Showing posts with label racism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label racism. Show all posts

Sunday, November 13, 2016

There is NO path to make America great without being better together.

Facebook Commentary by Cindy Morrisroe Mirabella:

There is NO path to make America great without being better together. 

Thoughtful opinion pieces like the one below are integral to the process of understanding each other. Many of my friends are sharing valuable opinions and 3rd party opinion pieces that are constructive and positive.

In CONTRAST to the useful opinion piece below, please realize that the faux news sites (those that present opinions as fact) will continue heading further right and further left with clickbait titles and garbage presented as data in order to manufacture outrage. Outrage --> clicks --> shares --> views --> ad revenue. Outrage --> revenue (get it?). These sites have had months of year over year growth and they're not going to give it up easily just because the election is over, so they're going to work really hard at getting us lathered up enough to do their ad sales for them by sharing their clickbait (exaggerated airquotes) content (end exaggerated airquotes).

Don't be manipulated so easily. Be better than that. Check before you post crap positioned as fact. You have a brain. You have the Internet. Use them both. And throw the yellow card (politely) when you see a fellow American not using their brain and/or the Internet but posting crap positioned as fact. Do that especially when you kind-of, sort-of like where a faulty conclusion is headed - that takes REAL effort. We are all entitled to our own opinions (and to share them), but NOT to our own facts. If the producers of crap content can't use us as a free sales force, they will eventually no longer be able to afford the costs to manufacture it.


Facebook Commentary by Linda Vola:
A good read. If you want change. It's time to start writing to those in DC and State gov. Get ready for the next elections in 2 yrs! 

