Millennials Are More Racist Than They Think

Art Vandelay

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I'd modify the headline to read "than most people think."



Millennials Are More Racist Than They Think
Just look at the numbers.
By SEAN MCELWEE
March 09, 2015
Politico


News about race in America these days is almost universally negative. Longstanding wealth, income and employment gaps between whites and people of color are increasing, and tensions between police and minority communities around the country are on the rise. But many claim there’s a glimmer of hope: The next generation of Americans, they say, is “post-racial”—more tolerant, and therefore more capable of easing these race-based inequities. Unfortunately, closer examination of the data suggests that millennials aren’t racially tolerant, they’re racially apathetic: They simply ignore structural racism rather than try to fix it.

In 2010, a Pew Research report trumpeted that “the younger generation is more racially tolerant than their elders.” In the Chicago Tribune, Ted Gregory seized on this to declare millennials “the most tolerant generation in history.” These types of arguments typically cling to the fact that young people are more likely than their elders to favor interracial marriage. But while millennials are indeed less likely than baby boomers to say that more people of different races marrying each other is a change for the worse (6 percent compared to 14 percent), their opinions on that score are basically no different than those of the generation immediately before them, the Gen Xers, who come in at 5 percent. On interracial dating, the trend is similar, with 92 percent of Gen Xers saying it’s “all right for blacks and whites to date each other,” compared to 93 percent of millennials.

Furthermore, these questions don’t really say anything about racial justice: After all, interracial dating and marriage are unlikely to solve deep disparities in criminal justice, wealth, upward mobility, poverty and education—at least not in this century. (Black-white marriages currently make up just 2.2 percent of all marriages.) And when it comes to opinions on more structural issues, such as the role of government in solving social and economic inequality and the need for continued progress, millennials start to split along racial lines. When people are asked, for example, “How much needs to be done in order to achieve Martin Luther King’s dream of racial equality?” the gap between white millennials and millennials of color (all those who don’t identify as white) are wide. And once again, millennials are shown to be no more progressive than older generations: Among millennials, 42 percent of whites answer that “a lot” must be done to achieve racial equality, compared to 41 percent of white Gen Xers and 44 percent of white boomers.

The most significant change has been among nonwhite millennials, who are more racially optimistic than their parents. (Fifty-four percent of nonwhite millennials say “a lot” must be done, compared with 60 percent of nonwhite Gen Xers.) And this racial optimism isn’t exactly warranted. The racial wealth gap has increased since the 2007 financial crisis, and blacks who graduate from college have less wealth than whites who haven’t completed high school. A new paper by poverty experts Thomas Hirschl and Mark Rank estimates that whites are 6.74 times more likely to enter the top 1 percent of the income distribution ladder than nonwhites. And Bhashkar Mazumder finds that 60 percent of blacks whose parents were in the top half of income distribution end up in the bottom, compared with 36 percent of whites.

As to how well whites and nonwhites get along, only 13 percent of white millennials say “not well at all,” compared with 31 percent of nonwhite millennials. (Thirteen percent of white Gen Xers and 32 percent of nonwhite Gen Xers agree.)

In a 2009 study using American National Election Studies—a survey of Americans before and after each presidential election—Vincent Hutchings finds, “younger cohorts of Whites are no more racially liberal in 2008 than they were in 1988.” My own analysis of the most recent data reveals a similar pattern: Gaps between young whites and old whites on support for programs that aim to further racial equality are very small compared to the gaps between young whites and young blacks.

And even though the gaps within the millennial generation are wide, as with the Pew data, there is also evidence that young blacks are more racially conservative than their parents, as they are less likely to support government aid to blacks.

Spencer Piston, professor at the Campbell Institute at Syracuse University, used ANES data and found a similar pattern on issues relating to economic inequality. He examined a tax on millionaires, affirmative action, a limit to campaign contributions and a battery of questions that measure egalitarianism. He says, “the racial divide (in particular the black/white divide) dwarfs other divides in policy opinion. Age differences in public opinion are small in comparison to racial differences.” This finding is, he adds, “consistent with a long-standing finding in political science.” Piston finds that young whites have the same level of racial stereotypes as their parents.
There is reason for an even deeper worry: The possibility that the veneer of post-racial America will lead to more segregation. The post-racial narrative, when combined with deep structural racism, leads to what sociologist Eduardo Bonilla-Silva calls “racism without racists,” a system where racial gaps persist less because of explicit discrimination and more because of structural factors—things like the passage of wealth from generation to generation or neighborhoods that remain segregated because of past injustices.

