I SEE WHAT YOU DID THERE!Ihateregistering1 said:it can take otherwise complicated issues and reduce them down to black and white
I SEE WHAT YOU DID THERE!Ihateregistering1 said:it can take otherwise complicated issues and reduce them down to black and white
I'm just going to address this one - I'm not convinced by this paragraph.Astoria said:2) Now I don't know about the rest of the world but there is a lot of anger here about the preferential treatment that asylum seekers get upon entering Australia. Most of the time upon getting entry they are put straight into housing trust, which is something very hard to Australian citizens to get, and can be put on benefits for around $50,000 a year which is scandalous when you consider the average wage for a full time worker is something like $35,00 a year and pensioners who have worked all their life can only get $28,000 a year (btw don't quote me on these numbers I may be recalling them incorrectly). Anyway, people who are protesting this treatment may be misunderstood as being racist because it seems they are against immigrants when really they are against the government for not helping out their own people this much as well.
Reading OP's post, I just wanna say 'This'. UK is fairly bad at things, with being polite often being confused with being 'PC' and 'PC' associated with hand-wringing namby pamby guardian readers.Stu35 said:I'm just going to address this one - I'm not convinced by this paragraph.Astoria said:2) Now I don't know about the rest of the world but there is a lot of anger here about the preferential treatment that asylum seekers get upon entering Australia. Most of the time upon getting entry they are put straight into housing trust, which is something very hard to Australian citizens to get, and can be put on benefits for around $50,000 a year which is scandalous when you consider the average wage for a full time worker is something like $35,00 a year and pensioners who have worked all their life can only get $28,000 a year (btw don't quote me on these numbers I may be recalling them incorrectly). Anyway, people who are protesting this treatment may be misunderstood as being racist because it seems they are against immigrants when really they are against the government for not helping out their own people this much as well.
It reads like something the Daily Mail (a right wing, anti-immigration tabloid in the UK), would post about asylum Seekers here to rile their small minded readership up.
However, what the Daily Mail DOES do in this country, is insist that we should be more like Australia - Your nations stringent migration laws and treatment of asylum seekers is actually held up as an example by the British right wing on how we SHOULD be doing migration, and we're probably the most xenophobic, anti-migration country in Europe.
I'm not convinced by the rest of what you're saying either, this is just the easiest one for me to address, and by itself starts to discredit whatever argument you may have wanted to construct.
Saving this one. Very in-depth studies man.Mr.Cynic88 said:History major here correcting your statement. Race doesn't go back to ancient Greece at all. You're probably thinking that because there were slaves in ancient Greece, it was a racial thing, but it wasn't. Slaves were enemies captured in battle. To say that race had anything to do with it is anachronistic.Astoria said:Consider that only 50 or so years ago blacks and white were still segregated in the US and blacks were treated horribly. That was an attitude that goes back to Ancient Greece or even further which is thousands of years and I think the jumps society has made in such a short time are pretty good really.
In fact, race is a pretty new concept. It goes back to about the 17th century. Chattel slavery, which is what the American south practiced, was a unique kind of slavery based on white supremacy. Race wasn't a thing in ancient times. There are no words in ancient greek that translate to "race."
I posted something on my friends Facebook trying to explain the significance of race in American society, and I think it applies here:
"What made the white race so successful, as a whole?"
Let me try to answer that. I recently took a 3 hour exit exam for my Master's in History, and covering American history from the 1600's to present, all I talked about was race. I would argue it's one of the most important themes when analyzing our country's culture, and it took me seven years of college to figure that out.
The white race was so successful, as whole, because they invented the game. It's easy to win when you make the rules.
Race is a social construct. White people made it up. There was no such thing as race in ancient rome. It came about in the 17th century as white people moved into new territory and needed an excuse to justify it. White people were classifying everything at the time, and since you're writing the rule book, you might as well put yourself on top.
Now to understand race you need to understand the concept of "othering." We ultimately define everything, not by what it is, but by what it is not.
What does it mean to be black? It means you're not white. Language is nothing but a collection of metaphors, and thus imperfect. We only understand things by comparing them against others.
Now what does it mean to be white? There's a pretty sweet book by David Roediger called "Wages of Whiteness," and it explains how whiteness came about in America.
Basically it came from trying to get jobs. Dirty, smelly European immigrants came into the country, and found the job selection less than satisfactory. But they had one thing going for them, and that was their fair skin. Now it came time to one-up the competition.
"I'm better to hire because I"m not a negro, I"m WHITE." Nobody wanted to hire negros, because, black people, and nobody really wanted to hire immigrants, but that was definitely better than hiring a negro.
Immigrants joined the winning team, and many were able to successfully claim whiteness and as a result find better jobs. What did it mean that you were white? It means you weren't a negro.
