Ana the Ist
Aggressively serene!
- Feb 21, 2012
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Just that part of it. As I said, I'm not interested in assigning blame or focusing on causes. I'm more interested in discussing where we go from here.
Well then perhaps a good starting point for us would be to describe "here". What, in your words, is the problem? How did you come to the conclusion that it's a problem? No need to include causes in your reply.
Yup. The problem didn't "magically disappear," as you said. Someone recognized that there may be some prejudices involved, unconscious though they may be, reexamined the situation and took steps to try and avoid old preconceptions.
He didn't dwell on why those preconceptions existed, he just readjusted his point of view and moved forward.
It's that simplification that I think is naive. I don't believe that our employer won't "dwell on why those preconceptions existed". He'll either rationalize them if he does have them...or dismiss them if he believes he doesn't.
Many things can't be seen, that doesn't mean they're imaginary.
It doesn't mean they're real either.
Since we're having fun with analogies here, if there's a dead cow in the middle of the road, how important is it to find out how it got there? You either clear it out of the way, or go around it.
When faced with the problems of institutional racial bias, sometimes you just have to accept that it's there, and find a way to clear the path, or find a way around it.
The reason this analogy is bad is the same reason your house fire analogy is bad. Institutional racial bias isn't a fire or dead cow...it's a matter of perspective. Not only the perspective of those who are being accused of bias, but of those perceiving the bias. It's not a hard fact....it's a shaky possibility.
You may not think finding causes or sources of the problem are important...but what would get you to reconsider that? What if we instituted the most radical changes that you could imagine? What if we gave all non-whites two trials? What if we made sure all police were non-whites? What if we used cloaks and voice camouflage to ensure no judge or jury ever knew the race of a defendant?
What if we took the most extreme steps imaginable and things didn't change at all? What if they stayed the same? Would you keep looking for new ways to give minorities a better chance? Or would you consider that the reason things are the way they are doesn't have anything to do with the problem you imagined it was...and maybe it's actually a different problem altogether?
Which is why I don't try to assign blame, that way we can just recognized that there's a problem, and try to find a way around the preconceptions.
Go back to my example of the guy hiring John or Malik. Did he dwell on why he had a preconception about one name over the other? Is it necessary for him to figure out why the preconception exists for him to give the matter further thought, and not make the same assumptions he might have made before he gave it more thought?
I'm not saying we can't examine the causes of these issues, but that we shouldn't let the fact that we haven't solved the question prevent us from finding new paths going forward.
Is it necessary? No. Is it realistic? Absolutely. I've actually asked coworkers (you can imagine in my line of work that this has been a common topic of discussion amongst us for the past 1.5 years or so) if he thought white privilege exists...most said no. Then I posed the following question to them...
If you were an employer, and you had to hire 1 person, and two applicants...1 white, 1 black...both applied and were equal in realistically every respect....who would you choose?
Nearly every coworker had the same response....they'd choose the applicant of their race (I changed the races of the applicants to reflect who i was speaking with). When I asked them why...the common response was that is who they felt they could most easily relate to (which is something I can't really argue with). There were a couple who picked the person of the other race...and the reason why was so that they wouldn't appear racist.
I don't think people will just naturally agree with someone else's assessment of how they think without reflecting on the reasons why themselves. It's an idea that sounds ridiculous to me.
I never said there can be no exceptions, that it was an absolute. No goalposts have been shifted, my point remains. What I said about casting in TV is still the norm. Exceptions to the norm are rare, and rarer still the further back you go. That exceptions exist doesn't invalidate the point, but the fact that exceptions are rare, and notable for being exceptions, proves the norm exists in the first place.
So when you asked me to "think of any t.v. show where the lead isn't played by someone caucasian..." what did you mean?
How about most. Practically all.
You mean not "any t.v. show where the lead isn't played by a caucasian"?
I disagree. Popular culture has always been a reflection of the culture it comes from. That's true now, it was true in the 1950s, it was true in France back in 1650.
If popular culture "has always been a reflection of the culture it comes from"....why would we need to change ours? Is ours another one of these exceptions that you seem to forget about?
Yep. But that doesn't change that Idris Elba would make a fantastic James Bond, and Hayley Atwell would be amazing as The Doctor.
There are many reasons to consider either of them for those respective roles, both are very talented, very gifted actors. But there's only one reason to not consider either one: it's not the way we've done things before.
That's not really true...is it? Certainly, the reason of "someone else gave a better audition" would be a valid reason wouldn't it?
Again...this highlights why you should look at causes. If Elba doesn't get the role...you wouldn't just jump to the conclusion that the casting director is racist, or white privilege, or whatever you want to believe....would you? Don't you think it would be important to find out if someone else gave a better audition?
Many good and positive things have come from defying tradition. Never even trying to do things differently leads to stale ideas.
