A quote from John Quincy Adams:
"The whole continent of North America appears to be destined by Divine Providence to be peopled by one nation, speaking one language, professing one general system of religious and political principles, and accustomed to one general tenor of social usages and customs. For the common happiness of them all, for their peace and prosperity, I believe it is indispensable that they should be associated in one federal Union." Now does this represent all white Americans? It's hard to say, but it reflects the sentiments of one of the leaders of the U.S.
The speaker seems to say that they will not give up hope that peace, acceptance, tolerance, love, and all things to bring humankind together can be achieved. They will not simply take on the view that men and women are forever destined to be racist toward one another and that war is an inevitable part of our lives. The starless midnight represents the darkness we are all trapped in and roaming through; we are without sight and guidance. The bright daybreak represent us making it to a new day with light; we are able to start anew.
Would it be possible for south Africa to host the world of soccer if apartheid still existed?
No it would not be possible to hold it.
Can the Utah Constitution override the Federal Ada laws in the united constitution?
no, federal laws always override state constitutions
What was the US Supreme Court's June 2009 decision on age discrimination?
Gross v. FBL Financial Services, 557 US ___ (2009)
Gross v. FBL Financial was an age discrimination suit brought under the Age Discrimination and Employment Act of 1967, in which the Petitioner, Gross, alleged FBL financial demoted him due to his advanced age (54).
From 2001 to 2003, Gross held the title "Claims Administration Director." In 2003, FBL divided Gross's responsibilities, assigning many of them to a woman in her early 40s who had previously worked under him. Gross's new title was "Project Coordinator"; the other employee's title was "Claims Administration Manager." FBL Financial claimed the division was part of a general restructuring, and stated that Gross was placed in a position more suited to his skills. Gross's salary was not reduced; both positions received the same compensation.
At the end of the trial, the District Court instructed the jury to find in favor of Gross if he proved by a preponderance of the evidence that his age was a motivating factor in his demotion. If age played a part in the decision, regardless of any additional legal reason the company may have had to demote him, the verdict was to favor Gross under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 mixed-motive provision. The jury was to find in favor of FBL if it has proved it would have demoted Gross regardless of his age. In other words, if the plaintiff proved any part of the company's decision was related to his age, the burden of proof shifted to the respondent to prove age played no part in their decision.
In a 5-4 opinion written by Justice Thomas and joined by Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Scalia, Kennedy and Alito, the Court decided age discrimination claims couldn't be brought under the two-step Title VII rules, because Congress hadn't explicitly specified those rules were to be applied in the ADEA (29 US § 621), despite amending the legislation several times. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, the Court presumed the omission was intentional.
The Court held that plaintiffs in age discrimination claims carry the entire burden of proof, and must convince the jury that "but-for" the employee's age, no adverse action would have occurred.
Justices Stevens, Ginsburg, Breyer and Souter dissented.
In order to change the precedent set by Gross v. FBL Financial, Congress would have to amend the ADEA legislation to specify it qualified for Title VII protection. No other discrimination policy was affected by the Court's decision.
It makes ignorance, stereotypes, and misinformation just as readily available with true information and educational pieces of work, so some believe that by being on the Internet, it must hold true, even if only to certain a degree.
However, racism, ignorance, and negative stereotypes do not hold true in reality because individuals of any racenormally show the world otherwise, and show why it is terrible to generalize just because of what's spread around the net.
Anti-Jewish is prejudice against Jewish cultural differences?
No. Very few people who are anti-Jewish have any idea of Jewish culture, just a few stereotypes. Anti-Jewish attitudes are generally based on notions of race, not culture or religion.
How does Obama become aware of the existence of racism?
By opening his eyes to what really matters not just what he thinks we want to hear
Was Yoko Ono affected by racism?
Yes, particularly in England when she and John Lennon began their romantic relationship. People called her ugly, asked Lennon why he couldn't have chosen another English girl (his first wife Cynthia was English), and had Lennon forgotten about Japanese treachery in World War II. New York, by contrast, was accepting of their relationship, and they felt more comfortable in New York, so they moved there.
Was considered a leader in the women's movement during the 1800s?
