i'll start this off by opening a can of worms
i keep reading articles like this
https://www.vox.com/identities/2016/11/15/13595508/racism-trump-research-study
how is this different from telling PoC to sit down and shut up?
― the late great, Wednesday, 14 February 2018 20:50 (seven years ago)
the trump budget is the most racist in a long, long time
https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2018/02/trumps-infrastructure-plan-is-doa
― reggie (qualmsley), Wednesday, 14 February 2018 20:56 (seven years ago)
Trump budget being the most racist in decades == Trump fulfilling his implicit and explicit campaign promises to be the most racist administration in decades
― A is for (Aimless), Wednesday, 14 February 2018 21:06 (seven years ago)
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/03/19/upshot/race-class-white-and-black-men.html
In our most recent study, we analyze racial differences in economic opportunity using data on 20 million children and their parents. We show black children have much lower rates of upward mobility and higher rates of downward mobility than white children, leading to black-white income disparities that persist across generations. While Hispanic and black Americans presently have comparable incomes, the incomes of Hispanic Americans are increasing steadily across generations. The black-white gap in upward mobility is driven entirely by differences in men’s, not women’s, outcomes. Black and white men have very different outcomes even if they grow up in two-parent families with comparable incomes, education, and wealth; live on the same city block; and attend the same school. Black-white gaps are smaller in low-poverty neighborhoods with lower levels of racial bias among whites and a larger fraction of black fathers at home. We conclude that reducing the black-white income gap will require efforts whose impacts cross neighborhood and class lines and increase upward mobility specifically for black men.
The black-white gap in upward mobility is driven entirely by differences in men’s, not women’s, outcomes. Black and white men have very different outcomes even if they grow up in two-parent families with comparable incomes, education, and wealth; live on the same city block; and attend the same school. Black-white gaps are smaller in low-poverty neighborhoods with lower levels of racial bias among whites and a larger fraction of black fathers at home. We conclude that reducing the black-white income gap will require efforts whose impacts cross neighborhood and class lines and increase upward mobility specifically for black men.
The new data shows that 21 percent of black men raised at the very bottom were incarcerated, according to a snapshot of a single day during the 2010 census. Black men raised in the top 1 percent — by millionaires — were as likely to be incarcerated as white men raised in households earning about $36,000.
― k3vin k., Monday, 19 March 2018 19:31 (seven years ago)
that last sentence is staggering
― Louis Jägermeister (jim in vancouver), Monday, 19 March 2018 19:37 (seven years ago)
I am very glad to have this study widely available to support the anecdotal evidence I have been arguing from when people try to tell me that if we just focus on economic issues, things will improve drastically for black people as a side-effect.
― Embalming is a flirty business (DJP), Monday, 19 March 2018 19:40 (seven years ago)
https://www.miheadlines.com/2018/04/13/rochester-hills-man-arraigned-on-charges-after-shooting-at-lost-14-yr-old-boy/
POS tried to hide behind "you didn't see the entire video, maaaan" defense until realizing his Ring doorbell captured the whole incident. then woman has audacity to call 911 to report break-in attempt.
― fuck the NRA (Neanderthal), Saturday, 14 April 2018 17:32 (seven years ago)
This story. Man...
My son is 11. I remember him kicking or throwing balls into neighbors' yards and wanting to go in and just get his stuff.
I made the case that he should always go to the neighbor's house, knock, and ask if they can get his stuff or ask their permission to go get it. This story is the kind of story that makes you think...maybe just call the ball a loss and go play in a park instead of a backyard. Safer that way.
― The Harsh Tutelage of Michael McDonald (Raymond Cummings), Saturday, 14 April 2018 17:45 (seven years ago)
yea, it's fucking horrifying.
the infuriating thing is, once again, we have to wonder if, despite the recording, if dude will be convicted.
― fuck the NRA (Neanderthal), Saturday, 14 April 2018 17:55 (seven years ago)
He’s not a police officer; he’s going to be convicted.
― Embalming is a flirty business (DJP), Saturday, 14 April 2018 23:28 (seven years ago)
Big ol' study on the US racial wealth gap
Addressing racial wealth inequality will require a major redistributive effort or another major public policy intervention to build black American wealth. This could take the form of a direct race-specific initiative like a dramatic reparations program tied to compensation for the legacies of slavery and Jim Crow, and/or an initiative that addresses the perniciousness of wealth inequality for the entire American population, which could disproportionately benefit black Americans due to their exceptionally low levels of wealth. Indeed, the two strategies -- reparations for America’s record of racial injustice or the provision of the equivalent of a substantial trust fund for every wealth poor American —- need not be mutually exclusive.In what follows, we come to grips with the ten most important, widely held myths about closing the racial wealth gap.
In what follows, we come to grips with the ten most important, widely held myths about closing the racial wealth gap.
https://socialequity.duke.edu/sites/socialequity.duke.edu/files/site-images/FINAL%20COMPLETE%20REPORT_.pdf
― Simon H., Monday, 16 April 2018 17:25 (seven years ago)
Reparations, surely. They just need to be carefully thought out so as to reduce unintended consequences, such as fraudsters and financial predators swooping in to skim off as much as they can.
― A is for (Aimless), Monday, 16 April 2018 17:43 (seven years ago)
The difficulty of that layer of implementation is trivial compared to building the political capital required to get the job done.
― Simon H., Monday, 16 April 2018 18:04 (seven years ago)
"just carefully thought out" is hardly trivial, it would be the part that kills a lot of the political capital.
― Milking the Soft Power Dividend (dandydonweiner), Monday, 16 April 2018 19:27 (seven years ago)
Seems like it would be very hard to separate reparation from the implementation.
― Milking the Soft Power Dividend (dandydonweiner), Monday, 16 April 2018 19:28 (seven years ago)
How many actually existing politicians are out there promoting reparations in any form? How many Americans have even been asked about the concept? But yeah, let's waste time fretting about implementation.
― Simon H., Monday, 16 April 2018 19:30 (seven years ago)
A lot of people will be dismissive of concepts unless they are presented within the context of implementation. People may agree with it philosophically but be skeptical of how to actually get it done ("the devil is in the details").
― Milking the Soft Power Dividend (dandydonweiner), Monday, 16 April 2018 19:41 (seven years ago)
A majority are perfectly fine to support Medicare for All *as a concept* without needing a 20-point implementation plan.
― Simon H., Monday, 16 April 2018 19:44 (seven years ago)
I think those concepts are pretty different but if you think we can sell reparations at that level, then great.
― Milking the Soft Power Dividend (dandydonweiner), Monday, 16 April 2018 20:01 (seven years ago)
Yeah, figuring out the details of a Reparations plan is nothing compared to get a majority of Americans on board.
(though the comparison with Medicare for All is dangerous. I'm still fairly sure a lot of Democrats are jumping aboard fully expecting it to fail once the trade offs become known. One is a feel good concept that's complex in implementation, the other is... let's say more divisive)
― Frederik B, Monday, 16 April 2018 20:08 (seven years ago)
I'm not inviting a direct comparison, just saying that getting at least a baseline *familiarity* with the concept out there comes way first.
― Simon H., Monday, 16 April 2018 20:09 (seven years ago)
so i’ve been thinking a lot about the politics of arguing with your friends’ racist families and friends on social media
and i have decided it is more classic than dud
― the late great, Wednesday, 25 April 2018 22:49 (seven years ago)
A friend of ours has bought our kids a few childrens' books on activism. I sort of thought they were too mature for my 6 year old but she insisted on me reading them to her. One is about civil disobedience and has various examples of protesters getting arrested etc. I've been sort of concerned that her young mind might take the wrong message away -- that since she hasn't yet gotten the nuance of "police aren't always good," she might think the people getting arrested were bad.
