Keila Keila

Will things ever change?

Will things ever change?

I just saw a segment on Good Morning America where they spoke to two groups of very young children White/Black "terms they used". They were asked mostly about their feelings about the other group and the answers were sad enough. The reason I am writing this is because of one question given and the answers received.
Question... " Wouldn't it be nice if you could not see the color of people and everyone was just all mixed up."
Answer... " That would be really, really bad."
Question..." Why?"
Answer... " Because then you would not know who your friends were."

This is not a thread to be answered in any way, I think one emoticon sums it all up.
!
9,866 views 33 replies
Reply #26 Top
sheesh, I'm crying.... I miss him.

Powered by SkinBrowser!
Reply #27 Top
left Texas in the sixties to go to Vietnam. Came home to Texas with some emotional reservations in the mid-nineties, thinking i would be back to seeing things that i don't want to see. was greatly pleased that many things have indeed changed in a very positive way.
Reply #28 Top
What about Crabs? They're people too! Fellow life-forms. All this diversity. One planet. Out in the back-waters of the galaxy. Are we being watched? Huh? Old Crab grew up in a very racist and biased home. Old South. Perceptions change very slowly. As I know I myself show alot of racist attitudes unintentionally. Especially today with the media and info age constantly bombarding me with race differentials and holidays for every race and all. Don't mean to offend any life-forms but thats this world and it probably will never change now or ever. All this stuff is constantly being shoved down peoples throats about equality and all, everyone has to be the same, all grey. This shoving and brow-beating of other people about their attitudes and personal beliefs is what alot of people find offensive. Old Crabs a racist, right? Wrong. Changed most of my beliefs a long time ago without having all the trash shoved down my throat. My best man at my wedding was Jarvis a black man, my wife was Tex-Mex, and the ministers were Catholic and Protestant. Just behave yourselves and treat everyone else the same as you'd like to be treated. Where'd I get that from? That message was sent down quite awhile back and it's still being ignored by alot of folks. Just my 2 cents worth. Hmmn..make that a nickle worth.
Reply #29 Top
Someone sent me this email one time. Don't know what to make of it.

Walter Williams

What I celebrate as a source of pride and self-esteem is the fact that I have brown eyes. You say, "Williams, that goes to prove what we've been saying all along. You're a lunatic. Is having brown eyes some kind of accomplishment?" Such a response is proof positive that you've missed out on an important part of today's college education.
Diversity worship and multiculturalism are currency and cause for celebration at just about any college. If one is black, brown, yellow or white, the prevailing thought is that he should take pride and celebrate that fact even though, just as in the case of my eye color, he had nothing to do with it. The multiculturalist and diversity crowd see race as an achievement. In my book, race might be an achievement, worthy of considerable celebration, only if a person was born white and through his effort and diligence became black.
For the multiculturalist/diversity crowd, culture, ideas, customs, arts and skills are a matter of racial membership where one has no more control over his culture than his race. That's a racist idea, but it's politically correct racism. It says that one's convictions, character and values are not determined by personal judgment and choices but genetically determined. In other words, as yesteryear's racists held: Race determines identity.
The multiculturists are right in saying that in a just society, people of all races and cultures should be equal in the eyes of the law. But their argument borders on idiocy when they argue that one culture cannot be judged superior to another and to do so is Eurocentrism. For them, different cultural values are morally equivalent. That's unbridled nonsense. Ask your multiculturalist friends: Is forcible female genital mutilation, as practiced in nearly 30 sub-Saharan African and Middle Eastern countries, a morally equivalent cultural value? Slavery is practiced in Northern Sudan; is it morally equivalent? In most of the Middle East, there are numerous limits placed on women such as prohibitions on driving, employment and education. Under Islamic law, in some countries, women adulterers face death by stoning, and thieves face the punishment of having their hand severed. Are these cultural values morally equivalent, superior or inferior to ours?
Western values are superior to all others. Why? The indispensable achievement of the West was the concept of individual rights. It's the idea that individuals have certain inalienable rights, and individuals do not exist to serve government but governments exist to protect these inalienable rights. It took until the 17th century for that idea to arrive on the scene and mostly through the works of British philosophers such as John Locke and David Hume.
While Western values are superior to all others, one need not be a Westerner to hold Western values. A person can be Chinese, Japanese, Jewish, African or Arab and hold Western values. It's no accident that Western values of reason and individual rights have produced unprecedented health, life expectancy, wealth and comfort for the ordinary person. There's an indisputable positive relationship between liberty and standards of living.
Western values are by no means secure. They're under ruthless attack by the Liberal academic elite on college campuses across America. These people want to replace personal liberty with government control; they want to replace equality with entitlement; they want to halt progress in the name of protecting the environment. As such, they pose a much greater threat to our way of life than any terrorist or rogue nation.
Multiculturalism and diversity are a cancer on our society, and, ironically, with our tax dollars and charitable donations, we're feeding it.


Walter Williams is a nationally syndicated columnist.


Powered by SkinBrowser!
Reply #30 Top
Wow... I'm speachless.
While I tend to agree with the beginning of that column, I strongly disagree with the end.
There are cultural differences in the world, and our culture is by no means not perfect, nor immuable. Multicultiral differences are good, as it encourages individual cultural growth.
But I don't see skin colour as a cultural trait. You may be black and just as Canadian as I am, just like you can be white and, if raised in Mali for example, be just as African as any other Malian.
As for individual liberty being replaced by government control, to protect the environment for example, that is total nonsense. Without regulations, we'll have no planet to live on in 10 years... if we're still alive at all.
Reply #31 Top
While Western values are superior to all others,


What a load of crap.
Rare, quality drivel....
Reply #32 Top
duh!
Reply #33 Top
/me observes the ants on Planet Barbaria from his vessel orbiting the planet

"Western Values" are considered to be the standard because the West dominates the world. If China would have all the money, "Chinese Values" would be considered superior.

Anyhow, as long as people keep seeing themselves (or their culture) as superior to others nothing will ever change.