Mad Max RW
Mildly Dipped

Sander said:I haven't.Mad Max RW said:Sander, how many years have you lived in the US?
Then why does any of this matter to you?
Sander said:I haven't.Mad Max RW said:Sander, how many years have you lived in the US?
A scholar who presents his research and reasoning clearly, with sources. Far from the only scholar I've read on the topic, and I can critique his reasoning myself. There's plenty of stuff in that book that I have issues with, but the overall picture is convincing and based on very solid data.Mad Max RW said:A guy from UC Davis isn't biased?
I've changed my views of America several times. As I said, I like data-driven approaches, and I like thorough studies. Those would be worthless if I couldn't absorb them and their data and see how they should affect my worldview. My views now are not the same as my views ten years ago on many subjects, discrimination being a prominent one.Mad Max RW said:Don't let other people and websites with a false agenda form your opinion. Everything you know is based on things filtered through other sources. Honestly, you have a very warped view of America and I think you're afraid of changing it.
No I don't. I've stated multiple times that the culture of the poor is part of the problem, too. And that could be related to race, too. What I've also said is that I've seen very little evidence that suggests that race is the key factor, there. And what I've also repeatedly said is that most cultural differences are probably a result of centuries of oppression.Syphon said:Maybe Max (and me) find it hard to hilter Sander in anyway. He says the decent things I guess, but he still denies that their is a loss of upbringing that cultural distorts their fates.
They don't have a bigger drug problem, actually: http://healthland.time.com/2011/11/07/study-whites-more-likely-to-abuse-drugs-than-blacks/Syphon said:There is drug problems that claim prisoners and lives every year, as do whites and latinos, but the Black community seems to have a higher percentage.
What I require is evidence. You guys present almost no evidence. Also, I have acknowledged and brought up most of these things, but I have also repeatedly noted that a lot of these issues have to do with poverty in general and not with current cultural problems within the black community.Syphon said:But it isn't dude. This is a sad situation of poor social mobility which hosts multiple hostile variables that eat any way at that community. Criminal past and aggressive police, substance abuse, parents (single/nuclear), cultural steering toward rap, drugs, objectifying women, "balling" out (which attracts robberies, retaliation) and alienates millions of youthful black every year under the impression that White man is at fault.
You haven't examined them critically, tried to find the data to figure out which way the wind blows. And that is exactly how prejudices are born and perpetuated.
When you look at large groups of people, that's exactly what happens, yes. And that's entirely logical: when you have one large group of people in the same situation, there has to be a structural reason for why they are in that situation. That structural reason could be that they all made the same choices -- but then you have to ask yourself why they made those choices.Cimmerian Nights said:I don't think there's such a clean, clear, unbroken line of causality here either. This deterministic line of thinking diminishes people as impotent, hapless pawns, to borrow a Curleyism "victims of coicumstance".
Yes. I think we all agree with you there. But then, no one said there was a monolithic order of white guys, nor did they say that there wasn't exclusion there, nor did anyone claim that white people are united in everything. Those claims would be ludicrous.Cimmerian Nights said:Also, there is no monolithic Fraternal Order of White Guys that immediately wraps it's benevolent arms around every white guy that steps off the boat, and lifts the velvet rope to the secret red carpet to success. "White" people harbor prejudice against each other, they bring their old world baggage and prejudices with them. White people don't magically get along for the greater good of white interests. Old money and bluebloods represent a small portion of whites and, only look out for their own interests, and often actively shut out other whites (see experience of Jews, Irish, Italian immigrants). This is not a melanin thing, it's self-interest and tribalism, and holding on to your piece of the cheese so you can pass it on to your pasty, inbred Ivy League kids. White people can't agree on anything, least of all slavery and Jim Crow (see Secession and Civil Rights mvmt). More Americans died in the Secession that every other war combined up to Nam. That doesn't sound to me like a nation with any kind of consensus on the issue.
We're painting with some real broad brush strokes about whites and blacks here. There are other demographics at play here.
I am saying that poverty is an obstacle, and that it is a bigger obstacle in the United States than it is in many other developed societies. That yes, a big part of the problem has nothing to do with race but with poverty. I've made this point over, and over and over again and I'm slightly surprised that you haven't grasped it yet.Syphon said:what about poor white people, Sander? Are you trying to point to the fact that they and latinos share the same obstacles and mindsets that hinder there success? Absolutely being "poor" plays a part, but not every poor person is out for blood or failing in school. For me, its solely about how hard someone wants to escape the hard life (unfortunately that also includes desperate degenerates), and whether they remain there, white , black, brown, Asian.
Go read the entire 12-page thread again. I've named plenty.Syphon said:Dude, I get it. Being poor has more weight on your situation than race. Yes. But that neither has identified / analyzed "specific" reasons why being poor is harder in America than anywhere else.
What? No. None of this has anything to do whatsoever with the issue. Things like social transfers (12% vs 30% of GDP), minimum wage, protection of labor, quality of education, barriers to entry in higher education and jobs -- those are the big differences.Syphon said:Because our currency was devalued? Because inflation onset coupled with the average American's median value decreasing? The price of everything increases year after year to inflation and we're still making $7.50 an hour. I know EUro enjoys a hefty conversion rate.