Stereogatari
Banned
American politics is reminding me more and more of Turkish politics everyday.
In my college global studies class I took this summer, someone did this while writing about gloabal warming in an exercise. Just one reference, the bible. It's sad.
That sounds like an echo chamber tbh. Not saying that in response to accusations of liberal echo chambers, more like it seems to be a concept everywhere unfortunatrly.
No you are wrong. State representatives vote on not to give other state aid during natural disasters knowing that their constituents don't care. And then when something happen to their state they ask for aid.
not a choice.This comes off more as explain how xenophobia has overtaken most rural areas by the surrounding themselves with an echo chamber of like people. These people choose to be ignorant because they refuse to expose to other people, religions, and life styles.
It's one of the most ridiculous things about the USA how everyone is so into patriotism and god but if it about helping each other for real then everything is forgotten.
"The United States also scored in the top 10 on the index’s two other measures of altruism: helping strangers in need (first) and volunteering (fifth). Seventy-nine percent of Americans surveyed said they had helped a stranger in the previous month, while 44 percent said they had volunteered. The United States was the only country in the report to rank in the top 10 on all three measures."
https://www.philanthropy.com/article/United-States-Ranks-9th-in-the/152197
Google more, and you will get more of the same results.
Leaving the echo chamber really helps shaping perspective, not everything is black and white. If I was brought up in such an environment I'd probably think Trump was a good candidate as well.
I have to say, I've lost all patience with the dual infantilization and deification of rural America and working class whites.
Helping a stranger is an incredibly vague category that it could even be interpreted as telling a stranger the time. Volunteering can also be intoxicated because people may lie about it because her character is at stake in the survey. I'd imagine this is an aggregate from different specific questions that result in these numbers, but pollsters can be so fucking lazy that you never know."The United States also scored in the top 10 on the indexs two other measures of altruism: helping strangers in need (first) and volunteering (fifth). Seventy-nine percent of Americans surveyed said they had helped a stranger in the previous month, while 44 percent said they had volunteered. The United States was the only country in the report to rank in the top 10 on all three measures."
https://www.philanthropy.com/article/United-States-Ranks-9th-in-the/152197
Google more, and you will get more of the same results.
Yet she spent all previous paragraphs describing ignorant, hateful, bigoted, zealoutus people that pretty much fits the definition in the western world of "idiot".
You are still wrong.
America, Rural America specifically, does not have an issue helping "strangers" in their community but it is clear that anything outside of the line of view is out of their minds as well. One strong pillar of Christianity is volunteering and giving back. That doesn't have to mean giving to people that do not look like you.
Look at policy decisions in the United States that are aimed at benefiting specific groups of people either people of one background or people in a different state. If 79% of America felt that way then 100% of policies aimed at helping others would get passed.
https://thinkprogress.org/31-senate...r-aid-for-home-states-1ea0a82683e0#.qylfj051n
http://www.latimes.com/business/hiltzik/la-fi-hiltzik-louisiana-floods-20160822-snap-story.html
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ge-while-mulling-south-carolina-flood-relief/
Rural America is demanding jobs that are in a dying industry and at the same time their current political affiliation would have people argue against Affirmative Action.
And people wonder why the left can seem overbearing.
If you go to people who were raised in ignorance and call them idiots, or racists, or whatever, of course theyre going to push back. It sucks, but you have to realize there are people who have fundamentally different beliefs than you or I, and what we care about is not necessarily what they care about.
My question is then what do you do when you have a racist.
Can logic be twisted to argue that someone is being racist by saying all blacks are inferior and only got into college because of Affirmative Action but that they are not racist?
When do you stop calling a spade a spade.
There is a big issue of generalizing everyone, but when you have specific people do you not address them? It should not matter if you were raised to think your actions of assuming inferiority was a bad thing.
I already showed links to rankings of US, and aid to many countries that have all kinds of ethnic backgrounds. You seem to make it a race item, we will have to disagree then.
