You have it backwards. When there exists a sophisticated system that groups individuals into an unjust racial hierarchy, the solution is never to merely/broadly pretend that system doesn't exist. Sure, if people where treated like individuals, there would be no racial hierarchy...that doesn't mean the solution is to simply ignore racial hierarchy and treat everyone like individuals. That is incredibly naive...misguided, colorblind nonsense. It's like insisting that the way to help someone who has been stabbed, while they are bleeding to death on the ground, is to not stab them in the first place. It's that ridiculous. Yeah, the problem is that they have been stabbed, but proposing/insisting the solution(to not stab them in the first place) is absurd...rather than recognizing they have been stabbed and rushing them to the hospital. There are situations where it is necessary to recognize and highlight this grouping in order to address a problem. And to blindly insist on theoretical individuality when these social groupings actually exist is the opposite of helpful.phe_de wrote:Yes I can, and I will.Dr_Liszt wrote:As long as oppression exists you can't look at people as individuals.
The quotes provided by Cassius Clay justify it.Exactly. The racial hierarchy is the problem, because it does not treat people as individuals. If people were treated as individuals, there would be no racial hierarchy.If you want to prevent people from being raced, the solution is as unavoidable as it is difficult: eliminate racial hierarchy. The truth is, as long as there exists a system of oppression which punishes people on the basis of race, white individuals will sometimes suffer a bit of backlash. To expect anything else is unreasonable bordering on infantile; whiteness has always been a double-edged sword.
See above. The problem is the racial caste system. If it is upheld, its rules usually target people from racial minorities; and sometimes people from the racial majority. But what should be done IMO is not applying discrimination more justly; it's dropping the rules. The problem is not the imbalance of power within the caste system; the problem is the caste system itself.By extension, you can never prevent a few white individuals from experiencing racialized, disproportionate backlash as long as our racial caste system exists. And, like focusing on gun accidents while ignoring gun murders, focusing on the rare backfiring of racism—rather than the horrendous costs it exerts when it punishes its preferred victims—manages to miss the point quite spectacularly.
Let's quote an En Vogue text.En Vogue wrote:Free your mind and the rest will follow
Be color-blind, don't be so shallow
Edit: What is also dangerous in the colorblind solution is the superficial and simplistic implication/assumption that the racial categories were formed merely because people started arbitrarily grouping each other...rather than because there are powers and their interests that forced the creation of these categories...and some people then aligned themselves with power in various ways. So, then the superficial solution is then for people to merely stop categorizing each other, instead of addressing the engine that drives it all...the power. Saying "the power imbalance within the caste system is not the problem" is so backwards.