This morning my 6 year old said "I'm glad I don't have brown skin, because then I would protest and get sent to jail." Not sure how to address that. I tried to explain that they wanted to go to jail, and that they didn't do something bad. But I'm not sure she got it.
― Fedora Dostoyevsky (man alive), Friday, 27 April 2018 14:32 (seven years ago)
The “Ordinary People Change The World” series by Brad Meltzer is the balm you and your 6yo need.
― El Tomboto, Friday, 27 April 2018 14:46 (seven years ago)
xpost she might actually.. totally get it??
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Friday, 27 April 2018 14:51 (seven years ago)
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2018/05/a-new-lynching-memorial-confronts-americas-history-of-racial-terrorism.html
With brutal, unspeakable violence, white men affirmed their manhood, white communities affirmed their virtue, and the white South, as a whole, affirmed its power. To murder with impunity, in full view of the public, is to claim total authority. On the other side, both black men and black women were shown their essential powerlessness in Southern society. And the extent to which black women were lynched—Mary Turner, for instance was killed with her unborn child for complaining about the lynching of her husband—served to underscore the scant value attached to their lives and “womanly virtue.” If the master-slave relations of the antebellum South were shattered by the Civil War and Reconstruction, then lynching helped recreate them, albeit on more “democratic lines,” as all white Southerners—and not just a select, propertied few—could claim the right to kill. Lynching dramatized the South’s emerging caste system at the same time that it defined its terms.That rigid caste system may be gone, but the central narrative of lynching—the lie of inherent black criminality—still shapes public life. Just weeks ago, 14-year-old Brennan Walker was shot at after knocking on a door in the predominantly white Rochester Hills, Michigan. The woman at the door thought he was there to rob them, and her husband, who heard her screams, ran down with his shotgun. Walker had simply stopped, on his way to school, to ask for directions. He was lucky. In 2013, 19-year-old Renisha McBride knocked on a door in a Dearborn Heights neighborhood, seeking help after a car crash. The homeowner, Theodore Wafer, opened his door and fired his shotgun, killing her. Compare both incidents to a lynching account presented at the memorial: “A black man was lynched in Millersburg, Ohio, in 1892 for ‘standing around’ in a white neighborhood.”
That rigid caste system may be gone, but the central narrative of lynching—the lie of inherent black criminality—still shapes public life. Just weeks ago, 14-year-old Brennan Walker was shot at after knocking on a door in the predominantly white Rochester Hills, Michigan. The woman at the door thought he was there to rob them, and her husband, who heard her screams, ran down with his shotgun. Walker had simply stopped, on his way to school, to ask for directions. He was lucky. In 2013, 19-year-old Renisha McBride knocked on a door in a Dearborn Heights neighborhood, seeking help after a car crash. The homeowner, Theodore Wafer, opened his door and fired his shotgun, killing her. Compare both incidents to a lynching account presented at the memorial: “A black man was lynched in Millersburg, Ohio, in 1892 for ‘standing around’ in a white neighborhood.”
I have had no reason to ever travel to Montgomery, Alabama, but if I somehow wind up there, https://museumandmemorial.eji.org/ is obviously mandatory.
A collection of other stories on the National Memorial and the Legacy Museum is here: https://eji.org/national-memorial-and-legacy-museum-media
Not related to race, but from what I can tell it looks like there is some pretty impressive architectural / engineering sleight-of-hand going on, in that some of the pillars are structural, even though most of them aren't.
― El Tomboto, Friday, 4 May 2018 15:42 (seven years ago)
http://www.historicalmaterialism.org/articles/afro-pessimism-and-unlogic-anti-blackness
thought this was absolutely storming piece against 'afro-pessimism' and Americanised conceptions of race, with lots of good stuff on Fanon, race as a technology of imperialism and 'non-black poc'
― ogmor, Wednesday, 30 May 2018 11:06 (seven years ago)
It's a very good read that kinda convinces me, but then Morbs posted this on the Roseanne thread:
Roseanne should have stuck to saying insanely racist things about Palestinians, which is something that that you can do freely without consequence in the United States for some reason.— Murtaza Mohammad Hussain (@MazMHussain) May 29, 2018
Anyways, it's fair, careful and incisive. Great read! Even though I'm not sure I buy the overall 'settler colonial' framework, that framework seems kinda disconnected from the actual history of the non-european world. But I need to dive further into that at some point.
― Frederik B, Wednesday, 30 May 2018 12:44 (seven years ago)
Real situation I was just confronted with: what happens when your younger black friends in academia have requested that you (me), a white man, drop "slave" from your vocabulary in favor of "enslaved people" due to the belief that term provides more agency and humanity to the generations of black people who were held in bondage here against their will and without mercy, but then a friend of a friend, an older black woman also in academia, calls you out for using the term "enslaved people" and says her ancestors were indeed slaves and that the softening of the language around that is offensive?
I don't know if this is a young/old divide or not, but the last thing I want to do is show my ass if I ever find myself in this conversational pivot again.
White people problems are barely even problems, I know, but any guidance here would be appreciated.
― Johnny Fever, Sunday, 10 June 2018 21:58 (seven years ago)
Adjust your language to different generations? I understand this only works for conversations and not written text and it is painfully obvious but I’ve been in a similar situation when discussing sexual assault with younger and older women in the context of #metoo and thats the only method I found. However, my context is outside academia and those not include written text.
― Van Horn Street, Sunday, 10 June 2018 22:26 (seven years ago)
My take: You’re in a unique position to broker and explain the differences in perception that can come from usage. Use your privilege for good, as an educator, but not an arbiter.
― El Tomboto, Sunday, 10 June 2018 22:31 (seven years ago)
Also everyone is allowed to take issue with you as necessary- that’s what being a trust broker means, whenever complicated shit comes up.
― El Tomboto, Sunday, 10 June 2018 22:33 (seven years ago)
My take: You’re in a unique position to broker and explain the differences in perception that can come from usage.
Good answer!
― Simon H., Sunday, 10 June 2018 22:36 (seven years ago)
I should point out that I'm in no way involved in academia. I just seem to have found myself fortunate enough to have several scholars in my life.
― Johnny Fever, Sunday, 10 June 2018 22:38 (seven years ago)
i've had some fun times reading the alt-papers this week. seattle's stranger has this to say about cameron whitten:
https://www.thestranger.com/slog/2018/06/07/27192471/portland-in-flames-after-alleged-racist-incident-at-vegan-bakery
in the meantime, the portland mercury has this to say about cameron whitten:
https://www.portlandmercury.com/news/2018/06/06/20394535/alt-right-trolls-put-local-businesses-on-edge-for-hosting-reparations-happy-hour
― Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Sunday, 10 June 2018 23:27 (seven years ago)
Par for the course in Quebec...
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/04/arts/music/protests-shutter-a-show-that-cast-white-singers-as-black-slaves.html
The production bills itself as a “theatrical odyssey” inspired by “traditional African-American slave and work songs.” It also features a nearly all-white cast performing the music. Its director, Mr. Lepage, is white, as is its star Betty Bonifassi. Two of the seven cast members are black, including Kattia Thony, who plays a young black woman searching for the roots of her identity. On Wednesday, the storm proved too much, and the jazz festival and Ms. Bonifassi canceled the show after only two performances. It had sold more than 8,000 tickets and was scheduled for 16 performances. The festival said it had been “shaken” by the intensity of the response. “We would like to apologize to those who were hurt,” it said in a statement. “It was not our intention at all.”The anger provoked by the production had been visceral and swift as artists of all stripes asked why Mr. Lepage hadn’t bothered to hire more black actors and singers. The production also raised thorny questions about how to differentiate cultural appreciation from cultural appropriation and accusations, fairly or not, that its white creators had engaged in a modern-day form of blackface.
