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"The Delusion of Color Blindness"

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Blogger Tegeus said...

(not that it matters, but I am not white. I am a racial minority.)

I agree with the bush administration.

we should not distinguish on the basis of race, either for or against.

the govt should be color-blind.

and we should all be color-blind as well.

affirmative action is NOT being color-blind.

"exposure to diversity, racial and otherwise, is in itself a form of education"

the above quote says, "diversity, racial and otherwise,"

this is my stance: racial diversity is superficial. why? because skin color is trivial.

re: the "otherwise" -- ideological diversity is significant and important. why? because ideology is substantive.

what other kinds of diversity is significant?

sex: men and women are significantly different.

religion: religions are significantly different.

so: exposing students to RACIAL diversity is NOT very educational.

but exposing them to other kinds of diversity can be educational.

respectfully submitted, by a big fan of president bush.

5:58 AM

Blogger The Kool-Aid Mom said...

I am a single mom of three beautiful girls. I am doing the best I can to raise them not allow a person's color to influence their value as a person and friend. This has been something I have had to do purposefully, as my father was racist. And I agree with you that "color blindness" is stupid, because it is the first thing you notice, before a person's sex even. The thing that we have to do is to teach our children and encourage each other to appreciate each person's uniqueness and what life perspective each brings to the conversation, instead of fearing and ultimately hating others.

I am white, and I will admit I see things naively, though not as naively as other whites. And I strongly believe children benefit from diversity in the classroom. In my city, we have a large hispanic population, which translates roughly, to 50% of my children's classrooms. I love this, and wish they took advantage of this more, but other white parents are distrustful, and some are downright mean, about this ratio. They say the mexicans, and they're all mexicans to them and probably illegal at that, are ruining the school. Their children aren't getting the education they need because too much time is spent teaching the mexican kids English. Bull.

As to the idea that the legal system is racially unequal, this may be where my naivety comes in. I don't know all the answers, and some of it may be a "chicken before the egg" arguement, but it looks to me to be socio-economically unequal, not racially. If you have enough money, you can buy an innocent verdict, and without money the system railroads you without blinking. Red, yellow, black or white, as the song goes, is treated the same in that regards. However, there is a disproportionate number of poor who are of a minority group, than white. That could very likely be, and I believe it is, a logical outcome of slavery, segregation and racism that was ubiquitous throughout the country until within the last 30 years. And you still have the caste system in which poor whites with no morals are placed above strong, hard-working, people with strong moral fiber who happen to be black. The Ewells still win over the Robinsons.

This is not going to be overcome simply by throwing people together who don't live in the same neighborhood. It is not going to be overcome with a month of black history. It is not going to be overcome with BET, Jet and Ebony, or the CW network. It will not be overcome by unfair hiring practices that give a job to the unqualified person solely based on racial percentages. All these things lead outside groups to bitterness and a slow burn.

Don't misunderstand me, children are not born with hatred, but learn it in the conversation adults don't even realize they are having. Racial and cultural diversity is great in the class, because it exposes all children to good people and bad people, which have nothing to do with race. And when they grow up and raise their children, they will be less acrimonious towards divergent peoples. And their children, et al. Which is my point, overcoming racism begins with each of us teaching our children to respect and honor one another and to appreciate everyone's uniqueness.

9:18 PM

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