During the 1800s, Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a well-known leader in the women's rights movement. She authored the Declaration of Sentiments.
Who are the Enemies of the Open Society?
Among the enemies of open society, Popper points out the ethical positivism, a key element, though little noticed, Marxism and Nazism. Positivism ethical "claims no other standards than those laws that were actually spent (or positive) and therefore have a positive existence. Other patterns are considered as unrealistic imagination."
The obvious problem with this theory is that it prevents any kind of moral challenge to existing norms and moral limit any political power. If there are no moral standards than those positivized law, the law that exists is that which must exist. This theory leads to the principle that force is the law. As such it is radically opposed to the spirit of the open society: it is based, as we saw in the possibility of criticizing and gradually alter or preserve laws and customs. The ethical positivism, to enact the lack of moral values beyond those contained in existing legal norms actually leads to the demoralization of society and, thereby, the abolition of the concept of freedom and moral responsibility of the individual.
This is perhaps one of the most misunderstood aspects of the work of Popper. The idea of "openness" was captured by intellectual fashions and relativistic theories that Popper actually condemned as enemies of open society. The ethical positivism, Popper warned, generates a rampant relativism and, as the theory of popular sovereignty, paving the way for an unlimited state, a state that recognizes no moral limits.
The challenge of ethical relativism leaves mankind in doubt about the standards with which it can critique the ethics of a different society on account of the fact that the theory states that societies develop ethics in order to cope with both their physical, and social environments. The central tenet of the dogma is that there is no universal truth in ethics, and therefore critics speak in vain when criticizing the ethics of another society; rather, the critic ought to tolerate the ethics of another society because the ethics he obeys, and those that he critiques developed in two different environments. However, ethical relativism can lead mankind down a path to aberrant ethical positivism where the only standard of ethics are the existing ethics of the day thus denying man the capability of improving his society via reason.
In fact, the entire concept of tolerance, while it is certainly a keystone to an open society in which individuals of differing judgments of value (especially ones of a metaphysical character) can unite in the division of labor that is the engine of prosperity, should not hinder man from critiquing himself, his society, or that of others. There is absolutely no reason to uphold the status-quo as the absolute best of all outcomes.
This process should provide an alternative to the utopia promised, for exemple, by terrorists-to the open society, and it gives Muslims, like Christians and Jews, an opportunity to liberate themselves from the ever-present menace of hell, which is the single most effective threat the fundamentalists employ. And yet suggestions like this cause many people in the west to flinch. Many hold that questioning, or criticising, a holy figure is not polite behaviour, somehow not done. This cultural relativism betrays the basic values on which our open society is constructed. We should never self-censor.
The persistence of closed societies would be the cause of recurrent wars, said Bergson, but wars among themselves rather than wars waged by closed societies against open ones. For Popper the impulse to the closed society would be the cause of recurrent revolt against freedom and reason within societies that were trying to make the transition from one condition to the other.
Whatever the current object of adulation- the wisdom of the East, tribal Africa, Aboriginal Australia, pre-Columbian America -the message is the same: the absolute superiority of Otherness. The Third Worldist looks to the orient, to the tribal, to the primitive not for what they really are but for their evocative distance from the reality of modern European society and values.
The western cultural relativists, who flinch from criticising Muhammad for fear of offending Muslims, rob Muslims of an opportunity to review their own moral values. The first victims of Muhammad are the minds of Muslims themselves. Moreover, this attitude betrays Muslim reformers who desperately require the support-and even the physical protection-of their natural allies in the west.
Muslims must reform their approach to Muhammad's teachings if we are all to coexist peacefully. Terrorists and fundamentalists should not be permitted to dictate to us the rules of the game. Core western values must be maintained, and proclaimed. Our struggle should focus on persuading the large middle group of Muslims that they need not give up their religious beliefs if they engage in a process of clear and honest thinking about the need for Islamic reform.
Professor Hayek also attributed the recent revival in tribalist thinking to the fact that more and more people were obliged to work in larger and larger organisations, both public and private.
