Byakuya769
Member
What the girl said wasn't racist, though.
I know this person, and I know the kind of of jokes she makes. That's how it was meant to be a racist joke. However, she believes that it's okay because no matter what she says, nobody can be racist towards white people. That lead me to make this thread to see if posters on GAF shared her opinions or knew someone that did.
That falls under tribalism not racism. Hutus and Tutsis are the same race.
Minorties don't have the privilege to be thought of as individuals (in the context of our opinions, history, and actions) because...we're minorities...we don't make the rules.
Also some white/straight/cis people don't always have to deal with us on a daily basis so they never get to seriously know us as individuals and they just assume that we're a stereotypical hive-mind. It doesn't help that we're usually depicted with the same old tropes (Ex: Angry jive talkin' black man, loud effeminate promiscuous gay boy) in every form of media ever.
I'm gonna say you're both to the South of "Smart".
That's not a racist thing to call someone ... and white people aren't the only racist people.
No, in reference to him quoting me and several others when we said anyone can be a racist.They're saying that racism = the belief that (after subscribing to the social construct that is the idea of "race") one race is greater or less than another race.
This is assuming that black people (or any other minority) believe they they ARE better than the other. A declaration of "nerdy white guy" doesn't say they are better than the person because of race. In fact, acknowledging that white privilege exists means any minority already knows they can't be better because solely of their race. Then what's the argument for a black person or any other minority (at least in America) can be racist?Yeah dude, keep coming up with backwards ass logic to defend hating or believing you're better than someone else because they share a different skin color to the one you're wrapped in. Anyone can be racist. Being on the shorter end of the stick throughout history isn't a fucking fee pass.
In an academic context, I've heard it said that racism is prejudice + power. Black people therefore can't be racist because, while they might be prejudiced, their prejudice doesn't have the backing of a whole host of social systems designed to promote one race at the expense of another.
Mostly seems like a semantic thing to me, but I kinda like having a word to indicate prejudice + power, because it really is qualitatively a different thing from prejudice on its own.
Most whites do not differentiate between what they call "racism" against other whites and racism against minorities.
After the Civil Rights Movement, racism no longer had the sort of legal backing that allowed it to openly thrive for generations. So, it went underground, and in doing so, became invisible to the vast majority of white people. Where racism was once highly visible, it is now well-hidden.
What we're left with is an America in which reasonable people of all colors recognize increasingly rare on-the-nose racism (Donald Sterling, Trayvon Martin, etc), but only minorities (mostly black people, to be honest) recognize and experience racism in its all-too-common hidden, institutionalized forms.
So, when a white person is the victim of prejudice or discrimination, their first inclination is to call it racist. But to minorities, that kind of discrimination pales in comparison to the sort of racism they deal with on a daily basis. A random pedestrian called you a white boy? That's definitely NOT okay, but it's also definitely NOT the same or as harmful as the sort of racism non-whites experience. When non-whites talk about racism, they're generally talking about the kind of stuff that keeps them from getting jobs, causes them to feel threatened by law enforcement, and prevents them from being able to accrue wealth and power in the ways equally capable whites can.
Whites set the tone of every cultural discourse in this nation because they are the majority. But if whites use "racism" to describe relatively minor occurrences like being called a "white boy," how will blacks and others be able to explain the already difficult to pin down and oft-denied varieties of institutionalized, hidden discrimination they've experienced for centuries?
Most whites do not differentiate between what they call "racism" against other whites and racism against minorities.
After the Civil Rights Movement, racism no longer had the sort of legal backing that allowed it to openly thrive for generations. So, it went underground, and in doing so, became invisible to the vast majority of white people. Where racism was once highly visible, it is now well-hidden.
What we're left with is an America in which reasonable people of all colors recognize increasingly rare on-the-nose racism (Donald Sterling, Trayvon Martin, etc), but only minorities (mostly black people, to be honest) recognize and experience racism in its all-too-common hidden, institutionalized forms.
