Infinity9999x
Avenger
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2005
- Messages
- 12,107
- Reaction score
- 638
- Points
- 103
Racism is a tough issue, and it usually leads us into the same arguments again and again. So much so that on my first visit to this thread I see a perfect example of exactly what I expected: a debate on the very nature of racism, specifically, can white people experience racism?
The hard thing about this issue is that people want to draw black and white lines (excuse the pun) and have it exist in a world of set definitions, but it's really a much grayer issue. This is my take on it, as a white, heterosexual man living in America:
The biggest problem we have is trying to equalize everything. People want to believe that we're all equal, we all get the same chances, and everyone experiences just as much racism as everyone else. And that's just not true. I realize that, politically, being born a straight white guy in the USA stacked the deck of life in my favor. I have opportunities and privilege afforded me simply because of my gender and skin color. For some reason people are afraid to admit this is a thing. However, I am not condoning this world behavior. Admitting it exists and supporting it are not the same thing. Which is why I have tried to use my status, as a person afforded more social opportunities, to help others of differing races and genders.
Now, on the other hand, can white people experience racism? Well, this becomes a semantic argument essentially. What I would say: yes, white people can exprience racism on a inter personal, or even small group level. They can't experience it on a institutionalized level. Not in America anyway, because straight white men, by and large, control the institutions of power in this country. I don't know what it feels like to flip through the television channels and not see myself represented. I've never known the feeling of reading a magazine without someone who looks like me in it, even if it's just in an add. Popular media has always shown me a version of myself, because white men are the group in power currently. Racism, on an institutional level is absolutely something white people will not be able to understand, because it's never happened in this country to white Americans.
The danger though, is that people want to simplify this issue. Someone sees a person of color using a racism claim for a selfish reason and then tries to claim that all claims of racism by people of color are merely duplicitous actions to get what they want, which is obviously not true. Or you get people saying that because white people can't experience institutionalized racism, they can't experience racism of any kind, which is obviously not true either, because a white person can certainly be discriminated against because of the color of their skin.
But it's hard to get people to look at these gray areas. Because we want things to be simple. We want things to be black and white. But the truth is, things just aren't that simple. But because this is such a hot button issue, we usually end up arguing the absolutes instead of looking at things in a case by case basis.
The hard thing about this issue is that people want to draw black and white lines (excuse the pun) and have it exist in a world of set definitions, but it's really a much grayer issue. This is my take on it, as a white, heterosexual man living in America:
The biggest problem we have is trying to equalize everything. People want to believe that we're all equal, we all get the same chances, and everyone experiences just as much racism as everyone else. And that's just not true. I realize that, politically, being born a straight white guy in the USA stacked the deck of life in my favor. I have opportunities and privilege afforded me simply because of my gender and skin color. For some reason people are afraid to admit this is a thing. However, I am not condoning this world behavior. Admitting it exists and supporting it are not the same thing. Which is why I have tried to use my status, as a person afforded more social opportunities, to help others of differing races and genders.
Now, on the other hand, can white people experience racism? Well, this becomes a semantic argument essentially. What I would say: yes, white people can exprience racism on a inter personal, or even small group level. They can't experience it on a institutionalized level. Not in America anyway, because straight white men, by and large, control the institutions of power in this country. I don't know what it feels like to flip through the television channels and not see myself represented. I've never known the feeling of reading a magazine without someone who looks like me in it, even if it's just in an add. Popular media has always shown me a version of myself, because white men are the group in power currently. Racism, on an institutional level is absolutely something white people will not be able to understand, because it's never happened in this country to white Americans.
The danger though, is that people want to simplify this issue. Someone sees a person of color using a racism claim for a selfish reason and then tries to claim that all claims of racism by people of color are merely duplicitous actions to get what they want, which is obviously not true. Or you get people saying that because white people can't experience institutionalized racism, they can't experience racism of any kind, which is obviously not true either, because a white person can certainly be discriminated against because of the color of their skin.
But it's hard to get people to look at these gray areas. Because we want things to be simple. We want things to be black and white. But the truth is, things just aren't that simple. But because this is such a hot button issue, we usually end up arguing the absolutes instead of looking at things in a case by case basis.
Again with more hyperbole? Come on, you're better than this. Asking for proof of a claim that you are making is me saying I'm the authority? Alright.