We can see numerous examples of how the post-racial rhetoric is hampering a racial justice agenda. In Parents Involved in Community Schools Inc. v. Seattle School District, a 2007 case in which two school boards were sued for using racial quotas to ensure that schools were diverse, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in the opinion, “The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.” This reasoning is pervasive in his decisions. When the Supreme Court struck down a key provision of the Voting Rights Act in 2013, Roberts wrote that the country “has changed, and while any racial discrimination in voting is too much, Congress must ensure that the legislation it passes to remedy that problem speaks to current conditions.” The results were immediate: Across the country, states began putting up barriers to voting, which the finds disproportionately affect black voters. Political scientists Keith Bentele and Erin O’Brien have concluded that the laws are indeed motivated by a desire to reduce black turnout—all proving that Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was right when she noted in her dissent that the logic of the decision was akin to “throwing away your umbrella in a rainstorm because you are not getting wet.”

It’s possible that the court will use the same “post-racial” logic someday for affirmative action, too. Or to strike down the Federal Housing Administration’s ban on housing actions that have a “disparate impact” on African-Americans, such as exclusionary zoning or lending practices that disproportionately penalize people of color. This is particularly important since the most important impediment to black upward mobility is neighborhood poverty.

The conservative stance on racism is to deny structural racism exists and therefore deny that the solution to racism lies in structural changes. Instead, conservatives view the way to end racial disparities as simply ignoring the issue and treating everyone equally. While this sentiment sounds nice, it means that children who are born into poverty and face structurally racist housing, criminal justice and education systems will never have equal opportunity. The conservative view was once lambasted by 19th-century economist Henry George as “insist[ing] that each should swim for himself in crossing a river, ignoring the fact that some had been artificially provided with corks and other artificially loaded with lead.”

Yet many millennials subscribe to this view, with an MTV/David Binder poll finding only 39 percent of white millennials believe “white people have more opportunities today than racial minority groups.” By contrast, 65 percent of people of color feel that whites have differential access to jobs and other opportunities. Further, 70 percent of all millennials say “it’s never fair to give preferential treatment to one race over another, regardless of historical inequalities.”

And the irony is that having a black president has made this failure to acknowledge structural barriers to opportunity worse. Numerous studies find that the election of President Barack Obama has made whites, particularly young whites, sanguine about racial disparities in America. One study surveyed 509 people of all races before and after the 2008 election about their perceptions of discrimination against blacks. The youngest third in the sample were 11.7 percent less likely to perceive discrimination in the wake of Obama’s election than they were before, while the oldest third was 8.5 percent less likely. A study of college students at the University of Washington, also based on surveys before and after the 2008 election, finds that those polled were less likely to see the need for continued racial progress after Obama’s election. In the recent MTV study cited above, 62 percent of millennials (58 percent of people of color, 64 percent of whites) agreed that “having a Black President demonstrates that racial minority groups have the same opportunities as white people.”

A 2012 Public Religion Institute poll found that 58 percent of white millennials say discrimination affects whites as much as it affects people of color. Only 39 percent of Hispanic millennials and 24 percent of African-American millennials agree.

This is disturbing for the future of race in America. The Roberts vision of radical colorblindness has irreparably harmed racial progress. If young Americans buy into his vision of a colorblind society—and a large literature suggests they do—white America and black America will diverge further, creating a permanent underclass in which people of color are denied equitable access to the American dream.


 
In 2010, a Pew Research report trumpeted that “the younger generation is more racially tolerant than their elders.” In the Chicago Tribune, Ted Gregory seized on this to declare millennials “the most tolerant generation in history.” These types of arguments typically cling to the fact that young people are more likely than their elders to favor interracial marriage. But while millennials are indeed less likely than baby boomers to say that more people of different races marrying each other is a change for the worse (6 percent compared to 14 percent), their opinions on that score are basically no different than those of the generation immediately before them, the Gen Xers, who come in at 5 percent. On interracial dating, the trend is similar, with 92 percent of Gen Xers saying it’s “all right for blacks and whites to date each other,” compared to 93 percent of millennials.