So, when a white person is the victim of prejudice or discrimination, their first inclination is to call it racist. But to minorities, that kind of discrimination pales in comparison to the sort of racism they deal with on a daily basis. A random pedestrian called you a white boy? That's definitely NOT okay, but it's also definitely NOT the same or as harmful as the sort of racism non-whites experience. When non-whites talk about racism, they're generally talking about the kind of stuff that keeps them from getting jobs, causes them to feel threatened by law enforcement, and prevents them from being able to accrue wealth and power in the ways equally capable whites can.
Whites set the tone of every cultural discourse in this nation because they are the majority. But if whites use "racism" to describe relatively minor occurrences like being called a "white boy," how will blacks and others be able to explain the already difficult to pin down and oft-denied varieties of institutionalized, hidden discrimination they've experienced for centuries?
Hmm. I can see how "nerdy white boy" could be racially charged. Not necessarily racist in the sense that it should be rage-inducing, but I see it as a statement that "this person is nerdy, but not just regular nerdy, nerdy in the way that only white people seem to embody."
You.
You!
I like you. A lot!
Made a well thought argument in a dicy thread.
Nominate to expedite his membership status.
Right so a black person who hates white people is not racist.
Being prejudice is not the same as racism.
Well I apologize if I came across as insulting your intelligence, in hindsight I shoulda used different wording seeing as I was wrongfully going along the general line of thought on the first page and first few post stating that your friend's "an idiot".I know this person, and I know the kind of of jokes she makes. That's how it was meant to be a racist joke. However, she believes that it's okay because no matter what she says, nobody can be racist towards white people. That lead me to make this thread to see if posters on GAF shared her opinions or knew someone that did.
It isn't like I go on a crusade against anyone who dares to describe a boy who happens to be white as a "white boy."
I think it should be clear that people use "nerdy" in a derogatory manner quite a bit (mostly in a high school or middle school environment). However, it can also be used in a positive manner.
If you think I'm incorrect in using "racist" instead of "prejudiced" or some other word,then, say that and explain why I was wrong. If I realize that I was wrong, then, I just apologize and go on about my day. There's no need to question my intelligence.
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Black people most certainly can be.
BUT.
I've never met an actual black person that believed that their black skin or ethnic background made them superior to or otherwise better than someone of fair skin. That's what racism is, after all: A belief that there is a difference between races and that your race is superior, supported by actions designed to oppress, suppress, or otherwise limit those of the "inferior" races. That is racism. And no, "Black supremacy" isn't a common modus operandi in our communities. We generally don't walk around under a belief that we're *better than* anyone else. We've been looking for equality for 400+ fucking years; give us at least another 100 before we start feeling better than.
It's very possible for black folk to be bigoted or prejudiced, but racist...that's very rare. The only groups I think I've ever heard of that are black supremacists (per se) are some really weird religious groups. Maybe some in the Nation of Islam (are they still around?), maybe some in the 5 percent nation and similar extremely radical, extremely small groups.
So yes, it's possible but highly unusual. I hope people have a functioning, working, PROPER definition of what (a) racism, (b) bigotry, and (c) prejudiced are. There is some overlap, but there are some things that make each very unique and identifiable. As a socially-conscious black man, I'm perhaps more versed on these matters than some, but I expect all who would seek to participate in such a discussion at least absorb and internalize the definitions and go from there.
It becomes a prejudiced comment.If the person the OP spoke with has a habit of calling white people nerdy, or thinks most white guys are nerds, then it becomes a racist comment I think.
isn't this even worse? the level hate towards people with different facial features to result in genocide?That falls under tribalism not racism. Hutus and Tutsis are the same race.
Nerdy white is racist.
Have all of you, saying otherwise, forgot the phrase "stop acting white" ? That phrase is also used against people trying to make themselves more educated.
It's a very stupid viewpoint but it is still a negative derogatory view and the nerdy white boy joke is rooted in that same view.
"I can't disprove what they said so here's my feeble attempt to dismiss it."
