Verasev, on 23 November 2016 - 06:45 PM, said:
1) Go ahead and link them. I doubt they're that conclusive. Correlation doesn't always imply causation, so even if you identify more racism among some group it doesn't mean that it was a major factor.
2) What's referred to as racism today is pretty broad so yeah, it helps to understand what the person's actual motivations are. They're usually just swept under the rug of "white supremacy" which I doubt is that universally applicable.
3) The article you linked is discussing a completely assumed pretense, "Clearly, a lot of US voters either shared Trump’s prejudiced views or, at the very least, didn’t find such ideas to be fundamental deal breakers. That suggests there’s a lot of racism — or at least the enabling of it — in America, perhaps even more than one would think in 2016." No actually, voting for Trump doesn't mean that there's more racism than "one" would think. It doesn't work like these people think it does and I'm shocked that there isn't more reflection about how flawed the two party system is and how much that led to Trump.
Verasev, on 23 November 2016 - 06:45 PM, said:
Based on what exactly?
Verasev, on 23 November 2016 - 06:45 PM, said:
I don't think so. I strongly disagree with the notion that we apply different standards of whether defensiveness is justified or not based on what group someone belongs to. Either a person is being treated fairly and reasonably or they aren't, regardless of whatever you feel like blaming their group for.
Verasev, on 23 November 2016 - 06:45 PM, said:
Will we be allowed to use that one for people who aren't white?
Verasev, on 23 November 2016 - 06:45 PM, said:
1) I rarely see them talk about non-white people having racial prejudiced.
2) When they do it's used to dismiss the topic, I have never seen anyone on this criticize or rebuke someone for said prejudice. Not once. Ever.
3) The whole thing is a double standard. You yourself happily say that "very mild racism is actually fairly common" - do you mean to tell me this is all institutional? Well I'm sure that's the idea but I find that argument incredibly unconvincing. It's starting with a philosophical position first and forcing everything else to conform to it.
When you get down to it, people need to start realizing that no one is exempt from the mindsets that give rise to racism, xenophobia and so on. This is a human problem and yes, it's informed by history and circumstances but these things change and they're not universal or absolute. If society at large comes to think that some groups are perpetual oppressors and others can't be then they're making the transition inevitable.
I'm seeing the white fragility paper get cited more and more these days and it's troubling because that paper has some really bad ideas, in my opinion. It goes on a long rant against individualism, which doesn't surprise me because when you get down to it I think individualism vs collectivism is what this is all about. But the racists were never on the side of individualism.