On Wednesday, the storm proved too much, and the jazz festival and Ms. Bonifassi canceled the show after only two performances. It had sold more than 8,000 tickets and was scheduled for 16 performances. The festival said it had been “shaken” by the intensity of the response. “We would like to apologize to those who were hurt,” it said in a statement. “It was not our intention at all.”
The anger provoked by the production had been visceral and swift as artists of all stripes asked why Mr. Lepage hadn’t bothered to hire more black actors and singers. The production also raised thorny questions about how to differentiate cultural appreciation from cultural appropriation and accusations, fairly or not, that its white creators had engaged in a modern-day form of blackface.
― Van Horn Street, Friday, 6 July 2018 18:06 (seven years ago)
https://nextshark.com/crazy-rich-asians-poster-vandalized-racist-comments-vancouver-nothing-will-shake-us-says-director/
A theatrical poster of “Crazy Rich Asians” in Vancouver, Canada was vandalized with racist comments ahead of the movie’s opening this month.
― F# A# (∞), Sunday, 5 August 2018 16:40 (seven years ago)
Several incidents of racial harassment or low-level assault in Ontario over the last week or two getting shared a lot. I don't know where it's coming from:
https://www.facebook.com/teejay.meer/videos/10156095612873591/UzpfSTgwNTU4MDE2NDoxMDE2MDcyMjg3MzE2MDE2NQ/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/london/race-incident-london-sobeys-1.4768191https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/white-man-threatens-kill-indian-13000193
Security appear to be restraining or taking away the victims in the first video (about 2 wks old) rather than doing anything against the aggressor.
Guy kept yelling about "my province" which who tf gets that way about Ontario?
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Sunday, 5 August 2018 17:03 (seven years ago)
I made the mistake of reading the comments on F#A#'s article.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Sunday, 5 August 2018 17:04 (seven years ago)
Ugh. Let's hope this won't snowball.
― pomenitul, Sunday, 5 August 2018 17:09 (seven years ago)
it's bad all around i'd say
― F# A# (∞), Sunday, 5 August 2018 17:32 (seven years ago)
National Book Award winner Ibram Kendi has some thoughts, and a new antiracist center in Washington.
The goal is to identify inequalities, identify the policies that create and maintain those inequalities, and propose correctives in six areas: criminal justice, education, economics, health, environment and politics. Kendi also hopes to create an online library of anti-racist thinking. He’s still considering initial projects.But when he talks about racism, he is not still puzzling out his ideas. Kendi has spent thousands of hours reading thousands of documents, including “some of the most horrific things that have ever been said about black people,” to uncover the origins of racist thought. His words are distilled, precise, authoritative. His voice never rises. He is, temperamentally, an antidote to the heat of the subject matter and the hyperbole of the times.“We have been taught that ignorance and hate lead to racist ideas, lead to racist policies,” Kendi said. “If the fundamental problem is ignorance and hate, then your solutions are going to be focused on education, and love and persuasion. But of course [Stamped from the Beginning] shows that the actual foundation of racism is not ignorance and hate, but self-interest, particularly economic and political and cultural.” Self-interest drives racist policies that benefit that self-interest. When the policies are challenged because they produce inequalities, racist ideas spring up to justify those policies. Hate flows freely from there.
But when he talks about racism, he is not still puzzling out his ideas. Kendi has spent thousands of hours reading thousands of documents, including “some of the most horrific things that have ever been said about black people,” to uncover the origins of racist thought. His words are distilled, precise, authoritative. His voice never rises. He is, temperamentally, an antidote to the heat of the subject matter and the hyperbole of the times.
“We have been taught that ignorance and hate lead to racist ideas, lead to racist policies,” Kendi said. “If the fundamental problem is ignorance and hate, then your solutions are going to be focused on education, and love and persuasion. But of course [Stamped from the Beginning] shows that the actual foundation of racism is not ignorance and hate, but self-interest, particularly economic and political and cultural.” Self-interest drives racist policies that benefit that self-interest. When the policies are challenged because they produce inequalities, racist ideas spring up to justify those policies. Hate flows freely from there.
https://theundefeated.com/features/ibram-kendi-leading-scholar-of-racism-says-education-and-love-are-not-the-answer/
― wayne trotsky (Simon H.), Friday, 24 August 2018 02:03 (six years ago)
Van Dyke murder trial verdict to be read at any moment.
― Karl Malone, Friday, 5 October 2018 18:44 (six years ago)
Guilty, 2nd degree murder.Guilty of 16 separate counts (one for each shot fired) of aggravated battery with a firearmNot Guilty of official misconduct
― Karl Malone, Friday, 5 October 2018 18:58 (six years ago)
and not guilty on 1st degree murder
― Karl Malone, Friday, 5 October 2018 18:59 (six years ago)
weird that we don't have a racism in europe thread so putting this here
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/23/travel/racism-travel-italy-study-abroad.html
― F# A# (∞), Thursday, 25 October 2018 18:45 (six years ago)
This is a racism thread. It covers racism anywhere. The predominance of US racism as a topic here is merely a byproduct, not a dictate.
― A is for (Aimless), Thursday, 25 October 2018 18:48 (six years ago)
it's cuz we're so good at it
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 25 October 2018 18:53 (six years ago)
youtube is recommending me a video where a young white man with a beard calling himself "the pop song professor" explains the lyrics to "how much a dollar cost"
please try to remember this the next time somebody asks why white people hate themselves
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Sunday, 11 November 2018 15:56 (six years ago)
I don't get it.
― pomenitul, Sunday, 11 November 2018 15:59 (six years ago)
Also I don't hate myself for being white, I'm not American. Can you please start saying 'why (some) white Americans hate themselves' instead? Thanks.
― pomenitul, Sunday, 11 November 2018 16:01 (six years ago)
― pomenitul
give it a couple years and perhaps the pop song professor will have a video explaining it
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Sunday, 11 November 2018 16:05 (six years ago)
I don't get why someone – even, yes, a white dude – explaining that song to people who don't get it is a problem. Not everyone who watches YouTube is American and intimately familiar with your history, for starters.
― pomenitul, Sunday, 11 November 2018 16:09 (six years ago)
I haven't seen the video so I have no idea if he does it well, though. But the implication that such a thing is simply inconceivable due to his skin colour is frankly absurd.
― pomenitul, Sunday, 11 November 2018 16:10 (six years ago)
pomenitul have you heard the song
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Sunday, 11 November 2018 18:16 (six years ago)
I have and I still don't get your point. Why don't you spell it out for me, since I clearly need to have it explained?
― pomenitul, Sunday, 11 November 2018 18:25 (six years ago)
because i didn't come here for a stupid internet argument
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Sunday, 11 November 2018 18:28 (six years ago)
i'm sorry i insulted someone who turned out to be your favorite streamer or something
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Sunday, 11 November 2018 18:30 (six years ago)
Suit yourself. I frankly have no idea what you're talking about at this point and your refusal to accept that only reinforces the notion that, yes, there might be some value in explaining what's going on in that song and in this 'argument' both. There are people out there learning English in part through songs like this one who might be tempted to search for its 'meaning' online, whether on YouTube or elsewhere. I see no harm.
