Are today's white kids less racist than their grandparents? (Salon)
| Dark stock car | 09/24/18 | | Contagious cordovan property ceo | 09/24/18 | | Dark stock car | 09/24/18 | | vermilion heaven queen of the night | 09/24/18 | | medicated dingle berry | 09/24/18 | | talented topaz corn cake | 09/24/18 | | Sooty chad | 09/24/18 | | chartreuse organic girlfriend messiness | 09/24/18 | | Duck-like khaki school private investor | 09/24/18 | | Sooty chad | 09/24/18 | | stirring indian lodge athletic conference | 09/24/18 | | Dark stock car | 09/24/18 | | Dark stock car | 09/24/18 | | honey-headed factory reset button | 09/24/18 | | Sooty chad | 09/24/18 | | Duck-like khaki school private investor | 09/24/18 | | stirring indian lodge athletic conference | 09/24/18 | | Adulterous Heady Spot Immigrant | 09/24/18 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: September 24th, 2018 9:55 AM Author: chartreuse organic girlfriend messiness
You really can’t win with libs absent full acceptance of their orthodoxy on every subject
But a second group of researchers disagreed. They found that whites today simply articulate racial prejudice in new ways.
For example, according to national survey data, high school seniors are increasingly expressing a form of prejudice that sociologist Tyrone Forman calls “racial apathy” — an “indifference toward societal, racial, and ethnic inequality and lack of engagement with race-related social issues.”
Racial apathy is a more passive form of prejudice than explicit articulations of bigotry and racial hostility. But such apathy can nonetheless lead white people to support policies and practices that align with the same racist logic of the past, like a lack of support for social programs and policies designed to address institutional racism or an indifference toward the suffering of people of color.
Other researchers question the ability of surveys to capture honest responses from whites about race-related questions or to describe the complexity of whites’ perspectives on race.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4085768&forum_id=2#36876394) |
Date: September 24th, 2018 10:21 AM Author: Sooty chad
One 11-year-old named Natalie told me:
“Racism was a problem when all those slaves were around and that, like, bus thing and the water fountain. I mean, everything was crazy back in the olden days. … But now, I mean, since Martin Luther King and, like, Eleanor Roosevelt, and how she went on the bus. And she was African-American and sat on the white part. … After the 1920s and all that, things changed.”
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4085768&forum_id=2#36876596) |
|
|