White people are the winning team because it's a rigged game. Whiteness became a concept because of othering. "We're not like those savage negroes. We're different, and other races should be subordinate to us because they're not us."
Race is a tool of imperialism. It justified European conquests around the world and has been used to artificially categorize and separate us.
You?re saying that with a rude and overly aggressive attitude, so now I?m going to have to school you.l33t.heathen said:This is just utterly ridiculous and completely blows my mind that someone claiming to have a history major could be so completely ignorant.Mr.Cynic88 said:snip
Thank you.gargantual said:Saving this one. Very in-depth studies man.
Thank you kindly.FizzyIzze said:I sincerely hope you get to move on to a PHD and write a book, because I would buy that book. I would buy the hell out of that book.Mr.Cynic88 said:snip
Oh Canada. It's so funny how quickly we forget that most of our families immigrated only in the last 120 years. My best friend recently tried convincing me that "reverse racism" is a thing (insinuating that there's an accepted kind of racism) because we give "preferential" treatment to immigrants. I pointed out that his family has only been in Canada for four generations.lacktheknack said:A few days ago, I was sitting next to a cheery Pakistani girl and her boyfriend, who were chatting and minding their own business. Suddenly, a woman in front of her tried to hit her, told her to shut her fucking mouth, said that we ought to deport all the filthy immigrant sand niggers, and complimented her on her mustache before marching off the bus.
(For the record, the Pakistani girl had significantly less facial hair than the woman attacking her.)
The girl then leaned back, looking upset and said "Not again."
And I live in CANADA, land of immigration and accepting all other cultures.
So no, I don't think racism is overplayed. Not when this happens on a regular basis.
You made some good points, but how about the American conquistadores?Mr.Cynic88 said:History major here correcting your statement. Race doesn't go back to ancient Greece at all. You're probably thinking that because there were slaves in ancient Greece, it was a racial thing, but it wasn't. Slaves were enemies captured in battle. To say that race had anything to do with it is anachronistic.Astoria said:Consider that only 50 or so years ago blacks and white were still segregated in the US and blacks were treated horribly. That was an attitude that goes back to Ancient Greece or even further which is thousands of years and I think the jumps society has made in such a short time are pretty good really.
In fact, race is a pretty new concept. It goes back to about the 17th century. Chattel slavery, which is what the American south practiced, was a unique kind of slavery based on white supremacy. Race wasn't a thing in ancient times. There are no words in ancient greek that translate to "race."
I posted something on my friends Facebook trying to explain the significance of race in American society, and I think it applies here:
"What made the white race so successful, as a whole?"
Let me try to answer that. I recently took a 3 hour exit exam for my Master's in History, and covering American history from the 1600's to present, all I talked about was race. I would argue it's one of the most important themes when analyzing our country's culture, and it took me seven years of college to figure that out.
The white race was so successful, as whole, because they invented the game. It's easy to win when you make the rules.
Race is a social construct. White people made it up. There was no such thing as race in ancient rome. It came about in the 17th century as white people moved into new territory and needed an excuse to justify it. White people were classifying everything at the time, and since you're writing the rule book, you might as well put yourself on top.
Now to understand race you need to understand the concept of "othering." We ultimately define everything, not by what it is, but by what it is not.
What does it mean to be black? It means you're not white. Language is nothing but a collection of metaphors, and thus imperfect. We only understand things by comparing them against others.
Now what does it mean to be white? There's a pretty sweet book by David Roediger called "Wages of Whiteness," and it explains how whiteness came about in America.
Basically it came from trying to get jobs. Dirty, smelly European immigrants came into the country, and found the job selection less than satisfactory. But they had one thing going for them, and that was their fair skin. Now it came time to one-up the competition.
"I'm better to hire because I"m not a negro, I"m WHITE." Nobody wanted to hire negros, because, black people, and nobody really wanted to hire immigrants, but that was definitely better than hiring a negro.
Immigrants joined the winning team, and many were able to successfully claim whiteness and as a result find better jobs. What did it mean that you were white? It means you weren't a negro.
White people are the winning team because it's a rigged game. Whiteness became a concept because of othering. "We're not like those savage negroes. We're different, and other races should be subordinate to us because they're not us."
Race is a tool of imperialism. It justified European conquests around the world and has been used to artificially categorize and separate us.
