shazsha wrote:Shaz
Being upset because races, creeds or colours get preferential treatment is not racism. Nor is it racism to blame those who court this preferential treatment and throw it in the faces of those who pay for it or suffer because of it.
Of course it isn't if we are being pedantic and using the true definition of racism. However, in discussion, it can be cumbersome to apply different terms when speaking of colour prejudice, racial intolerance, racial hatred, etc and the word "racist" does become a cover all.
So, Shaz, in fact it has become easier just to use a "cover all" rather than use our brains to come up with coherent argument as to why something is wrong or not.
This is censorship and debate killing by using the "race" word. If you kill debate, then you stop people from talking about issues and you stop it from coming out into the open and being dealt with. This is exactly why the people around you are becoming increasingly belligerent and hardened to immigrants. Not because of the immigration or because of the handouts and inequality.
It is because they cannot even talk about it without being branded as a RACIST by some person who is all about PC and nothing to do with common sense.
This cannot go on.
Let me give you a fabricated example of where this debate can help.
Let us say we go back 30 years and take our "racist" attitudes with us. In a village we find an old lady who won't use the village shop because it's owned and run by a Black (Afro/British) family. If you were to go an ask her why, she'd tell you that they're dirty and she won't buy from a dirty shop. Even though she doesn't actually know them and has never been in the shop since they took over.
Racist you decry Racist, Racist RACIST.
OK so let's stop chanting and screaming for a while and go back to the old lady and actually talk to her. Let's ask her why she feels that way and what her problem is.
When talking to the old lady we find that in the 1930's she was a Nurse with several different Missions in Africa. Everywhere she went she saw disease, poor hygienee practises which led to disease, food practises which cases illnesses, water which was barely fit to drink which cause huge deaths. Then we find she came home, married, took up a career and is now a widower. She's never been back to Africa and has never really had any contact with any British Blacks of African descent.
So we talk to her and find out that she has nothing against Black people, in fact had many good friends in families there even if she would not touch any offered food. We find that she still writes to some of those families and has photographs. She's shocked to find that people think she's against the family because she thinks that people having a different skin colour makes them inferior.
When talking to her we manage to let her know that this family is third generation Black English. The children are, when they leave home, going to good universities. That the family has a tradition in Engineering, Law and Health but this branch of it chose to get out of the rat race of the big city and have a small shop in a village instead, to try and get away and some peace.
Also we realise that she knows, having been a nurse, that there are plenty of white families which she would not want serving in shops and that she does not frequent other shops because of the personal hygiene of some of the staff.
Eventually we find that once she's learned that these are British Black's with a good standard, she becomes happy to use the shop.
Wind forward 30 years.
The debate would never happen. The woman would be ostracised. Nobody would ever find out what it was all about, they would be too busy screaming RACIST at the top of their lungs.
Such is the "convenience" of smearing everyone with one tag rather than trying to debate an issue.
Labelling kills debate.
Labelling "racist" causes racism.
We should be extremely careful what we wish for. Supposedly the UK is a democracy. That means that if 51% of the voting population decided that all ethnic minorities had to leave the UK and either go back to their country of birth or emigrate to a country which would have them; then they would have to leave. Whether the other 49% were screaming their lungs out that this was wrong or not.
Let us hope that our "democracy" is never so challenged because of Politically Correct labelling on "racism".
Because, in my opinion, the whole Race debate in the UK has descended to the level of bigotry. Not by those who are branded as racists; but by those who do the branding.