What is the worst racist joke ever worst meaning mean?
Put this on your page if you HATE racism, like me.
A white man said, "Colored people are not allowed here."
The black man turned around and stood up. He then said:
"Listen sir....when I was born I was BLACK "
"When I grew up I was BLACK, "
"When I'm sick I'm BLACK, "
"When I go in the sun I'm BLACK, "
"When I'm cold I'm BLACK, "
"When I die I'll be BLACK."
"But you sir."
"When you are born you're PINK".
"When you grow up you're WHITE, "
"When you're sick, you're GREEN, "
"When you go in the sun you turn RED, "
"When you're cold you turn BLUE, "
"And when you die you turn PURPLE.
"And you have the nerve to call me colored?"
The black man then sat back down and the white man walked away..
Please, go against racism, we are all the same!
(i got this from FISH247) Thanks fish247
What were the Scottsboro circumstances surrounding this incident?
Because on a freight train there was a group of white boys and black boys that got ina fight and when they were in Scottsboro the black boys won and threw the white guys off the train and the white called ythe police and the police arrested everyone and 2 ladys were on and one was a minor n thought they would get in trouble for underage prositiution across the border so they accused the black men of raping them Because on a freight train there was a group of white boys and black boys that got ina fight and when they were in Scottsboro the black boys won and threw the white guys off the train and the white called ythe police and the police arrested everyone and 2 ladys were on and one was a minor n thought they would get in trouble for underage prositiution across the border so they accused the black men of raping them
What is racist about believing it is immoral and wrong to date or marry outside your own race?
In itself, believing that it is immoral to date or marry outside your own race isn't racist. It becomes racist and unacceptable when someone tries to impose that view on others.
Why every question against blacks is considered racism?
Not everyone considers questions against blacks racism. It depends on the person, and also on the question. Racial issues are very complex nowadays.
What is a topic sentence about racism now and from the past?
A topic sentence for racism now would be that racism still exists in our country and it needs to be stopped. A topic sentence from the past would be that racism was a way of life and many milestones have passed to overcome racist issues.
What country did racism start in?
Racism did not start in one specific country. There have and always will be racism. It is present in all or most humans, it's just natural. However, it is not natural to openly express your racism at the expense of others (meaning you're violent either verbally or physically).
Why was the 1920 racism important?
The KKK were more active than ever in the 1920's, they would burn crosses and attack African Americans. They weren't just racist against blacks it was anyone who were non American that they targeted.
What is a example of racism through history?
The KKK against African Americans or the Nazis against the Jews
Red wine, usually home brewed. "Dago" is a derogatory term for Italians.
Why do you think some areas are shown as having neither a majority nor an evenly divided population?
these areas may not have been inhabited
What can racism do?
1. It can make one say, "Racism is feeling one is better than those of another culture. I don't feel I am better than any other, so I'm not racist, I just want you (insert here all the differences about you..) as far away as possible from me and my 'kind' that I love very much. I hope your kind dislike/distrust/hate/avoid my kind as much as my kind dislike/distrust/hate your kind. So we equally and kindly dislike/distrust/hate/avoid each other. It is for the sake of race preservation of dislike/distrust/hate/avoid"
It can make one see people more as races and less as people hence narrowing down his mind.
2. Indoctrination that people should get stuck in differences and divisions like animals.
3. Divide the globe strictly into species in correlation to their habitats.
4. Making rules on what to do and what not to do based on appearance, what distance to be kept, where to go, etc.
5. Acts ranging from verbal abuse, taunts, fight provocation, prejudice, bullying, violence, until a Racial Holy War.
6. Make battlefield line easier to draw by distinguishing your enemies by their homogeneous appearance.
7. Fill you with fear and prejudice that you get across the street immediately at the sight of someone outside of your race.
8. Sexual impotence since racist sentiments and propagandas instill in some people frustration, hate and self-consciousness that he or she is not worthy enough to choose whomever he or she wants as a mate but be dictated by sets of fascist rules.
9. Inferiority and superiority complex. Feelings like being threatened and downgraded for some while, for others it's unfair because being different and divided are what they're obsessed with.
10. Causes people to say mean words while claiming not to be racist.
11. Brewing the World War III
12. Makes life not worth living and this world not livable.
13. Spouting around the deceiving, fear/hate-mongering propaganda with words such as "Love your race", "preserve" by not meaning the human race but his own deceitful selfish ego that is divisive and full of hateful pride.
