05-08-2009, 08:14 AM | #81 (permalink) | ||
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What about the multitude of responses? They're right above. Last edited by Willravel; 05-08-2009 at 08:20 AM.. |
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05-08-2009, 09:26 AM | #82 (permalink) |
Easy Rider
Location: Moscow on the Ohio
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Punishing this generation for the actions of past generations makes about as much sense as punishing a son for the crimes of his father. If any reparations are owed they should have been paid by those who committed the unjust acts and not their descendants or others just because they are members of the same race.
Improving programs for the impoverished should be encouraged regardless of how they got there. To my way of thinking this is much different than trying to justify paying reparations directly to the descendants of an abused race by the descendants of other races who had nothing to do with it. |
05-08-2009, 11:56 AM | #83 (permalink) |
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Willtravel is hopless. He has the racist problem of low expectations. Again, he thinks blacks can not help themselves unless enlightened whites like himself give them the boost they need. There is no debate in this topic, he won't hear any viewpoint other than that. And he clearly thinks he is helping. That is the ironic thing. Like Fredrick Douglas said, " Let the black man rise or fall on their own." Clearly wiltravel must think that Douglass is part of the problem...
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05-08-2009, 01:03 PM | #84 (permalink) | |||
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Stop calling me a racist. I know you're new here, so I was wiling to grant you latitude, but unless you can demonstrate racism to the objective reader, you're just name calling. TFP isn't a place for name calling.
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Douglas, in that quote, was trying to inspire black people of that time to take responsibility for themselves, but that alone didn't cause the Emancipation Proclamation, did it? No, it was the combined efforts of many abolitionists, white and black, and a complex socio-political atmosphere as well as a civil war. These things take considerable effort, and those working for change need all the help they can get. I refuse to stop fighting because you think I'm somehow enabling weakness. I feel that I'm supporting the overall strength of the movement for social equality. Edit: it's Willravel, as in Will (me) and Ravel. |
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05-08-2009, 01:17 PM | #85 (permalink) |
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What about poor whites then? Should they get reparations? There are vastly more poor whites. Did racisim and the system make them poor?
---------- Post added at 05:17 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:11 PM ---------- And I am calling your racist because you are. You are not a bad person, but you honestly think that Blacks can not make it in America without help. That implies they are inferior. Asians can make it. Hispanics, but not blacks. Ergo, you are racist. That is my whole point of reparations. They are a racist notion that a certain group of people can not succeed in a nation that has fucked over everyone. Look at the history of the Irish in America. More than half the population of Ireland came to the New World as slaves, yet you would be laughed at for suggesting that I should get reparations. And if I were to claim that I can not get a break due to my ancestor's enslavement, no one would take me seriously. The Irish suffered from slavery the same as, or more than any other ethnic minority, yet for some reason Irish can do fine without handouts. but do gooders like you think that for some reason, blacks are incapable of fending for themselves unless white people do it for them. Hence, you are racist. No offence as I am sure you are a nice guy, but you thinking so poorly of blacks is racist. |
05-08-2009, 01:22 PM | #86 (permalink) |
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I'm begging you, read my posts. Do you know what form reparations would come in if I were in charge? Better schools in poor neighborhoods. More after-school programs. More recreational centers in poor neighborhoods. More scholarships. More job training. Get rid of mandatory minimums.
These things would help all the poor. Why call it reparations? Because black people are disproportionately poor and imprisoned. By amount? Yes, absolutely, but it's fuzzy math simply comparing numbers. There are a lot more white people in the US than there are black people, so saying there are more white people doesn't actually speak to the problem. Proportionally, black people are more poor than white people. |
05-08-2009, 01:26 PM | #87 (permalink) |
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And proportionatly blacks commit more murders, rapes and violent crimes. That may be the reason more blacks are in jails.... But don't let logic get in the way of a good debate.
