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Forums - Politics Discussion - Why is racism so normalized on social media in 2025?

JuliusHackebeil said:

And if MLK was for equity, he was on the completely wrong track. Equity is poison to meritocracy and productive society. He should have much rather thought that black people would not need a hand out, that, given how generational wealth actually works (and how few people are actually wealthy to begin with), black people would make it at an equal playing field, because they are no worse than white people.

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TallSilhouette said:
JuliusHackebeil said:

And if MLK was for equity, he was on the completely wrong track. Equity is poison to meritocracy and productive society. He should have much rather thought that black people would not need a hand out, that, given how generational wealth actually works (and how few people are actually wealthy to begin with), black people would make it at an equal playing field, because they are no worse than white people.

Honestly, I'd rather see people saying "I disagree with MLK" than saying "Actually, MLK was a moderate"

OSZAR »


sundin13 said:
JuliusHackebeil said:

I think racism is not dead yet, because it is kept on life support by people who would benefit from it. Grifters telling white people for a hefty price how racist they are. And for black people who want to use the false victim narrative as a shield against criticism, work, accountability and reason (e.g. BLM)

I am on the internet a fair bit, often looking at contentious social and political topics, including race relations in different countries. I almost never see racism, apart from some idiot colledge kids, woke professors, protesters, professional victims and ideologically captured news outlets. I get that this is not nothing, but if you account for the mentally disturbed and for people who do not need to work or even produce results or proof to stay in their position, I would say the rest, that is the big silent majority, is quite well adjusted.
Additionally I suspect that for every comment on the internet that was actually racist, we get a bazillion talking about it, falling over themselves to signal their virtue, and a bazillion more misinterpreting jokes and memes (as mentioned in the op) as racist, to again show how good and anti-racist they are. ... Perhaps a whole lot of this is just plain projection.

And if MLK was for equity, he was on the completely wrong track. Equity is poison to meritocracy and productive society. He should have much rather thought that black people would not need a hand out, that, given how generational wealth actually works (and how few people are actually wealthy to begin with), black people would make it at an equal playing field, because they are no worse than white people.

Equality before the law for all people who were made equal.
Equity for all races beneath that, unable to compete.

Hundreds of years of handouts and federal assistance for white people to help them build wealth, from the Homestead Act to redlining and Levittowns (often which had disastrous consequences for the people left behind), but as soon the federal government could no longer discriminate against minorities, government assistance quickly became just immoral handouts for the lazy. 

How strange...


Meritocracy cannot exist without starting from a place of equality. 

If you misunderstood me and think I am against government help for black people, say, in the USA (or elsewhere), let me clarify: I am not.

I am against government help for black people in the USA (or elsewhere) if that help is contingent on them being black, or minorities, or lgbtq, or whatever the next flavor of the day is gonna be.

More generally to your first paragraph: I never said I was for government hand outs at some point and then suddenly changed my opinion when minorities might have also benefitted from them. What a bad faith reading. It is these quotes and answers that make me think it is effort in vain to talk to you.

I'll quote your second paragraph: "Meritocracy cannot exist without starting from a place of equality." I agree. But equity is not equality. In fact these principles (equity and equality) are mutually exlusive. The moment you argue for one, you will argue against the other. It is either the case that

1) people are treated equally and can expect different outcomes between groups, or

2) that people are treated unequally and can expect simillar outcomes between groups.

To say: I am for equality therefore different races should be treated differently - That is something I cannot intellectually follow.

I recommend Thomas Sowells "Discrimination and Disparities" to combat the detrimental belief that disparities in outcomes between groups must be because of unfair discrimination and an unequal playing field.

OSZAR »


As a minority myself, I do stand against and call out racism.
That's the only way we can enact true change, it won't happen overnight, it will take generations.

It's not to be tolerated in a modern, democratic, civilized society... Which is why I have been an ardent opposer of certain political groups like Bob Katter, One Nation, Clive Palmer and more in Australia.

And often the only rebuttal I get from others on WHY they support these detestable, racist, bigots/party's is... "They are just saying what everyone is thinking".
If racism is what "everyone is thinking" then that points to a systemic issue nationally.

Thankfully these bottom feeders tend to only get minority support here... But I feel that social media tends to over-represent these groups in my social media feed, likely due to "the algorithm".

OSZAR »


--::{PC Gaming Master Race}::--

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JuliusHackebeil said:
sundin13 said:

Hundreds of years of handouts and federal assistance for white people to help them build wealth, from the Homestead Act to redlining and Levittowns (often which had disastrous consequences for the people left behind), but as soon the federal government could no longer discriminate against minorities, government assistance quickly became just immoral handouts for the lazy. 

How strange...


Meritocracy cannot exist without starting from a place of equality. 

