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Showing Original Post only (View all)10 ways white people are more racist than they realize [View all]
http://www.salon.com/2015/03/04/10_ways_white_people_are_more_racist_than_they_realize_partner/If theres anything our fraught national dialogue on race has taught us, its that there are no racists in this country. (In fact, not only do multiple studies confirm that most white Americans generally believe racism is over just 16 percent say theres a lot of racial discrimination it turns out that many actually believe white people experience more discrimination than black people.) Its a silly idea, of course, but its easy to delude ourselves into thinking that inequality is a result of cultural failures, racial pathology and a convoluted narrative involving black-on-black crime, hoodies, rap music and people wearing their pants too low. To admit that racism is fundamental to who we are, that it imbues our thinking in ways we wouldnt and couldnt believe without the application of the scientific method, is infinitely harder. And yet, theres endless evidence to prove it.
For those who recognize racism is real and pervasive, its also comforting to believe that discrimination is something perpetuated by other people, overlooking the ways we are personally complicit in its perpetuation. But fruitful conversations about race require acknowledging that racism sits at the very core of our thinking. By something akin to osmosis, culturally held notions around race mold and shape the prejudices of everyone within the dominant culture. People of color unwittingly internalize these notions as well, despite the fact that doing so contributes to our own marginalization. Most of us know the destructive outcomes systemic racism produces (higher rates of poverty, incarceration, infant mortality, etc.). Accepting that implicit bias is happening at every level makes it awful hard to chalk those issues up to black and brown failure....
3. White people are more likely to have done illegal drugs than blacks or Latinos, but are far less likely to go to to jail for it. A 2011 study from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Data Archive found white people were more likely to use illegal and prescription opiates (heroin, oxycontin), hallucinogens, and cocaine than blacks and Hispanics by significant margins. Black people just edged out white people on marijuana and crack use (which incurred disproportionate sentences for decades). Yet, a 2009 Human Rights Watch study found that each year from 1980 to 2007, blacks were arrested on drug charges at rates 2.2 to 5.5 percent higher than whites.
4. Black men are sentenced to far lengthier prison sentences than white men for the same crimes. A 2012 study by the United States Sentencing Commission found black men were sentenced to prison terms nearly 20 percent longer than white men for similar crimes. To break those numbers down further, from January 2005 to December 2007, sentences for black males were 15.2 percent longer than those of their white counterparts. From December 2007 to September 2011, that number actually increased, with differences in sentencing growing to 19.5 percent.
For those who recognize racism is real and pervasive, its also comforting to believe that discrimination is something perpetuated by other people, overlooking the ways we are personally complicit in its perpetuation. But fruitful conversations about race require acknowledging that racism sits at the very core of our thinking. By something akin to osmosis, culturally held notions around race mold and shape the prejudices of everyone within the dominant culture. People of color unwittingly internalize these notions as well, despite the fact that doing so contributes to our own marginalization. Most of us know the destructive outcomes systemic racism produces (higher rates of poverty, incarceration, infant mortality, etc.). Accepting that implicit bias is happening at every level makes it awful hard to chalk those issues up to black and brown failure....
3. White people are more likely to have done illegal drugs than blacks or Latinos, but are far less likely to go to to jail for it. A 2011 study from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Data Archive found white people were more likely to use illegal and prescription opiates (heroin, oxycontin), hallucinogens, and cocaine than blacks and Hispanics by significant margins. Black people just edged out white people on marijuana and crack use (which incurred disproportionate sentences for decades). Yet, a 2009 Human Rights Watch study found that each year from 1980 to 2007, blacks were arrested on drug charges at rates 2.2 to 5.5 percent higher than whites.
4. Black men are sentenced to far lengthier prison sentences than white men for the same crimes. A 2012 study by the United States Sentencing Commission found black men were sentenced to prison terms nearly 20 percent longer than white men for similar crimes. To break those numbers down further, from January 2005 to December 2007, sentences for black males were 15.2 percent longer than those of their white counterparts. From December 2007 to September 2011, that number actually increased, with differences in sentencing growing to 19.5 percent.
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I don't see much difference between internalized white privledge and racism
ismnotwasm
Mar 2015
#106
knowledge and acknowledgment are 2 different things, I don't see a lot of black people ACKNOWLEDGING
uponit7771
Mar 2015
#13
The "allegation" against you is as real as the dead earwig lying on the floor next to my chair
Number23
Mar 2015
#89
Oh, I have no doubt of that. It is very much as deliberate as it is hurtful and unnecessary
Number23
Mar 2015
#163
I'll see your unsubstantiated claim about personal experience of the views of a few sociologists,
Donald Ian Rankin
Mar 2015
#66
Tell me which dictionary is best known for explaining complex social issues
Bjorn Against
Mar 2015
#67
why do you never take time to fill out your profile? It would be interesting to learn more about you
uppityperson
Mar 2015
#138
Who are you, what part of the country, your political persuasion, education, do you like long walks
uppityperson
Mar 2015
#142
Aw, still, we can get to know you a bit better. And as long as you are spending so much time here,
uppityperson
Mar 2015
#145
I agree with you. I think there is a desire to describe an emotional experience but
Wella
Mar 2015
#80
Institutionalized racism is a huge problem, being aware of it is just the start
uppityperson
Mar 2015
#2
This is an anecdote but in all 5 times I've been hospitalized (for severe abdominal pain),
ScreamingMeemie
Mar 2015
#30
That's more "ways society is way more racist than most white people realise" (n/t)
Spider Jerusalem
Mar 2015
#8
Well, yes, but a white person who gets busted for drugs and does community service...
Spider Jerusalem
Mar 2015
#20
The beneficiary of the "privilege", i.e., being free from the racism others experience ...
1StrongBlackMan
Mar 2015
#21
I'm racist because a "justice" system I don't support does things that make me not support it?
Nuclear Unicorn
Mar 2015
#18
Some white folk simply cant accept that they are, by definition, racist
NoJusticeNoPeace
Mar 2015
#55
Michael Brown was a good kid, deep down inside who was trying to make a good life for himself.
AverageJoe90
Mar 2015
#73
Great post. The pattern you mentioned is on full display in this thread as well.
Number23
Mar 2015
#91
was it the only park in your city, or were there other parks and only that one was proposed as
ND-Dem
Mar 2015
#96
Several of these aren't actually evidence that specifically white people are racist
mythology
Mar 2015
#81
You should have included the subheading. Even without it, the good folks here are already in full
Number23
Mar 2015
#90
"it just strokes the fires between race groups" & not just for site clicks. the PTB *want* to
ND-Dem
Mar 2015
#95
The white privilege discussion is really about this phenomenon in the United States.
kwassa
Mar 2015
#155
I call bullshit, white people are significantly both aware and comfortable with all 10
TheKentuckian
Mar 2015
#113
Re: "Real racists will hide among the masses and will be less marginalized."
AverageJoe90
Mar 2015
#156