― pomenitul, Sunday, 11 November 2018 18:32 (six years ago)
I've never watched this guy's videos. For all I know they're complete shit. I just take issue with the argument that his being a white dude with a beard tackling this topic somehow justifies white self-loathing.
― pomenitul, Sunday, 11 November 2018 18:33 (six years ago)
rushomancy laying down the semiology of beards
― A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 11 November 2018 19:05 (six years ago)
a really, really sad story, at the intersection of america's problems with guns and racism
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2018/11/12/1812296/-Chicago-Man-is-Shot-and-Killed-by-Police-For-Being-a-Hero-Security-Guard-While-Black
Jemel Roberson, 26, was working early Sunday at Manny’s Blue Room ― a bar in the predominantly black Chicago suburb of Robbins, Illinois ― when a patron who was part of a drunken group that had been kicked out returned with a gun at 4 a.m. and opened fire, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. Several people were shot.Roberson, who was armed at the time, grabbed one of the men, held him down and waited for police, according to witnesses.However when the police arrived, one of the officers shot at Roberson, who died later.[A witness] said the officer shot an innocent man and that people on the scene tried to warn police that Roberson was a security guard.“Everybody was screaming out, ‘Security!’ He was a security guard ... and they still did their job, and saw a black man with a gun, and basically killed him,” Harris said.
Roberson, who was armed at the time, grabbed one of the men, held him down and waited for police, according to witnesses.
However when the police arrived, one of the officers shot at Roberson, who died later.
[A witness] said the officer shot an innocent man and that people on the scene tried to warn police that Roberson was a security guard.
“Everybody was screaming out, ‘Security!’ He was a security guard ... and they still did their job, and saw a black man with a gun, and basically killed him,” Harris said.
― Karl Malone, Monday, 12 November 2018 23:44 (six years ago)
This interview with Wesley Yang is interesting.
― grawlix (unperson), Tuesday, 13 November 2018 21:05 (six years ago)
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/17/us/kansas-official-master-race.html?smtyp=cur&smid=tw-nytimes
But Mark Loughry, the administrator of Leavenworth County, which is just outside Kansas City, said in a statement that Mr. Klemp’s comments were misconstrued and had nothing to do with Nazism.Mr. Loughry said Mr. Klemp had used the term “master race” several times in the past year to refer to people with gaps in their front teeth, and his comment was meant to include both Ms. Penelton and himself.
Mr. Loughry said Mr. Klemp had used the term “master race” several times in the past year to refer to people with gaps in their front teeth, and his comment was meant to include both Ms. Penelton and himself.
― j., Sunday, 18 November 2018 02:31 (six years ago)
annie olaloku-teriba who wrote the piece on afro-pessimism i linked upthread in may had an interesting interview on the groundings podcast with some particularly interesting stuff on the relationship between afro pessimism, anti blackness and black nationalism
https://groundings.simplecast.fm
― ogmor, Tuesday, 27 November 2018 12:12 (six years ago)
Dorchester historical society apologizes, says it's horrified by Christmas card it sent out to advertise an upcoming event. pic.twitter.com/144ukLTxj5
I feel like I'm missing something here. I mean, it's obvious they're talking about snow. "Dreaming of a white [fill in the blank]" is an extremely common phrase about hoping it will snow. Why is this so obviously a racist faux pas? Is it because they used "Dorchester" instead of "Christmas"? I guess usually it's Christmas but idk, I still feel like that's a stretch.
― evol j, Tuesday, 27 November 2018 15:57 (six years ago)
can't believe they misspelled 'genocide' as 'dorchester', that's a real fuckup
― sign up for my waterless urinals webinar (bizarro gazzara), Tuesday, 27 November 2018 15:59 (six years ago)
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2018/12/07/unc-teaching-assistants-go-strike-over-confederate-monument
Several dozen teaching assistants at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill started a strike Friday, saying that they will withhold student grades as long as the university moves ahead with the idea of constructing a building to house the Confederate monument known as Silent Sam. The strike comes after classes have finished for the semester and students are preparing for final exams and normally would be soon receiving final grades.
― j., Saturday, 8 December 2018 04:30 (six years ago)
the comments... god help me i read the comments...
― Larry Elleison (rogermexico.), Saturday, 8 December 2018 06:23 (six years ago)
I don't want to start a 2019 race thread just to share this one amazing tweet. Just read it and be amazed.
Here’s my only nativist beef: Hispanic people who look and sound Mongolian and who I therefore don’t realize I could just communicate with in Spanish instead of English which they don’t speak particularly intelligibly. I’m cool with Spanish, just not being super-confused.— Liz Mair (@LizMair) January 2, 2019
― grawlix (unperson), Thursday, 3 January 2019 00:06 (six years ago)
oooof.
― ( ͡☉ ͜ʖ ͡☉) (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 3 January 2019 00:11 (six years ago)
tbftts i too might try to pass as mongolian if it seemed to make her not communicate with me
― topical mlady (darraghmac), Thursday, 3 January 2019 00:14 (six years ago)
I am so confused by this ^^^. Mongolian? I had to look her up. Ok. She's an idiot.
― Yerac, Thursday, 3 January 2019 00:15 (six years ago)
I'm assuming she's saying "latin american person who looks indigenous" in the most racist way possible
― ( ͡☉ ͜ʖ ͡☉) (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 3 January 2019 00:27 (six years ago)
Lol, she made a loooong thread defending that tweet, and complaining that people don't realize how anti-racist she is. She's a never-Trump'er, don't people realize how important an ally she could be?
― Frederik B, Thursday, 3 January 2019 11:09 (six years ago)
The non-apology thread is breathtaking.
― resident hack (Simon H.), Thursday, 3 January 2019 12:47 (six years ago)
That tweet is despicable and depressing. I’m not surprised that kind of language is catching on even among the (vanishingly small) “never trump” right.
― Trϵϵship, Thursday, 3 January 2019 13:33 (six years ago)
It’s the most dangerous kind of thinking in the world, that dehumanizing shit
― Trϵϵship, Thursday, 3 January 2019 13:34 (six years ago)
Sorry—i know that was all redundant. There is just something super bleak about racism being couched in this flippant, trendy twitter speak.
― Trϵϵship, Thursday, 3 January 2019 13:42 (six years ago)
via a former ilxor
https://youtu.be/hcSAp-nBwR8
"What kind of language has then to be found that would not be a re-imprisonment of Black lives? Does it still belong to philosophy? Does it still belong to literature? For sure, this issue requires the opening of a yet unheard space. Afro-Pessimism might be its name. A name born in prison."
― ILX’s bad boy (D-40), Thursday, 17 January 2019 10:42 (six years ago)
this entire Jussie Smollett story is a bummer.
https://thegrapevine.theroot.com/it-looks-like-jussie-smolletts-case-is-headed-to-grand-1832700715
― omar little, Monday, 18 February 2019 19:29 (six years ago)
what an absurd story
― k3vin k., Monday, 18 February 2019 19:34 (six years ago)
https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/05/us/trump-teacher-fort-worth-anti-immigration-trnd/index.html
I'm putting this here because there isn't a 2019 thread and because I can't get over the fact that this person was a teacher
― Arugula Raccoon (DJP), Thursday, 6 June 2019 13:27 (six years ago)
https://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/450757-analysis-black-homebuyers-more-than-twice-as-likely-as-whites
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 27 June 2019 22:51 (six years ago)
https://www.rrstar.com/news/20190617/man-arrested-while-attached-to-iv-machine-says-he-was-racially-profiled
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Friday, 28 June 2019 20:01 (six years ago)
It's just
Schroeder said the IV was removed by a professionally-trained FHN employee and that police followed the proper protocol when they realized Dukes was having a medical event.