If you misunderstood me and think I am against government help for black people, say, in the USA (or elsewhere), let me clarify: I am not.

I am against government help for black people in the USA (or elsewhere) if that help is contingent on them being black, or minorities, or lgbtq, or whatever the next flavor of the day is gonna be.

More generally to your first paragraph: I never said I was for government hand outs at some point and then suddenly changed my opinion when minorities might have also benefitted from them. What a bad faith reading. It is these quotes and answers that make me think it is effort in vain to talk to you.

I'll quote your second paragraph: "Meritocracy cannot exist without starting from a place of equality." I agree. But equity is not equality. In fact these principles (equity and equality) are mutually exlusive. The moment you argue for one, you will argue against the other. It is either the case that

1) people are treated equally and can expect different outcomes between groups, or

2) that people are treated unequally and can expect simillar outcomes between groups.

To say: I am for equality therefore different races should be treated differently - That is something I cannot intellectually follow.

I recommend Thomas Sowells "Discrimination and Disparities" to combat the detrimental belief that disparities in outcomes between groups must be because of unfair discrimination and an unequal playing field.

I was talking about society changing their views. This flip is something that happened, like, 50 years ago so I'd presume you weren't alive at the time (respect to the old-heads who were around and don't suck though). Sorry for the lack of clarity on that. 

My point with my second paragraph though, is that we can't expect meritocracy to bloom out of society that had its thumb on the scale for hundreds of years. That shit has consequences, simply taking your hand off the scale doesn't right those wrongs, and it doesn't put society in a good position to give the best to its best. 

To me, equality is a goal more than a pathway. I'd love to get to a point where people get out of society what they put in, but when so many black Americans are born so much further behind than many white Americans, we clearly are not there yet. And this wasn't an accident. These situations were in many ways designed by the public policy of the past. 

So, we have a responsibility to set those communities back onto a path where they are able to get out of society what they put in. There are a lot of ways to do that, and a lot of it involves specifically putting resources in to build back those communities, or provide opportunities to the people in them. This will inherently be skewed racially, because the policy of the past that new policy should address were also racially skewed. That doesn't mean that a white person from the inner city shouldn't get opportunities or that we shouldn't also provide assistance to rural communities who face a different set of challenges and are more white, but we have a specific responsibility to the people suffering under the unjust actions of the government of the past. 

Also, I think Sowell misses a lot of the complexity of this issue. For example, he brings up the absence of criminal background checks during hiring, and says that many employers are not discriminating against black people due to individual racism, but instead to reduce the likelihood of hiring an ex-felon, but this misses the pretty clear issue that the increased proportion of black Americans in the criminal justice system is in itself in no small part a symptom of discrimination and past racism. In a way, he is kind of advocating for a "systemic" approach to racism and not an "individual" approach. Racism is not merely something that individuals do, but instead is largely something that is imparted by the weight of systemic decisions of the past. 

OSZAR »


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TallSilhouette said:
JuliusHackebeil said:

And if MLK was for equity, he was on the completely wrong track. Equity is poison to meritocracy and productive society. He should have much rather thought that black people would not need a hand out, that, given how generational wealth actually works (and how few people are actually wealthy to begin with), black people would make it at an equal playing field, because they are no worse than white people.

Just going by USA because it is such a popular example for race relations: in 1860, about 1,45 % of people owned slaves. About 8 % lived in a slave owning household.

If you want to punish the decendants of those 8 %, that is already a strange viewpoint. But to want to punish the decendants of the remaining 92 % of white people, that I cannot understand at all.

Inherited wealth is mostly spent after one or two generations, not amassed to form a big pile of gold that some people just lucked out of because of their race. Wealth, spending habbits, the economy are all more complicated than Mario Kart.

And very few white people were wealthy to begin with. Just 70, 80 years ago most lived in conditions far worse than any person in the USA today, irrespective of skin colour.

A youtuber screaming about past injustices (and slavery, segregation were injustices, obviously) is not a good argument for looking at the present and say: let us not help poor people, let us help black poor people, because they deserve it more. Because there are still disparities between groups. And everybody knows what disparities between groups must mean: racism.

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JuliusHackebeil said:

If you want to punish the decendants of those 8 %, that is already a strange viewpoint. But to want to punish the decendants of the remaining 92 % of white people, that I cannot understand at all.

...What? 

Who said anything about punishing white people? Also, racist governmental policy didn't end with slavery...

OSZAR »


JuliusHackebeil said:

Just going by USA because it is such a popular example for race relations: in 1860, about 1,45 % of people owned slaves. About 8 % lived in a slave owning household. 

I like how this is the only form of discrimination mentioned in the video that you actually address, as if many, many more people and their families weren't affected (positively or negatively) by things like the Homestead Act, New Deal programs, sharecropping, redlining, persecution by law enforcement, segregation, general racism, etc. 