No one is against good schools, except maybe the democrats. Look at how well they run the school systems. i am with you on this one. Toss out the unions and let schools compete for money and watch quality improve. Who suffers when Unions ( ei, democrats and liberals) the poor. And if everyone gets better schools, then why do you insist on calling it reparations? Why not make a thread called "Improve Public Education?" Methinks you are just itching for a fight. |
05-08-2009, 01:30 PM | #88 (permalink) | |
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Because helping the poor would disproportionately help black people more. Like I said above. Twice. |
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05-08-2009, 01:35 PM | #89 (permalink) | |
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No, even poor whites commit less crimes than poor blacks. So you are wrong on that account. And helping the poor would help more white people, since there are more poor whites than any other race in America so calling it reparations is just asking for charged debate to spice up a boring argument that no one would be against. ---------- Post added at 05:35 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:34 PM ---------- And again, if slavery is to blame, why don't the Irish suffer the same affects, since proportionatly, they suffered more than blacks from it? |
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05-08-2009, 01:55 PM | #90 (permalink) | ||
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Slavery isn't to blame anymore, racism is. |
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05-08-2009, 10:02 PM | #91 (permalink) | |||
Lennonite Priest
Location: Mansfield, Ohio USA
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So it's reparations to help only the poor blacks because whites (no mention of any other ethnicity, race or culture)...... but you change your tune in the very next reply to my posts, to it helping "all poor people." So if we say that then it's not truly "Reparations" it's ..... um....... welfare, the war on poverty, social programs to help the inner city..... Which we have tried and failed at because it doesn't reward hard work and personal responsibility and has led us where we are now. People say "ok, let's help" Then the abuse is shown and it's "we tried screw them trickle down yes." And finally social, moral, spiritual, financial decay and bankruptcy of the nation. So, is it true "reparations" you are wanting..... which would mean programs and monies ONLY to Blacks OR are you wanting social reform and programs? You are fighting for one or the other you cannot call one the other because they are not the same thing. Because by it's very nature and meaning to those demanding "reparations" it is solely for the blacks and no one else.
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?" Last edited by pan6467; 05-08-2009 at 10:06 PM.. |
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05-08-2009, 10:20 PM | #92 (permalink) |
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I never changed any tune. Black people are disproportionately poor, therefore a move to help all poor people would disproportionately help black people more. Black people are poor because of inequality in society the roots of which can be traced all the way back to slavery.
So, to put it into one sentence: I want social reform specifically dealing with impoverished and high crime areas, which happen to include a disproportionate amount of black people due to race-based societal problems dating back generations, the consequence of which will eventually be a more equal opportunity for success regardless of race, gender, or creed. |
05-09-2009, 12:19 AM | #93 (permalink) | |
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Location: the ether
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Explain this to me: According to the CDC, the proportion of blacks who use illicit drugs is very slightly higher than the proportion of whites. We are talking about 8.1% of whites to 9.7% of blacks. And yet blacks are 4 times more likely to be given jail time for possession and make up 44% of all people arrested for possession of illegal drugs. Drug possession is responsible for about 1/5 of all who are currently in jail. As far as the whole "unions and education" argument, that is so far removed from any reality as to be ridiculous. Not surprisingly, people who push this perspective are generally basing their findings on hearsay or anecdotal evidence, and not looking at the data (and the few that are do no control for confounding factors). http://epicpolicy.org/files/Chapter10-Carini-Final.pdf |
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05-09-2009, 06:45 AM | #94 (permalink) | |
Lennonite Priest
Location: Mansfield, Ohio USA
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Social programs with fiscal responsibility are great. My job (if I have one), my profession needs social program funding. So I will not argue there.
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?" |
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05-09-2009, 07:34 AM | #95 (permalink) |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Reparations mean different things to different people. Anyone saying we should start issuing checks either isn't being serious or probably doesn't understand the consequences of such an action. As far as I'm concerned, it's simply a matter of doing what we can to ensure that the cycles of racial problems are finally purged from our society, and the government can play a role in that purge by ensuring that there are responsible and proven social programs available.
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05-09-2009, 07:58 AM | #96 (permalink) |
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Aye no one in this thread has claimed that we should just write some checks. The "reparations" that Will and I have discussed have been about forward thinking social programs aimed at improving the future.
