Jawbreaker
Member
Thanks, it's never easy to self-improve. But the moment I heard myself say "I'm not racist, but..." I realized that I was essentially parroting conservative talking points I've heard over the years. There is something to be said for criticizing someone's culture. Not all cultures are created equal and it's nonsensical to pretend they are all great. But there is a leap in logic from talking vaguely about broad culture norms and then suggesting that an individual of a certain ethnicity is behaving or will behave a certain way because of that culture. It implies that any Latino is as representative of the culture as any other Latino. That is where it is inherently racist unless you actually know the person deeply enough to speculate on how their upbringing affected them. For example, there have been observations that anti-gay attitudes are more prevalent in "black"/urban/ghetto cultures. That observation may be well founded, but to extrapolate that to an individual's attitudes would be a step too far. If I knew this person well enough to hear his opinions and history, then I might be able to make a statement about how I perceive his bias was influenced by his culture. The problem comes when you treat a person of any given demographic as representative of the entire group. This is wrongheaded in multiple ways.
First, cultures are not well enough defined to use this way. It may be unfounded for me to equate the black communities of Compton with those of LA. They may both be predominantly black, but that's the facet I'm trying to make a statement about, so it can't be the only feature we rely upon to group these cultures. It's racist to treat any community as representative of the entire culture because there are more factors at play than just their skin and may be local.
Second, I think that "race" or ethnicity may exist only as a societal construct. But so is currency and it has real world effects. Using these handles as catch-all terms is fine, but making precise statements about groups of people is impossible. Without genetics, each persons bias is used to categorize other people. Some people look white, but they are actually Jewish, Armenian, Latino, ect. Also, some people self identify as one race or the other when they are mixed. And we are almost all mixed anyways. So making statements based upon such flimsy terms is foolish.
Lastly I think that demonizing a "bad" culture is actually counterproductive. When people talk about thug-culture, they don't just mean criminals. They mean predominantly black, drug centric, poor people. This culture was created by the slums created by serger gated housing, drug war, and police policy. These people were born into a world that you probably can't understand unless you did too. Taking a broad brush approach to stamping their culture out only empowers it. If you unequally arrest people wearing baggy pants and backwards caps, you are only galvanizing communities against the police and glorifying "thug-life". Plus, you might make a criminal out of someone that was just minding their own business. Police harassment is a major problem in black communities and this leads to increased negativity towards police. The same could be said for stereotyping "Muslim culture". I used to agree with Sam Harris about how Islam was the most evil of all religions and should be eradicated with predjudice. But the number of violent extremist Muslims are really low compared to the vast majority of them. And their opinions on scripture are as varied as Christians. I would bet that the American "Christian" perspective influenced our bad decisions with Iraq and Afghanistan. These could have potentially been avoided by a more nuanced view. And when Muslims are demonized as terrorists, you invoke more extremism. But how do you change a very negative culture without using force or demonizing? Education, without education, people will repeat the stereotypes their parents instill in them.
Often, it's not simply thisit's even worse. Many minorities are criticized by their own family members and peers for not conforming to the culture, and you're seen as some sort of traitor or outsider if you deviate. Growing up, I can tell you that I was often teased by my Hispanic family members for listening to punk and ska music instead of merengue, bachata, or rap. I was picked on for how I styled my hair, how I dressed, and how I spoke. Apparently, I spoke too "white" and listened to "crazy white boy music." I was "corny" because I wasn't heavily into what they had adopted as their culture. I wasn't "Hispanic enough." It's really unfortunate that this happens and it certainly causes a lot of internal conflict. You want peopleespecially the ones who love youto accept your differences instead of seeing it as an aberration.