 Reposting of David Wong blog post on http://cracked.com

Don't Panic



Don't panic. Or rather, don't keep panicking for too long.
We tend to have a fairly left-leaning readership here at Cracked, just for demographic reasons (lots of college kids and such). So a lot of you reading this are outraged, sad, disgusted, terrified, and/or physically ill right now. Lots of you also use the stuff I write to feel better about the world, so let me give it my best shot.
First, understand that the opposite of panic is not blithe acceptance of the situation -- it's clear-minded, positive, day-to-day action. Panic makes you do stupid shit or, even worse, curl up into a ball and do nothing. Don't tell me you have reason to panic. You never have reason to panic. You have reason to act.
So yeah, be upset for as long as you want. Get drunk. Do whatever you have to do. After that, I want you to sober up, splash water on your face, and consider some facts:
Gay marriage has overwhelming support nationwide -- 55 percent to 37 percent against.
The vast majority of the population supports background checks for gun buyers -- up to 90 percent in some polls.
A majority of Americans support some kind of universal health care, 58 percent to 37 percent.
And -- get this -- Americans overwhelmingly agree that immigration helps the country more than it hurts, by a 59 percent to 33 percent margin.
Okay?
Your country didn't go anywhere. It's right here where you left it. America is nothing more than a big ol' collection of people, and those people are more diverse and progressive than they have ever been. That train won't be stopped. Donald Trump's supporters are by and large an aging and shrinking demographic. We didn't see the backlash coming, but that's on us -- a look at our history would have taught us to expect it.
In light of that, there are a few things to understand going forward.
1. You still have tremendous power, if you are willing to exercise it.
If Trump strides into office and decides he wants to undo 50 years of social progress, he will hear about it from a majority who disagrees, many of whom do in fact have quite a bit of influence. So will the members of Congress, who have to sign off on whatever he wants to pass. Trump was elected for a bunch of different reasons that may never be replicated, but that doesn't change the fact that most of the country is still on your side.
Midterm elections are just two years away. Someone who needs your assistance because they're suffering under Trump's policies is probably much closer. Unite. Act.
2. Half of America did not, in fact, just reveal themselves to be closet Nazis.
My family back home aren't Nazis. Neither are their neighbors. This is the last thing many of you want to hear at the moment, and that's fine -- feel free to bookmark this and read it a few months from now. But you can see the numbers for yourself, if you go issue by issue. Shit, at least three Trump states just voted to legalize marijuana, maybe more by time you read this. This is not your grandfather's GOP. This is something different.
The truth is, most of Trump's voters voted for him despite the fact that he said/believes awful things, not because of it. That in no way excuses it, but I have to admit I've spent eight years quietly tuning out news stories about drone strikes blowing up weddings in Afghanistan. I still couldn't point to Yemen on a map. We form blind spots for our side, because there's something larger at stake. In their case, it's a belief that the system is fundamentally broken and that Hillary Clinton would have been more of the same. Trump rode a wave of support from people who've spent the last eight years watching terrifying nightly news reports about ISIS and mass shootings and riots. They look out their front door and see painkiller addicts and closed factories. They believe that nobody in Washington gives a shit about them, mainly because that's 100-percent correct.
That pressure was building and building all around us, and we kept ignoring it. We media types were baffled when Trump won his first primary, and then his second, and then his third. We desperately tried to figure out how the system had failed. We were bemused when he won the nomination, then when he continued to hang around in the polls, we had approximately the same reaction one would have to seeing an invisible dagger floating across the room, aimed right at our fucking face. "How is this happening?!?"
Stop being baffled. Understand why it happened. Do the opposite of panic. Work through the problem.
3. The internet lets us live in social bubbles that blind us to what's really happening.
"How can he keep winning when 100 percent of the comedians and smart commentators have nothing but derision for him? How can he keep finding voters when everyone on my Twitter feed thinks he's a monster?" Well, we can stop being confused. That invisible hand on the dagger belonged to a forgotten entity called "Most of America."
That sick feeling some of you have right now? They've had that for the last eight years. Call them racists, if you want -- some of them definitely are -- but mostly they're regular people who want jobs, security, and safety. Part of that bubble effect is that we're often shielded from "the other side" just enough that only the loudest, craziest assholes leak through. Some of you never had a single polite conversation with a Trump supporter, but did hear about hate crimes and the baffling Reddit spammers and Breitbart bigots. You didn't think Trump would win because you didn't think half the country could be crazy assholes.
Well, I've got good news: You were right. If you focus on the racism and ignore the economic anxiety, you're intentionally blinding yourself to much of the problem. It doesn't matter how much you hate them; their concerns must be heard and addressed or else this will happen again. Or, as someone on Twitter put it, "I'm begging liberal Democrats to discover a tactic other than wealthy celebrities mugging in a camera about how dumb the GOP is."
They don't need your sympathy, they don't need your thinkpieces. They need fucking jobs. They need to feel like they're not getting left behind and they need to not actually get left behind. The system needs to change, and only one candidate promised them it would. If he fails, they'll turn against him too. Watch.
4. What Trump's supporters just did, you can do.
Bad things are absolutely going to happen over the next few years. There will be outrages and disasters. That means people will need your help and you do not have the option of sitting it out. Just know that none of this is unprecedented -- you're just seeing it for the first time, many of you too young to have been paying attention pre-Obama. The old guys who wept with joy when Obama took office did it because they knew that getting there had been a long, brutal road, full of pitfalls and harrowing detours around mountains of bullshit. They saw the Civil Rights Movement bloom in the 1960s, only to run smack into the Reagan years. They pressed on and saw the tide turn.
But only because they acted. In each gut-wrenching setback, they saw opportunity.
And there is opportunity here. You'll see. Trump ran against the most well-funded, well-organized political machine in the history of national politics, with 90 percent of the media and celebrities standing against him. All of the systems that are supposed to make sure one side wins failed. He smashed a billion-dollar political machine to pieces.
Good. I'm glad we can have elections where the prize doesn't go to the side with the slickest ads, biggest names, and deepest pockets. So be it. Next time, that groundswell movement against the powers that be can be coming from your side. I personally believe it will, that this will be remembered as the dying last gasp of the worst part of America, one final stand against the bigotry and ignorance that has plagued us since the day we decided to build this nation on the backs of slaves.
But it won't happen on its own. Nothing good ever does. Some of you wake up every day feeling like you have no purpose in life, and motherfucker, have I got news for you! The future is waiting to see what we do next. Let's get to it.
David continued this conversation with Editor-in-Chief Jack O'Brien the morning after the election. You can listen to it here.

Sunday, November 6, 2016

Voting for Trump - You Don't Get It Do you?

A friend of mine posted this meme on facebook:



A back and forth response started with one friend telling the person who posted this: "Lmao.You just don't get it"

He wouldn't say what he meant, but he was obviously a Trump supporter.

I post things from time to time about this and other elections. This year I have tried to usually post articles with facts about one side or the other. That is something that has been sorely missing in this election - but also blatantly ignored. I could say it's a mystery, but it's not really such a mystery to me.

People are caught up by their emotions. Their emotions are being fanned by an entertainer who has been taught by professionals how to act on camera. That's not all Trump on his TV shows. He's an actor being directed how to look, act, respond and get reactions on camera as every TV actor told is by their Director.

He is also stirring up what many folks have kept silently hidden from the public and themselves. I bit of bigotry, small or big, but there non the less.

