nomadthethird
more issues than Time mag
Oh for goodness sake.
For goodness sake what?
Oh for goodness sake.
yeah which explains stuff like the one drop rule.
yeah he's not any less black, you're right i wasn't trying to argue anything like that, but it wasn't until the 2000 censuss that american people could identify their background as coming from more than one place
'There remain many circumstances in which biracial individuals are left with no real response when asked for demographic data. But multiracial people won a victory of sorts after years of effort when in 1997, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) changed the federal regulation of racial categories to permit multiple responses, resulting in a new format for the 2000 United States Census, which allowed participants to select more than one of the six available categories, which were, in brief: "White," "Black or African American," "Asian," "American Indian or Alaskan Native," "Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander," and "Other." Further details are given in the article: Race (U.S. census). The OMB made its directive mandatory for all government forms by 2003.'
But also if you look at the portrayal of women in the media there is definitely an issue around lightness of skin and beauty, I think? In european countries but also something I noticed in Brazil.
For goodness sake what?
Would you say that Obama is mixed-social construct then?nomadthesecond said:Race exists--as a social construct.
As a biological fact it's non-existent, except in the minds of racists, who believe that there's some kind of "species within a species" heirarchy of human genetics.
Racism is always racism, no matter how good a racist's intentions may be.
Would you say that Obama is mixed-social construct then?
The point was not that I have never heard of people being of mixed ethnicity (what???) but that it is curious for the politically correct arbiters of 'preferred nomenclature' to stand against the notion of race as being inherently racist on the one hand but to approve the use of terms like 'mixed-race' and 'multi-racial' on the other.
Barack being mixed is a great asset in a country where whites will be the minority by 2050.
I said PC arbiters of 'preferred nomenclature'. Is that you? Do you have a badge?nomadthesecond said:Uhh when did I say I approved of them? I said they were preferred in the U.S.
'I don't think anyone has any problem'I don't think anyone has any problem seeing someone as multi-racial nowadays, rather than just black.
do figures like this really increase by the same proportion annually though? also, im not sure i really like the way these stats for the US' ethnic makeup (usually with some fear-instilling agenda) are divided into 'whites' and then everyone else. plus 46% of the population isnt quite a minority. whites will still be the racial majority. its only when you group it into (all) non-whites and whites as the polar opposite that it seems that way.
I said PC arbiters of 'preferred nomenclature'. Is that you? Do you have a badge?
But if you're asking:
'I don't think anyone has any problem'
You asked me where you had said that you approved of the term, even though it was the 'arbiters of PC language' I had mentioned, not nomadthesecond. So I quoted where you implied that you were OK with the term.Did you read the post or are you intent on taking everything I say out of context for your own convenience?
Would you say that Obama is mixed-social construct then?.
You asked me where you had said that you approved of the term, even though it was the 'arbiters of PC language' I had mentioned, not nomadthesecond. So I quoted where you implied that you were OK with the term.
I think it's fairly acceptable as a term but I was just pointing out the inconsitency of utterly denying 'race' on the one hand, and accusing those who claim to recognise it as a reality of being racists, and using the language of race on the other.
I would aspire not to give a toss how black or otherwise someone is. In other words I agree with the bit I already quoted -Any comments on my OP, Jambo?![]()
john eden said:social constructs.
I would aspire not to give a toss how black or otherwise someone is. In other words I agree with the bit I already quoted -
Presumably if there's a discussion to be had for those that are interested it is around the implications of perceptions of and attitudes to colour / race.
Try fitting these three propositions into your head all at once, for pomo PC laffs:
"Reality is socially constructed" (there is nothing but bodies and languages)
"Race is a social construct" (languages construct bodies as raced)
"Race is not real" (the notion of race is demonstrably incoherent)
There are all sorts of things we habitually take for real that race is at least as real as, regrettably. Obama seems to bridge two "realities", one in which race is real (if incoherently so) and he is a black man, and another in which race is no longer real (has lost all symbolic efficiency) and "the colour of his skin" no longer signifies as a racial marker.
My guess is that the US itself is now a kind of disjunctive synthesis of these two realities: a racist society that has a dream of becoming a non-racist one, and a post-racial society that has not completely awoken from the nightmare of once having been something else. If so, Obama's presidency is at least a potent sign of the times.
The fact is, all 42 of our presidents have been of British, Irish, or Germanic descent.
"Race is not real" IS NOT, nor has it ever been, a "PC" sentiment or proposition. It's a scientific proposition that "race is not a biological fact."
But hey, if you're into constructing strawmen, have a ball.