Kinda the point. It's a broad issue.
The world around me. Our society.
Racial bias? How would you observe that?
Any number of ways. I've offered a few examples here and there.
Why should I consider your observations over my own?
Who said you should?
Are you trying to contend that there is no racial bias in this country, that there is no inequality due to race? If not, I'm not sure of your point. Perhaps you could elaborate.
I disagree. It's absolutely essential to understand the problem.
Okay. When you understand it, let me know, okay?
It's seems you've missed the point. With your possibility being no more likely than mine, we'll need to find a cause to understand how to proceed correctly.
Or we could proceed anyway, and try to see if we can improve things. It's been working, so far.
Compare the status of different races today compared to, say the 1950s? And then, compared to, say, the 1850s. Have they improved?
If so, then we're headed in the right direction.
Even though we don't fully understand every cause behind the issue of racial bias and inequality. Imagine that!
Well, in the example of uncommon names having a less chance of being hired...I would say the easy solution would be to give your child more common names. Problem solved.
That's a solution, sure. And you've just illustrated white privilege in the process. To succeed in this country, the more "white" your name sounds, the better your chances.
The privilege of being white, extended to those who can pretend to be white, just long enough to get a job interview.
I don't see anything wrong with the presumptions in the example I gave. I don't think you can tell a black person it's wrong to relate more easily to black people or a white person to white people. It may be unfair...but it's not in any way wrong.
Which may be why I never claimed it was. Remember, I'm the one who isn't interested in assigning blame.
I think if your child is looking to t.v. for role models...you've got more problems than the color of the t.v. characters.
People find role models everywhere they look. TV offers a look into a world beyond your neighborhood, a larger picture of the society in which you live. If that larger picture doesn't include people like you (or only includes very few)...what does that say about your place in society?
It would seem that conscious manipulation of it then is an attempt for us to reflect it. Something I'm not crazy about.
Um, what other way is there to manipulate it? Do you think pop culture happens without people creating it? Art, writing, TV, movies, etc. It's all created by individuals, who are part of the culture they're writing about. We create it, and we're defined by it as well.
Just one example or a list of names?
Dude, you're killin' me here! What, you're not a fan of Idris Elba?
Suppose they recast the Cosby show with an all white family. Would that attempt to defy tradition be progress in your mind? Or is it only when white traditions are defied that it's progress?
Well, I guess that would depend....what about a TV show featuring an affluent, all-white family defies tradition, exactly?
Am I wrong? Any law enforcement experience? Any resources at your disposal which can aid the fight against terrorism?
Come on, dude, you've been relying on assumptions all this time, why stop now?
Doesn't really answer the question.
You asked in what way it was deeper than just race, I went deeper than race. How did that not answer the question?
Did you mean to ask a different question? I'm all ears.
So you think that a girl comes to the police and says a white guy named Matt raped her...the police think "no way! He's white!"
Is that what I said?
But when a girl says a black guy named Tayshaun raped her, they say, "let's get that (racial slur)!"
Is that about it?
If that's what I said. If it isn't....then no.
Tell ya what, why not go by what I said instead, mmmkay?
How do you propose we do that?
It was your idea...you tell me.
Well you can ask them for starters...
http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/04/28/blacks-whites-police/
There's lots more if you're interested.
I'll check it out. Give me time, though.
That's interesting. What part of the public do you suppose they are trying to relate to with those particular promotional choices?
I dunno...whatever part of the public they need to relate to. You know the business better than I do.
How do you suppose that this promotional strategy (hiring according to race and gender instead of say...ability) would impact any group that employs it?
No idea, I'm not the one doing it. Ask the people doing it, they're in a better position to tell you why than I am. As I said, I'm only able to guess.
That's an interesting idea...even a distinct possibility of skewed numbers if it weren't for the fact that there's actually more whites in poverty than blacks.
By actual numbers, or percentage?
So clearly this wouldn't be applicable except for very very few specific examples. There are millions more whites without powerful family connections than blacks.
True. Keep in mind, no one ever said every white person is privlieged. That's not what white privilege means.
Once again, see above. Last I checked, which was before writing this post...19 million whites under the poverty line and 7-8 million blacks. This wouldn't account for the numbers we see...
So you're saying blacks living in poverty are more likely to be arrested, even though there are fewer of them than whites living in poverty?
Hmm....that sounds rather unequal to me, doesn't it sound unequal to you?
Hmmmm...must be something else...
Or it could be exactly what I've been talking about.
But hey, when you've figured out the definitive cause, let me know, okay?
Fire has multiple causes.
Maybe on occasion, but usually, only one thing causes a single fire. And for the most part, it can be figured out definitively.
Causes for racial bias and inequality are far less definitive, or solvable by physical science.
But making them aware of these biases will?
For some individuals, nothing will ever change their point of view. But if more of us start to, the old, prejudiced ways of thinking pass into history, where they belong.
Just out of curiosity...suppose all of human history for blacks and whites were reversed. Blacks came from northern Europe, for example, and whites came from Africa.
Do you think any of our history would change for this one alteration? Would whites now be in the position of blacks and vice versa?
Probably. After all, biologically, there's no significant difference except for skin color. What we call "race" isn't a biological difference at all, it's a social difference. Skin color comes from how close a population is from the equator, not from any definitive biological difference.
To answer that I'd have to know how you would strive for it and what the end result you seek is.
By trying to create a better system of equality of opportunity among those of different races; toward the end result of leaving our society better off than we found it.
Haven't seen it since grade school...sorry.
Watch it sometime (or better yet, read the book). And try to imagine the same trial today, in a 21st century courthouse.
Again...I'd have to know where it is you want us to go.
Forward.
Well here's the thing. Let's say that the starting point for race relations in this nation was pretty bad. Whites had a terrible view of blacks...and likewise, blacks had an awful view of whites. That's a fair, if general description, isn't it?
Let's suppose that all the progress has really only happened in one direction...the white view of blacks. We've worked, created laws, created policies, etc etc...to change the white view of blacks.
Will we ever succeed in this golden utopia of equality without striving to change the black view of whites? Or can it succeed by only changing the views of whites towards blacks?
As a nation...I think we've made great strides in one direction, and very few in the other.
Why do you say that? How has the way black people view white people gotten worse since, say, when white people held them as slaves?
-- A2SG, hard to see how we've gotten lower than that nadir.....