Furthermore, these questions don’t really say anything about racial justice: After all, interracial dating and marriage are unlikely to solve deep disparities in criminal justice, wealth, upward mobility, poverty and education—at least not in this century. (Black-white marriages currently make up just 2.2 percent of all marriages.) And when it comes to opinions on more structural issues, such as the role of government in solving social and economic inequality and the need for continued progress, millennials start to split along racial lines.

If you look at that first video, which was meant to be heartwarming at the time of that Cheerio's commercial with an interracial couple caused an uproar almost two years ago, those kids obliviousness is part of the problem. "I thought Martin Luther King spoke against this and fixed this already," says the kid at 3:36. Most of these kids are around 12 but they don't get much more sophisticated in high school, college or even as adults. They really believe that because they wouldn't burn a cross on a black families lawn and think people should be able to fuck freely and use the same toilets, that racism is a thing of the past. It's a totally new type of ignorance.
 
And by period i think you mean end of sentence, and of discussion..

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Shit is crazy. The election of Obama didn't help things. Called that shit. Most people are ignorant. As such, both white people and black people think he has more power than he really has. It keeps racial division going in the information age.

As far as structural racism goes, a good number of white people won't admit it exists while a good number of black people won't admit that whites played roles in changing it in the past.

Of course even if white people played roles in change it doesn't mean they weren't racist to some degree and creating benefit for the power structure of the U.S. Abe Lincoln and President Johnson are examples.
 
Don't Snitch -- Example #1


The "Don't Snitch" code works is apparent in the 2011 interview of Dr. Barbara T., on the C.O.W.S. internet radio station (www.contextofwhitesupremacy.com) on June 12, 2011.

Dr. T. is a white female and the author of a book that explains how "well-meaning white people" often practice "silent racism." In addition to writing a book, Dr. T has led numerous focus groups informing other whites about racism BUT she could not (or
refused to) explain exactly HOW white people practiced racism (!)

JUSTICE (CO-HOST, age 12): Who teaches you how to practice racism/white
supremacy?

DR T: My parents first, and then my teachers in school, and my friends, and the media.


JUSTICE: What makes you a racist/white supremacist?


DR T: Not understanding how racism works.


JUSTICE: How do you practice racism/white supremacy everyday?


DR T: I don't know.


JUSTICE: Could you at least name three ways?


DR T: No, I can't. That's part of the problem.


JUSTICE: What's part of the problem?


DR T: Not being able to see it.


JUSTICE: See what?


DR T: Pardon me?


JUSTICE: See what?


DR T: To see how racism operates in my life, personally.


JUSTICE: Gus, I might be incorrect, but I think she's practicing racism.


GUS (the Host): What is she doing?

JUSTICE: First of all, she's using terms that I don't understand. Second, she said something right before the other question, that I thought that she was practicing racism/white supremacy.

GUS: Well, I highly suspect Dr. Trepanier is practicing racism/white supremacy and I suspect she's aware of this. I could be wrong, but she said she's not aware of how the system works. She has written a book, a very sophisticated book. An in-depth study of how the system works. That is a huge contradiction. She studied this for 15 years and worked with different organizations. This does not seem accurate to me.

JUSTICE: I agree. My next question is, what are a few specific ways that your children
practice racism/white supremacy?

DR T: I don't know what they do. (Pause). You know what, Gus? This is not working.
This is not a good fit. I don't know what you thought. I've been as honest as I can be in my book. I don't know where the disconnect is between you and me, but this is not going to work. I'm sorry if I disappointed you, and disappointed your listeners and Justice, but I'm going to have to end the interview because I can't go on.


GUS: I am not disappointed at all. This is what I expect—


DR T: You're thrilled to death.

GUS: This is what I expect from racist man and racist woman. Exactly what I expect - from a well-meaning white person.


DR T: Okay, then.


JUSTICE: Could I get in one more question?


DR T: Sure. (sounding reluctant)

JUSTICE: I watched a video where you were explaining how all white people practice racism/white supremacy. You mentioned that you experienced greater resistance from other white people that are more racist and further up on what we call the racist continuum. Who do you know that is more racist, practicing racism/white supremacy
better than you, further up on the racist continuum?