Ha!Astoria said:2) Now I don't know about the rest of the world but there is a lot of anger here about the preferential treatment that asylum seekers get upon entering Australia. Most of the time upon getting entry they are put straight into housing trust, which is something very hard to Australian citizens to get, and can be put on benefits for around $50,000 a year which is scandalous when you consider the average wage for a full time worker is something like $35,00 a year and pensioners who have worked all their life can only get $28,000 a year (btw don't quote me on these numbers I may be recalling them incorrectly). Anyway, people who are protesting this treatment may be misunderstood as being racist because it seems they are against immigrants when really they are against the government for not helping out their own people this much as well
Immigration made Canada what it is, I hate it when people forget that.lacktheknack said:A few days ago, I was sitting next to a cheery Pakistani girl and her boyfriend, who were chatting and minding their own business. Suddenly, a woman in front of her tried to hit her, told her to shut her fucking mouth, said that we ought to deport all the filthy immigrant sand niggers, and complimented her on her mustache before marching off the bus.
(For the record, the Pakistani girl had significantly less facial hair than the woman attacking her.)
The girl then leaned back, looking upset and said "Not again."
And I live in CANADA, land of immigration and accepting all other cultures.
So no, I don't think racism is overplayed. Not when this happens on a regular basis.
Why not? Is everyone who is racist entrenched in it to the degree they won't change?Robert Marrs said:Real racists don't care what you think.
By real racists I mean people who openly hate other races. Generally people who say "I'm not racist but..." just have misconceptions or are about to quote a stereotype. Since really all people stereotype other people to some extent I wouldn't really call adding ignorance on top of that racism. Its just ignorance. It does not mean they necessarily hate or think they are better than the race they about the stereotype when they say that phrase. The people who use that phrase are a part of the other group I mentioned in my post. The people who are extremely afraid of being labeled a racist. When they say "I'm not racist but..." they mean " I don't hate or think I am better than (insert race) but (insert stereotype)". That's just ignorance. Big difference if you ask me.thaluikhain said:Why not? Is everyone who is racist entrenched in it to the degree they won't change?Robert Marrs said:Real racists don't care what you think.
If racists don't care about being called racist, why is "I'm not racist, but..." a thing?
There can be a big difference, but the two can overlap quite a lot as well.Robert Marrs said:By real racists I mean people who openly hate other races. Generally people who say "I'm not racist but..." just have misconceptions or are about to quote a stereotype. Since really all people stereotype other people to some extent I wouldn't really call adding ignorance on top of that racism. Its just ignorance. It does not mean they necessarily hate or think they are better than the race they about the stereotype when they say that phrase. The people who use that phrase are a part of the other group I mentioned in my post. The people who are extremely afraid of being labeled a racist. When they say "I'm not racist but..." they mean " I don't hate or think I am better than (insert race) but (insert stereotype)". That's just ignorance. Big difference if you ask me.
So if I say "Iran is corrupt" am I saying that the people of Iran are corrupt? If I say "Russia is anti-semitic" does anyone think I am passing a moral judgement on every individual Russian? If I said "North Korea is fascist", would you dispute it on the basis that the average citizen isn't a fascist? So why shouldn't I say "Australia is racist" when it fucking is?Paradox SuXcess said:
I sense anger. Anyway, you can say what you feel and if you say and believe those comments then they are your opinion. I am just saying that sometimes, people may take what you say differently to what you actually intended. So yeah, some people might actually think you could be passing a moral judgement on the people too if you say something like. Especially those who may be from the countries you mentioned. Also the original point I was trying to make was EVERY country has that similar problem where racism, fascism and other forms of discrimination is involved. Yes it's a problem and the narrow minded few shouldn't be getting louder and the news media shouldn't be adding fuel to the small flame.manic_depressive13 said:So if I say "Iran is corrupt" am I saying that the people of Iran are corrupt? If I say "Russia is anti-semitic" does anyone think I am passing a moral judgement on every individual Russian? If I said "North Korea is fascist", would you dispute it on the basis that the average citizen isn't a fascist? So why shouldn't I say "Australia is racist" when it fucking is?Paradox SuXcess said:
While I agree that there is a big difference between ignorance and racism, you're example here is really flawed. People don't say "I'm not racist but..." because they're ignorant, they say it because they know they're about to say something that may be taken as racist. That's the opposite of ignorance. Racism isn't as simple as thinking that you're better than someone, is it thinking all of a certain type of people can be judged as the same. Saying "ooh, get the black guy for our basket ball team" may piss less people off then saying "let's not pick the black guy for the swim team" but it's no less racist.Robert Marrs said:By real racists I mean people who openly hate other races. Generally people who say "I'm not racist but..." just have misconceptions or are about to quote a stereotype. Since really all people stereotype other people to some extent I wouldn't really call adding ignorance on top of that racism. Its just ignorance. It does not mean they necessarily hate or think they are better than the race they about the stereotype when they say that phrase. The people who use that phrase are a part of the other group I mentioned in my post. The people who are extremely afraid of being labeled a racist. When they say "I'm not racist but..." they mean " I don't hate or think I am better than (insert race) but (insert stereotype)". That's just ignorance. Big difference if you ask me.