The Cover Contest Weekly Winners ThreadSo much winning!!
"When fascism comes to America it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross." - Sinclair Lewis
“It’s your party and you can cry if you want to.” - Captain Europe
The Cover Contest Weekly Winners ThreadSo much winning!!
"When fascism comes to America it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross." - Sinclair Lewis
“It’s your party and you can cry if you want to.” - Captain Europe
Of course you did -- because you're more concerned with finding an insult in said comment than you are in seeing it as a statement of fact: it would be nice to just feel alienated by the concept of white privilege, instead of having to deal with actual discrimination and racism in society.
That might be a foreign perspective to you, but that's my every day existence -- and instead of trying to see things from a different viewpoint, you instead choose to see said viewpoint as an attack on "white voters".
If you're insulted by the truth, then that speaks volumes about your (or "their") position on the matter -- regardless, claiming that you feel that your (or "their") "concerns" aren't being met by either political party is no excuse for voting for a blatant racist.
There were plenty of other options in the running -- the people who voted for Trump deserve no sympathy in that regard.
You're always talking about "slippery slopes" but you seem to have a real blind spot when it comes to the "slippery slope" of racist behavior, even when it reaches the halls of our Presidency.
Last edited by aja_christopher; 02-11-2018 at 02:28 PM.
I think the whole reason why the concept of "white privilege" gets a lot of flak is because many more people have their eye on the privilege of wealth - far more advertised, easy to discern, and of course much more desirable a privilege. Plus, at least you can more easily put a physical measurement on it (in the form of currency and possessions, usually).
Last edited by Ragged Maw; 02-11-2018 at 02:40 PM.
And because it's a lot easier to do that than to talk about "race" -- especially when it might mean losing some of the aforementioned "privilege".
Personally, I think "white privilege" is a stupid terminology, but that doesn't mean it isn't real.
Conversely, there's no need to get defensive when the topic is brought up -- this is a system that was put into place long before most of us were born.
Our responsibility is to change things, not to blame one another for the problems that preceded our birth.
Last edited by aja_christopher; 02-11-2018 at 03:06 PM.
Personally, I'd rather just achieve a state where I can withdraw from human civilization entirely and be none the poorer for it. Cause I'm honestly tired of being told what (or whose) "cause" I should fight for and why I'm one of "them" if I dont.
After all, if I'm off the grid and outside the "machine" that is society, I'm technically not taking advantage of whatever oppressive systems people think are in place and thus I'm in a better position to tell them where they can stick their sanctimonious judgments.
Last edited by Ragged Maw; 02-11-2018 at 03:16 PM.
'We've been forgotten': Hurricane Harvey and the long path to recovery
s Hurricane Harvey howled through the night and the roof and walls of their island home collapsed from the pressure of 130mph winds, the immediate task for Melani Zurawski and Tim Yoke was survival.
The couple climbed to the attic of their rental home and tied themselves together with ripped-up sheets. As they lay down, Yoke steeled for the end and Zurawski clutched a marker pen, ready to scrawl her social security number on her arm to make it easier for rescuers to identify her body.
That was nearly six months ago. The present challenge, a mood of slow-burning frustration rather than a life-or-death adrenaline rush, can be summed up by the wads of documents they have crammed into a satchel. And the location of those dossiers: a small but cozy and well-appointed trailer near the beach where they live with two friendly black labradors.
Like several others in Port Aransas, it was provided not by the government but through Adapt A Vet, a small Texas organisation that helps military veterans and their families. “The non-profits have done a wonderful job for a lot of people but there’s so many more people in need. We need people to know what we’re still facing,” Zurawski said.
After the influx of volunteers and emergency workers and donations to meet urgent basic needs, many of Harvey’s victims have endured a time-consuming, energy-sapping bureaucratic labyrinth: exacting rules, hours on hold to call centres, waits for site visits, more questions than answers and the anxiety that help will be curtailed even though a return to something that resembles normal life is still months or years away.
