Racism as it was taught to me.

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nofearfactor

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Where I grew up at in San Diego CA there were a mix of peoples in our neighborhood: whites, blacks, Mexican-Americans, Asians,etc all with the common denominator being we were all working class or lower. I heard all kinds of stuff in those days spewing out of everybodys mouths. I hung out with blacks and latinos and Asians and I heard so much racist stuff in their own communities against each other besides what they said about us that it would confuse anybody. Everybody talked shite to each other and about themselves, but there wasnt any hate to it. Ive never feared for my safety any where Ive been just because I was white, or mixed, whatever I am. Ive always been a big kid spending alot of time lifting weights and boxing with my black and Mexican buddies and while Ive always gotten alot of teasing from them it has never gotten out of hand, I have never experienced any hatred because of my skin around blacks and latinos back in California, north and south.

When I would go to Oklahoma to visit grandparents and visit where my parents were born and raised I got to experience a different kind of racism though. My mother was born native living on what used to be considered our tribes reservation and still lives there on her familys allottment, same as her parents did. My grandfather was an original allottee on his tribes roll full blood indian and my grandmother was half indian and half French/Anglo. I remember lots of stories told to me by my gramma, one of which I will never forget about an uncle who while running for chief once fed all the white people dogfood mixed in with chili. My grandfather was one of the indians in the late 1800s early 1900s sent off to boarding school for indians at Chilocco. He apparently never liked white people much after that he just did what he had to do to get along with them. Ive heard stories about how much he hated my father when my mom brought him home for them to meet him. All because he was white. My father had dark hair but he for sure was a white boy. My grandfather wouldnt even eat facing him at the dinner table, he would turn his back so he didnt have to look at my father. They wanted her to marry indian. She did but it was her 2nd marriage and by then my grampa had passed away. He reportedly was disappointed when he saw me for the first time after I was born saying " well gd, thats a white baby" as I wasnt born dark haired and dark skinned like my older sisters and brother, I was light skinned, lighter than everybody else in the family. My mothers kids with my indian stepfather are all dark, brown eyed and brown skinned also.

Weird as science is my birth father being full on Scot-Irish meant someone was gonna win the racial lottery and be born light haired and blue eyed- out of all the kids in our house, bingo, Im the one who got the blonde hair and blue eyes and light skin. My 3/8ths indian is in there some where. Living in California when we went to the indian health center I looked like alot of the mixed breed California bred indian kids out there and I fit right in. But in Oklahoma when we went to the indian health clinic I was usually the lightest indian kid in the house. Playing with my dark skinned siblings and cousins when I was young I always was the cowboy when playing cowboys vs indians. The dead cowboy, I died alot of deaths at the hands of those evil indians. My sibs when we went to the beach in CA all just got darker and darker in the sun while I get a tanned like sunburn. When we went to indian cultural functions I was the always the one who stuck out the most even though I was usually more indian by blood than some of the darker looking kids. Didnt matter, I heard it all from them, mostly about how I didnt belong there, how I was too white looking to be an indian, plus I heard the more racist names called to me usually in our tribes native language, I knew em all, it didnt matter what my CDIB said, I was white to them. Back then I didnt want to be white, I wanted to be a darker. Not because I was embarrassed to be white but because I wanted to look like everyone else in my family, it just wasnt going to happen tho.

I learned to just go with it and live mixed. Now today there are tons of light skinned indians running around as well as light skinned blacks, latinos, etc. On most official forms I have always checked caucasion AND native/indian. I identify as mixed and thats what I am. My kids are all kinds of mixed up: 2 of my girls are dark brown skinned brown eyed like their mothers who are both indian and brunettes, another daughter is blonde and blue eyed like me and her mother who is also blonde and indian mixed, and then my youngest is a son I had with a woman who is a light skinned mixed half African-American half white making my son dark haired with hazel eyes but light skinned like me.

Imagine someone being born white with all of the prestige that having white skin supposedly brings a person, and they would rather have been born a different color.
 
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MoBoost

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I agree with the overall message of the post, but blaming the parents is the same old broken record ... got to grow-up someday and be accountable for your thoughts, words and actions.
 

Ace_on_the_Turn

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Very nice, and well said. I am just tired of it being a one way road. Everyone acts like Whites are the only Racist people there is. Wonder what would happen if we had a White Entertainment T.V. or Miss White America. Do not get me wrong, those kids on the bus deserve what they got, but it's a 2 way street and I'm tired of paying for it.