...WHICH YOU CAUSED BY WITHHOLDING HIS MEDICATION THAT WAS LITERALLY FLOWING INTO HIS VEINS AT THE HOSPITAL'S DIRECTION.
― There's more Italy than necessary. (in orbit), Friday, 28 June 2019 20:09 (six years ago)
good news everybodyhttps://www.washingtonpost.com/local/public-safety/james-fields-jr-avowed-neo-nazi-in-charlottesville-car-attack-set-to-be-sentenced-for-federal-hate-crimes/2019/06/27/fcead458-9849-11e9-830a-21b9b36b64ad_story.html?utm_term=.7f7ad220c013
― Οὖτις, Friday, 28 June 2019 20:11 (six years ago)
That is fantastic news
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Friday, 28 June 2019 20:27 (six years ago)
re: dude who was arrested for following doctor's orders, I really want the hospital to weigh in on this
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Friday, 28 June 2019 20:28 (six years ago)
half expected the cops to claim they mistook the IV for a weapon
― Οὖτις, Friday, 28 June 2019 20:31 (six years ago)
did they think the hospital gown was a disguise?????
― j., Friday, 28 June 2019 20:35 (six years ago)
They thought they had someone they could brutalize who wouldn't fight back.
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Friday, 28 June 2019 20:49 (six years ago)
"Police urge people not to rush ‘to judgement against the police without all the information..."
Dukes was ultimately charged with disorderly conduct, after an investigation revealed he had no intention of stealing the IV stand, said Freeport police Lt. Andrew Schroeder.
A full investigation revealed that after coming all this way police were able to determine that the suspect who was by the way no angel was clearly guilty of something because otherwise we wouldn't be here now would we? Case closed!
― Larry Elleison (rogermexico.), Friday, 28 June 2019 21:30 (six years ago)
"disorderly conduct" is cop-speak for not being appropriately deferential to the thin blue line that separates us from the savages/not thanking them for hassling you
― Οὖτις, Friday, 28 June 2019 21:35 (six years ago)
Police urge people not to rush ‘to judgement against the police without all the information’
Should I give the site the benefit of the doubt and assume the reason they used this quote to lead the article is out of irony?
― viborg, Saturday, 29 June 2019 00:05 (six years ago)
Couldn't find a thread for this year; read this awful story tonight: https://www.thedailybeast.com/utah-state-student-jerusha-sanjeevi-suffered-months-of-racist-attacksand-the-school-did-nothing-suit-claims
― All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Wednesday, 7 August 2019 04:09 (six years ago)
Horrible.
― pomenitul, Wednesday, 7 August 2019 10:54 (six years ago)
jesus.
― mfktz (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Wednesday, 7 August 2019 11:20 (six years ago)
https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/12/entertainment/sarah-silverman-blackface-scli-intl/index.html
I think this is a ridiculous overreaction to a great sketch that was a top-to-bottom condemnation of racism and blackface
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Monday, 12 August 2019 21:05 (six years ago)
She did a huuuuuuge mea culpa for thatvepisode on her current show (I Love You America) last year, which was interesting
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 13 August 2019 01:57 (six years ago)
What's the word for when someone apologizes for something they shouldn't need to?
― Pauline Male (Eric H.), Tuesday, 13 August 2019 02:15 (six years ago)
I was sure Chris Cuomo would figure into this thread revive.
― Simon H., Tuesday, 13 August 2019 02:24 (six years ago)
Absolutely essential story: https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/09/this-land-was-our-land/594742/
― Frederik B, Tuesday, 13 August 2019 10:42 (six years ago)
This cosmic balance sheet underpins the national conversation—ever more robust—about reparations for black Americans. In that conversation, given momentum in part by the publication of Ta-Nehisi Coates’s “The Case for Reparations” in this magazine in 2014, I hear echoes of Mississippi. I hear echoes of Hamer, the Scotts, Henry Woodard Sr., and others who petitioned the federal government to hold itself accountable for a history of extraction that has extended well beyond enslavement. But that conversation too easily becomes technical. How do we quantify discrimination? How do we define who was discriminated against? How do we repay those people according to what has been defined and quantified? The idea of reparations sometimes seems like a problem of economic rightsizing—something for the quants and wonks to work out.
Economics is, of course, a major consideration. According to the researchers Francis and Hamilton, “The dispossession of black agricultural land resulted in the loss of hundreds of billions of dollars of black wealth. We must emphasize this estimate is conservative … Depending on multiplier effects, rates of returns, and other factors, it could reach into the trillions.” The large wealth gap between white and black families today exists in part because of this historic loss.
But money does not define every dimension of land theft. Were it not for dispossession, Mississippi today might well be a majority-black state, with a radically different political destiny. Imagine the difference in our national politics if the center of gravity of black electoral strength had remained in the South after the Voting Rights Act was passed.
― Frederik B, Tuesday, 13 August 2019 11:00 (six years ago)
I just watched that clip and loooooooooooooooool
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Tuesday, 13 August 2019 11:29 (six years ago)
straight outta that sopranos episode
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 13 August 2019 12:01 (six years ago)
I've never heard of "I'll ruin your shit" before
― a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 13 August 2019 12:03 (six years ago)
I'm simultaneously like "what ridiculous nonsense" and "RUIN HIS SHIT, CHRIS; STRAIGHT UP MURDER HIM"
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Tuesday, 13 August 2019 13:18 (six years ago)
How to solve racism in 'Murica forever:
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/aug/15/white-professor-investigated-quoting-james-baldwin-use-of-n-word-laurie-sheck
― pomenitul, Thursday, 15 August 2019 13:54 (six years ago)
Sheck told Inside Higher Education that a white student had objected to her language. According to Sheck, she questioned the student about her objection, who said she had been told by a previous professor that white people should never use the term. At the end of term, the student gave a presentation about racism at the New School.
comedy descending notes played on a muted trumpet
― bookmarkflaglink (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 15 August 2019 16:21 (six years ago)
or trombone rather
― bookmarkflaglink (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 15 August 2019 16:28 (six years ago)
Ugh: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatoon/saskatoon-gas-assault-mischief-1.5294412?fbclid=IwAR2WP-FrKOb62cgb0kOrGAsi5eHdTGTL2XfLBRYrfedUMRzqYju9uATB91o
― All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Wednesday, 25 September 2019 02:53 (five years ago)
That Justin Trudeau is out of control.
― Let them eat Pfifferlinge an Schneckensauce (Tom D.), Wednesday, 25 September 2019 06:49 (five years ago)
Ugh indeed.
