Quote from: kitty. on August 30, 2007, 05:45:02 PMQuote from: piggy bank on August 30, 2007, 05:42:10 PMQuote from: Lindbergh on August 30, 2007, 05:36:09 PMI'll give you Jim Crow, at least among some older folks (though you probably don't know them). But that's the most innocuous element presented, and no one has established how experiencing this as a kid directly impacts people today. What? Something that directly affected my parents couldn't possibly affect me? Or, something that directly affected my grandparents couldn't possibly affect me through my parents?huh?You're not going far enough in your analysis. I'd suggest that even if you had been directly impacted by Jim Crow laws or lynchings or even slavery, you're not directly affected if it's not happening to you at this very moment. Once the moment where you're being discriminated against passes, you're no longer affected in any way whatsoever. TITCR. FINALLY we're getting some clear thinking here.
Quote from: piggy bank on August 30, 2007, 05:42:10 PMQuote from: Lindbergh on August 30, 2007, 05:36:09 PMI'll give you Jim Crow, at least among some older folks (though you probably don't know them). But that's the most innocuous element presented, and no one has established how experiencing this as a kid directly impacts people today. What? Something that directly affected my parents couldn't possibly affect me? Or, something that directly affected my grandparents couldn't possibly affect me through my parents?huh?You're not going far enough in your analysis. I'd suggest that even if you had been directly impacted by Jim Crow laws or lynchings or even slavery, you're not directly affected if it's not happening to you at this very moment. Once the moment where you're being discriminated against passes, you're no longer affected in any way whatsoever.
Quote from: Lindbergh on August 30, 2007, 05:36:09 PMI'll give you Jim Crow, at least among some older folks (though you probably don't know them). But that's the most innocuous element presented, and no one has established how experiencing this as a kid directly impacts people today. What? Something that directly affected my parents couldn't possibly affect me? Or, something that directly affected my grandparents couldn't possibly affect me through my parents?huh?
I'll give you Jim Crow, at least among some older folks (though you probably don't know them). But that's the most innocuous element presented, and no one has established how experiencing this as a kid directly impacts people today.
The truth is that no one living today actually experienced slavery, which makes reparations an inherently flawed concept. I would, however, support free passage back to Africa for anyone who desires it -- to the extent any descendant has a desire to return to their ancestral homeland, that would appear an appropriate remedy.
I'm not saying that people can't rise up out of a bleak situation, but if you've been surrounded by poverty/low income, violence, and the door just keeps getting shut in your face for your entire life it's extremely difficult to get the motivation to do anything different.
Quote from: ashVU08 on November 07, 2007, 08:23:08 PMI'm not saying that people can't rise up out of a bleak situation, but if you've been surrounded by poverty/low income, violence, and the door just keeps getting shut in your face for your entire life it's extremely difficult to get the motivation to do anything different.Yeah, but the door isn't being shut in the face of African American's anymore-therefore we do not need AA. I could see the need for in in the 60s, 70s, and 80s but the current generation of college kids and young adults didn't grow up during an era of severe racism. That doesn't mean that none of them have ever experienced racism, but that they are just as likely to be victims now as anyone of another race is.
but the current generation of college kids and young adults didn't grow up during an era of severe racism.
After you give me a link that shows that racism in America warrants the use of AA.
She was being sarcastic. I wish she was still around.
I believe that...
As far as history, I DO think that American social culture can and has changed very quickly. There is a huge difference between the treatment of blacks in the 50s and today. That is only 50 years. Look at the acceptance of homosexuality, which has changed dramatically in only a couple of decades. Saying that because slavery and racism occurred for hundreds of years in the US, that it cannot be changed in a few short decades is completely false. First of all, it hasn't been a "few short decades". The abolition and equal rights movements were well under way before the major transformations that occurred in the 1860s and 1960s. With greater access to media and information (thanks in large part to the internet), communities are no longer closed minded bubbles like they were in the past. I believe that the social ideologies of America have changed and continue to change very rapidly. Another example would be Nazi Germany. Look what a "few short decades" did them? They went from the holocaust to one of the biggest allies of Israel.