DR T: Well, I'm not going to say people by name, but I think that on the political spectrum, there are conservatives that want to change some of the civil rights legislation and I think that's more racist, and I don't know if that's where you're getting at or not but I don't think this conversation is going anywhere. I'm very sorry but I'm going to leave it now. I'm really disappointed and I know you're disappointed, I think you're disappointed - you say you're not - because you probably wanted to get a white person on here and embarrass her and you've done a good job of it.


GUS: You feel embarrassed? What do you feel embarrassed about?

DR T: (louder and upset tone) I feel embarrassed, I feel used, you read my whole damn book, and you knew who you were getting on this show.


JUSTICE: Good grief.


GUS: (surprised laughter): Now, I'm surprised. I'm not disappointed, I'm surprised.


DR T: Well, I'm really happy I could surprise you, I'm just¼well...


GUS: What did we do?

DR T: You can say anything you want to say, you can say I'm stupid, you can say
anything you want to. I don't care. All I know is I've done the best I can to write a book about racism from the well-meaning white person's perspective, and I understand that you don't think there is such an animal, but I give up! Okay? I give up! So, goodbye! (HANGS UP).


GUS: Man!


JUSTICE: That's what we should expect from white people.



***


(AUTHORS' COMMENT): It is difficult to understand how a white person (or any person) can write a book, conduct research, and inform others about something he or she "can't see" and doesn't understand.

That being said, the Authors totally disagree with the (false) premise that a white person can practice "silent racism" AND be a "well-meaning white person" at the same t i me .

This is as logical as saying a burglar can practice "silent burglaries" and still claim he is an honest person. Certainly, his victims would NOT agree that the criminal who
burglarized their homes was a "well-meaning person."

Once it was revealed ON-AIR that Dr. T was practicing racism, she attempted to transform herself into the (white) victim of Justice, the 12-year-old co-host of the C.O.W.S. internet program. It is common for racist woman to resort to hurt feelings or (crocodile) tears to derail any constructive (or honest) discussion of racism.


It is LOGICAL to assume that a "well-meaning" white person who practices "silent racism" is simply practicing a more REFINED (and dishonest) form of racism/white supremacy.



Don't Snitch -- Example #2


This is an excerpt from an interview with an admitted white female supremacist, Ferrell Winfree, on the C.O.W.S. internet blogtalk program in 2009. Throughout her two-hour interview with the host, Gus Renegade, Ms. Winfree insisted most white people don't think about being white.

WINFREE: The fact that most of those in power, the everyday man, woman, that gets
up, goes to work, cooks supper, makes their children do their homework, it never occurs to them that they have any power at all. They use the power without ever thinking about it, which is, of course, one of the greatest privileges of white supremacy is the fact that you can take advantage of it and not even think about it or be aware of i t.

In that sense, that the system is there, Gus, and that we do take advantage of it, yes, but whether or not the majority of my people, and when I say my people, I'm talking about those classified as being white, the majority of my people would deny, number one, that they have any power until it is brought in front of them and discussed, and isn't often done, because they don't have to think about it and it is not
brought to the forefront of their minds."

GUS: I wanted to clarify for myself and our listeners, for the purpose of this interview, are you in agreement with the definition for white supremacy being a system of people who classify themselves as white, and are dedicated to mistreating and/or abusing
and/or subjugating everyone they say is not white? Are we in agreement?"

WINFREE: The only thing I'm in disagreement with the word that whites are dedicated, because like I said, the majority of them, it never occurs to them that they have the privilege so it's not something that they will get up in the morning and say, okay, today, I must make sure that I take advantage of being white, and to me that's
the idea that comes from the word 'dedicated.'
Most of my people don't think about it...and I'm not talking about people in authority, I'm talking about the majority of people who are classified as white. When I do seminars, one of the things that I ask is, ok, those of you who are classified as white, what did you like about being white? And most of the time until we're through with the seminar, and we ask that same question again, there's this blank look on their face, because they have never thought about it.

GUS: Interesting...I wanted to ask, do you think under the system of racism/white supremacy, do you think it is logical for any non-white person to think that white
people are not aware of what it is to be white in a system of white supremacy?