Globalists are committed to mass people conditioning along the lines advocated by B.F. Skinner, and in a society supplied with an abundance of material goods, in which information is carefully controlled by the mass media, and in which independent thought is discouraged from an early age by an education system which rewards conformity, it is possible to achieve that. Masses of people, through the encouragement of mental laziness and reliance on authorities, can be lulled back into bicameral mode. Once there they can be induced to believe almost anything provided it comes from an accepted authority figure or source, such as political leaders, professors of this or that, newspapers with coloured pictures, teachers in the classroom, the lyrics of pop music, or the TV.
Globalists are socialists and therefore collectivists, in other words, tribalists. They view society not as many individuals, but as various tribes, pressure groups, or human resources whose interests are necessarily in conflict. They readily accept concepts such as inherited tribal guilt, guilt for past wrongs allegedly committed by people of the same tribe or race. It is therefore meaningful for them to apologise for the alleged crimes of their tribal ancestors, and to try to persuade others to do likewise. They are obsessed with issues of race, culture and group rights, while they ignore and set about abolishing individual rights.
The more disturbing aspect of global tribalism lies in the adoption of policies which are having the effect of causing the masses to reject their morality and to adopt values actually threatening to themselves and their society. They can be induced to believe the butchery of defenceless civilians by NATO is a humanitarian action, that war-making is peacekeeping, and that it is wrong to judge people who do such things because moral rules are merely an outmoded form of social control, a conspiracy by naughty people from the old individualist order. Faced with ideas seemingly too difficult to grapple with, they will reject them out of hand as conspiracy theories or just another person's opinion, and move on to easier things, like sport or gossip.
Globalism is merely the latest version of these reactionary movements, this time striving to create one big global tribe, or global village, an attempt to recreate paleolithic tribal society on a global scale.
The sociologist Edward Shils was certainly no enemy of what Sandall champions as "civilization." But in his book Tradition (dedicated, incidentally, to the spirits of Max Weber and Eliot), Shils observed that "a mistake of great historical significance has been made in modern times in the construction of a doctrine which treated traditions as the detritus of the forward movement of society." If romantic primitivism is an enemy of civilization, so too is the view that piety toward the past is always an impediment to progress.
What is the cress theory of color confrontation and racism?
Washington, D.C.-based http://www.answers.com/topic/psychiatrist and race theorist Frances Cress Welsing rocked the fields of cultural and behavioral science with her 1970 essay The Cress Theory of Color-Confrontation and Racism (White Supremacy).This striking theory of the origins of racism is rooted in the effects that varying degrees of melanin--the color-producing pigment in skin--can have on racial perception and development. "The quality of whiteness is a genetic http://www.answers.com/topic/inadequacy or a relative http://www.answers.com/topic/deficiency or disease based upon the inability to produce the skin http://www.answers.com/topic/pigment of http://www.answers.com/topic/melanin which are responsible for all skin color," she explained in the essay, adding, "The majority of the world's people are not so afflicted, suggesting that the state of color is the norm for human beings and [its] absence is abnormal." In her essay, Welsing contends that because of their "numerical inadequacy" and "color inferiority," white people may have defensively developed "an http://www.answers.com/topic/uncontrollable sense of hostility and aggression" towards people of color which has led to "confrontations" between the races throughout history. Repressing their own feelings of inadequacy, whites "set about evolving a social, political and economic structure to give blacks and other 'non-whites' the appearance of being inferior." - http://www.answers.com/topic/frances-cress-welsing
What happened after slavery was abolished Did racism stop?
Racism was abolished partially in the 1930's when the slavery famine began to die down but there is still lots of racism going on today!
What is the relationship between religion and racial harmony?
A:
Traditionally, religions have developed within a specific ethnic group, even if they subsequently become universalising religions. So, for example, Judaism is the religion of Jews who believe their ancestors to be the Hebrew people, Christianity (at least now) has Europeans at its core, Islam has an Arabian core and uses Arabic as its core language, and Daoism has a Chinese ethnic core. In each case, racial harmony is certainly possible, but history shows this to be an almost impossible ideal.