Writing checks will do nothing to fix the problems we are seeing and in many ways may make them worse. |
05-09-2009, 08:46 AM | #97 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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it is strange---conservatives like to talk about meritocracy and in the process pretend to themselves that such a (one-dimensional) social arrangment is possible without anything being done to alter the class system. when people in the public sphere (you know) have the audacity to actually reference the inequities of that class system, conservatives set them up as objects of the usual Grouphate.
so it appears that conservatives oppose the class order at the level of fantasy, but in fact they kinda like it--if this were not the case, they'd abandon this fantasy of equality and turn their attention to the actually existing class order, how it operates how it reproduces itself, it's effects--and would advocate a politics that would go after that order, change it, and change it radically. it's like there's some political circuit that one assimilates as one drifts into being conservative and that circuit determines associations and those associations determine outcomes. so even folk whose underlying sentiments might be quite close to one another's end up not being able to communicate really because the interior of arguments--and so of viewpoints---differ enough that even when we might try to talk about the same thing, we can't quite manage it. the problem then is the way shifts happen from a sense of something being wrong or fucked up or whatever into the set of arguments and associations that let us articulate that sense and come away from the process with the sense that we'd said something. the only way to have a discussion across divergent arguments/associations is at a remove from them--ok what is the problem here; how to describe it so that we know we have at least some hope of referring to the same thing; what kinds of argument best fit with this image of the world that is produced through description; how do we evaluate this sense of fit? i can see some common ground at the level of sentiment with quite a few of the folk above whose arguments run counter to mine---not all of them---but quite a few. but we can't ever seem to get anywhere in terms of doing more than simply rehearsing the grids we start with. maybe it's a messageboard thing---i dunno.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-09-2009, 05:03 PM | #98 (permalink) | |
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05-09-2009, 05:22 PM | #99 (permalink) |
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Comon, you can do better than that. Do I even have to ask? Why do you think there's a higher rate of single parenthood among black people? It's the income! There's a higher rate of divorce among people of low income, and black people are disproportionately represented in the low income bracket. Social inequality becomes financial inequality becomes further social inequality. This isn't doctorate level sociology here.
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05-09-2009, 06:36 PM | #100 (permalink) | |
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Location: watching from the treeline
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Trinity: "What do you need?" Neo: "Guns. Lots of guns." -The Matrix |
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05-09-2009, 06:41 PM | #101 (permalink) | |||
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"I can normally tell how intelligent a man is by how stupid he thinks I am" - Cormac McCarthy, All The Pretty Horses |
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05-09-2009, 07:51 PM | #102 (permalink) | ||
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Wrong. Why was the marriage rate much higher for blacks in the forties, fifties and sixties? How could slavery acount for that? |
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05-09-2009, 08:15 PM | #103 (permalink) | ||
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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I'll be the first to admit that income isn't going to be the only factor in divorce, but it's a major contributing factor, probably the largest overall. Other contributing factors are religion, age, location, and children. And yes, culture. Still, saying that black culture doesn't place much value on marriage is waaaay out there. |
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05-09-2009, 08:42 PM | #106 (permalink) | |
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Location: Fort Worth, TX
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Look up the Harlem Renaissance. Look up the development of black culture throughout the first half of the 20th Century and you will see strong households with strong parental influences. Black schools which looked inward to help develop new talent leading to such greats as George Washington Carver and Dr. Williams. Black doctors who specialized in medication in the ghettos, black teachers inspiring their own to overcome and persevere. Somewhere along the line the family structure broke down. It was not due to slavery, and the oppression during the equality movements only seemed to strengthen it. Somewhere it broke down, and to be honest I can't figure out what.
