[QUOTE="the_new_guy_92"]
[QUOTE="gamerguru100"] That often what they say, but tell me exactly what is the "double standards and BS" you refer to?gamerguru100
Here are some examples: The assumption that only whites can be racist, but non-whites cannot.Non-whites can have certain clubs, scholarships, organizations, etc. Yet if any such thing is established for whites, it's deemed "racist".
Nobody tells whites that they cannot do these things, their could easily have a United Caucasian College Fund, You would just have to find enough whites that would be willing to provided for the huge number of whites attending college in this nation
Uh...look what happened when this one girl tried to establish a Caucasian Club at her high school.:|I know it's old, but it's relevant.
I just have to say...that high school shouldn't have the word "freedom" in its name...
The girl didn't mean for it to be racist, but in the article it stated why people were worried about it.
Darnell Turner, vice president of the East County National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said he fears the club could morph into a white-supremacy group after Lisa graduates.
"I think she's doing this for the right reasons, but what's going to happen when she graduates? What's it going to turn into?" said Mr. Turner, who added he was speaking for himself and not the NAACP.
He suggested that she change the name to the European-American Club so that the focus would be on heritage, not race.
Their is a big difference between celebrating culture and celebrating race.
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