― pomenitul, Wednesday, 25 September 2019 08:34 (five years ago)
https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2019/09/26/newspaper-reported-that-mans-ancestors-were-slaveholders-hes-suing-defamation/
― j., Thursday, 26 September 2019 03:37 (five years ago)
they really should add on to that lonely slave heritage statue that was an auction block: "the Tayloe family traded slaves here, probably still would if they could" and just let the lawsuits roll
― mh, Thursday, 26 September 2019 04:00 (five years ago)
that case SLAPPs
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Thursday, 26 September 2019 12:36 (five years ago)
otm
― mh, Thursday, 26 September 2019 13:37 (five years ago)
in all the right places
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Thursday, 26 September 2019 13:38 (five years ago)
you guys, this story is like a series of racist nesting dolls
https://www.cnn.com/2019/09/27/us/carson-king-aaron-calvin-des-moines-register-trnd/index.html
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Friday, 27 September 2019 15:22 (five years ago)
I have been actively trying to ignore it, as it gets dumber with every update.This is the best coverage imo: https://deadspin.com/is-beer-money-sign-man-sorry-for-old-racist-tweets-1838457224
― mh, Friday, 27 September 2019 15:43 (five years ago)
ha
I can't wait for the editor's old racist tweets to resurface
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Friday, 27 September 2019 15:45 (five years ago)
It's a Gannett paper, so the salary is crap and the majority of the staff is probably below age 25. I give it.. a day or two at most
― mh, Friday, 27 September 2019 16:28 (five years ago)
I can't spare the brain cells to investigate the entire timeline of this but at least one of the racist tweeters involved was 16 at the time? Do I understand that correctly?
Gotta say I'm glad there was no social med when I was 16 to catalog the things I firmly believed at the time bc the evangelical church told me to. o_____O
― There's more Italy than necessary. (in orbit), Friday, 27 September 2019 16:32 (five years ago)
Not saying 16 yos shouldn't be held accountable, just saying I'm grateful to be old.
― There's more Italy than necessary. (in orbit), Friday, 27 September 2019 16:33 (five years ago)
Yeah I mean, I think this largely played out correctly? Dude raised money, shit was brought up from his past, he gave what I thought was a legit apology, the corporate sponsor did the predictable corporate sponsor thing, the hospital is still getting money, everything is good and golden.
Where it gets funny is when the reporter's shit pops up
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Friday, 27 September 2019 16:35 (five years ago)
I feel dumber every moment I hear about this story, and never need to hear coworkers talk about it again, but here we go
1. Guy holds up stupid sign with his venmo address asking for beer money for busch light at state's largest college football event2. Fans send him ridiculous amount of money3. He vows to send money to a children's hospital, beer company says they'll match it and send him a bunch of beer. Dumb ploy makes good for everyone, ok so far4. Local paper reporter decides to check out guy before publishing another article, finds idiot racist teenage tweets5. Paper reaches out to guy saying they found this, deciding what to do with it6. Guy preemptively tells everyone he was an idiot teen, is no longer idiot teen7. Paper writes round-up on all that has happened, tries to make clear they were preempted7a. College football fans go nuts trying to figure out how to cancel their nonexistent newspaper subscriptions8. Beer company still going to donate money, not going to give guy free beer8a. Some fans with poor reading comprehension think beer company is not giving money to hospital, vow to never drink their beer again9. Reporter who initially found racist tweets investigated by roving mob of online college football fans, racist tweets found9a. Fans attempt to destroy reporter in addition to paper, salt earth
I have not worked from the office today and have heard nothing more
― mh, Friday, 27 September 2019 16:43 (five years ago)
xp yeah, everything resolved relatively ok, other than the college football fans who are trying to figure out where to aim the torches and pitchforks still roaming around. apparently the reporter is fired now?
the governor was/is proclaiming a state day after the beer donation guy, but I'm unsure whether it was before or after the racist tweet debacle. I'm assuming after, because the governor is an idiot
― mh, Friday, 27 September 2019 16:46 (five years ago)
https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/opinion/columnists/from-the-editor/2019/09/26/carson-king-tweet-editor-response-investigation-iowa-childrens-hospital-donations/3780741002/
I'm hoping this dies, but I'm also wondering if the beer guy's going to be outed as the son of a racist cop
― mh, Friday, 27 September 2019 16:51 (five years ago)
you get a milkshake duck! and you get a milkshake duck! everybody gets a milkshake duck!
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Friday, 27 September 2019 16:55 (five years ago)
everybody IS a milkshake duck inside a larger, slightly more racist milkshake duck
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Friday, 27 September 2019 16:56 (five years ago)
it's completely wild to me that companies, like newspapers, let reporters use their existing twitter accounts (and get them verified) when they become reporters
and also amazing that people would want their twitter presence, including all existing tweets, linked to their employer in that way
― mh, Friday, 27 September 2019 17:00 (five years ago)
I KNOW RIGHT
I say absolutely NOTHING about my job on Twitter and am prepared to nuke the entire account if I ever become famous and I haven't really said all that much that's controversial
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Friday, 27 September 2019 17:01 (five years ago)
xxp to djp, see now THAT i would truth bomb!
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Friday, 27 September 2019 17:02 (five years ago)
lol this reminds me of my friend who is very good at many things but was very naive about social profile in the past. his idea was that he has no real regrets portraying any part of his life to the world, nbd
so he was a little confused when a friend asked him to remove pictures of her at a party at his place, or at least remove her name, but came around to it. the final nail in the coffin was probably when he absent-mindedly posted a picture of his new drivers license because the picture was funny, and forgot to obscure details. you've heard of identity theft? that's how you get identity theft.
I did say naive, right? going to stick with that out of kindness
― mh, Friday, 27 September 2019 17:12 (five years ago)
looooooooool
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Friday, 27 September 2019 17:13 (five years ago)
The longevity of these accounts is fascinating. There have been enough times where I dive into someone's Facebook photos and then scamper right back out as soon as the sixth-grade church camp photos appear.
Not saying I'm without a little guilt: Beeps has already gotten on to me after she found kid photos of her on my Instagram. But Beeps! I said, that account is locked and private!
Good thing she hasn't found this place yet.
Anyway. Good thing this is an Iowa newspaper. Otherwise, we'd be waiting on "This just in... Newspaper endorsed Dred Scott decision..."
― pplains, Saturday, 28 September 2019 00:57 (five years ago)
https://www.citylab.com/equity/2016/08/half-of-wisconsins-black-neighborhoods-are-jails/495152/
Sharing this info on the Young, Gifted, and Black Coalition’s blog, Blank explains that he used the Racial Dot Map to identify where predominantly black neighborhoods—defined as “a certain area where the majority of residents are African Americans”—are located throughout the state. There are 56 of them, 31 of which are either jails or prisons. There are 15 cities where the only black neighborhood is a jail. The city of Winnebago claims it has an African-American population of more than 19 percent, but most, if not all, of that black population is located among one of four correctional facilities there. It’s perhaps no wonder that Wisconsin perennially comes up as the worst place for African Americans to live in the country.
old but, man
― j., Saturday, 23 November 2019 03:26 (five years ago)
oh god
brad pitt jamaican king pic.twitter.com/dnOf9fw0f2— florence niggh (@ohfIux) December 8, 2019
― "Big Joe Fuck and the Bogalusa Maniac" (bizarro gazzara), Monday, 9 December 2019 14:55 (five years ago)
lol wtf is that from
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Monday, 9 December 2019 16:09 (five years ago)
meet joe black, whose title was apparently more literal than i realised at the time of its realise
― a synthesis of Trotskyism and Ufology (bizarro gazzara), Monday, 9 December 2019 16:11 (five years ago)
I'm wiping away tears at my cubicle from stifling laughter
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Monday, 9 December 2019 16:31 (five years ago)
Brings back memories:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwDgA9LUVMA
― pomenitul, Monday, 9 December 2019 16:37 (five years ago)
https://hyperallergic.com/533465/mellon-foundation-pulls-1-5m-grant-after-unc-settles-with-neo-confederate-group
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 18 December 2019 16:40 (five years ago)
Kind of glad I never did get around to grad school as UNC Chapel Hill would have been my first choice for what I wanted to study
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Wednesday, 18 December 2019 16:47 (five years ago)
https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/19/us/wyoming-students-white-robes-and-hood/index.html
hmm
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Thursday, 19 December 2019 17:12 (five years ago)
I know they don't actually speak about the punishment for these kids but I kind of hope the school district burned crosses on their lawns and tried to burn down their homes.