You are doing the exact same thing by grouping all rural and Christianity.
Kind of surreal to read the replies in this thread. Having grown up in MN, I can identify with the people here and I identify them as real people, but if I were an outsider to this thread I'd see a lot of parallels between breaking up this Minnesotan echo chamber and breaking up the indoctrination that leads to radical Islam in certain corners of the Middle East.
I guess the problem is essentially the same between the two. Neither groups actually want to be re-educated, and both groups actually feel like their are the ones with the moral high ground. Though I will admit that the few posts that basically say "fuck 'em" sting a little bit more when they're talking about me.
Is that your excuse for equating minorities arming themselves against the threat of bigotry to hulking up and going to war against the US government?
Because if that's the case, after reading this piece, I kind of understand where you're coming from... and still don't forgive you for the damaging views you hold.
Kinda further confirms my belief that much of today's right wing landscape falls at the feet of Fox News. These belief systems were already there but instead of the internet and television diversifying perspectives, right wing media accelerated the confirmation of their preexisting biases.
People are what they eat in a sense.
How can you help a collective group of people where the majority of them do not want your help?
Seriously how?
Kind of surreal to read the replies in this thread. Having grown up in MN, I can identify with the people here and I identify them as real people, but if I were an outsider to this thread I'd see a lot of parallels between breaking up this Minnesotan echo chamber and breaking up the indoctrination that leads to radical Islam in certain corners of the Middle East.
I guess the problem is essentially the same between the two. Neither groups actually want to be re-educated, and both groups actually feel like their are the ones with the moral high ground. Though I will admit that the few posts that basically say "fuck 'em" sting a little bit more when they're talking about me.
I grew up in rural East Germany, a classmate of mine had a daily two hour commute thanks to living in a remote village with a bad connection to public transport. Wasn't so bad. School made a big point in education about nationalsocialism from grade school on. German education systems, not even the saxon one are not that terrible. We are ruled by central parties that would both be left in the USA.Kinda sounds like her mind would be blown if she drove 1 or 2 hours and visited rural East Germany lol
My question is then what do you do when you have a racist.
Can logic be twisted to argue that someone is being racist by saying all blacks are inferior and only got into college because of Affirmative Action but that they are not racist?
When do you stop calling a spade a spade.
There is a big issue of generalizing everyone, but when you have specific people do you not address them? It should not matter if you were raised to think your actions of assuming inferiority was a bad thing.
Maybe it's not the government's business to help them.
If your policies work, implement them in the states where you can and make them want the same instead of trying to drag them along unwillingly. This has been the republican strategy for decades.
Noooo only 1 video is available to watch in my country (USA)Two Swedish journalists have traveled to Grundy, Virginia to do a sort of investigation on why that town is the strongest foothold Trump has: In Trumpland with Filip & Fredrik
It gives a great understanding on how even POCs want to vote for Trump. Basically, the issues of jobs are much more important than if a guy is likeable or not.
Here are some clips with meetings of people in Grundy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-ySOTddQ2M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q9x4gt0ImIc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjDVvJc2VO0
But the absolute lack of understanding of the 'other side' isn't progress, and it isn't progressive. It's stiffling, it's blinding, and it prevents moving forward. The only way to convince someone of a point is to talk to them, hurling insults does not change minds, it shuts them.
We write a paper on the Big Bang in biology class. When Ashlie strikes out all the questions and simply writes down the story of creation from the Bible, she gets the full score.
What the what heck is this hahahaha.
Seriously??
I'm glad she opened her eyes to other ways of thinking. The culture wars are just that, culture wars. The way the left views things like racism are pretty much exactly the way small towns view an issue like abortion - there is no discussing it, there is no rational explanation, there is no 'understanding' the other side, it's just pure evil. So both sides shut down and there is no communication, because without understanding there is no conversation, no debate, no learning, no progress.
Salena Zito, in the Atlantic, said: "When he makes claims like this, the press takes him literally, but not seriously; his supporters take him seriously, but not literally."
