maxpower8888 wrote:levon wrote:maxpower8888 wrote:
If you think about it, the whole "racism = prejudice + power" argument is a giant racist mind ****. It actually does the opposite of fighting racism by literally treating white people as above non-white people (the whole punching up vs. punching down argument). And nowhere does it leave any room for any criteria of when non-white people will have a similar amount of power as white people. The idea that an average working white guy somehow has more power than the average non-white person is not based in reality.
In the USA the most powerful people are almost exclusively white, and that needs to change. But somehow the progressive media has convinced the youth that if they racially discriminate against their white neighbors who hold no institutional power, that somehow will end racism. The people at the top are laughing at all of you.
There is a lot of confusion and misunderstanding in this post. You're not giving the youth of America enough credit--young people today are the most educated about the workings of systemic racism than they've ever been. Gen Z is also voting and signaling a desire to vote at a higher rate than previous generations, which hopefully we can both agree is a positive no matter where you fall politically. Further, today, non-white kids and families value higher education more than white families (I can find this poll for you if you like). They recognize education as the only way to build capital and literally live somewhat comfortably, facing economic challenges that prior generations have not faced, worsened even further by the 2008 crash and Covid.
Being prejudiced to your white neighbors solely on the basis of them being white is a problem.
The bigger problem? The mechanisms that keep white people in power are continuously reinforced by their average white neighbors, are they not? Which forces are actively, overtly trying to slow minorities from voting, or slowly ascending to said positions of power? Do white men not constitute the majority of the people supporting those forces, despite almost all of them being powerless themselves, according to countless polls and exit polls?
There is no real way to linearize and deterministically prioritize every ailment of our society, but there should be ways to at least loosely achieve consensus on what the most important issues are today.
I can confidently say that prejudice against white people isn't the biggest problem in our society, despite how hard the trash peddlers try to convince you otherwise. In fact, I'm not sure it even registers in the top 10. Check this Pew poll
https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2022/11/03/key-facts-about-u-s-voter-priorities-ahead-of-the-2022-midterm-elections/ Racism checks in as Issue #15, and I'm not sure if it's even top 10 for Democrats.
I am not confused in my post, I agree with most of what you said, but I take issue with what I have in bold.
1) The average white man does not vote to try to stop minorities from gaining power or voting. The enemies of minorities are the super-wealthy (who as I said earlier are predominantly white). There are forces at play that do that, but the vast majority of those are people whos net worth is $100 mill+, it's the people who benefit from the status quo. So when young people are being taught that "whiteness" needs to be dismantled, rather than the hoarding of wealth, they're essentially being fooled. There is absolutely no racial problem that will be solved by making it ok to be racially prejudice against white people, the only thing it will do is make white people (who over the course of decades have been progressively getting less and less racist) become more racist.
2) Being racist against white people does not need to be the biggest issue for it to be an issue. But we can see how the prejudice is playing out when "Can you be racist against white people?" is an actual serious discussion being had rather than just having a simple answer "Yes." If the racism black people experience is the equivalent of a punch in the face, and the racism white people experience is the equivalent of a slap, well it still doesn't feel good to get slapped, even if it's not as bad as a punch, especially when you did nothing to deserve it.
Young people despite having access to countless more resources than we did when we were young, are still young people, and they're more prone to being emotionally manipulated. And they're being bombarded left and right by this messaging, and then those young people grow up and believe the problem is worse than it is.
There is less institutional racism today than there was 10 years ago, and yet there is more racial tension than there was 10 years ago.
On point #1, the majority of people voting (if you believe in voting as an honest signifier) for the policies I'm referencing are white men, usually uneducated. I misspoke as often happens when trying to qualify stats. It's the case that
of the people that vote for such policies the plurality (biggest segment) are white, white men, and white uneducated men as you drill down further. That last segment is especially pertinent because it highlights that it's precisely this segment of the powerless that fervently prop up the powerful, evidently on the basis of race (again, if you believe voting has explanatory weight or impact in our society).
On point #2, sure, it doesn't have to be the biggest issue, but we have only have a limited amount of energy and time. As for if it's possible to be racist against white people, the answer is yes -- we've had ample evidence of it in the past,
predominantly from other white people. It's perplexing until you realize that whiteness is just a manufactured label, manufactured by white people. Others have been racial
ized, and to be white is to essentially be of the unracialized group in your society. There are plenty of other societies where a certain segment is afforded outsized power and influence, but their genetic makeup has no relation to Germanic peoples or whatever is the tenuous ethnic origin of American whiteness in 2023. Whiteness is not just a western concept or new concept. But if you prefer to argue that prejudice, wishing harm unto other people, causing violence based on the color of skin falls under the word "racism", I'm not going to disagree with you. It's where people start to equate that-version-of-racism against white people to racism against others. You're going to have to upgrade the latter definition of racism into some other word then or qualify it somehow, because they are not equal, nor have they ever been.
There is less institutional racism today than there was 10 years ago, and yet there is more racial tension than there was 10 years ago.
The economy, and terrible people poisoning our information space both domestically and internationally. Identity-based conflicts decline when people are able to equitably participate in the wealth of their society. If it's failing people across the board, the temperature goes up. Point being, you should levy this same criticism of "we should all be working together to stick it to the powerful" to the powerless white people as well who are playing a disproportionate role in either propping up the old guard, or ushering in deleterious far-right actors.