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originally posted by: gpawnday
a reply to: Hoosierdaddy71
My Choctaw friends identified themselves as Indians. They used the term Native American and Indian interchangeably. I think that's what you were referring to, but I am not certain.
originally posted by: Hoosierdaddy71
originally posted by: gpawnday
a reply to: Hoosierdaddy71
My Choctaw friends identified themselves as Indians. They used the term Native American and Indian interchangeably. I think that's what you were referring to, but I am not certain.
I was under the impression that Indian was an offensive term now.
originally posted by: InverseLookingGlass
a reply to: tranquilone666
You are making a fatal mistake in your thinking.
You equate the "racism" of the oppressed to the racism the oppressor. It is an absolute fallacy. Racism by those with little or no ability to affect your life isn't effective racism. It's irrelevant to you. If someone has some kind of control over your life and they express racism it does matter. It is important. It's a tool of oppression. That's the evil.
e.g. Prisoners hating guards is a joke for the guards.
If you can deny that blacks are systematically oppressed in the US that's where you end in one of two camps; ignorant or lying.
You equate the "racism" of the oppressed to the racism the oppressor. It is an absolute fallacy.
originally posted by: gpawnday
a reply to: TrueBrit
The problem thus becomes ignoring the past, instead of acknowledging that it happened and growing from it. To further illustrate my point, I grew up in Vicksburg, Mississippi, where a famous Civil War battle, the siege of Vicksburg took place. The siege ended on July 4th, 1863, and for over 100 years people in Vicksburg did not celebrate Independence Day.
Mississippi is the only state in the Union to still have the Confederate flag on their state flag. We still have jerry-mandering in the districts to maintain Republican party control, even though the state is 51% black and has a large Southern Democrat constituency. My friends in another town in Mississippi had separate proms for black and white kids that still goes on today. Ole Miss had student riots when Obama was reelected.
The problem is growing from this, but we are stuck in the past here. It's getting better but at a snail's pace compared to the rest of the country. There are so many people here who want to remain ignorant. Even minorities here have become complacent with it, when it should instead be receiving national media attention.
And this doesn't even cover the Indian reservations we have here.
originally posted by: tranquilone666
Id like to thank everyone for taking the time to reply. Its been said that its not a double standard, just the tables being turned and my response is no. Its not the tables being turned, its people taking advantage of a system of white guilt. There is no longer a need for these specialized publications and stations. The views expressed on them can be aired to a receptive audience on standard channels. If there is to be equality for all, it needs to be "black and white" if youll pardon the pun, it must be a clear cut this is ok for everyone or not for anyone.
originally posted by: tranquilone666
I would be willing to bet that if I went out and developed a television chanel dedicated to white entertainment...
originally posted by: Klassified
As a "white" male who grew up in one of the worst, and most violent ghetto's in St. Louis, I know what it's like to be hated because of your skin color firsthand. I can give you as many examples of racial hatred in both directions as your stomach can handle. And they would all be meaningless, because they ignore the root cause of the problem.
Look to your government, and the corporate media. They are the masters of division, and the purveyors of hate and fear. When we the people decide we will no longer be divided into colors, genders, and classes, only then do we stand a chance of making discussions like this a thing of the past, and a very distant memory.