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many white males in America are aggrieved at the constant repetition that their experiences and opinions are not worthy of consideration and that any personal expression that deviates from politically correct speech is inherently racist and/or sexist. It can be, but is not inherently.
Ok, this might hold true in some situations but how often is it the norm? If so, in what settings?
I don't personally think that identity politics is alone a complete enough formulation to change our social institutions. but given that it has been posing a challenge to old ways of being,
how could we reasonably tell the difference between when the critics are being "too PC" versus when the defenders actually are being racist or sexist?
Ok, this might hold true in some situations but how often is it the norm? If so, in what settings?
mentalgongfu2 wrote:Sorry AD, I have no statistical analysis to answer that. All I can say is, people tend toward more radical views when they feel disenfranchised, and this feeling is not limited along racial or gender lines, although it often finds expression in the context of race or gender.
I don't personally think that identity politics is alone a complete enough formulation to change our social institutions. but given that it has been posing a challenge to old ways of being,
mentalgongfu2 wrote:
I don't understand what that is supposed to mean, but considering humans tend to frame the rest of the world in the context of self and group identity, I think it is an important factor in our relationships with other people.
how could we reasonably tell the difference between when the critics are being "too PC" versus when the defenders actually are being racist or sexist?
mentalgongfu2 wrote:
It's like pornography; I don't know how to define it, but I know it when I see it. The Southern Poverty Law Center does a good job of illustrating this concept lately. Assuming racist motives in the absence of evidence thereof is a common feature, as is finding racist implications when a speaker happens to notice and comment on differences of ideology or behavior among various groups.
I think you're missing my point. I'm asking if you think it's common that white men are marginalized or oppressed simply for being who they are, for being unfairly stigmatized as the perpetuators of racism and/or sexism. I'm thinking that it's fairly uncommon- that the places where people who are kinda fanatical about bashing the white man, and have institutional power to hurt him, are the exception and not the norm.
I hope I'm misunderstanding you here- Are you saying that the groups commonly called racist- white supremacist, holocaust denier/revisionist, "Christian Patriot", the BNP, the Pacifica Forum etc. etc. are actually the victims of prejudice rather than the perpetuators of it?
American Dream wrote::
how could we reasonably tell the difference between when the critics are being "too PC" versus when the defenders actually are being racist or sexist?
mentalgongfu2 wrote::It's like pornography; I don't know how to define it, but I know it when I see it. The Southern Poverty Law Center does a good job of illustrating this concept lately. Assuming racist motives in the absence of evidence thereof is a common feature, as is finding racist implications when a speaker happens to notice and comment on differences of ideology or behavior among various groups.
MARK POTOK: We know nothing of this man. We did not have him in our files. We found absolutely nothing in the way of real background on the movement or association with any group. But, yeah, as a general matter his ideas seem connected to at least some of the core ideas of the radical right . . . In 1995, not long after the Oklahoma City bombing, a man attempted to blow up what I think is the very same building in Austin, the IRS building in Austin back in '95. In addition there were attempts to blow up IRS buildings by people on the radical right in Michigan and in Las Vegas as well. So this is kind of a traditional target of the radical right.
SPLC Picks and Chooses Tragedies
Posted on: 2010-02-25 15:22:28
They're all about money, bigotry and an agenda.
by Rick Spyker
The Southern Poverty Law Center has long outlived its usefulness. What was once a noble organization dedicated to protecting civil rights has now become nothing more than a far-left echo chamber.
For example, during a recent appearance on MSNBC, the SPLC's Mark Potok implied that Joseph Stack, the perpetrator of the suicide attack on the IRS building in Austin, may have been linked to the "radical right." What absolute nonsense.
Even an analyst from an organization without the SPLC's $150 million endowment could figure out that someone who quotes Lenin, hates George Bush, is anti-capitalist and pro-socialized medicine is probably not a right-winger.
Potok mentioned that the SPLC didn't have a file on Stack. I wonder why? Probably for the same reason they don't have a file on Amy Bishop, the University of Alabama in Huntsville professor charged with murdering three of her co-workers. As an avowed leftist who was obsessed with Obama, she just didn't fit their profile of what a violent wacko should be (i.e. a conservative good ol' boy Republican).
In fact, the SPLC has yet to even comment on the Huntsville massacre, despite the fact that all of the victims were minorities. Amy Bishop killed or wounded every minority member of the UAH biology department faculty. And yet the SPLC, an organization ostensibly dedicated to protecting minority rights, doesn't give this violent racial incident one mention on its Web site.
Apparently, this particular senseless tragedy just doesn't fit with its agenda.
It's like pornography; I don't know how to define it, but I know it when I see it. The Southern Poverty Law Center does a good job of illustrating this concept lately. Assuming racist motives in the absence of evidence thereof is a common feature, as is finding racist implications when a speaker happens to notice and comment on differences of ideology or behavior among various groups.
Joe Stack attacked the IRS by flying his plane into one of its buildings. Is he a hero?...
Stack is also becoming a hero to the radical right – specifically, white supremacists and their fellow travelers, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center. Supremacist web forums have been filled with comments that elevate Stack into an icon of resistance to tyranny, writes Mark Potok, director of the SPLC’s Intelligence Project.
Potok quotes one poster on Stxrmfrxnt.org, a large supremacist web site, as saying, “The Guy is a true HERO!!!”
There is no indication that Stack himself had racist ideas, but that has not stopped those who do from being thoroughly excited by his actions, writes Potok on the SPLC’s “Hatewatch” blog.
“A few other white supremacists suggested that lionizing Stack could be a bad thing for the radical right, but they appeared to be in a minority,” writes Potok.
mentalgongfu2 wrote:Is Joe racist, or is Joe commenting on the reality he has observed?
how could we reasonably tell the difference between when the critics are being "too PC" versus when the defenders actually are being racist or sexist?
We know nothing of this man. We did not have him in our files. We found absolutely nothing in the way of real background on the movement or association with any group. But, yeah, as a general matter his ideas seem connected to at least some of the core ideas of the radical right . . .
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