These are wise words. Trump supporters didn't freak out about every last piece of garbage Trump spouted, because they don't take him literally. They forgave his excesses and focused on his message - things the left didn't take seriously, or often even hear at all. As Moore pointed out, Trump spoke directly to the rust belt, promising tariffs on auto manufacturers who continued to move jobs overseas. Those supporters didn't support Trump because he was racist, but because promised to protect their jobs, something HRC would never do.
Trump is awful. But he spoke to America, and he didn't use the words of politicians, but crassness. And some people needed to hear that, because even if they didn't agree with him on every issue, they were sick of the sanitized mumbo jumbo coming out of other politicians mouths. Trump offered change.
I don't support Trump (nor Hillary). But I have lived in big cities in the US and in Europe, and lived on both coasts of the US. I'm not happy Trump is president, but I'm happy Clinton isn't. I'd have said that in reverse had we had another outcome. But the absolute lack of understanding of the 'other side' isn't progress, and it isn't progressive. It's stiffling, it's blinding, and it prevents moving forward. The only way to convince someone of a point is to talk to them, hurling insults does not change minds, it shuts them.
It is very sad. In my ideal world these communities would not protect the racists, and bigots.When there are racists in a homogenous community, it becomes tough. They still have their community to fall back on. Theyre not going to want to engage in a discussion over their beliefs from an outsider like you or me, because they know best because that is how their community has shaped them.
Whats the answer, though? If I had my way I would break up these communities and force them into a diverse one. Make them live in a diverse one so their children can grow up in a melting pot, and they will see that everyone is a person trying to live their life.
As it stands though, until diversity is forced upon these homogenous, rural areas, they will continue to breed their ignorance. I understand that. I understand that no matter how much you say till youre red in the face that they need to stop living in ignorance, they will continue to do so.
Its a sad reality. You cant force groups of people that are isolated and leak their own truths in to change, so the second best thing is to understand that they have different needs. You cant ignore these people in the grand scheme of politics either, because they are a formidable voting block. To engage with them is a catch 22 for politicians. For everyone else tho, we can thankfully steer clear of them.
I'm glad she opened her eyes to other ways of thinking. The culture wars are just that, culture wars. The way the left views things like racism are pretty much exactly the way small towns view an issue like abortion - there is no discussing it, there is no rational explanation, there is no 'understanding' the other side, it's just pure evil. So both sides shut down and there is no communication, because without understanding there is no conversation, no debate, no learning, no progress.
Salena Zito, in the Atlantic, said: "When he makes claims like this, the press takes him literally, but not seriously; his supporters take him seriously, but not literally."
These are wise words. Trump supporters didn't freak out about every last piece of garbage Trump spouted, because they don't take him literally. They forgave his excesses and focused on his message - things the left didn't take seriously, or often even hear at all. As Moore pointed out, Trump spoke directly to the rust belt, promising tariffs on auto manufacturers who continued to move jobs overseas. Those supporters didn't support Trump because he was racist, but because promised to protect their jobs, something HRC would never do.
Trump is awful. But he spoke to America, and he didn't use the words of politicians, but crassness. And some people needed to hear that, because even if they didn't agree with him on every issue, they were sick of the sanitized mumbo jumbo coming out of other politicians mouths. Trump offered change.
I don't support Trump (nor Hillary). But I have lived in big cities in the US and in Europe, and lived on both coasts of the US. I'm not happy Trump is president, but I'm happy Clinton isn't. I'd have said that in reverse had we had another outcome. But the absolute lack of understanding of the 'other side' isn't progress, and it isn't progressive. It's stiffling, it's blinding, and it prevents moving forward. The only way to convince someone of a point is to talk to them, hurling insults does not change minds, it shuts them.
Well I would not want to be with a CDU voter..>_>.
How can the American education system pass off creationism as a full points solution to biology? That's downright crazy! If you teach at school, you have to teach science - religious courses excluded.