Christians have used their Bible to justify the enslavement of other races, while Muslims are divided on sectarian lines, which often result in de facto ethnic divides. Judaism welcomes converts, but some more orthodox Jews refuse to acknowledge black Jews as truly Jews, even if their ancestors have been Jewish for centuries. Religion and international harmony are at times almost irreconcilable.
Is being anti-semitic legal in the us?
There is no specific law in the US which controls an individual's private thoughts and beliefs (yet), but expressing anti-semitic remarks in public at an inapproprioate time and place COULD place you in jeapordy of being arrested for everything from disorderly conduct, making threats, harassment, inciting to violence, etc, up to being charged with a so-called "hate" crime.
To be specific, a racist is someone who believes that a certain race, colour, nationality etc is inferior to themselves or their race, colour or nationality. If someone acts like this, they would be acting racist or they probably would be a racist. This can also be called racism. Racism is different from sexism, which is when on gender believes their gender is superior to the opposite gender. Like if a man says that women are weak or if a women said men are stupid whoever said that would be a sexist.
Another answer:
I disagree, politely. What you defined is ethnocentrism, which see other cultures as inferiors to one's traditional culture. This is fine, as people have a right to think however they may.
I say racism is the PHYSICAL OPPRESSION of a people based on their skin color. Just calling somebody names is nothing more than teasing, and some are overly sensitive. Denying someone basic services (health care, employment, voting rights) is discrimination, but its not necessarily racist.
When the Africans were brought West (and East) and forced to do labor for no pay, this was NOT SLAVERY, it was INVOLUNTARY SERVITUDE, which is much worse. It was also institutionalized racism, and has a much longer legacy than any form of slavery, which has oppressed most of the world's people.
Some people become racist b/c their family and friends from a young age teach them that it is right. People don't understand if you love your child you would not let them go out in to the world and have another thing to deal with. some people become racist because something happened to them by someone of a different race, like a fight or stealing. Some people listen to the media and take the attitudes they see on television an radio and think that all of a particular race is a certain way... that is stereotyping to its fullest. Be kind.. we are all God's children. You don't have to like everyone but God says we should love everyone. Good luck!
AnswerThey are either taught the ignorance or they have had something happen to them and weren't able to deal with it properly or in a healthy manner.What was one result of the women's movement?
the number of women in the workforce doubled from 1950 to 2000
Why is fostering equality and diversity important?
equality and diversity is important because everyone should be treated in the same way everyone else does it doesn't matter what race or culture you belong to we are all equal in the eyes of god
What are the long term and short term effects of racism?
Several may include: become self-conscious, intense hatred at particular people/ethnic groups, fear, low self-esteem, depression, anxiety, decreasing of health, and psychological pain.
Who or what is a constitution?
The system of fundamental laws and principles that prescribes the nature, functions, and limits of a government or another institution.
What is the law that banned discrimination?
Various laws have restricted certain kinds of discrimination in the United States. Like State Legislatures, the Congress of the United States has the power to pass statutes regulating a wide range of activity. The 1964 Civil Rights Act, for example, placed limits on discrimination (among other things) in the workplace and at businesses that are open to the public.
The decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States are another source of law because Supreme Court decisions that interpret the Constitution become the supreme law of the land. Responding to various cases and controvercies that have come before it, the Court has repeatedly ruled that no government entity may discriminate on the basis of race without meeting what is called "strict scrutiny." For governmental discrimination on the basis of race to stand, the government must show both a "compelling interest" and show that no less restrictive means would meet that interest. The practical impact of this requirement is that virtually all governmental race discrimination is prohibited. (One important exception is affirmative action.)
The Supreme Court has similarly ruled that no governmental entity may discriminate on the basis of gender without meeting what the Court calls "intermediate scrutiny." In contrast to strict scrutiny, which requires a compelling governmental interest and narrowly tailored means to that end, the intermediate scrutiny test is slightly easier to pass. To pass intermediate scrutiny and permissibly discriminate on the basis of gender, a governmental entitly must prove an important government interest and must prove the means used to reach that end are substantially related to that interest.
While there has not yet been a law that bans all forms of discrimination in all contexts, stautes passed by Congress and rulings of the Supreme Court have worked together to combat many of discrimination's harmful effects.