ability, but if someone whose grown up and given the same opportunity but acts like their ethnicity is a crutch for their incompetence... theyre welcome to go FLICK themselves
 

Ten Foot Bunny

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Outside of videos I've seen of the KKK, the most racist things I've ever seen are my dad and stepmom. It's one of the many reasons that I haven't had any contact with that side of my family for four years.
 

jamail77

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Leonardo Huizar said:
I'm really confused how this is overtly racist. Is it the ethnic part? Could the person in question even tell what ethnicity you fall under from this photo? Did they single something out about your ethnicity? Including ethnicity along fat and bigot might have been meant as part of the insult, but it's not really all that specific in its racism. Did this person hate all ethnicity that weren't theirs or all minorities or what? Not trying to hurt your point, I'm just seriously not seeing it and need some clarification.

Also, I don't see how your 2nd and 3rd paragraph have anything to do with the topic at hand. I guess you're trying to justify that your political opinions aren't a sign of racism or self-hate/self-racism on your part? And, that's nice I suppose, but it seems largely irrelevant to this thread. Or, maybe you were trying to show you go against opinions popular with a majority of certain ethnic minorities? I'm just not sure. Whatever your intention, if you wanted to make a point regarding that I feel like you could have just started your own thread and just left only the 1st paragraph for this thread. It feels like you know your opinion is hotly contested and some of that frustration bled here and, at least to me, it just comes as unnecessarily preemptive and over-defensive for something nobody has brought up in this thread and nobody has attacked you for yet.

Again, I don't mean any of this to come off as offensively or cynically critical. I'm just lost on your point and why you bothered with the 2 follow up paragraphs.
 

The Egalitarian

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Recently? The most racist thing I've seen refers to an advert (a 19th century Imperial British one at that) which involved soap. I'll leave it for you guys to find it out; It's pretty darn easy to find out the suspect if you type a basic google search about it.

Needless to say, this was for my academia as I am a history student studying the Empire as my specialist module in my third year. I hold no relation to the advert, although it did cause a wave of uneasy laughing and awkward silence when they were given out as source analyses.
 

Cowabungaa

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In daily life, not a lot actually. Mostly friends who is convinced he can keep shouting "******" because, as one of them says, it not being okay to say it would be 'reverse discrimination' which is the biggest load of bullcrap ever. But I've given up saying it's not cool, it didn't help anything.
Casual Shinji said:
That's probably the best way around this. Though it feels to me that the Sinterklaas holiday is getting more insignificant as time goes on. It's like all the stores can't wait for it to finally be over for that year, so they can kick him out and get to Christmas. I feel like the holiday itself might slowly get snuffed out within 30 years, and everyone will just latch on to Christmas.
And a sad day it'll be when we'll see the last 'Sinterklaas intocht' for the sake of that Americanized Santa Claus bullshit.

But yeah, the whole riot about Black Pete. Good god people just make him look like a proper chimney sweep with some colourful outfits instead of a Moorish stereotype and you're fine. Buuuut noooo... They have to make a hassle out of it. They had an attempt a few years back though which was just ridiculous; have the steamboat travel through a rainbow so all the Pete's were all kinds of different colours. It looked so so stupid.
 

Gordon_4_v1legacy

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Probably the most racist thing I've ever seen has been those old Loony Toons shorts from World War II era. I know why they're like that, but damn if some of them still aren't funny.
 

Adam Lester

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When I was living in Japan, I saw an isolationist rally going in Shibuya. My Japanese was a bit better at the time and my girlfirend at the time translated bits of it but what the basic message was "Gaijin spread their culture throughout Japan like a disease to intentionally destroy the Japanese way of life", we were filth that needed to be run out of the country or eliminated. One guy called my girlfriend a traitor for holding my hand. So yep, probably most racist thing I've seen up close.
 

gigastar

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Sep 13, 2010
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My dad has come fairly extreme views on immigration.

But then he works in the construction industry, so i dont imagine the periodical influx of cheap labor from the EU is helping to change his opinion.
 

Saltyk

Sane among the insane.
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Solsbury_Grille said:
I live in Texas, and contrary to popular belief, it is not the seething cauldron of racism everyone seems to believe it is. Mostly because Latinos and whites have intermarried so often over the last few decades that no one can really afford to be racist. You might be offending your own cousin.
Pretty much this. I live in the South. And frankly, racism is not nearly as bad as people seem to think here. You see it on occasion, but that's usually limited to the occasional comment from some idiot (of damn near any race). Generally speaking, I know several black people and get along with them famously.

I'm pretty convinced that the worst of racism is actually in the more Northern states.
 

Furbyz

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jamail77 said:
Solsbury_Grille said:
I live in Texas, and contrary to popular belief, it is not the seething cauldron of racism everyone seems to believe it is. Mostly because Latinos and whites have intermarried so often over the last few decades that no one can really afford to be racist. You might be offending your own cousin.
I can believe that. I never fully bought the stereotype about Texas being like that anyway. However, are you so sure there aren't concentrations of racism unique to Texas, a city here or there? There aren't certain places that attract racism? You might say all states have a place like that, but you don't think there is anything unique about Texas in attracting it when it comes to certain areas?