Racialism was coined as specifically meaning the belief in the superiority of a specific race around 1908
In the 1930s racism was coined as a synonym
Following WWII racism replaced racialism as the common word for the belief in racial superiority
The term came inti common use during the civil rights movement
The sociological definition has been the accepted one in academia (fun fact: the majority of which is, in fact, not anti-white black folk) for over two decades now. More than a quarter of the term's existence.
The most recent version of the three most cited English dictionaries definitions require a belief in superiority.
At no point, ever, has the colloquial definition as a synonym for prejudice ever been an official definition.
But this is all easily looked up. You don't want anything disproved, you just want to shove your fingers in your ears and play victim.
"I have literally no idea what I am talking about, but please enjoy the contents of my anus!"
Well I apologize if I came across as insulting your intelligence, in hindsight I shoulda used different wording seeing as I was wrongfully going along the general line of thought on the first page and first few post stating that your friend's "an idiot".
But yes, I think you're seeing racism where "prejudiced" is.
IDK you're friend, but unless she thinks being wut people call "black" makes her better than other races then it's not racist. It's prejudiced to believe or assume that all or most of any group acts w/e way. But of course there's overlap and what not but people like to be lazy and muddy the difference up.
This post is a great look at how I see it..
It becomes a prejudiced comment.
Racialism was coined as specifically meaning the belief in the superiority of a specific race around 1908
In the 1930s racism was coined as a synonym
Following WWII racism replaced racialism as the common word for the belief in racial superiority
The term came inti common use during the civil rights movement
The sociological definition has been the accepted one in academia (fun fact: the majority of which is, in fact, not anti-white black folk) for over two decades now. More than a quarter of the term's existence.
The most recent version of the three most cited English dictionaries definitions require a belief in superiority.
At no point, ever, has the colloquial definition as a synonym for prejudice ever been an official definition.
But this is all easily looked up. You don't want anything disproved, you just want to shove your fingers in your ears and play victim.
Does this mean Sammy Sosa can be racist? The man has been bleached to high heaven for his pale complexion.Sadly, I have seen people claiming that only white people can be racist because "racism = intitutional power + prejudice" or something stupid like that.
Luckily it's mostly been by crazy people on tumblr, but it makes it difficult to have a proper discussion on the subject without it devolving into "only white people can be racist"
Does this mean Sammy Sosa can be racist? The man has been bleached to high heaven for his pale complexion.
You are aware that NO word has an official definition right? A colloquial definition is a definition.
I'm sure they'd call him white passing and claim that he therefor can be racist. Sadly, the "only white people can be racist" is often used to spout the most racist and hateful shit imaginable under the guise of "I'm not white so it's harmless, I'm just venting".
I can't recall the last time I saw a minority discriminate against a white person. I can recall the last time I saw a white person discriminate against a minority. The former happens far, far less often than he latter and has very different repercussions, so a different word (prejudice/discrimination) should be used for the former.
This seems very America/Western-centric. What happens if your frame of reference is a place where white people aren't the majority?
This whole argument seems nothing short of ridiculous where I live, for instance.
I like that the idea is expressed, but they should not have co opted a word with a wider understood meaning and then deny those other meanings.
This.of course they can be racist, but i don't see how calling someone a nerdy white boy is racist
Right so a black person who hates white people is not racist.
Being prejudice is not the same as racism.
However, I think that the term "racism," in its simplest form, means the simple hatred of a person, or group of people of another race, just because of their race. So, anyone who says that this can't exist in ANY race, is just plain nuts, or dumb, or just likes to argue for the sake of arguing.
Why is every black person a spokesperson for black people in general
I don't listen to white hobos talking about whatever the fuck and then go and ask other white people "so why do you guys believe [hobo ramblings]?"
I saw white kids getting picked on by blacks and Hispanics a lot at my middle and high schools simply for being "white boys" or "gueros."I can't recall the last time I saw a minority discriminate against a white person. I can recall the last time I saw a white person discriminate against a minority. The former happens far, far less often than he latter and has very different repercussions, so a different word (prejudice/discrimination) should be used for the former.