WINFREE: I believe the majority of my people, they have no contact with people of color and no real concept of what it would be like to be in the shoes of the person of color and be in this system. I believe that the majority of white people are not conscious of this system itself. Which again, is one of the greatest privileges is that we don't have to think about. Our lives are advantaged by the system. It has been going on so many hundreds of years that we don't think of it.
The fact that we don't have to worry about race when we apply for a job, or applying for a loan for a mortgage, or sending our children to school, knowing that they're not going to read in that history book negative things about how this country

was established, that was near genocide of one people, and the enslavement of
another, they don't think about the fact that their children in most places are not going to have to listen to that.


***


(AUTHORS' COMMENT): It is illogical to believe that white people in a white supremacy system do not know they are white, just as it is illogical to believe that a rich person in a capitalist system does not know he is rich.
A rich person does not have to get up every morning, look in the mirror and say, "okay, today, I am rich" to know they are rich. All they need to know is they have luxuries and privileges that poor people do not have.
When a white person in a system of white supremacy refuses to admit they are white to a non-white person, OR explain how other whites function as racists, they are practicing racism by withholding important and accurate information from the VICTIMS of racism.
It is a contradiction to say white people KNOW they do not have to worry about (their) race when they apply for a loan or mortgage (like non-whites) AND at the same time say white people are "not conscious" of being white in a system that gives whites more privileges than it gives non-whites.
It is also illogical to think that the white supremacy system could function so efficiently on a 24-7, 365-day BASIS, any time and anywhere whites come into contact with non-whites WITHOUT the vast majority of white INDIVIDUALS supporting and maintaining that system.


The White Supremacy System is supported and
maintained by:



  • the white loan officer who charges black applicants a higher interest rate for a loan than white applicants with the same credit rating and income
  • the white police officer who racially profiles black drivers for driving in the "wrong" (white) neighborhood
  • Mr. and Mrs. Ted and Jane Smith who sit on the local school board and vote to give white schools more funding than the black ones
  • the white parents who meet every year to continue the tradition of a 'whites-only' high school prom in their integrated high school

  • the white receptionist who throws the job applications from black jobseekers in the circular file (trashcan) after they leave her office
  • the white female housewife who sits on a jury and votes to acquit three white policemen who pumped 41 bullets into an unarmed black male
  • the white janitor who sits on a jury and decides that the dark-skinned, black male defendant is (always) guilty before he hears a single piece of evidence


"While appearing on the Larry King Live show (December 9, 2010), Wesley Snipes talked about his tax evasion conviction and his upcoming prison sentence. The host, Larry King, read aloud a statement from one of the jury members who admitted that there was 'one juror hat had said they knew Mr.
Snipes was guilty right when they first saw him during the jury selection."



It is the SYSTEM made up of millions of ordinary and average white INDIVIDUALS that maintains the system of white supremacy -- the same whites Ferrell Winfree claims "do not think about being
white."




***



(INTERVIEW CONTINUED)


GUS: Just to clarify that, you did say for a non-white person it would be difficult to think that white people in a system of white supremacy are not aware of what it means to be white, and are not aware that we're in a system where the people
classified as white dominate and abuse the people classified as not white?


WINFREE: Yes.

GUS: As a victim of white supremacy, I have asked many white people, and Mr. Tim Wise and many other white people have all conceded it would be difficult, if not illogical, if they were non-white, to think that white people are not aware of the system of white supremacy.
And I have seen a lot of non-white people, they say that white people are ignorant, that that is one of the problems of racism/white supremacy, that white people are ignorant.
I feel it is very dangerous in the system of white supremacy for the victims to reference the white people as "ignorant;" that they are doing this because they're ignorant. And I've seen many of the consequences of that, that the victims of WS remove culpability (blame) from white people. They are no longer held responsible for the system of white supremacy because the non-white people think they are ignorant
and I think that's a major error on the part of non-white people. Do you have a view
on that?"

WINFREE: The only thing I have hope for is more and more I'd be able to make my people, to cause my people to be aware of this system in the hopes that they will try to stop this system as it is now. The danger that's there, I believe, for your people to think it's a matter of ignorance...because it's the system that needs to be talked about,
that needs to be recognized, the system that subjugates millions of people."

***​


(AUTHORS' COMMENT): The definition of the word "ignorance" is: "a lack of knowledge or awareness." Anyone who is acting deliberately and willfully to mistreat other people IS NOT acting out of ignorance. It is illogical to believe that white people are NOT "aware" that they are mistreating black (and non-white) people when they are practicing racism. It is also ILLOGICAL to state that the "system" is the problem, NOT the people who CREATED, MAINTAIN, and BENEFIT from the system.


