@musicalmac:
"Statements such as this one, "My parents escaped any such fate and stuff like that doesn't happen anymore. Oh wait, my bad. That article is actually from last year." seem to point to the idea that we haven't made any significant progress since the civil rights movement. In the 1950s, I doubt the issues in Ferguson would have even made the news, and I'm certain that America wouldn't have elected a black president in 1950. Do you disagree?"
I stated my position on where I think racial progress is in this country very clearly. Twice. You are deliberately ignoring what I said. I very clearly said in both of my previous posts that the country as a whole has come a long way but you keep trying to "strawman" my position by characterizing it as something else. The reason I gave you that specific example is not because I was trying to imply something contrary to what I specifically said, but because you keep demanding specific examples (under the pretense of it being a prerequisite for "critical thinking"). Remember?
Also, you don't think that a riot in which the governor of Missouri was forced to declare a state of emergency and call in the national guard to quell the unrest wouldn't even "have made the news"? What is your logic here? Please, provide specific examples.
"I didn't specifically address your link about the lynching because I'm well aware that racial violence is still present and every example is a terrible tragedy. I never said we'd stamped out racism."
But again, you asked for specific examples to back up my position. I provided an example to do just that, and you refuse to discuss it. I was very clear. The country has come a long way but there are areas in the country where it hasn't made much progress at all. You can say things like "but we have a black president!" all you want, but let me ask the question a different way. If the majority of people in the United States thought the way that the people in rural Bladenboro, North Carolina think (where they threatened a mixed race couple for dating) that we would have a black president today?
My point is that racism does NOT "average out" across the country. Sure, if you act like a racist in an affluent neighborhood in a major metropolitan area you would be treated as a pariah, but there are plenty of places in the United States where a racist would just be treated like "one of the boys". Where do you honestly think rural Indiana comes out on this average?
"I chose not to discuss any personal experiences because those experiences are just that -- personal. It makes it personal and the thread I've created here isn't about me, it's about unpopular opinions that go against the grain of "conventional wisdom." I posed questions for the purpose of sparking a conversation and am presenting those opinions for discussion."
If you have a specific example of how you think I'm wrong, please provide it. All experiences with racism are personal by nature. Whether it happened to me, you, or someone else doesn't matter. You keep asking for specific examples, but when we give them to you, you keep going out of your way to try to find reasons to invalidate those examples when you don't agree with the picture they paint. If anything, a personal example should be -more- relevant than some random anecdote found on Google found trying to back your position.
"I asked for examples because there are many other states with similar laws, as well as a federal RFRA law signed by Bill Clinton. The thread is not a catch 22, it's a thread that requires some bigger-picture thought."
So you would like examples of how other, similar RFRA laws have hurt people in the past? Giving you the benefit of the doubt that you're not just backpedaling because you didn't realize this law hasn't gone into effect yet, your premise is still fundamentally flawed. The whole point of your thread is around whether or not businesses should be allowed to choose who they serve. There are no examples of how RFRA laws have hurt homosexuals by allowing businesses to discriminate because none of the other RFRA laws in place extend to businesses. That's the whole reason that Indiana's law is controversial. Even if this law is the most harmful piece of legislature to gays in history and the day it passes every homosexual in the state of Indiana is denied access to every private business the day it goes into effect, there won't be a single example that anyone can provide you -today- because it hasn't happened yet nor are there any similar laws in effect in any other state. Your thread is either a deliberate catch 22 or you didn't realize that the examples you're asking for can't possibly exist yet regardless of who is right.
Again, research goes hand in hand with critical thinking.
"I also see that you were quick to dismiss my comment regarding the school in Georgia, "That's a ridiculous statement." What makes the statement, "She and her friends took action and solved the problem" ridiculous? Isn't that exactly what happened? Why look at it as a symptom and not a great victory? Young people took initiative and changed their local society, isn't that something to be celebrated?"
Wow, okay. So you think that the lack of an integrated prom is the source of racial tension in that community and that by successfully throwing an integrated prom that racial tensions have been fixed? The prom was a symptom of existing racial tension, and while holding an integrated is a great step forward that doesn't mean the problem is gone (and I explained that very clearly in my last post). If that's how you think prejudice works, then perhaps that helps to explain your position on this topic.
"This last bit is particularly important because it brings back the purpose of the thread, which is about the freedom of choice, not about whether or not racism still exists in the United States (because it does in some areas) or whether LGBTQ folks will at times face discrimination (many will)."
The thread is about discrimination and whether or not preventing it can or should be law. Discrimination is discrimination, regardless of who it is against so the comparisons are very relevant.
"EDIT: I think the growing mob mentality is also a compelling turn of events. A person is smart, but people can be dumb."
Are you talking about the majority of people disagreeing with you in this thread? Again, you're trying to make yourself out like some kind of victim because most people disagree with you. If I made a thread proclaiming that the world is flat and 10 people respond disagreeing with me, that doesn't mean I'm being mobbed. It just means that nobody agrees with me.
Also, did you just call the group "dumb" for disagreeing with you? With a Barry Sonnenfeld movie quote, no less?
-Byshop
Log in to comment