14. Losing of conscience, common sense, and ability to repent or seek for a betterment. Defending the indefensible, shooting back with remarks such anti-racism is racism itself, paranoid crybaby excuses, history denials, threats, and all stuffs of misleading tu-quoque arguments.
15. Insincere "friendship" and "charities" for the sake of showing off only.
16. Best of tu-quoque excuses and arguments with hope and encouragement so that there are racists in every "race", i.e. "Everybody is racist too, why am I worse?"
17. Loss of individualism replaced by herd/group/zombie mentality.
18. Tension, terror, and of course atmosphere of terror and terrorism.
19. Using of science in pretentious, wrong direction and/or obsession in pseudoscience all for divide and control purpose.
20. Using freedom of speech and/or religion to spread hate, inspire people to turn against each other.
21. Demanding that people not feel insulted when they are shown hate against, abused, insulted, thrown bananas at, hurled stones at, slapped, punched racially verbally and physically. They might say, "We were just having fun, can't you take a joke?!"
22. Making typical arguments for no. 21 such as: Calling it fear instead of racism, or calling the victims liars.
23. Make some anthropologists on this small planet think and postulate "Human races are evolving away from each other, are actually diverging from one another, We are getting less alike" (Henry Harpending) Which serves good only for a certain segment of that human "race".
24. It can make those who behave, speak, think, or act racist against a victim angrier when they are pointed out and called out as racists, much angrier than their victims whom they offend. Because basically they are proud bullies, and can't see anything wrong in bullying.
25. It makes men more and more sleeker and slicker in their glibs, and so subtle in sugarcoating it, in pathetic attempt to make their deep seated racist psyche appear acceptable they even use God and twist scriptures to appeal to religious people in hope as many can be deceived. One example is this website, please check how "21st century" the "sweet sugar" fits in the name of God: faithandheritage com/faq/ i imagined they sing "Amazing Races how sweet segregation sounds" after that
Why is conflating racial prejudice and discrimination with racism a big issue in the classroom?
For me, it's an issue of literacy. Racism and white supremacy have made us illiterate. We don't see systems of power but rather very surfaced attitudes or opinions which have become understood as "racist." Thus racism becomes a synonym for something which should be more specific, namely, racial prejudice or prejudice against certain races.
Discrimination carries the systemic element to it and for me that's the most clarifying part. Not everyone is "racist" in the sense that they benefit from a hierarchical organization of the institutions that create the society we live in. I mean hierarchical in the sense that there are people who have access to institutions, and people who have remained without access for centuries. There are people with better working conditions, and then there are people who's working conditions have killed them. There are people with access to education, and then there are people whose educations were policed daily. These vague generalizations only make sense when they are grafted onto the history of European colonialism.
The access of the one comes at the expense of the other. The beneficiaries of racism are people of European decent, i.e. white people.
Understanding these fine differences remains a difficult task for me, and I am a humanities major at a college in new york city! "critical race theory" has recently been targeted by the Right. at the other end of the spectrum, children are particularly sensitive to the messages and codes they're bombarded with. If we want them to be literate, if we want ALL children to flourish, we need to arm them with a vocabulary that will help them end racism and white supremacy, not disarm them with confusion and misunderstanding. The history and concepts I learned in my (previous) public and parochial education only made it more confusing for me.
In every group of religious or non religious people there are those who are racist, but the Nazarene church itself is not racist.
How do religious teachings affect attitudes towards racism?
Religious teachings may make people feel as if they are better than others, since many religions uplift believers instead of those that don't believe. The best way to overcome this is to avoid judging others.
Technically, NO. Lynch was originally someone's surname. It also was used in the American west to denote hanging someone of any color - and most of the West was White prior to 1900. "Let's lynch him!" a crowd might yell about the (White) gun slinger.
However, lynch and lynching became terms frequently associated with Slavery and African-American history, especially in the South post-Civil War times. So to a person of African-American descent, hearing a White person refer to lynching might cause immediate concern and a feeling of racist targeting even when the White person was only referring to lynchings in a historical context.
It's unfortunate that so many words have been used to hurt people and that actions along with words quickly recall pain of ancestors.
What are the motivations behind racism?
Jeolusy or hatred
[The above answer is the orignal response. This is simply a note that it is idiotic and that this question has been addressed with far more consideration elsewhere on the site.]