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"Smite the rocks with the rod of knowledge, and fountains of unstinted wealth will gush forth." - Ashbel Smith as he laid the first cornerstone of the University of Texas |
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05-09-2009, 10:51 PM | #108 (permalink) | |
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So what caused the marriage rate among blacks to drastically decline since the 60s? ---------- Post added at 02:51 AM ---------- Previous post was at 02:50 AM ---------- It sure would as Willravel would be hard pressed to blame slavery for this. I mean, nothing bad can be attributed to blacks. It has to be white people's fault somehow. |
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05-09-2009, 11:37 PM | #109 (permalink) | ||||||||
Lennonite Priest
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So where is the equal opportunities for ALL PEOPLE in poverty?????? You say that's what you were talking about. You say you weren't just trying to get "reparations", you say people have different meanings for "reparations" and yours is supposedly for ALL in poverty..... but before you said that when people started questioning about ALL PEOPLE in poverty, it was all just about the blacks getting what YOU believe they deserve. That is the very definition of racist and then waffling. ---------- Post added at 03:37 AM ---------- Previous post was at 03:17 AM ---------- Quote:
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I just love people who use the excuse "I use/do this because I LOVE the feeling/joy/happiness it brings me" and expect you to be ok with that as you watch them destroy their life blindly following. My response is, "I like to put forks in an eletrical socket, just LOVE that feeling, can't ever get enough of it, so will you let me put this copper fork in that electric socket?" Last edited by pan6467; 05-09-2009 at 11:34 PM.. |
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05-10-2009, 03:55 AM | #110 (permalink) |
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For the record I don't feel any guilt nor do I feel I owe the black race anything. They are as responsible for their personal destiny as I am. Any of us can choose to live below the poverty line and blame something or somebody for our despair and the government will send us a check once a month. At the end of the day this is still the United States of America and anyone can do anything they want if they put their mind, heart and soul into it. There are plenty of examples of black people rising above and reaching for the sky and to blame other races for the despair of those that refuse is racist and it takes away from the millions who have already and those still putting forth the effort. There will always be a small percentage of people that have fallen on hard times and need assistance for a short time or those that don't have the mental fortitude to make it and will be in need government assistance their entire life but the vast majority of people living below the poverty line, regardless of race, live there by choice because it's the easy way out. It's much easier waking up amid squalor and crime everyday blaming someone else while you cash that government check than it is to take responsibility and work your ass off day and night to get out of the situation your in.
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"The beauty of the second amendment is that it will not be needed until they try to take it." Thomas Jefferson |
05-10-2009, 06:11 AM | #111 (permalink) | |
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Location: watching from the treeline
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This is where your problem lies: You think something that isn't politically correct is necessarily wrong because you could not/would not say it to someone's face. If it doesn't hurt anybody's feelings, then it must be the right answer...right? That's a load of bullshit. The truth hurts sometimes, but we all must face the truth if we are going to eliminate the problems facing blacks in poverty situations. What do you think when black people say that black culture doesn't value marriage? Is that a racist thing to say? If I see an obese person dying of high blood pressure and diabetes, my solution to them isn't going to be "oh, it's OK. It's the restaurant's fault for putting too many delicious fatty items on the menu." My answer to them would be "Get the fucking twinkie out of your mouth you disgusting slob. You've done this to yourself, now unfuck yourself or you will die. It's simple." Whether it would hurt that person's feelings is irrelevant to the truth.
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Trinity: "What do you need?" Neo: "Guns. Lots of guns." -The Matrix |
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05-10-2009, 07:11 AM | #112 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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so now the conservative set is getting pissy. fact is that it's only in your fantasy world that socio-economic opportunities are distributed evenly. in the real world, class position is an overwhelming determinant of possibilities. o sure, part of being conservative entails avoiding nasty ugly structural realities and substituting for it mythologies of the Execeptional Individual who through Gumption and Grit strides manfully off the pages of a horatio alger story and into 3-d where he Triumphs Over Adversity because this is Amurica dammit and that's what we do here, that's what amurica is about, these Exceptional Individuals who stride manfully off the pages of cheap stupid 19th century novels. so Everyboy Everywhere is an Exceptional Individual conditioned only by the level of Gumption and Grit poured into his skull by whomever wrote this cheap stupid novel that is amurica conservative style--nothing but Exceptional Individuals who manfully Compete with each other in the manly man arena of the Market and if one Exceptional Individual makes out better than another then dag gummit it Proves that there is a Gumption and Grit Gap. folk who do not fare well in the manly man world of competition are therefore Less in the Virtue Department. so if there are inequities, it's the fault of those who are trapped in them--if they were more Filled with manly Gumption and Grit--if they were more like you, in short, who is obviously the Hero of your own private Novel of amurica---they wouldn't be in that position of disadvantagedness.
there is no structure in this cheap stupid novel that conservatives substitute for social reality: no history, no institutions, no class, no effects of class. this novel is published by the chump press and distributed free of charge through conservative media outlets everywhere. you may enjoy reading it, you may prefer it to the world, but in the end it's just a novel.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-10-2009, 07:51 AM | #113 (permalink) |
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what's with all this class warfare crap damn i'm about as poor as poor can be without living on the government teat and I don't feel held back other than from my own moral limitations and the 50% of the population out there that want to tax me to no end to provide for fat lazy fuckin slobs that just wanna hang out and sell drugs for extra cash all this class bullshit might work well in europe or somewhere else in the fucking world but it don't have to be that way here unless you want it to or it suits your socio/political bullshit give me a break.