JuliusHackebeil said:

If you want to punish the decendants of those 8 %, that is already a strange viewpoint. But to want to punish the decendants of the remaining 92 % of white people, that I cannot understand at all. 

As sundin said...what?! Who said anything about punishing white people? How does helping minorities do that? This worldview is so emblematic of the victim complex that fuels so much of right wing politics. 

JuliusHackebeil said:

Inherited wealth is mostly spent after one or two generations, not amassed to form a big pile of gold that some people just lucked out of because of their race. Wealth, spending habbits, the economy are all more complicated than Mario Kart.

And very few white people were wealthy to begin with. Just 70, 80 years ago most lived in conditions far worse than any person in the USA today, irrespective of skin colour.

And yet the racial wealth gap in this country remains massive. You don't have to be rich to have been positively or negatively affected by generational wealth disparities. How else do you explain the wealth gap? Culture? Work ethic? Family values? 

JuliusHackebeil said:

A youtuber screaming about past injustices (and slavery, segregation were injustices, obviously) is not a good argument for looking at the present and say: let us not help poor people, let us help black poor people, because they deserve it more.

No one here is saying not to help poor people in general. Only one side is objecting to helping specific disadvantaged groups within that population. 

JuliusHackebeil said:

Because there are still disparities between groups. And everybody knows what disparities between groups must mean: racism. 

It's been true for pretty much all of American history. Why would that suddenly stop being the case now? 

OSZAR »


OSZAR »
sundin13 said:
JuliusHackebeil said:

If you misunderstood me and think I am against government help for black people, say, in the USA (or elsewhere), let me clarify: I am not.

I am against government help for black people in the USA (or elsewhere) if that help is contingent on them being black, or minorities, or lgbtq, or whatever the next flavor of the day is gonna be.

More generally to your first paragraph: I never said I was for government hand outs at some point and then suddenly changed my opinion when minorities might have also benefitted from them. What a bad faith reading. It is these quotes and answers that make me think it is effort in vain to talk to you.

I'll quote your second paragraph: "Meritocracy cannot exist without starting from a place of equality." I agree. But equity is not equality. In fact these principles (equity and equality) are mutually exlusive. The moment you argue for one, you will argue against the other. It is either the case that

1) people are treated equally and can expect different outcomes between groups, or

2) that people are treated unequally and can expect simillar outcomes between groups.

To say: I am for equality therefore different races should be treated differently - That is something I cannot intellectually follow.

I recommend Thomas Sowells "Discrimination and Disparities" to combat the detrimental belief that disparities in outcomes between groups must be because of unfair discrimination and an unequal playing field.

I was talking about society changing their views. This flip is something that happened, like, 50 years ago so I'd presume you weren't alive at the time (respect to the old-heads who were around and don't suck though). Sorry for the lack of clarity on that. 

My point with my second paragraph though, is that we can't expect meritocracy to bloom out of society that had its thumb on the scale for hundreds of years. That shit has consequences, simply taking your hand off the scale doesn't right those wrongs, and it doesn't put society in a good position to give the best to its best. 

To me, equality is a goal more than a pathway. I'd love to get to a point where people get out of society what they put in, but when so many black Americans are born so much further behind than many white Americans, we clearly are not there yet. And this wasn't an accident. These situations were in many ways designed by the public policy of the past. 

So, we have a responsibility to set those communities back onto a path where they are able to get out of society what they put in. There are a lot of ways to do that, and a lot of it involves specifically putting resources in to build back those communities, or provide opportunities to the people in them. This will inherently be skewed racially, because the policy of the past that new policy should address were also racially skewed. That doesn't mean that a white person from the inner city shouldn't get opportunities or that we shouldn't also provide assistance to rural communities who face a different set of challenges and are more white, but we have a specific responsibility to the people suffering under the unjust actions of the government of the past. 

Also, I think Sowell misses a lot of the complexity of this issue. For example, he brings up the absence of criminal background checks during hiring, and says that many employers are not discriminating against black people due to individual racism, but instead to reduce the likelihood of hiring an ex-felon, but this misses the pretty clear issue that the increased proportion of black Americans in the criminal justice system is in itself in no small part a symptom of discrimination and past racism. In a way, he is kind of advocating for a "systemic" approach to racism and not an "individual" approach. Racism is not merely something that individuals do, but instead is largely something that is imparted by the weight of systemic decisions of the past. 

I think I get the sentiment. In the past people did things wrong in one way. So you want to do things wrong in another to make everything right. I would argue that we should do things right now, because you cannot make good on past wrongs with more wrongs (like discriminating against people on the basis of their race, like lowered standards for colledge admissions (USA killed that thankfully, even though in practice it is still a problem), like hiring just from the minoritiy pool (as Britain did for government jobs the last two decades), etc.).