White supremacy = white people
white people = the white supremacy system


The white supremacy system did NOT create white people; white people created the system of white supremacy.


***


GUS: I wanted to bring up Mr. Neely Fuller, Jr. and I spoke to you before about him. Mr. Fuller has been quoted as saying white people cannot be ignorant about
racism/white supremacy. Do you think that statement is true?

WINFREE: I have a great deal of respect for him. I read some of his work. I met him briefly once, but again I have to come back with almost 70 years of living in this system, in this society, a society that subjugates, and again, I say this over and over, most of them have never thought of that. And I say it again, they don't think about it.

GUS: One thing that I tell non-white people when having conversations with any suspected racist in the system of white supremacy, is be diligent in making sure you get a clean answer to your question. I'm not sure I got a clean answer to my question. My question, Mr. Fuller says, white people cannot be ignorant about racism/white
supremacy. Do you think that's true, or do you think that's false?

WINFREE: I think he is mistaken.


GUS: Ok, thank you for that answer.

WINFREE: Please understand that I make that statement with great respect for the work that he does. But, I'm not sure that during his lifetime has had the opportunity to meet those people that I'm talking about because they're not going to be listening to black radio stations. They're not going to be going to seminars where racism is discussed, they're going to be getting up in the morning, shaving. Race has not occurred to them.


***​


(AUTHORS' COMMENT): It is illogical and frankly, ABSURD, to think that Mr. Fuller -- who was born in 1929; is 82 years old as of this writing; and has lived through the Great Depression AND Jim Crow (legal segregation) has not had an "opportunity" to meet (a ton of) white people -- including those who have NEVER, ever listened to a "black radio station" or attended a racism seminar.

Obviously, Ms. Winfree is reluctant to admit that the majority of her (white) people are well aware of their white status in a white supremacy system.

In the Authors' opinion, this is another example of a "well-meaning" white person who refuses to "snitch" and deliberately withholds important and accurate information from the VICTIMS of racism.


***​



Neely Fuller Jr. On The Average White Person by Age 16


(Excerpted from an interview with Mr. Fuller, Jr. by Gus Renegade on the internet
blogtalk program, C.O.W.S. (Context Of White Supremacy)

GUS: Ariela Gross, a professor at the University of Southern California wrote a book on
white supremacy called, 'What Blood Won't Tell,' and analyzes how white people practice racism, and how they have changed the rules about who gets to be a white person.
One of the things she highlights is to be a white person, you are expected to be informed about racism. You are expected to know the rules of how you're supposed to function as it relates to other white people and non-white people. That is expected of you. You cannot be ignorant of those rules.
Mr. Fuller, I have heard you say white people cannot be ignorant about racism, and if you are, you will get into trouble with other white people. Could you share your view on
that study?


FULLER: Every white person by the time they're sixteen, they know all the rules. They've picked it up by osmosis, just by being around people and observing and listening and being around the dinner table when political talk is going on.
The little white girl, the little white boy who's sitting there, he's six years old but he hears his white grandfather sitting up there talking about that blankety-blank Obama,
and all the rest of those heathen ******s, are ruining the society, and on and on and on.
He's six years old, and by the time he's fifteen, he's well-schooled, and he hasn't said a word to anybody. By the time he gets ready to go to school, he knows the
fundamentals, and by the time he gets to eighth or ninth grade, he's got it down pat.
Now and then, he'll make some mistakes. He'll choose a black buddy or something like that, they'll be on the football team, and all like that. But for the most part, he knows the rules.
He knows where the line is and he's not supposed to cross it cause when he does,
he'll be crossing his grandfather, who's still sitting on that porch, rocking back and forth.
'Now, boy, you know better than that. Okay, you be nice and kind to the people, don't call them names, but after all, don't forget you're white, that means something. I didn't go through all the wars, fighting, for you to wind up being like them.
It's alright for you to be around them, laughing and talking, but you're a different species altogether, and don't you forget it. How do you think we got all that we got? By being like them? Look at them.
Drive through where they live. Look at the way they act. Do you think that's an improvement? They (white boys) go out and check it out, and they say, no, I'd rather behave. There's something to being white.
You get a lot of things out of being white that you don't get if you're black. They see that. They ain't blind. Are you in a better position being white or in a better position
being black, anywhere in the world?
And every white person, a 30-year-old white person doesn't know that? Even if they are blind, they know that much. I mean, a blind white person don't even know what a black person looks like, if somebody told him he's white, he knows what that means. That's a much better position. Cause he's listening. He's got ears.




