Chas_P, on 2019-December-11, 20:45, said:
The question was asked in the Confederate Statues thread having to do with how removing those statues would improve the lives of black Americans and I think it's a reasonable question. Do you have a reasonable answer?
Yes, my answer is that associating African-Americans as a group with murder, over-population, divorce, poor education, unemployment and 'hysterical' activism rather than treating each person as an individual is wrong and is generally harmful both to the debate and to society in general. The Merriam-Webster definition of racism is:-
Quote
1: a belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race
2 a: a doctrine or political program based on the assumption of racism and designed to execute its principles
b: a political or social system founded on racism
3: racial prejudice or discrimination
This association belongs to the first definition. Placing it as an assumed truth in a discussion about what government policy should be plays directly to the second. So I reject your basic racist presentation of the issue. It saddens me if you genuinely cannot see that your post here matches the absolute definition of racism. I suspect that you know very well what you are doing though and feign ignorance only so that you can continue. But there are plenty of racists around in varying shades of grey. It actually saddens me more that BBO tolerates it to the point where one might get the impression that this is acceptable in some way. It is not. We as a group should be making it quite clear that it is not acceptable.
To address the specific issues, on murder the most obvious change in the world would be to have more stringent gun control.
For over-population one minor change would be for state laws designed to make abortion more difficult to obtain illegal. Well, technically they are mostly already illegal but stopping them from going on the statute books in the first place by embedding Roe v Wade on the federal statute book. Allowing government finance go towards providing free condoms in local health clinics would be a bigger and more widespread change. And naturally providing better and more extensive sex education is essential to tackling the issue in the longer term.
High rates of divorce are an issue across racial divides and has a link to poverty. So I think the most useful thing for the government to do would be to pursue policies that provided better opportunities for poorer families, particularly in the area of...
Education. This is a topic I am sure Adam and Elianna could provide specific policies for much more eloquently than I and maybe one of them will jump in. I think the most general issue here is the funding gap between schools in different areas of the country. Due to the way school funding is done in America, it is almost impossible for a school in a poor area to provide a similar level of education to one of an affluent area. This gap should be closed with educational funding either pooled across a wider area and re-distributed fairly or topped up for under-funded schools by central government. There are many many more issues in the US education system of course but that would be a start and without radical funding changes, any other policies are only going to make a small dent in the inherent unfairness that characterises the system today.
Finally, the activism would decrease if the gap between African Americans and whites, and indeed generally between the richest and poorest in American society, were to decrease. Activism is there because individuals come to understand the unfairness within the society. The solution is to reduce the unfairness, not to label anyone who points it out as 'hysterical'. The statues are a lasting reminder of the unfairness that remains from that time to this day, not only to the African Americans but, perhaps more importantly, to those that want to perpetuate that unfairness indefinitely. Education does not end just with sex and schools here, whites also need to be educated that racism is not acceptable. Removing statues is part of that process. Much much more is required in this area but this is at least a start.
I hope you can see the difference here. If you frame issues as being related to general (negative) racial traits then you have stepped across the line to racism. Perhaps now you would care to offer that apology?