Lol you are really caught up on my mentioning the KKK and New Black Panther party huh. ... Just a simple example of a rascist group.
As long as you associate "racism" with "racist groups", you're missing the point. Did you even read the links?
Lol you are really caught up on my mentioning the KKK and New Black Panther party huh. ... Just a simple example of a rascist group.
As long as you associate "racism" with "racist groups", you're missing the point. Did you even read the links?
Without knowing the details, I'm sure you made the fair choice and applied the law just as you would for anyone else.
However, let's say you're 50 years old, live in a state where five years ago they passed a stricter ID law. You may not even know of it's existence. For years, you seen woung people with much light skin than you buy liquor without being carded, while the obviously adult people with your skin color regularly get carded. One day, you forget your card, and get turned away. What your first instinct as to the cause?
I think this is funny because I grew up in a mostly minority neighborhood. If One Brow doesn't think I ever faced racism, was never beaten up due to racism, didn't deal with race issues on a daily basis because I have pale skin he can continue to live in his little fantasy world.
You are trying to argue something else entirely and are either intentionally missunderstanding or just don't care.
So just because they claim it to be something it is?
My EXAMPLE is as relevant as your assertion that darker skinned people suffer rascism all day every day.
The original point was that a darkly skinned, or female, VP candidate would demotivate a substantial part of the Republican base, and from what I can tell, a larger part than would be motivated by it.
Once again, you've never supported this interesting claim with anything other than anecdotal hateful generalizations. Have you got any data to support your assertion that the choice of a minority VP would lessen the election chances of a Republican presidential candidate?
No, I do not. While it would be interesting to run controlled experiments, I'm not sure that's feasible (OK, I'm sure it is not). Therefore, I don't see how any such data can be assembled. I'm open to suggestions on how such data would be accumulated outside of polling, or if there were any way to poll this questions and get honest responses.
Very few people like to think of themselves as racist (or sexist). The interviewer who takes one candidate's attempt to negotiate salary as being a positive, and the other as a negative, does not think of themself as racist; it's just one guy was assertive and the other was aggressive. There have been experiemental studies on these sorts of relationships. You think it doesn't extend to voter's opinions of politicians? Maybe not.