Excerpt from Chapter 6 of "The Interracial Con Game" by Umoja
 
America is Racist, period!

White folks been old since 1619, shit ain't going anywhere...

And by period i think you mean end of sentence, and of discussion..

A pattern of ending discussions before they start is a good way to remain ignorant.

The little white boy I wrote about in that video is nothing like white people from 1619. Today's problems are serious but different. I think there is a productive and intelligent conversation to be had here if people are willing to have it, but it won't come from thoughtless one sentence exclamations.

President Obama did a great job addressing this stubborn foolishness as well as the naivete of the boy in the video just this weekend in Selma:

We do a disservice to the cause of justice by intimating that bias and discrimination are immutable, or that racial division is inherent to America. If you think nothing’s changed in the past fifty years, ask somebody who lived through the Selma or Chicago or L.A. of the Fifties. Ask the female CEO who once might have been assigned to the secretarial pool if nothing’s changed. Ask your gay friend if it’s easier to be out and proud in America now than it was thirty years ago. To deny this progress – our progress – would be to rob us of our own agency; our responsibility to do what we can to make America better.

Of course, a more common mistake is to suggest that racism is banished, that the work that drew men and women to Selma is complete, and that whatever racial tensions remain are a consequence of those seeking to play the “race card” for their own purposes. We don’t need the Ferguson report to know that’s not true. We just need to open our eyes, and ears, and hearts, to know that this nation’s racial history still casts its long shadow upon us. We know the march is not yet over, the race is not yet won, and that reaching that blessed destination where we are judged by the content of our character – requires admitting as much.
 
A pattern of ending discussions before they start is a good way to remain ignorant.

Ignorant of what? .....Your breaking news that there are a lot of Millennial racists? COME ON, SON!!!!!

Does that even need a discussion? Racism is the marrow of America.
 
Ignorant of what? .....Your breaking news that there are a lot of Millennial racists? COME ON, SON!!!!!

Does that even need a discussion? Racism is the marrow of America.
Did you even bother reading the OP? I suspect you're just a blowhard polluting this thread with your uninformed opinion-- or, as I said, ignorance. If you actually read the OP and your takeaway was simply "that there are a lot of Millennial racists," then I apologize for being mean and I'll just ignore you in threads like this from now on.
 
This may shock a lot of these young. so-called "New Black" folks. But it never shocks "Oldsters" like myself and a few others here. It's one of the main reasons I didn't get all romantic and shit with #OCCUPY or #BLACKLIVESMATTER. It's just a social activity to most of them involving no risk to their livelihoods whatsoever.

I got my wake-up call dealing with White Progressives from the late 70s on.

Everything's cool.
As long as you don't disturb their Status Quo.
And even then, they have underlying feelings they don't even want to admit nor deal with.

William Kuntsler (via his daughters) said it best about White People and Racism in "DISTURBING THE UNIVERSE".

But I'd rather some of you see that film for yourselves. Because I can't remember the exact words he used. But it's those exact words that put it all together and made a hell of sense.
 
Did you even bother reading the OP? I suspect you're just a blowhard polluting this thread with your uninformed opinion-- or, as I said, ignorance. If you actually read the OP and your takeaway was simply "that there are a lot of Millennial racists," then I apologize for being mean and I'll just ignore you in threads like this from now on.

....Breaking News: America continues to be racist,

Thanks for the status update, Art Vandelay
 

Been listening to his speeches again lately. At times i swear up & down that what i heard was just said weeks ago. What he was saying 50 years ago is just as relevant now as it was then....it just boggles my mind how incredible he was.

King's ideas are whats used now by da masses to continue to ignore & write off everything happening. Malcolm's ideas are whats actually happening still today, everyday.

Racism is the very root of America...she was built on it. It will NEVER go away.
 
White folks been old since 1619, shit ain't going anywhere...
:eek::eek::eek::lol::lol::lol::smh::smh::smh:
Shit is crazy. The election of Obama didn't help things. Called that shit. Most people are ignorant. As such, both white people and black people think he has more power than he really has. It keeps racial division going in the information age.

