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Just because race is socially constructed doesn't mean it isn't a powerful reality that must be delt with.
It's our differences that divide us; physically, culturally, emotionally, educationally, politically, economically. Of course the most striking difference is appearance (is this racial, ethnic? I don't know the terms anymore).
As much as Republicans complain about abortion and the IRS, they have done nothing about them when they had control of all three branches of power (House, Senate, White House). Nothing.
What happened when Democrats had control of all three? They pushed through the Affordable Care Act. That's the difference.
Pretending that something does not still exist, when it does, solves nothing.
What?
There is a difference between dealing with a myth and perpetuating a myth.
The problem is that, at some point, a subjective perception ceases to be entirely mythical. If I were to walk into a room full of people, some of them with attached and some of them with unattached earlobes, and were to divide them up into categories based off of that, then my perception would be rightly derided as irrational and confusing. However, if I were to do that and the perception became accepted, the result could be very different. If, four hundred years down the line, individuals with unattached earlobes had faced generations of enslavement, distrust, and poverty because of that perception, then very real differences in lived experience and outcome would exist for members of the two different categories. Religious, economic, and social factors would impact members of each differently, and so solutions to problems caused by the original categorization would have to take that categorization into consideration because of changes in the real-world status of individuals resulting from it.
Do I have to post the studies again? Seriously, look them up yourself. When they put together CVs of people with very similar levels of experience and education, but give some an African American "sounding" name or a white "sounding" name, they found that prospective employers were more likely to call the candidates with the "white" names. That would prevent a minority applicant from even getting to the interview stage. Also, huge amounts of research showing school teachers discriminating against minority kids, which puts them at a disadvantage from pre-school. I'm so tired of posting this stuff - but I'll make the effort, just to address this point.
Just because race is socially constructed doesn't mean it isn't a powerful reality that must be delt with.
What thoughts are triggered by an obviously African American name? Is it just skin color or is there more to it? When I hear a Japanese name I sometimes think of Pearl Harbor.
You would have to ask the people who are doing the hiring. I am not on one of the subjects of these studies.
You used the example to make a point. I'm just probing deeper into it.
But there is no comparable event to Pearl Harbor for African Americans. In fact, the boot would be on the other front and they would be the ones looking at YOU with mistrust.
I accept mistrust by both.
And also the majority of Japanese are not responsible for Pearl Harbor.
True, and the majority of Americans aren't responsible for slavery.
Maybe they should be looking at you suspiciously for Hiroshima, Nagasaki, right?
Understandably there is still anger by some Japanese toward us.
Are there actually any people still alive who could be called directly "responsible" for Pearl Harbor?
Do progressives/liberals really want issues to be resolved?