I even could be wrong about past injustices being insignificant for black peoples wealth in the USA today. (Even though it is almost insignificant for your wealth if one of your grandparents were wealthy.) Perhaps those past injustices are actually significant. But what to do about it? Envourage racist policy? I don't think that is the righ way when so many others also suffered from various injustices. I think you would agree that there are many, many poor people, who are poor because they faced injustices, not because of their own doing. So why concentrate so much on the supposed reason for people being poor and helping just those specific ones for those specific reasons? I would say we should try help everybody irrespective of their skin colour.

(Even though you could argue that the reason for the black plight in the USA is important for helping them effectively. Unemployment was low. Family cohesion was high. Violent crime was low. And then the wellfare state came in. And after I don't know how many billions, nothing is better. Quite to the contrary.)

"we can't expect meritocracy to bloom out of society that had its thumb on the scale for hundreds of years" -"had"- past tense. We cannot expect meritocracy to bloom out of society that favours one group over another on the basis of their skin colour.

"we clearly are not there yet" -How do you come to this conclusion? Because of different outcomes? Since that tells you fairly little.

"So, we have a responsibility to set those communities back onto a path where they are able to get out of society what they put in." -This is a too tribal mindset for me. My responsibilities are not to one community over another, only to my fellow citizens. And how do you know that any community does not get out what they put in? Different outcomes again?

"we have a specific responsibility to the people suffering under the unjust actions of the government of the past." -This responsibility only extends to making the government just. Not to overcorrect for poeple with a victim complex.

"the increased proportion of black Americans in the criminal justice system is in itself in no small part a symptom of discrimination and past racism" -I think people are in prison because they commit crimes. And black people are free not to commit them. When Roland Fryer (the ex Harvard prof) talked about his cousins, he said they were in prison on purpose, to get cool tattoos.

And why is it that so many Africans (I read a statistic about Nigerians in particular) and Asians coming to the USA much later, that lived there in extreme poverty for only one generation, are now better off than most black poeple who already lived in that country, this time with a big headstart on their part (with Asians doing even better than white people)? No racist can see the difference between a black person in the country for one generation vs 6 generations.

Ultimately I think we should concentrate on what is effective. The single biggest predictor for success is if you had both your parents at home. So this is what we should promote as a nation - family cohesion, not handouts that have not been effecitve so far in closing any gap. Quite the contrary.

OSZAR »


sundin13 said:

So, we have a responsibility to set those communities back onto a path where they are able to get out of society what they put in. There are a lot of ways to do that, and a lot of it involves specifically putting resources in to build back those communities, or provide opportunities to the people in them. This will inherently be skewed racially, because the policy of the past that new policy should address were also racially skewed. That doesn't mean that a white person from the inner city shouldn't get opportunities or that we shouldn't also provide assistance to rural communities who face a different set of challenges and are more white, but we have a specific responsibility to the people suffering under the unjust actions of the government of the past. 

That is EXACTLY what it means and everyone in the working class knows it.  That's because they SEE IT.  For the working class, it's REAL, not something they read on the Huffington Post or see on CNN.  White people who are wealthy and secure aren't giving up a goddamn thing, they're just sacrificing low-income white people instead while they pat themselves on the back and talk about equity like THEY are the ones who deal with the consequences.  That's why you see wealthy people in California talk about helping poor people until it comes around to letting them into their neighborhoods, then they're all about zoning laws.  I was literally told when I applied for a previous position that they were mostly looking to hire minorities to meet the new company-wide goals.  That's reality.  At the very least be honest about it.

That's why the hate for the Left from the working class is only going to increase.  I'm not kidding.  Mark it down.  Remember when I said Trump was going to win several months before the election?  That the working class was fed up with being ignored and dismissed by the Democrats?  But many of the people here said I didn't know what I was talking about?  Yeah, that's because they are out of touch.  I literally heard a Democrat politician say, "we need to fix healthcare because of racial disparity."  NOT to help PEOPLE, but only SOME PEOPLE.  I heard another say the exact same thing about student loans.  Do you really, honestly think other people who are struggling to survive don't catch that they were being left out?  Not that anyone expects either side to go against the insurance lobby, but still.

In fact, there is another warning the Left should take to heart.  Many, many black and Hispanic people are actually very conservative.  I know that surprises a lot of white Democrats but it's true.  They might vote for the Left out of self-interest, which I completely understand, but if the Republicans can get their act regarding racial minorities together even a TINY BIT, then the Democrats will be in real trouble.  The dislike of the Left-wing politicians and celebrities is pretty wide-spread, regardless of race.  We already saw some of the fallout last election.

Really, abandon the ideal of equality if you want, but it absolutely will breed anger and resentment.  Don't be surprised next time.

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