Αρχείο ετικεττών | «Αρπακτικός ρατσισμός»

Πόλη ΗΠΑ σημαιών - μια συμβολή της άσπρης άγνοιας `» και του αρπακτικού ρατσισμού `»

Ετικέττες: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Στην πόλη ΗΠΑ σημαιών, οι ψεύτικες φήμες Obama πετούν

Στην τηλεόραση στο καθιστικό του, Peterman έχει προσέξει αρκετές ειδήσεις και διαφημίσεις εκστρατείας για να ακούσει την αλήθεια: Sen. Το Barack Obama, γεννημένο στη Χαβάη, είναι χριστιανικό οικογενειακό άτομο με ένα αρχείο διαδρομής των δημόσιων υπηρεσιών. Αλλά στο διαδίκτυο, στο κατάστημα παντοπωλείων του, στο σπίτι του γείτονά του, στο αυτόματο κατάστημα του γιου του, Peterman έχει απορροφήσει επίσης μια άλλη έκδοση του υποβάθρου του δημοκρατικού υποψηφίου, ένα που είναι εξ ολοκλήρου ψεύτικο: Το Barack Obama, γεννημένο στην Αφρική, είναι ενδεχομένως ομοφυλοφιλικός μουσουλμανικός ρατσιστής που αρνείται να εκθέσει την υποχρέωση της υποταγής.

«Είναι όπως σας ακούει περίπου δύο διαφορετικά άτομα με τίποτα από κοινού,» Peterman εν λόγω. «Το καθιστά αδύνατο να υπολογίσει αυτό που είναι αληθινό, ή τι μπορείτε να θεωρήσετε.»

«σκέφτομαι Obama θα ήταν μια καταστροφή, και υπάρχουν πολλοί λόγοι,» εν λόγω κλαδεμένο δέντρο, εξηγώντας τις φήμες είχε ακούσει για τον υποψήφιο από τους φίλους πηγαίνει με. “I understand he’s from Africa, and that the first thing he’s going to do if he gets into office is bring his family over here, illegally. He’s got that racist [pastor] who practically raised him, and then there’s the Muslim thing. He’s just not presidential!” …..[MORE >>]

Racist America: Roots, Current Realities and Future Reparations
Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly: Feagin’s voluminous, relentless book testifies to both the strengths and the flaws of applying a sociological approach to the intricate issues of racism in America. Most social scientists, according to this sociologist at the University of Florida (White Racism, etc.) and president of the American Sociological Association, see racism “as something tacked on to an otherwise healthy American society.”

But Feagin contends that the system embeds racism at the core, from the Constitution to the legacy of slavery and segregation in retarding black economic advancement. He argues aptly that color-blind ideology “provides a veneer of liberality” for those unwilling to recognize how race has shaped America, while those who lump blacks with white immigrant groups ignore the effects of racial discrimination. But Feagin’s approach surely sacrifices complexity.

Are “racist pressures against interracial marriage” solely the product of white racism? If achievement tests are so biased toward the white middle class, then why do some Asian immigrants do well on them? Feagin calls for a large-scale educational campaign to move whites to confront “the reality of the pain that their system of racism has caused” and a new constitutional convention to incorporate “the group interests and rights of all Americans of color.”

He also calls for individual and group reparations for blacks. (But how exactly would a “black community” be determined?) Feagin doesn’t engage those who argue that class-based remedies may be better than race-based onesAanother flaw in a book full of strong yet poorly articulated arguments.

From Kirkus Reviews: A sometimes searing indictment of American racial practices.

Sociologist Feagin (White Racism, not reviewed) traces the development of American racism to its roots in Europe.

Ideologically, race was not a major consideration in human endeavors until the beginning of the European slave trade in the 1400s, Feagin tells us. But some 300 years later, it had grown full-blown and become a major cornerstone of intellectual thought–dominated by such thinkers as Locke, Kant, and Hegel, and by the Frenchman Joseph Arthur de Gobineau. All of these harbored anti-black views to varying degrees, including the curious natural-law notion that blacks somehow were born to be slaves.

Much of this 18th-century twaddle was absorbed by our Founding Fathers, especially by Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, and James Madison. Feagin also examines Reconstruction, the lynchings of the late–19th and early–20th centuries, the Civil Rights era, and the post–Civil Rights period.

As we enter a point in the new millennium where the white population is beginning to shrink, Feagin points out that less than half the population of America’s four largest cities (New York, Los Angeles, Houston, and Chicago) is white.

This and other factors lead Feagin to call for an international view of civil rights (i.e., one in which all are entitled to equal concern because all are human beings and not members of this or that state or tribe). Feagin, who is avowedly influenced by Franz Fanon and Kwame Ture (Stokely Carmichael), is at his overwrought best when he is in historical pursuit of the roots of racism.

Perhaps because it is something not readily fresh on the mind, it is a matter of more than idle curiosity what Benjamin Franklin and James Madison thought about whiteness.

On the other hand, matters such as affirmative action and reparations are too widely discussed and familiar to make Feagin’s discussion of them very interesting or fresh.

A useful study, even for those who are not guilt-ridden.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Sphere: Related Content

Translate to EnglishÜbersetzen Sie zum Deutsch/GermanПереведите к русскому/RussianΜεταφράστε στα ελληνικά/GreekVertaal aan het Nederlands/Dutchترجمة الى العربية/Arabic中文翻译/Chinese Traditional中文翻译/Chinese Simplified한국어에게 번역하십시오/Korean日本語に翻訳しなさい /JapaneseTraduza ao Português/PortugueseTraduca ad Italiano/ItalianTraduisez au Français/FrenchTraduzca al Español/Spanish

Recent Page Hits




MyBlogLog Community




Join My community

Our Photos - @ Flickr | @ CA Galleries

Site Sponsors

Information

Advertisement



Partners


Politics Blogs - Blog Top Sites

Blog Flux Pinger - reliable ping service.
pingoat_8.gif
Top 100 Internet Marketing Sites
Politics blogs
Top Blogs
Blog Directory & Search engine
Top Politics blogs
Political Topsites
Blogarama - The Blog Directory
Afrigator