re: some thoughts about childhood and white privilege, gets long
@Leucrotta In a way, I can say that racism and ableism are closely intertwined.
re: some thoughts about childhood and white privilege, gets long
@Leucrotta Not to mention neurotypical, since much of the world is also actively hostile to neurodivergent people.
re: transphobia, violence against transphobes
@vantablack I wholly support the decision to smash transphobe skulls
"trans women belong in womens' sports.
trans men belong in mens' sports.
don't agree? delete me, you piece of shit. "
re: some thoughts about childhood and white privilege, gets long
@Leucrotta This does make a lot of sense, because a lot of things that are racist often aren't thought of as racist. It isn't just bad actions that bad people do, it seeps into the very fundamental roots of how western culture is structured, and it affects the actions and thought processes of /everyone/. (We live in a society, etc)
To challenge racism isn't just to challenge racist /actions/, to challenge racism is to subvert the colonial cultural hegemony that underscores all of western society.
re: some thoughts about childhood and white privilege, gets long
(can't resolve because someone saying "hey, you know that's incredibly racist" is an outside influence and won't be internalized no matter how much a listener with a background like mine, might want to internalize it. Like right now I'm feeling that you can do fairly superficial dialogue about racism only, as a stopgap measure, but if you can connect that dialogue to a whole batch of internal processing, you're more likely to get the paradigm shift that could affect a real change.
Wow, I think I just made this *more* convoluted rather than less, I'll stop now...)
some thoughts about childhood and white privilege, gets long
I was thinking earlier that my mind's clicked over to accepting that I have white privilege, because white privilege is *luck*, and over the last few years my mind's clicked over to thinking I am fortunate rather than put-upon a lot more often.
And I don't think this is accidental, my childhood had all these messages about suffering justifying getting things, about having to justify getting things/deserve having things, and then blanket assumption that if you're in power, you must be good. I figure there's an us versus them thing which can explain authorities seen as not good, or how people suffering might be punished and therefore bad. So the idea that you got somewhere because you're lucky is completely alien to that (and I guess it's the distinction handed the Bad People).
Like; it's this huge clusterfuck that *just* tackling it as a racism thing can't resolve, if that makes any sense?
(And to further detail; I don't, and will never, consider myself white. But I definitely think I pass such that white privilege has literally saved my life in the past, I can tell you exactly when. I was gonna friends lock this but ehh, I initially didn't so I'll run with it.)
An analysis of just how prevalent "dark patterns" such as fake urgency and deceptive graphics are on shopping sites:
There's a script for the way certain critiques or even just questions are dismissed.
But then when your group is "suddenly" all white or predominately non-Black even tho you claim to be/working/with Black communities you're all "oh but how did this happen? Where did all the Black people go?"
Well, you dismissed and shunned us to the point where we were just like yeah fuck it nevermind
@CaribenxMarciaX Agreed. Spaces that are truly made for BIPOC don't really need to advertize as such, because it would be self-evident in the actions those spaces take.
Cruel but Not Unusual: The Punishment of Women in U.S. Prisons: An Interview with Marilyn Buck and Laura Whitehorn
https://monthlyreview.org/2001/07/01/cruel-but-not-unusual
"to me, what your politics are in the abstract don’t mean a damn; it’s how you practice them. For myself as a white woman, I ask, how do you treat people; how do people receive you as a human being? Are people abstractions to you, in terms of racism? Or do you treat people as real equals, even given all the issues of privilege?"
What occurs is hyper-racilization onto a group of people in the imagination of Americans (regardless of color) that attempts to place white Latines as suffering the same kind of anti blackness or anti Indigenous based oppression, when that is just not true at all. Especially since what occurred in Latin American countries after Independence, meant nation state building with attempts to circumvent the power dynamics that places white Latines and mestizos at the top, which is still in order today+
"The only truly effective response that will neutralize repression is already captured by the politics and practice of abolition and decolonization, led by black and indigenous communities against the colonial-capitalist order, and the politics of anti-violence work, which locates heteropatriarchy and misogyny as key conditions for state violence and repression"
The only valid statement about antiblackness that can follow "I have Black friends" is "that's why I want to help create communities and societies where they can thrive without fear, and become a friend they can trust and rely on. To this end I will listen to Black people and work on my own racism." When your Black friends are used as a shield for your fragility you negate the claim to friendship.
Artist and Composer. Trans plural voidpunk anarchist and antifa nonbinary gremlin. My voice is for the oppressed, and I shall fight for freedom with no quarter, so that those around me won't have to.
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