I'm not doubting you; as I said, I don't really believe the stereotype anyway. Plus, it's not like I live there. Although, my Dad did move there for a bit and I would visit him, my step mom, and my half sister until they moved to West Virginia...then Kentucky...and now Colorado...that's a story for another thread, another time. Obviously, it's not the same as living there of course. Either way, I'm just asking because I'm genuinely curious to hear from a Texan's perspective. While I'm at it how much of Texas have you seen? What are the two most contrasting places of Texas that just so happen to be within the borders? I find those comparisons in the same state kind of funny. That's not to say I want to detract from the thread, but I'm just really curious.
You're absolutely right, there are pocket areas of racism in Texas. Mostly small towns, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's much the same in certain areas of the bigger cities. Probably the worst offender I know of locally is Vidor. A former Sundown Town in the 60's, Vidor is just not a great place to be. A cop friend of mine had to investigate a murder there (not a racial murder, just a good old fashioned burning someone alive in the trunk of a car) and while questioning the community he learned a few things like boys under 14 do not wear shirt or shoes at any time, Klan members can be very open about their affiliation and surprisingly helpful, and any conversation can be turned into a racist tangent with enough effort.

In contrast there is Austin, which is basically the Blue Capitol of an otherwise staunchly Red State. The Daily Show has been doing episodes from there and talks about the city, and I think they get the place across pretty well. Austin is weird, it's where nearly every outcast and black sheep from around Texas goes, and they love it.

http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/kwgaxa/democalypse-2014---south-by-south-mess--austin-s-real-weirdness

For the record, I'm from South East Texas, the big refinery and petrochemical area. We were recently deemed the least educated metropolitan area in the U.S, though considering they included three vastly different counties in that metric I take it with some salt. Rural farming communities, Vidor, not to mention that almost everyone raised here leaves, and company towns all around in this area. I also graduated at the top of my class when I got my associates degree. Does that make me king of the idiots? Am I Not Sure in Idiocracy?

I've been mostly around the East and North of Texas. Farthest West I've been is San Antonio, which is a beautiful city. People always think of the Alamo when they think of San Antonio, but they never realize that it's jam packed right in the middle of the city with commercial stuff all around it. There's literally a Ripley's Believe it or Not haunted house across the street.
 

Gorrath

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I guess it depends on what you define racism as. According to some, me getting my ass beat by a gang on a near daily basis for being white isn't racist. Subsequently being unable to get any help with the problem due to the people who ran the school being bigots isn't racist either. I'm honestly not sure what to make of racism these days. There was a time that racism was discrimination based on race. Now it is often defined in such a way that it becomes goal-post moving at its finest.

Still, even if my own experiences don't count for whatever reason people chose to conjure, the most racist thing I've ever seen was me and a few black friends of mine getting pulled over and beaten up by the cops. They were equal opportunity ass whoopings, no doubt, but the reason we got pulled over is because the driver was black. I'm under no delusion that anything like that would have happened if my friends had been white. Still, once they bothered to find out who we were, and discovered the whole group of us were Army, they got real pleasant and real apologetic real quick. The Army does not take kindly to local cops kicking the shit out of its troops.
 

Lil devils x_v1legacy

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Res Plus said:
mattaddhall said:
Lil devils x said:
Res Plus said:
Lil devils x said:
chocolate pickles said:
Lil devils x said:
chocolate pickles said:
PsychicTaco115 said:

Title explains it all

For me, it's all that Ray Rice costume bullshit... Who thought THAT would be a good idea??


WARNING: If anyone mentions GamerGate, I'll get mi mod friends to ban you. I've got 69 proxies and 420 firewalls and browse in incognito mode, you'll never know it was me
Forgive me: As a non-American, what was supposed to be racist about this?
The kid is in black face pretending to be a black wife beater guy dragging his black unconscious fiance around.

http://www.tmz.com/videos/0_c5nk3w3n/
OK. thanks for clarification. I'm gonna be honest, though, i don't really find that racist - poor taste? oh yeah, like dressing up as Hitler. But not really racist. It seems more like making fun of an individual rather than of a race.
I see it as being in poor taste AND racist, as well as a Hitler costume. I mean you knock on a an elderly Jewish woman's door on Halloween dressed as Hitler, can you imagine how upsetting that would be?

The reason the costume is not only in poor taste is that it also mocks and perpetuates the racist stereotypes of blacks.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereotypes_of_African_Americans
Hmm.. not really sure making an elderly Jewish woman upset is "racist" per se, it's just very unpleasant. Seems to be an urge to lump all "offense" as an "-ism" these days. I also don't see how making a costume of a person known to have committed an offence, which specifically refers to that individual's offence, can be racism, if that person has committed the offence. Logically, you'd end up with a situation where people are protected from satire or criticism solely due to their race, which is wrong.