I know what it was like to live in the 50"s. I know how many of our elders spoke and thought about people not like themselves. It was as blatant in my family as my mother not trusting an Italian who was not from Naples!!! That's like not trusting a person because they are from Montana and not the state they are from! It didn't have to make sense, it was how they were brought up. And guess what, many of us were exposed to that!

Now some of that history and memories are coming out. It's fueled by the fire of speeches filled with promises but not filled with plans on how to accomplish those promises. It's like saying "I'm going to cure cancer if you elect me!" He has no frigging idea how to do that but if he says it, on TV, it must be right. Our elders thought if you read it in the newspapers, it must be right. Some people read it on the internet and think the same thing.

Take the emotion out of the elections to date and look at the facts in front of you. That's what I did when I read the response, "You don't get it." Guess I got emotional and here was my response:

"No YOU don't get it. We don't have to make America Great Again. It's already pretty darn awesome. 
He wants to take us back 70 years where white men ruled, women were subservient, blacks were called the "N" word and ethnic jokes were just SO funny. 
Those are FACTS posted here, not lies made up to make his supporters feel good. 
I'm retired and have spent a lot of time watching all channels, reading articles and fact checking. Hillary may not be my 1st choice, but she is the most qualified candidate to continue to put us on a track of recovery.
Obama isn't to blame for all of the whining out there. He took over a stupendous mess that Bush got us into after taking over a country in great shape" Obama did his best "to continue to move forward. 
Is everything perfect like Obamacare, no, but it can be fixed. Remember both Dems and Reps spent a lot of time mucking it up. 
So if you want manufacturing jobs to come back to the USA and not keep them overseas where Trump makes all of his clothes, if you want to continue with the atmosphere of bigotry and hate that Trump has continued to poke like poking a bear with a stick, then God help us for your ignorance, bigotry and hatred of what is good and right".

Was I over the top with my response?  I don't think so. Was I a little overemotional? Probably. But then, why not? It seems that emotions may be what makes people vote during this election, not facts.

I just hope someone reads this or something else containing facts and finally "Gets it" and makes the right choice when they cast their vote.


Submitted by Linda Vola

Friday, July 10, 2015

We Have Removed the Symbol of Racism from the SC Capitol - Now the Structure of Racism Must Go


I had tears of joy  in my eyes as the Confederate flag was taken from the South Carolina State House today, It flew over the SC Capitol and that of other southern states for over 50 years as the symbol of racism. Now it's time to "take down the structure of racism" as quoted on a newscast this morning.

After living in South Carolina for almost 10 years, I never thought the politicians would take down that flag flying over the State House and many other government buildings. I thought, true to form, they were stalling to see if things would blow over, as there were still holdouts up to the last minute with 20 votes against taking it down! 

It should have been taken down years ago and never was for all of the wrong reasons. The tragedy that struck Charleston was an impetus for a few to take down their overt and embarrassing symbols of racism, originally flown for that express purpose. How sorry I am that it took such a tragedy to wake us up to something so simple to correct, that offended so many.

I agree it won't solve the problem of inherent or taught racism.But it can't be ignored or not discussed. I see it less racism down here than in the North where I lived most of my life. 

At least here it's more obvious if someone is a racist. Other's tend to mask their feelings about those that are different from themselves or joke about it or those they are afraid of or hate: a culture, religion, color, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, etc., etc.  

There is a lot of ignorance in the world and not talking about these things allows many to continue to teach their kids and those generations after them to hate. Ask any person of color about the talk they give to their sons of how to act when driving or being pulled over for DWB. 

My dad was a police officer but there are some over zealous officers out there, just like there are some over zealous people who fight for causes infused with ignorance. 

Back to the flag. I know it has been used by many thinking it's part of their proud heritage and what makes them an American, flown for fun by enthusiastic people not truly understanding what it means and how offensive it is to not only blacks, but to all Americans. 

It is a symbol of the Civil War and in ignorance, it's not even the true Confederate flag . As described by several folks I have encountered, the War of Northern Aggression, was fought for many reasons, but grandest of all it was fought to protect slavery. 

That is not a heritage I would be proud of and want represented and reminded of by flying the symbol over the SC capitol or over the capitol of my home state birth, NJ. Do you think Governor Chris Christie would allow that to happen? Fa get about it!

We have one flag that symbolizes America and that is the the flag of the United States, Old Glory, the American Flag. Let's let that flag fly high and proud over all of our government buildings and not make room on flag poles, in our hearts, in our minds or in our teachings and dealings with others that we will tolerate ignorance and injustice. God Bless you and God Bless America. 

Pax Vobiscum