I used to think that way.hyperbolica wrote: ↑Sun May 31, 2020 9:06 pmI'm saying use due process to judge people by their actions. Not who they are (race), not what they think (racist) , or what they say (sticks and stones... ) . Cops killing people is wrong (still deserve due process), setting buildings on fire is also wrong.Kdanielsen wrote: ↑Sun May 31, 2020 8:00 pm So you are suggesting that, while people are being murdered by the police, the solution is to tolerate racism?
Yes, you have to learn to tolerate people who think things you don't like. You can't defeat racism without tolerating it. What are you going to do? Kill all the racists? You know what that sounds like?
You can't fix what people think, but even people who think bad things can avoid bad actions. That's the only way to judge them. There are plenty of racists who don't allow bad thoughts to turn into bad actions.
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Then I realized that my privilege as a white person, my assumption that due process and law will work for everyone equally, was the reason that idea was so easy to embrace. When I get pulled over, or see a police officer, my assumption is that I’m not going to be murdered. People of color can’t make that assumption. That’s privilege. Same thing with the legal system. Same thing with employment. Same thing across society.
We need to be better allies.
Protecting oppressors only hurts victims. Tolerating public racist rants only gives racist violence a backdrop that normalizes it.
And being fired from an orchestra isnt in the same universe as being murdered at a traffic stop.
Im done intellectualizing this because for the victims of racism (and sexism, and homophobia, and transphobia, etc etc etc) it isn’t an intellectual issue. It’s a matter of life and death. It’s an everyday issue of fear and oppression.