I don't see how this relates to the topic...but I agree.
You do realize you have no experience of me, or my abilities, right? All you have are assumptions, nothing more.
Think about that.
Well based upon your previous posts...your misunderstanding of how the police do their jobs tells me you've never worked in a law enforcement position. My experience with people who actually do work in the fight against terrorism tells me that even if you were a cop....you'd be woefully unprepared to combat terrorism.
See how I reached that conclusion? It didn't take any preconceived notions...I just had to be observant.
That it involves more than just race. Race is, after all, a social construct. Skin color isn't a significant difference in biological terms, we're all the same biological race.
That's rather vague. In what way is it deeper other than the notion it doesn't involve race?
It isn't a cop's job to determine if the evidence supports a guilty verdict or not.
No...but they need evidence of the crime to arrest someone. They can't just haul in whomever they feel like it. That's a false arrest and can get rather expensive for police departments.
Their job is to arrest those they feel are guilty...so their views on who is or isn't a criminal are very much relevant.
No...see above.
If cops generally operate under a prejudice that leads them to believe those of a certain race are more likely to be guilty than those of another race, that preconception can lead to more people of that race being arrested.
What if they don't operate under any prejudice and just go where the evidence leads them? If that's what they do...and one race ends up being arrested more than others...what do you suppose the problem is?
And if your'e not arrested, then you can't be tried, let alone convicted. So, under these conditions, you can see how prejudice can lead to skewed results.
Sure...under those conditions. We haven't actually showed those conditions exist though. I have seen studies that show blacks do tend to perceive that is the way police operate...but no studies that show that is actually how they operate.
Yeah. Another reason why seeking causes isn't very productive. Sometimes, the causes are unclear, or come from a variety of different things.
I think it's important to get to the causes if you want to find real solutions...not just slap a flesh-colored band aid on it. Take my work for example...why do you suppose they promote minorities and women faster than white males? Especially into positions of visibility...
It can if it means suspicion falls on black men more than it does on white men: then more black men will be arrested, and less white men will even be considered for arrest....regardless of who actually did the crime.
This is almost baffling to me. Maybe it's just because I've worked with the police and other law enforcement agencies that I can't understand what you're thinking here.
Could you give me an example where you think this statement would be applicable? Preferably one that would be relatively common so as to explain the extremely high rate of black crime...but I'm interested in any example you can think of.
Neither do I. Who ever said such a thing?
You said something about poverty and race complicating crime when we were talking about the example of a black man committing a rape. Again, I had no idea what you meant...so again, let's have an example.
A black man commits a rape. How would poverty and race complicate this issue?
First, I didn't dismiss your example, I discussed it with you. And second, white privilege can be a factor without it being the cause of the problem itself. In fact, the issues of race in this country are so large and so pervasive I doubt we can define the causes to anything more than a confluence of many differing causes, with no one single cause being greater than any other.
Which is also why I think we need to look past the question of what caused the problem of racial bias in the US and try to find a way to get past it going forward.
-- A2SG, after all, we don't need to know why we do something to not do it any more....
Let's go back to your example of a house fire. I see it and wonder, "what caused that?"
You look at it and say, "it doesn't matter...let's put it out!"
Everyone follows your advice, we put it out and go on with our lives...
The very next day, the house next to the house that burnt down is now on fire. Again, we listen to you...don't worry about the causes...and put out the fire. Same thing happens the next day, and the next, and the next ...until someone figures out the bright idea of looking into what's causing these fires.
Similarly, in the 50s, blacks were being locked up at a very high rate. Civil rights leaders were pushing for changes. Slowly but surely, equality under the law is the norm...but blacks are still being locked up at a higher rate. Politicians look at this and say, "it's racism...we need to get out ahead of this". So they pass laws that give more advantages to suspected criminals...the idea being it will be harder to illegally lock up blacks. Crime rates spike, convictions drop, unsolved crimes increase....and a lot of new police are hired. Blacks get increased access into the "system"...more black police, mayors, etc. Blacks still have a higher rate of crimes...what's to blame now? It's gotta be police, judges, juries....they're racist! Anti-discrimination laws get passed, civil rights are transformed from "it's wrong to oppress me for being black" to "it's wrong to treat me differently at all because I'm black"....racial profiling and anti-prejudice training are instituted in police departments all across the U.S. Yet, still black crime rates are much higher than whites and other minorities....
So in six decades we've gone from a situation where blacks were definitely being oppressed and the justice system was undoubtedly racist....to one where we've instituted massive changes in the justice system (just about every part of it) to give minorities a fair chance. What's changed? Not much when it comes to black crime rates.
You seriously don't think that maybe...just maybe...it's time to look at the other side of the equation? Is there anything about the black community which perhaps is resistant to any attempts to improve their outcomes in the justice system?
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