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Thursday, 19 December 2019 17:14 (five years ago)
When I was a freshman in high school in Illinois in 1993, some seniors started a "KKK" group and the response was also pretty much: "They did not have an understanding of the impact that would create but they do now."
― rob, Thursday, 19 December 2019 17:15 (five years ago)
#itsokaytobewhite is trending on Twitter
The posts I've seen fall under the following categories:
We all bleed the same bloodBreathe the same airA race is not inherently bad its the personalities that just so happen to be a certain race Stop fighting and start uniting, we are all human so stop being hateful#itsoktobewhite— 𝕾𝖙𝖆𝖗𝖑𝖎𝖌𝖍𝖙 ( D̷̝̅a̸͇͆̇r̸̗̿̕k̷̼̊̍) (@StarGirlAlways) December 31, 2019
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Tuesday, 31 December 2019 16:25 (five years ago)
A race is not inherently bad its the personalities that just so happen to be a certain race
I'm gonna just stare at this for the rest of the day
a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their personalities that just so happen to be a certain race
― 💠 (crüt), Tuesday, 31 December 2019 18:28 (five years ago)
"Here where it says 'Race,' do you want the one for me or for my personality?
"Because they're exactly the same, hence why I asked that with a big ol' smirk."
― pplains, Tuesday, 31 December 2019 18:56 (five years ago)
"My personality? Well, close friends describe me as 'white'. *giggles*"
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Tuesday, 31 December 2019 18:57 (five years ago)
I keep subbing “it’s ok to be white” into the lyrics for that song from the tv show Arrested Development, “it’s not easy being white,” in my mind
should not be this funny
― babu frik fan account (mh), Wednesday, 1 January 2020 09:00 (five years ago)
https://youtu.be/xvgCvT9xX7A
― babu frik fan account (mh), Wednesday, 1 January 2020 09:01 (five years ago)
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2018/mar/02/the-unwelcome-revival-of-race-science
The recent revival of ideas about race and IQ began with a seemingly benign scientific observation. In 2005, Steven Pinker, one of the world’s most prominent evolutionary psychologists, began promoting the view that Ashkenazi Jews are innately particularly intelligent – first in a lecture to a Jewish studies institute, then in a lengthy article in the liberal American magazine The New Republic the following year. This claim has long been the smiling face of race science; if it is true that Jews are naturally more intelligent, then it’s only logical to say that others are naturally less so.
― romanesque architect (pomenitul), Monday, 17 February 2020 18:53 (five years ago)
I’m surprised the piece doesn’t acknowledge the hideous flipside of that argument, which is a favourite of Neo-Nazis.
― hyds (gyac), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:06 (five years ago)
This is an important point imho, as we'll certainly be seeing even more of this bullshit in the coming years:
One of the reasons scientific racism hasn’t gone away is that the public hears more about the racism than it does about the science. This has left an opening for people such as Murray and Wade, in conjunction with their media boosters, to hold themselves up as humble defenders of rational enquiry. With so much focus on their apparent bias, we’ve done too little to discuss the science.
― romanesque architect (pomenitul), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:10 (five years ago)
Yeah, can’t wait for the academic approach, that’ll definitely solve the racism when you’ve got some white nationalist on one side of the reasonable debate about which races are less worthy than others making diluted versions of their actual points while achieving the main goal of getting the points into the mainstream.
― hyds (gyac), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:16 (five years ago)
He says it's '[o]ne of the reasons'. I take your point, but why shouldn't the academic community leverage its specific know-how in the fight against racism? Similarly, while you don't neutralize climate change denialism via scientific arguments alone, it would be wrong to say it doesn't help.
― romanesque architect (pomenitul), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:20 (five years ago)
My issue is about platforming the denialists/race scientists/flat earthers. Just by having them in the room, it legitimises the viewpoint. They’re not cranks too extreme for tv anymore if they’re on Question Time being allowed to sound reasonable. Any converts are a win.
― hyds (gyac), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:23 (five years ago)
You could promote scientific anti-racist views and debunk junk science without giving the racists a platform though.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:24 (five years ago)
I'm with you on that. But since these cretins are already getting platformed, especially online and doubly so in the US thanks to its insane free speech laws, some amount of education is in order. I see the IQ argument bandied about all too often by just sayin' types, and it does help to have clear and irrefutable material to shut them down, even if it only sways some of the onlookers.
xp
― romanesque architect (pomenitul), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:28 (five years ago)
They're being given jobs in the British goverment, I call that pretty mainstream.
― Load up your rubber wallets (Tom D.), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:29 (five years ago)
These ideas have already been "platformed." They don't go away if you ignore them, they just fester in the minds of the New Republic-reading crossaint munchers who will deep down feel justified in the racist views that they know better than to share with anyone. And you don't have to set up an NPR-style debate between an anti-racist and a racist in order to refute them scientifically.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:31 (five years ago)
so pathetic and sad that new republic played a vital role in publicizing this stuff in the 90s (1994, Murray and the Bell Curve) AND 00s (pinker's article in 2006)
― But guess what? Nobody gives a toot!😂 (Karl Malone), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:34 (five years ago)
True, but facts didn’t work against Brexit, Trump, Modi or Bolsanaro, so why should they work here?
― hyds (gyac), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:34 (five years ago)
Depends what you mean by 'didn't work'. Facts sure as fuck didn't save us, no, but would dismissing them altogether have been a winning move? I seriously doubt it.
― romanesque architect (pomenitul), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:42 (five years ago)
These ideas are old as colonialism. They just come with better infographics and a longer list of citations. And also, the whole dealio of IQ/IQ testing is racist, sexist, classist, and meritocratic at its essence, and it's been widely validated for a hundred years by the very people who benefit the most from a racist, sexist, classist, and meritocratic system. Read: white Western academics and internet autodidacts. Since the overall premise of intelligence is built on sand, it's only useful as 'science' to uphold conservative power structures. There's no point in engaging with them as valid argument.
― rb (soda), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:43 (five years ago)
The point is the people invested in making this a mainstream belief aren’t going to be arguing it on the facts; how could they? They’re not on their side. It’ll be another emotive argument and the facts will never be objective enough for any concession.
― hyds (gyac), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:44 (five years ago)
by foregrounding it, it puts focus on "innate intelligence" as a specific criterion of human value, whereas, I would like to assume, that as non-sociopaths, we value all humans equally because they are humans, regardless of whether they are born smart, born average, or have intellectual disabilities.
― sarahell, Monday, 17 February 2020 19:45 (five years ago)
(not the most important point maybe in this discussion, but i suspect the current new republic has shed a LOT of that layer of readership -- it's a very different animal than the rag that marty peretz ran)
(also -- less important still obviously -- but "croissant munching"? come on dude)
― mark s, Monday, 17 February 2020 19:47 (five years ago)
who munches croissants ffs? It is not a particularly "munchable" food.
― sarahell, Monday, 17 February 2020 19:49 (five years ago)
take it to my only good thread i guess: "croissant-munching, latte-sipping": instances of misconceived media-class self-loathing ITT
― mark s, Monday, 17 February 2020 19:51 (five years ago)
I definitely agree with you on the speciousness of innate intelligence, sarahell. And (only because it's part of substance of this argument) I might challenge you on the idea that some humans are born 'smart, average, or with learning disabilities,' because I'm not sure that there's even science to back up the idea of those characteristics as plottable on a continuum. I think we've all got some areas of smarts, some idiocies, and some learning disabilities –– whether recognized or not.
