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I can grasp things pretty well if there is somethingThis view on systemic racism, or what is sometimes referred to as structural racism, has been recognized for over 30 years. Maybe that’s recent for you, but that’s as long as many people can remember. This assertion that it doesn’t exist or can be entirely reduced to cultural differences (which themselves cannot be traced back to any form of racist policy in the past) isn’t evidence-based.
Fascinating. It’s like you are physically incapable of processing what I’m telling you. Just read it again, maybe?
It’s not an assumption, it’s an observation that a bunch of you have a really hard time grasping for some reason.
That's extremely rare....given the nature of the work they do.
Walmart sells garbage...it's not a business that uses force in high pressure situations.
Also, we're talking about complaints...not convictions.
Does each and every Walmart store receive 9 complaints a week?
Again, this is a poor analogy. Do US airlines get 1000 complaints a day?
Is it far bigger?Again, poor analogy....
No...extremely rare would be the correct description. For example....
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As you can see...you have far bigger problems with teachers and school staff in schools than you do with police. Yet somehow, people are more than willing to trust these people with sexualizing their children starting in kindergarten.
You understand what the big difference is here....right? Police need to use force frequently during an arrest....as they're assaulted tens of thousands of times a year. Teachers never need to sexually abuse, harass, or assault a student....it's not part of their job.
If you had your priorities straight...you'd be demanding body cameras on the teachers and in the classrooms.
In the USA, public schools are largely funded by local property taxes. As a result, the public schools in rich areas tend to attract the best teachers as well as have the best after-school college prep and extracurricular programs due to their higher available funding. Conversely, the poor areas tend to have the lowest-rated teachers and programs due to lack of funding. While this is unambiguously systemic classism, it’s also an example of systemic racism because the class divide splits heavily along racial lines due to racially discriminatory practices in the past. Black people who trace their ancestry back to slavery inherit far fewer educational opportunities than their counterparts of other races, even new African immigrants, directly due to the way public infrastructure was funded in the past and is today.I can grasp things pretty well if there is something
there to grasp. In that Im noI so all alone.
I encountered some racism in the USA.
I have encountered it in Japan, Philippines, France...
Dunno if it was " systemic'.
But I know of no " systemic" racism in the USA.
It is blatantly obvious here.
Can you give me one good example please of it in
the USA?
No. The definition of "systemic" or even "structural" racism specifically as inequal outcomes is very recent.This view on systemic racism, or what is sometimes referred to as structural racism, has been recognized for over 30 years. Maybe that’s recent for you, but that’s as long as many people can remember. This assertion that it doesn’t exist or can be entirely reduced to cultural differences (which themselves cannot be traced back to any form of racist policy in the past) isn’t evidence-based.
They were localI'm sure Nikki Barns, Frank Lucas, and Bumpy Johnson will disagree with you on that one.
Is there a vaccine for woke self righteousNo. The definition of "systemic" or even "structural" racism specifically as inequal outcomes is very recent.
It’s not an assumption, it’s an observation that a bunch of you have a really hard time grasping for some reason.
What, exactly, is the nature of the work they do? This 1/2500 figure is supposedly the rate of complaints out of all police-civilian contacts. But what is the makeup of those contacts? IOW, what percentage are traffic citations? What percentage are questioning of witnesses? What percentage are them standing guard at a football game? What percentage are responding to calls for help? What percentage are interactions with suspects? What percentage of their contacts would even warrant them being in a situation where a brutality complaint could even be conceivable?
Not only are those not poor analogies, but I think you make my case for me.
I don't know the number of general complaints levied against Walmart or airlines, but I would not be surprised at all if they hit those kinds of numbers. I don't know anybody who would consider it "rare" to have a poor experience at either Walmart or on an airplane. IME, patronizing either one is typically miserable and I go into it expecting as much.
If complaint rates got that high in those industries, we'd consider that experience to be normal, not rare.
Is it far bigger?
The earlier post said that there are 56 million police interactions per year, yielding 26,000 brutality complaints for a ratio of 1 complaint per 25,000 interactions.
There are roughly 50 million public school students in the US. I don't know how many "interactions" they have with different school adults each day, but between teachers, administrators, bus drivers, etc. 5 strikes me as very conservative and 10 seems pretty likely. So that puts us at 250-500 million interactions per school day * 180 school days per year = 45-90 billion student-adult interactions per year.
Your Politico article said there were ~15,000 assaults per year. That's 1 out of 3-6 million interactions.
The NBC article said that 1/10 kids would experience something inappropriate over the course of their 13 years in school. 5-10 interactions per day * 180 days / yr * 13 years = 11,700 - 23,400 interactions per student. If 10% of students experience something, that would put the incident rate between 1 in 117,000 and 1 in 234,000.
Obviously, none are acceptable. But the rates appear to be orders of magnitude off from police complaints.
Recognized but unpopular since it doesn't hold up to scrutiny. There's a reason no one debates the validity of "systemic racism" and it's the same reason you have me on "ignore".This view on systemic racism, or what is sometimes referred to as structural racism, has been recognized for over 30 years.
Maybe that’s recent for you, but that’s as long as many people can remember. This assertion that it doesn’t exist or can be entirely reduced to cultural differences (which themselves cannot be traced back to any form of racist policy in the past) isn’t evidence-based.
It’s not an assumption, it’s an observation that a bunch of you have a really hard time grasping for some reason.
YepRecognized but unpopular since it doesn't hold up to scrutiny. There's a reason no one debates the validity of "systemic racism" and it's the same reason you have me on "ignore".
It's only recently become popular for purely political reasons.