You are, of course, correct. But, here's the deal (and I'm going to catch crap for it, that doesn't make it any less true). Whites have had the "upper hand" for so long, it's not an even playing field. Institutional racism was the norm in this country for close to 200 years after its founding. You don't undo that in one generation. There is a company in OKC that has about 200 employees. Well paying jobs. As recent as a year ago they had one black employee. One. The owner is an older white man who was raised in the days of separate drinking fountains and sundown towns. For those that don't know, a sundown town was a town that had a sign on the edge of town that said "******, don't let the sun set on you in this town". We just had the report from Ferguson that blacks were systematically profiled for no other reason than the color of their skin. Institutional racism may not be alive and well, but it's damn sure still breathing.

Yes, black people can be racist, but the undeniable fact is, whites have much more power over blacks than vice versa. If you think the average black child has the same chance to "make it" as the average while child in this country, you are lying to yourself. Here's when affirmative action is invoked. Most whites see affirmative action as something close to immoral, if not evil. They resent it. You can't cure what's in someone's heart. You can force them to hire blacks, but not truly treat them as equals. Some years ago I worked with a black guy. Young dude, about 25. He had a college degree. His wife was a airline stewardess for AA. He made pretty good money, as did she. We had talked light-heartily about race relations many times. One night, we were talking and for some reason long forgotten the subject turn to race, and how blacks are treated. He said to me, with tears welling up in his eyes, man, you have no idea what's it like to be black. What's it's like to be pulled over for no reason other than you're a black dude in a nice care (he drove a new Mitsubishi 3000GT, like I said, this was some years ago) and be told by the cop, you must be a drug dealer to have this car. Or be sitting at a stop light and some rednecks in the car next to you call you a ****** as they pull away. Or have people assume you got your job because your black, and not because you earned it.

I'm not saying I have all the answerer, or even any of the answers, but I'm know there is a problem. And it's not even close to being truly fixed.
 

FamousAJ

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If you think the average black child has the same chance to "make it" as the average while child in this country, you are lying to yourself.

so you don't believe that a white kid and black kid born to two families on the same street in Beverly Hills won't both grow up to be successful, powerful and accomplished? the whole nature vs. nurture doesn't exist??!! granted those two kids from Beverly Hills aren't average, but the same formula is there and can be applied to any middle class environment. Now if you're talking about a white kid on the right side of the tracks and a black kid on the other, then we have a debate.


all one has to do is watch Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (fiction obviously), but they hit the nail on the head.
 

Cedar Creek

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I grew up in SE Oklahoma AKA "Little Dixie". My family, like most in the region, descended from origins in Alabama, Georgia, South & North Carolina, and had strong feelings of racial superiority regarding people of color. My mother's family especially. I really didn't know my dad's family, but he didn't use the "N" and didn't approve of his kids talking that way - and I don't know why, because that was the norm for most people we knew. My mother would never have acknowledged that black & white people were of the same species. I don't want to be that way, and I didn't try to teach my children to be that way and always welcomed all their friends of diverse ethnicities to our home. I'm happy that I mave evolved to a great extent from the bigoted mindset I once had, but I still have to mentally kick myself in the ass sometimes when I fall short. America's "melting pot" still has a ways to go - lots of concrete in that hole.
 

RidgeHunter

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It's absurd that it has to be explained to some people that black people having a T.V. channel and years and years of institutionalized discrimination and disparate treatment are not comparable.

"Racism" with no power behind it means nothing. What is black privilege? Getting to say nigga freely? I'm so jealous. I don't think I'll trade my white male privilege, tho. I use that **** at work daily.
 

Ace_on_the_Turn

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so you don't believe that a white kid and black kid born to two families on the same street in Beverly Hills won't both grow up to be successful, powerful and accomplished? the whole nature vs. nurture doesn't exist??!! granted those two kids from Beverly Hills aren't average, but the same formula is there and can be applied to any middle class environment. Now if you're talking about a white kid on the right side of the tracks and a black kid on the other, then we have a debate.


all one has to do is watch Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (fiction obviously), but they hit the nail on the head.

With all things being equal, a white kid has a better chance. No question. None.
 

nofearfactor

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I remember seeing some black rappers once giggling when seeing a white rapper with all these gold chains hanging around his neck. They were talking about "why he wearing all that bling when his skin color IS bling for a white boy"?.
 

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