“Our government has failed us,” said Zurawski, 48. “It’s really sad that we’ve been overlooked and forgotten. Our mayor has done what he can as well as our city manager. We started out strong … and as time went by things changed.”
Original join date: 11/23/2004
Eclectic Connoisseur of all things written, drawn, or imaginatively created.
I think it's criticized more because people will always have a biases towards the problems that effect them and will have resentment towards anything that minimizes those problems. White people generally view income inequality as the big issue because it effects them and the concept of white privileged adds something into the equation where 1. it minimizes their problems and 2. doesn't have an impact on solving their problems. Whereas black people are impacted by it, so it's something that is more important to them and their causes for concerns.
It's the same reason you don't see the Asian community talk about white privilege as much, because the biases that effect the black population don't really effect them the same way (which also makes me think it should really be viewed more as a disadvantage to certain racial groups as opposed to an advantage to others, but that becomes splitting hairs).
And honestly it just comes down to people prioritizing what causes they want to fight for. I think nowadays people are less interested in building consensus on things they agree on and weeding out for ideological purity.
I can say that when I was poor and struggling to do things like pay rent every month and unable to afford transportation outside of the occasional taxi (to get the groceries home without melting) my opinion on white privilege was that I'd sure like to start seeing some of it. Now that my situation has become more stable I've become less hostile to the notion than I used to be.
The focus on economic inequality has some merit - it actually affects both the majority and minorities (and hits minorities harder). However, there also needs to be some focus on the underlying causes for that inequality, and not all of them are based purely in economics. The war on drugs and how convictions lock people out of a large portion of the economy for a lifetime is just one of those. And we all know who those policies have hit the hardest...
-----> It's one of the things the state Libertarian Party has been lobbying to do away with here in Nevada - besides stopping the War on Drugs (a failed policy that costs lots of tax dollars in addition to the staggering human costs) they have also tried to get that little 'have you ever been convicted of a felony' checkbox on job applications made illegal. The aftereffects of the overzealous enforcement have economic penalties that can follow you for a lifetime - a long time to pay for what might just be a youthful mistake or even something that never should have been a crime to begin with.
Last edited by Gray Lensman; 02-11-2018 at 03:45 PM.
I get that I may be making things confusing by in one part of a post, giving my opinions, and in another, describing perceptions of opinions that aren't my own, but when you're talking about someone being insulted by the truth, what truth are you talking about?
I'm not sure what statement I've made recently about racist behavior that would indicate a blind spot.
Sincerely,
Thomas Mets
Mets -- this dialogue is exactly what my mother meant by "explaining water to a fish".
It's probably not going to happen at this point, so it's best to just move on.
If you really want to learn more, there are plenty of other resources out there that will give you a much better definition of white privilege than the ones you seem to have, or are claiming that others seem to have -- a simple Wikipedia search was all it took to address the very first point that you brought up.
Last edited by aja_christopher; 02-11-2018 at 05:07 PM.
All The White Supremacists Running For Office In 2018
White supremacist candidates like Duke tend to be roundly condemned by establishment Republicans. Voters don’t like them either ― usually. But when they receive tens of thousands of votes, like Duke did less than two years ago, it’s a reminder that their views are less fringe than we’d like to imagine.
Duke isn’t running for office in 2018, but he’s encouraged by what he sees as a growing number of Republican congressional candidates who appear sympathetic to white supremacist causes or who are openly white supremacists themselves.
“I think it’s about time,” Duke told HuffPost. “I think there’s a tremendous amount of frustration in the white community and that we’re at a tipping point.”
There are at least three white supremacists currently running for Congress, and a fourth running for a state House seat. Two other candidates — one of whom can unambiguously be called a white supremacist, and one who has ties to white supremacist groups but denies being a white supremacist himself — announced runs for public office, but have since dropped out of their respective races.
Original join date: 11/23/2004
Eclectic Connoisseur of all things written, drawn, or imaginatively created.