steveinneed
CAGiversary!
[quote name='mykevermin']One thing that you cannot deny is that racism is inherent in our society. Minorities are constantly passed over for jobs they are qualified for, they are more frequently denied rent availability or mortgages, they are also frequently turned down from colleges. If you accept that racism and discrimination exist in our society (and there is no data that shows races are treated equally, and plenty that show they are not), a corollary of discrimination *against* minorities is discrimination *for* whites. That is, two sides of the same coin are that whites benefit to the extent that minorities are kept down because of race. With that in mind, the status quo which seems to make you so livid does, in fact, serve you better because you are white.
As far as reparations are concerned, that is another argument for another time; that having been said, considering the long term possibility of upward mobility (that is, improving your socioeconomic status over subsequent generations), the society you and I live in still suffers from the effects of slavery, racism, and discrimination that happened in the past. If that is not the case, then I will challenge you: show me the precise point in time where racial differences in employment levels, imprisonment levels, education levels, annual income, wealth (*not* the same thing as income), marriage rates, and within-business promotions have been equal. If there has been a point in time that minorities and whites have been roughly equal on these measures (and doubtless dozens of others), and that equality has decreased over time, then you can attribute that to something other than long-lasting effects of race-based policy (slavery and Jim Crow laws, mostly). If there has never been racial parity in these regards, then your argument holds up to nothing and is completely false in the face of all existing empirical evidence (which, I can assure you, it does).[/QUOTE]
Does having whites turned down because of their race for a black person less qualified matter to anyone? It's the same concept is it not? I am not racist, nor has anyone implied that I am, but I am just stating it so no gets the wrong idea. I also would think its wrong if a black person was turned down for a job for a white person less qualified.
As far as reparations are concerned, that is another argument for another time; that having been said, considering the long term possibility of upward mobility (that is, improving your socioeconomic status over subsequent generations), the society you and I live in still suffers from the effects of slavery, racism, and discrimination that happened in the past. If that is not the case, then I will challenge you: show me the precise point in time where racial differences in employment levels, imprisonment levels, education levels, annual income, wealth (*not* the same thing as income), marriage rates, and within-business promotions have been equal. If there has been a point in time that minorities and whites have been roughly equal on these measures (and doubtless dozens of others), and that equality has decreased over time, then you can attribute that to something other than long-lasting effects of race-based policy (slavery and Jim Crow laws, mostly). If there has never been racial parity in these regards, then your argument holds up to nothing and is completely false in the face of all existing empirical evidence (which, I can assure you, it does).[/QUOTE]
Does having whites turned down because of their race for a black person less qualified matter to anyone? It's the same concept is it not? I am not racist, nor has anyone implied that I am, but I am just stating it so no gets the wrong idea. I also would think its wrong if a black person was turned down for a job for a white person less qualified.