What's class is holding you back?
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"The beauty of the second amendment is that it will not be needed until they try to take it." Thomas Jefferson |
05-10-2009, 08:10 AM | #114 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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what are you talking about?
that the united states is a class system is self-evident. that wealth opens advantages that lack of weatlh forecloses is self-evident. that the children ot the wealthy are likely to have a higher-quality education than are the children of the less wealthy simply by virtue of the position they're born into is self-evident. that education is shapes not only one's sense of socio-economic and cultural options but also the sense of what you deserve in this life---also self-evident. these are indicators of large-scale, structural inequalities that operate at the core of the american cultural system. what this conversation shifted to for the most part, before the conservative inability to think in structural terms started being performed *again* and so send the conversation hurtling into the ridiculous void that's formed around shit like the bakke decision, was that race and class are intertwined in the united states and that to address questions of racism and its history at this point pitches you toward dealing with questions of class. THAT is a problem, given the reactionary self-serving nature of amurican politics. class stratification shows itself most obviously in the aggregate...conservatives like to pretend that there are only exceptions. conservative thinking cant address history, can't address structure, and so has nothing to say about class stratification. so you, scout, ask the wrong question
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
05-10-2009, 09:13 AM | #116 (permalink) | |
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Location: Fort Worth, TX
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Rat no one is saying the playing field is fair. No one is saying that everyone, if they try hard enough, can make it. What we do say that everyone CAN make it, as in the opportunities are there. Kind of like Ratatouille, not everyone can be a good Chef, but a good chef can come from anywhere .
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"Smite the rocks with the rod of knowledge, and fountains of unstinted wealth will gush forth." - Ashbel Smith as he laid the first cornerstone of the University of Texas Last edited by Seaver; 05-10-2009 at 09:17 AM.. |
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05-10-2009, 11:59 AM | #117 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Pan, the thread is about reparations, so I outlined necessary and sweeping social reform in a racial context in order to explain why it was applicable to the thread topic. Okay? The truth is that giving scholarships and such to the poor would be giving scholarships and such to the descendants of slaves, and NOWHERE in the thread did I say ONLY black people. Nowhere. If this thread were about illegal immigration into the US from central and south America, I'd have said "we need sweeping social reform for Latino immigrants and children of immigrants", but I would have been making a call for the exact same social and governmental changes. Understand? I'd not be saying, "let's turn away whites, asians, and blacks... only let Latinos partake of the social change" at all, and you know it. You assume by specifically naming black people I was excluding everyone else. That assumption was obviously wrong. Now that I've explained the position in the clearest way I can, we can move on. |
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05-10-2009, 02:26 PM | #118 (permalink) | |
Psycho
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"The beauty of the second amendment is that it will not be needed until they try to take it." Thomas Jefferson |
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05-10-2009, 03:18 PM | #119 (permalink) | |
Easy Rider
Location: Moscow on the Ohio
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I recall several years ago watching a Bill Moyers special concerning the growing number of black teenage pregnancies. The girls actually were trying to get pregnant and said they wanted someone in this world who would love them unconditionally. The boys said they felt no obligation to support their kids and most of the girls were not trying to collect support from them. It is an interesting social problem though, why so many women of both races choose to be single parents and so many men choose to be absent fathers. |
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05-10-2009, 03:31 PM | #120 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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scout--basically, until class position is no longer determinate of the quality of education one has available, this "opportunity" business is just hot air for most people.
you might not land where you started. the opportunity exists. you might be hit by a meteor. the possibility exists. either way this pub discussion format means that data isn't allowed. maybe sometime we can talk about social mobility. it helps to have data to refer to: things are rarely what one thinks they are. this goes for me too, of course: that's why i like data. anyway, not sure how much further to go with this here, but we'll see what happens.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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