In this discussion of CRT, we keeping hearing about how some people don't want to hear about slavery, they don't want an honest discussion about it. Well, any honest discussion about it would include the fact that Blacks enslaved their own people ( or would you dispute that fact ) and brought them in chains to the slavers waiting on the beach to put them on ships, well, the ones that they decided not to keep as their own slaves.
Do you think those White slavers would have trekked inland to capture those Black people?
So whether it has anything to do with Slavery in America, right up to Emancipation and the troubles that followed, it is a point of fact, an inconvenient truth, you obviously would rather not talk about.
All those other things you brought up such as "disenfranchisement", all true. Right up till 1964 ( was in 11th grade ), there was absolutely, unequivocally, systemic racism. Did the Civil Rights Act eliminate all disenfranchisement? It did not. Did it for the first time, set American on a path of continuing to fight disenfranchisement? It Did. Is there still work to do, of course there is. None of our institutions are run perfectly but Black people are now in positions of power never thought possible. Are there still poor Black people? Of course there are just as there are poor as dirt White people and you'll see them homeless in cities and towns all over this country.
Any "systemic" racism that might exist, is sure to be pointed out by powerful politicians like Barack Obama and Stacy Abrams. Will every instance be fixed immediately? NO, but the tools and the laws are there to do just that, that were not there before 1964.
Yesterday the SC said that voting in one's assigned precinct "does not disfranchise minority voters". Chuck Shumer almost had a coronary! Are only minorities confused about which precinct they have been assigned? I'd bet any investigation would turn up ten times more White people voting in a precinct they were not assigned. This as every single other issue Democrats bring up to prove disenfranchisement, is crap
Same thing with ballot harvesting. With mail in voting and all the other means a Black and a White person has at their means to get their vote in, why in the world would we say it is OK for strangers to go door to door collecting ballots? That's insane! And now, even Stacy Abrams has changed her tune on ID voting. Why? because she saw the polls that say that 80% of Blacks agree that requiring voter identification is not discriminatory. Hallelujah!
There is still individual racism in America. There are still racists groups like the Klan. You might find a bank or two, a real estate company or two who discriminate and they will absolutely be called on it by somebody
BUT there is no systemic racism in America, period. And anybody, any American citizen can vote if they want, if they are willing to put the effort into it. To say other wise is a lie, a lie that comes easy to Democrats.
Originally Posted by HedonistForever
Likely one of the most reasoned and possible honest responses we’ll get here since several posters are devoutly racist and proud of their “heritage”.
Long story short I don’t fully disagree with most of what you said so I’ll try to highlight as I haven’t an inclination to try to write a dissertation.
I have no issue with an honest discussion on slavery to the extent it’s relevant. In this discussion it isn’t really as the premise on which most CRT is based is that in America most foundational decisions were rooted in the preservation of slavery and much of the actions of government and private business carried that through for centuries (about 4) until they were just ingrained in how business and government were conducted. Now I don’t necessarily believe that wholely but some aspects of it are true even today.
Why slavery does matter in conversation is pretty limited to a backdrop of why some decisions were made. Not particularly that blacks sold other blacks into slavery or even a full discussion of the spread of African slavery through the Caribbean or south and central Americas or Europe. But how it informed the post Civil War actions in The uS. Trying to throw Africans took part in the slave trade in is just diversion.
What you wrote about disenfranchisement is mostly correct. We still have a ways to go to fix the actions of the past 160 years of disenfranchising, intentionally denying equal financial opportunity, preventing the accumulation of wealth (mostly through property) and passing laws which create a disparate impact on blacks. Now not all of that is specifically racially aimed. Some are directed to the poor, but there exists a knock on effect. If there are more poor people that are black then a rule, law or policy which effects the poor also effects more blacks, whether that’s the intent or not. Some aspects of CRT is to exam that relationship of policies and their origins.
I agree that many laws have passed to try to stem racist policies or policies that overtly are aimed at disenfranchising blacks. Some work some don’t. It’s really a kind of trial and error. Rather than letting those policies exist, people (generally white and Republican) do all they can to prevent those policies from working. There are also policies which get put in place that are designed to further disnfranchise blacks, mainly passed by whites and republicans and mainly in southern states (which rightly or wrongly looks to be a holdover from the south’s racist past and present or as some would say “heritage”). There has never been a time that we as a nation have all pulled together to make an equal playing field across the board. Since the 1860s their have been forces pushing to hold blacks back from full equality.
We would disagree as to the existence of systemic racism. Are their laws on the books aimed directly at blacks, not many, though there are sufficient attempts to pass them under the guise of being neutral. Are their laws being passed or that exist which have a disparate impact on blacks, yes. Are their laws, policies etc which have a disparate impact on the poor which in turn impact blacks more harshly, yes. Are those absolute barriers to success, not even close. Should we be vigilant in rooting those out, I believe so.
Yes,there are individual racists. Some on this very board and have posted in this very discussion. Is the US a “racist” country, no. Is opportunity equal for everyone, not at all.
Though there are voting measures that are intended to disenfranchise blacks a massive over haul of the system isn’t necessary but that’s a different discussion need not be conflated with “what’s CRT”.