As far as structural racism goes, a good number of white people won't admit it exists while a good number of black people won't admit that whites played roles in changing it in the past.

Of course even if white people played roles in change it doesn't mean they weren't racist to some degree and creating benefit for the power structure of the U.S. Abe Lincoln and President Johnson are examples.
Great points...
This may shock a lot of these young. so-called "New Black" folks. But it never shocks "Oldsters" like myself and a few others here. It's one of the main reasons I didn't get all romantic and shit with #OCCUPY or #BLACKLIVESMATTER. It's just a social activity to most of them involving no risk to their livelihoods whatsoever.

I got my wake-up call dealing with White Progressives from the late 70s on.

Everything's cool.
As long as you don't disturb their Status Quo.
And even then, they have underlying feelings they don't even want to admit nor deal with.

William Kuntsler (via his daughters) said it best about White People and Racism in "DISTURBING THE UNIVERSE".

But I'd rather some of you see that film for yourselves. Because I can't remember the exact words he used. But it's those exact words that put it all together and made a hell of sense.
I will be looking out for this movie.

Helluva drop, too, Fam.
 
Re: MM Are More Racist Than They Think

I agree but no one is born a racist, millennials or anyone else. Racism is taught and many times by your parents, family members, friends or people who you admire.
 
Re: MM Are More Racist Than They Think

I agree but no one is born a racist, millennials or anyone else. Racism is taught and many times by your parents, family members, friends or people who you admire.

This is mostly true and I might add that trying to change someone else's biases and prejudices after the age two is usually a major undertaking without huge amounts of peer pressure if it is even possible at all.
 
Re: MM Are More Racist Than They Think

I agree but no one is born a racist, millennials or anyone else. Racism is taught and many times by your parents, family members, friends or people who you admire.
Of course. Claiming every young white person today is the same as every white person in 1619 is just lazy defeatism. Saddest part is, while it earns cheap applause from the like-minded, it defeats progress, not the prevailing latent racism that will only be more of a problem in decades to come. Understanding the enemy is key to defeating it and you can't understand jack shit using a 400 year old playbook. It's nothing but ignorance in the guise of militancy, when no military leader worth a damn cent would ever embrace such nonsense.
 


nuff said


So ignorant. Judging all white people based on a few dozen makes you just as dumb as the white people who hyped up "the knockout game."

Is that footage meaningless? Of course not. But is it everything, as you make it out to be? This is "enough" only for a total moron.
 
So ignorant. Judging all white people based on a few dozen makes you just as dumb as the white people who hyped up "the knockout game."

Is that footage meaningless? Of course not. But is it everything, as you make it out to be? This is "enough" only for a total moron.

He never said anything of the sort. All he did was drop a video showing racism is alive and well among young people who were born in the 90s.

Your defensive rebuttal exemplifies what you pretend to not know.
 
He never said anything of the sort. All he did was drop a video showing racism is alive and well among young people who were born in the 90s.

Your defensive rebuttal exemplifies what you pretend to not know.
His post was not as you describe. He said "nuff said." The same "end of sentence, and of discussion" bullshit that WorldBFree and MrBee were talking.

There's a world of difference between saying "racism is alive and well among young people who were born in the 90s" and saying all young white people today are just like the whites of 400 years ago and there's no point in having a discussion about the evolution of racism. A world of difference.
 
If we were to examine the history of the white man over lets say the last 500 years you'll see they haven't changed much.

Lets look at their last 500 years. We've got enslavement, the near eradication of the Indian, an attempt at world domination, attempts at ethnic cleansing, well over 2,000 nuclear bombs exploded on the planet in just the last 70+ years, just to name a few things from the history of whites. Now is their being prejudiced really that surprising? :hmm:
 
His post was not as you describe. He said "nuff said." The same "end of sentence, and of discussion" bullshit that WorldBFree and MrBee were talking.

There's a world of difference between saying "racism is alive and well among young people who were born in the 90s" and saying all young white people today are just like the whites of 400 years ago and there's no point in having a discussion about the evolution of racism. A world of difference.

Hence,

tumblr_mavrwxuFBM1rvrogro1_250.gif

tumblr_mavrwxuFBM1rvrogro2_250.gif

tumblr_mavrwxuFBM1rvrogro3_250.gif
 
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