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Racism and privilege

Just another anecdote.

I got a call from the school security officer today. My daughter's boyfriend was identified as being involved in some altercation in a park about a mile from where we live. Since he was in our house at the time, we were able to substantiate his alibi.

This is routine stuff, of course.

How does this fit into a racism thread? Are your daughter and her boyfriend an inter racial couple? Also good on you for ending any rumors regarding his involvement.
 
No it is not. It is one persons attempt to control the words and thoughts of another based on how that first person views the world.

You don't believe that words and thoughts can carry dehumanizing cultural contexts?
 
You don't believe that words and thoughts can carry dehumanizing cultural contexts?

Words absolutely can depending on the circumstances of how and when they are used. However that does not mean that they always do.

But all that is happening is one sides attempt to control the language of everyone in a way that they approve of. Well guess what? I can be respectful and treat people properly without talking in your approved way.

Neither side has the monopoly on decency and respect.
 
...But that is quite an influence exerted by those 1 or 2 black people in the jury pool. Not sure what exactly it means, but they are having some major influence if just by their presence in a group of 27 they can change the outcomes of the trials so dramatically, even if they're not on the actual jury.

...Or perhaps a degree of political correctness? Or maybe a humanizing effect of seeing a black person as a potential juror that lessens in some small degree some inherent racial bias among the others?

since it's my post, let me clarify:

by political correctness, I meant the possibility of someone wanting to avoid being viewed as racist regardless of their actual attitude towards blacks

by the second part of my statement I meant that perhaps real attitudes were somehow influenced in a manner to cause less bias against blacks

I see it as at least a subtle difference between the two
 
Words absolutely can depending on the circumstances of how and when they are used. However that does not mean that they always do.

Hence the reference to cultural contexts.

But all that is happening is one sides attempt to control the language of everyone in a way that they approve of. Well guess what? I can be respectful and treat people properly without talking in your approved way.

If the words were not objectionable in that cultural context, why would someone object to them? Has anyone ever objected to you calling meat between two pieces of bread a sandwich? What language is being controlled, that you feel is not dehumanizing?

Neither side has the monopoly on decency and respect.

I agree. One side has experience with being culturally disfavored, the other does not; neither state implies decency and respect in and of that state alone (along culturally, decency and respect are often assumed more in the favored than the disfavored).
 
How does this fit into a racism thread? Are your daughter and her boyfriend an inter racial couple? Also good on you for ending any rumors regarding his involvement.

The young man in question is black, which is why I referred to this as "routine".

Were you asked for an alibi every few months when you were a teen?
 
Hence the reference to cultural contexts.



If the words were not objectionable in that cultural context, why would someone object to them? Has anyone ever objected to you calling meat between two pieces of bread a sandwich? What language is being controlled, that you feel is not dehumanizing?



I agree. One side has experience with being culturally disfavored, the other does not; neither state implies decency and respect in and of that state alone (along culturally, decency and respect are often assumed more in the favored than the disfavored).

Haha oh Lord.

Thank you for showing me that I was correct.
 
Haha oh Lord.

Thank you for showing me that I was correct.

Are you praying to OB????

wtf-eccbc87e4b5ce2fe28308fd9f2a7baf3-2523.gif
 
I wonder what the percentage of false convictions were. I didn't read the whole thing, so it might be in there, but is there any way to validate the results of the different juries? Are a much larger percentage of all-white juries falsely convicting, or was the conviction still warranted, and vice versa? It seems there is an underlying assumption that the 81% conviction rate with all-white juries is "wrong" and the 71% with at least one black on the jury is "right". In other words the assumption is that since the conviction rate is higher with an all-white jury it automatically means a higher false-conviction rate, while the lower conviction rate with at least one black juror is a lower false conviction rate, but is that really accurate? Is there any data showing false conviction rates, either way (convicting when innocent, acquitting when guilty)?

Bump.
 
I wonder what the percentage of false convictions were. I didn't read the whole thing, so it might be in there, but is there any way to validate the results of the different juries? Are a much larger percentage of all-white juries falsely convicting, or was the conviction still warranted, and vice versa? It seems there is an underlying assumption that the 81% conviction rate with all-white juries is "wrong" and the 71% with at least one black on the jury is "right". In other words the assumption is that since the conviction rate is higher with an all-white jury it automatically means a higher false-conviction rate, while the lower conviction rate with at least one black juror is a lower false conviction rate, but is that really accurate? Is there any data showing false conviction rates, either way (convicting when innocent, acquitting when guilty)?

Is there any reason to think that a person accused of committing a crime is more like to have committed that crime, based on the racial mix of the jury pool selected? Also, it could well be that the 71% represent more guilty people going free, as opposed to the 81% representing more false convictions. So what? Are you saying that as long as we cant show these people are innocent, it's acceptable that they are convicted more often?

At any rate, I think that discussion misses the point, which was the comparison between the effects of conviction rates on black people (decreased by 10%) and whites (increased by 7%, to the point of being effectively the same) by the inclusion of blacks in the jury pool.

If you read the original article, actually seating a black member on the jury seems to have no additional effect beyond what having a black person in the jury pool does. I'm not sure how to interpret that.
 
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