OT - I didn't see it first hand but in the 70s my Dad was stationed in Singapore and he claims Singapore customs had a colour chart which they matched against people's skin and they simply refused entry if you were the "wrong" colour. Now that is genuine racism.
It is racist because Hitler tried to exterminate her due to her race. Someone trying to exterminate you due to your race would definitely be classified as racism, and to pretend to be that person is extremely racially offensive. No, it isn't a matter of trying to lump everything into an " ism" category, but when it is hate related due to race, racism is a sub category specifying that is what it is, but not the only category it falls under, just one of them.
I would say that for it to be considered racist there would have to be some intent behind it. For example, blacking your face and dressing up as a stereotypical black person from the ghetto and carrying around fried chicken and a bottle of cool aid or a watermelon would be racist because you are specifically picking out all of the negative or generic stereotypes of that race. Dressing up as a Hitler isn't saying that being Jewish is a bad thing, it's just being dressed as a recognisable historical figure.

Dressing up as Ray Rice isn't saying that all black men are wife beaters, just that Ray Rice is. So while it is indeed bad taste, it isn't racist.

Remember that racist is against a whole race of people, not a specific member of that race.
Yep, I think intent is key, trying to exterminate a race is racist. Dressing up as someone who was racist, isn't racist, it's just poor taste. Very well put, to my mind.

Lil devils x said:
I think you may misunderstand racism, intent is pretty irrelevant to whether or not something is racist. Most of the history of racism has nothing to do with intent, it is more of ignorance of other races and ignorance is not harmful intent, it is lacking education and understanding of other races. It can be hatred, but it can also be ignorance of how those actions affect other races.
Actually, missed this bit, I think you might misunderstand racism, or more accurately, have developed your own definition of it - real racism is about denying someone something, treating them differently or assuming they a certain characteristic due to their race. It's a hate crime, not a "taste" crime or an "ignorance" crime.

There is nothing more corrosive in society at present that the "intent free", "victim" defined crime, allowing people to claim "offence" at the most minor slight, which inevitably leads to the overbearing, hysterical and ultimately censorious claims of "ignorance" (now the standard label for someone with different views), demands for unfair perks, Orwellian-style "right think education" and general anger all around. As a rule, the very idea of an intent free crime is an affront to the rule of law (it does occur in certain situations, in the UK and Europe mostly motoring situations, such as cyclists being always "in the right" and it often brings about wild injustice even there, where a clear policy decision should mitigate the result).

As an aside - I find very interesting that in my experience it's pretty much always self-flagellating white people who try to stretch the envelop of racism into areas where it has no application and starts to impinge on other people's civil rights. Seems to be an attempt to assuage manufactured feelings of guilt for events over which they had no control or input, often they can bolster their own feelings of self righteousness and morality.
Let's start with the definition of racism.

Racism:
a belief or doctrine that inherent differences among the various human races determine cultural or individual achievement, usually involving the idea that one's own race is superior and has the right to rule others.
2.
a policy, system of government, etc., based upon or fostering such a doctrine; discrimination.
3.
hatred or intolerance of another race or other races.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/racism

Racism is not limited only to definition 3.

Intent is not required to be ignorant of other races. If one believes that other races share an inferior characteristic due to their own ignorance, they are not intending harm, they are simply ignorant, but their ignorance does not mean that their belief is not racist.

I think you misunderstand that the person who is actually being racist does not have to be aware that what they are doing is harmful, thus they are racist due to ignorance rather than having intent to be harmful to others. They do not have to have actual intent. For example, simply because one assumes that blacks are more aggressive because they saw two black people fighting does not mean that belief is not racist, they are not intending to be racist, instead they are racist due to ignorance.

The vast majority of racism in past and present is due to ignorance of other races than actual intent. People actually believe many horrible things about other races simply because they are ignorant of other races, not because they actually hate them. One believing any of these racial stereotypes due to ignorance does not mean they intended to be racist, but that does not make the belief any less racist.

You do not even have to be aware of your actions, such as the experiments on empathy and pain. Some actually do not have the same reaction to a person of another race being harmed the same way they do to their own race being harmed. They were not even aware of this, but it does not make it any less racist.

http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/science/2013/06/racial_empathy_gap_people_don_t_perceive_pain_in_other_races.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereotypes_of_African_Americans
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereotypes_about_indigenous_peoples_of_North_America

This is not my understanding of racism, this is what racism IS. I am not sure what you are going on about white people.
 

V4Viewtiful

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Feb 12, 2014
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Anyone go to world star Hiphop? The most racist site i've ever seen, by black people, for black people, by black people.

If you don't understand why? Good, ignorance is bliss.
 

Solsbury_Grille

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Oct 31, 2014
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My son-in-law is Hispanic, all my grandkids are half-Anglo/half-Hispanic. I don't get to be racist, not that I'd want to be that miserable.

I really don't get it, but hey. As long as you keep a job and clean up your yard, I could care less. Texas has plenty of miserable white trash who can't even manage that. So you could say I'm biased against them.