Nova
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- Aug 18, 2003
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I don't consider their past sufferring to be that serious. (anymore)That horse to beat died 200 years ago and it's time to turn the page in the history books and move on to CURRENT sufferring of blacks.
As you know, Glitch, I lived in your town 30 years ago and my family lived there until about 5 years ago. Sorry, but things there aren't completely different from centuries past, though of course African Americans are no longer "legal" slaves. I got just a taste of the reality for blacks while dating an African American woman.
(I'm not suggesting Tallahassee has any corner on racism. I mention it by name only because you live there.)
As for your point that there are problems in black communities that are not the direct and immediate result of intentional white oppression, yes, that's true. But most of the systemic problems result at least in part from past discriminations.
And regardless, if African Americans contribute to their own problems (as do we all), that's hardly an argument in favor of Don Imus adding racial slurs to the mix. (ETA: Oops, sorry. I got my threads confused. Forget Don Imus for the moment. The purpose of the conference is to examine the historic and systemic privilege assumed by whites as a group. That's still relevant, even if it doesn't explain EVERY aspect of a black person's life. For the record and despite the excesses of a few activists, I've never heard an African American claim that whites were responsible for all difficulties s/he faced. I think that's more an impression we get from the media where the most extreme argument gets the attention.)