― rb (soda), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:52 (five years ago)
I might challenge you on the idea that some humans are born 'smart, average, or with learning disabilities,' because I'm not sure that there's even science to back up the idea of those characteristics as plottable on a continuum. I think we've all got some areas of smarts, some idiocies, and some learning disabilities –– whether recognized or not.
It would not be much of a challenge ... that aspect is also problematic!
― sarahell, Monday, 17 February 2020 19:55 (five years ago)
I don't even really get what we're arguing. There ARE people making these arguments in terms of facts and scientific inquiry and they should be challenged on those terms so people realize that it's not just a case of uncomfortable or inconvenient truths being quieted for the sake of politeness or shouted down for ideological reasons. People like Pinker already have a platform. Doesn't mean it is the only kind of argument that should be made or the only response to racism.xps
― With considerable charm, you still have made a choice (Sund4r), Monday, 17 February 2020 19:56 (five years ago)
There ARE people making these arguments in terms of facts and scientific inquiry and they should be challenged on those terms
the terms, themselves, are problematic -- it's a standard debate strategy issue. Where do you draw your line? What premises are you going to accept for sake of engagement / debate?
― sarahell, Monday, 17 February 2020 20:00 (five years ago)
How would you feel watching some smiling academic gently explain why you and your ethnic group are intrinsically lesser?
― hyds (gyac), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:00 (five years ago)
Doesn't Murray argue something to the effect that we should value all people and that is why we should not be blind to biologically determined differences in intelligence between groups and how they affect people's outcomes when formulating policy? NB I have not read Murray.2xp
― With considerable charm, you still have made a choice (Sund4r), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:02 (five years ago)
Maybe other social scientists can do this? But I certainly can't out-Pinker Pinker, and I doubt many can. He's got vast amounts of cultural capital and holds the moral(izing) and intellectual high ground in every argument he starts, even though he's dead fucking wrong. It's foolhardy to imagine out-platforming him, out-writing him, out academia-ing -him, out-privileging him.
― rb (soda), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:02 (five years ago)
^^ that too! They also enjoy pointing out the intellectual inferiority of cis-women. Even if I were to watch that with the feeling of exceptionalism ... still gross.
― sarahell, Monday, 17 February 2020 20:03 (five years ago)
(whoops, that was an xp to gyac)
Yep i agree with you & it’s why I just have no time for anyone giving obvious and dangerous charlatans making those arguments. xps to soda: I am fairly sure, however, we could outflank Pinker on at least one measure...
― hyds (gyac), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:05 (five years ago)
Idk what you mean, gyac? It is not an imaginative exercise for me. Philippe Rushton was doing that in the 80s.
― With considerable charm, you still have made a choice (Sund4r), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:08 (five years ago)
we should not be blind to biologically determined differences in intelligence between groups and how they affect people's outcomes when formulating policy
the thing is, there are so so so so many other factors that affect people's outcomes in re policy than biologically determined differences in intelligence! Like, this may be super fucking trenchant, but, a cop is not going to give you an IQ test before deciding whether you are a potential threat that requires use of deadly force -- the cop is going to take note if you are black, brown or white.
― sarahell, Monday, 17 February 2020 20:09 (five years ago)
Maybe I'm missing something here, but I don't get the leap from 'platforming these hateful fuckers is bad' (ditto) to 'doing more to educate the general public about why racism is scientifically unfounded in addition to being ethically wrong is bad'.
― romanesque architect (pomenitul), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:11 (five years ago)
Yeah, I'm not saying it's a good argument (at all!), just that "we should value everyone, forget intelligence" alone may not be enough.xp otm
― With considerable charm, you still have made a choice (Sund4r), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:13 (five years ago)
i haven't followed this conversation closely, but i would guess that the thought was that an honest effort to educate the general public about why racism is scientifically unfounded can end up providing a platform for the disinformers.
that is generally why, in a very different debate, it is not a good idea for climate scientists to "debate" the climate deniers. the uninformed public shuts down whenever it starts to get academically or numerically complicated, and come away with the thought "oh, well i guess it's still unsettled"
― But guess what? Nobody gives a toot!😂 (Karl Malone), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:15 (five years ago)
― hyds (gyac), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:15 (five years ago)
however, the possibility of that kind of thing happening does not imply that educating the public about the scientifically rong aspects of racism is a bad idea. but attempting to "educate" anyone is perilous when there is an active disinformation campaign going on, because that is also their stated angle: "we're trying to educate people!"
xp to self and pomenitul
― But guess what? Nobody gives a toot!😂 (Karl Malone), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:17 (five years ago)
Yes, Karl Malone – I agree. In the Western world of 2020, basically anybody who believes (or purports to believe) in the tenets of scientific racism, or a strictly biological basis for race (intelligence, r/K, etc.,) is either profoundly ignorant, manipulative, or just masking antique bigotries in pseudo-acceptable terms. A well-built argument isn't going to change anybody's mind, because the initial argument's being made in bad faith resting on garbage science.
― rb (soda), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:23 (five years ago)
But if you allow that there is such a thing as garbage science then surely that means it's demonstrable? Why shouldn't it be demonstrated then? In schools, for example.
― romanesque architect (pomenitul), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:25 (five years ago)
― Load up your rubber wallets (Tom D.), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:26 (five years ago)
in my mind, social justice / political advocacy is a lot about choosing one's battles wisely. I remember back in grad school (20+ years ago), taking a required media ethics course that partly focused on "agenda-setting" -- which, at the time, seemed kinda "duh whatever" -- but is actually super relevant and important. Like, why focus on this? Why give the racists a platform on this issue? Idk, as an American, in terms of combating racism, scientific "proof" of biological intelligence is low on the list of what "we" should be spending time debating.
― sarahell, Monday, 17 February 2020 20:26 (five years ago)
I suspect there are some national differences at play here:
https://time.com/5642773/american-students-taught-race/
xps
― romanesque architect (pomenitul), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:26 (five years ago)
xxp the PM is a pretty mainstream role tbf
― hyds (gyac), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:28 (five years ago)
also Karl otm
― sarahell, Monday, 17 February 2020 20:29 (five years ago)
For anybody interested, I highly recommend Angela Saini's book 'Superior' on this very issue.
― rb (soda), Monday, 17 February 2020 20:31 (five years ago)
that’s where these ideas always end up leading. Why else would there be so much effort at repeatedly reviving and funding them time and time again?
They are not leading there. They have arrived there and are teaching at Harvard, publishing in the NYT, and advising the British PM. How do you think we should respond?
― With considerable charm, you still have made a choice (Sund4r), Monday, 17 February 2020 22:07 (five years ago)
I’ve already said upthread and you seem determined that that’s not a good enough answer.
― hyds (gyac), Monday, 17 February 2020 22:09 (five years ago)
Admittedly, I'm somewhat heated and posting quickly but, no, it wasn't obvious to me. The main thing I was getting from your posts was that rational scientific arguments and education won't work and play into the hands of racists. Did you mean that your favoured response is to ignore these people, avoid giving platforms where we can, and continuing to stress the moral wrong of racism?
― With considerable charm, you still have made a choice (Sund4r), Monday, 17 February 2020 22:23 (five years ago)
Yes, that’s why I said those things across several posts.
― hyds (gyac), Monday, 17 February 2020 22:27 (five years ago)