Systemic racism isn't evidence based....it's circular reasoning.
"Why does this racial disparity exist?"
"Systemic racism."
"What is Systemic racism?"
"Systemic racism is the existence of a racial disparity."
There's no evidence there....just a circle of logic lol. The idea that you're calling out people for a lack of evidence is laughable.
I'm pretty sure I haven't failed to understand this concept at all.
Quite obviouslyYou are assuming. You are looking at a situation and are assuming it is systemic racism. It's a very myopic view. You are looking at the situation through the lense of systemic racism that youve been told exists. And you believe it. What you see is confirmation bias because you expected to see it. You have black people here telling you what is going on and you are ignoring it in favor of your own bias.
Your observations are quite obviously inaccurate.
The lack of social mobility in the US is what perpetuates cultural ghettos and reservations.I'm aware of American history, probably far more
so than a large majority of americans.
Just mentioning so you could save words on that.
A legacy of racism, by both races v the othrr in
the USA is Chinatowns, chinese restaurants,
and, overachievement on the part of the
Chinese in America.
Obviously, past affects the present. True for
all groups / races. In all places.
Everybody gets inon racial / clan, us v them
to some extent.
True, no?
Thing is for " us" ( Chinese, in this case
Jews are another ) we are not racist
against ourselves.
Your lowest achievers in the USA, hillbillies,
ghetto blacks, rez Indians, are their own
worst enemies, it'sTHEIR "system" of
anti self racism now that holds them down.
Yes, ghettos and the rez are products of
past racism.
But who perpetuates them?
I can see " systemic racism" in things
built in and officially / tacitly accepted
by the dominant group,. We have some of thar
here.
If thrre is discrimination in hiring, housing,
access to education,etc, well, that is
SYSTEMIC. sure enough.
Now. Is there such in the USA?
What anyone can or cannot do because
of race / because some system is in the way?
Hmm… no, that’s not it. I’m assessing data and applying appropriate characterizations to their implications. What you do with the same data is your own business, but it’s also your funeral.You are assuming. You are looking at a situation and are assuming it is systemic racism. It's a very myopic view. You are looking at the situation through the lense of systemic racism that youve been told exists. And you believe it. What you see is confirmation bias because you expected to see it. You have black people here telling you what is going on and you are ignoring it in favor of your own bias.
Your observations are quite obviously inaccurate.
It’s disappointing that you skew reactionary given your rejection of religious fundamentalism.Is there a vaccine for woke self righteous
white guilt and self loathing industrial
complex?
Change 'disproportionally' to 'negatively' and I think you're pretty close.I know exactly what your telling me, your telling me that any situation that effects any particular race disproportionately is systematic racism which is not the definition of the term.
No. The definition of "systemic" or even "structural" racism specifically as inequal outcomes is very recent.
You could have easily checked. From wiki: 'The term institutional racism was first coined in 1967 by Stokely Carmichael and Charles V. Hamilton in Black Power: The Politics of Liberation.'
That's well over fifty years ago. Plus this, which just about sums up everything that a few people in this thread have been trying to get across:
'Carmichael and Hamilton wrote in 1967 that while individual racism is often identifiable because of its overt nature, institutional racism is less perceptible because of its "less overt, far more subtle" nature. Institutional racism "originates in the operation of established and respected forces in the society, and thus receives far less public condemnation than individual racism".[3]
Institutional racism was defined by Sir William Macpherson in the UK's Lawrence report (1999) as: "The collective failure of an organisation to provide an appropriate and professional service to people because of their colour, culture, or ethnic origin". It can be seen or detected in processes, attitudes and behaviour that amount to discrimination through prejudice, ignorance, thoughtlessness, and racist stereotyping which disadvantage minority ethnic people.'
There then follows a litany of examples of 'institutional racism' right up to the present day.
What, exactly, is the nature of the work they do?
This 1/2500 figure is supposedly the rate of complaints out of all police-civilian contacts.
But what is the makeup of those contacts? IOW, what percentage are traffic citations? What percentage are questioning of witnesses? What percentage are them standing guard at a football game? What percentage are responding to calls for help? What percentage are interactions with suspects? What percentage of their contacts would even warrant them being in a situation where a brutality complaint could even be conceivable?
Not only are those not poor analogies, but I think you make my case for me.
I don't know the number of general complaints levied against Walmart or airlines, but I would not be surprised at all if they hit those kinds of numbers. I don't know anybody who would consider it "rare" to have a poor experience at either Walmart or on an airplane. IME, patronizing either one is typically miserable and I go into it expecting as much.
Well that begs the question of what a "rare" experience is then?If complaint rates got that high in those industries, we'd consider that experience to be normal, not rare.
Is it far bigger?
The earlier post said that there are 56 million police interactions per year, yielding 26,000 brutality complaints for a ratio of 1 complaint per 25,000 interactions.
There are roughly 50 million public school students in the US. I don't know how many "interactions" they have with different school adults each day, but between teachers, administrators, bus drivers, etc. 5 strikes me as very conservative and 10 seems pretty likely. So that puts us at 250-500 million interactions per school day * 180 school days per year = 45-90 billion student-adult interactions per year.
Your Politico article said there were ~15,000 assaults per year. That's 1 out of 3-6 million interactions.
The NBC article said that 1/10 kids would experience something inappropriate over the course of their 13 years in school. 5-10 interactions per day * 180 days / yr * 13 years = 11,700 - 23,400 interactions per student. If 10% of students experience something, that would put the incident rate between 1 in 117,000 and 1 in 234,000.
Obviously, none are acceptable. But the rates appear to be orders of magnitude off from police complaints.