this post was submitted on 16 May 2025
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It certainly wasn’t because the company is owned by a far-right South African billionaire at the same moment that the Trump admin is entertaining a plan to grant refugee status to white Afrikaners. /s

My partner is a real refugee. She was jailed for advocating democracy in her home country. She would have received a lengthy prison sentence after trial had she not escaped. This crap is bullshit. Btw, did you hear about the white-genocide happening in the USA? Sorry, I must have used Grok to write this. Go Elon! Cybertrucks are cool! Twitter isn’t a racist hellscape!

The stuff at the end was sarcasm, you dolt. Shut up.

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[–] spankmonkey@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago (2 children)

That’s not to say that the average person is openly bigoted

I do think the average person openly perpetuates racist stereotypes due to the pressure of systemic racism. Not that they intend to, and their beliefs frequently contradict their actions because they just don't notice that they are going along with it.

Like the average person will talk about the 'bad part of town' in a way that implies the bad part is due to being where 'those people' live.

[–] thebestaquaman@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

I would say that the "bad part of town" usually has overlap with the poorer part of town, regardless of what skin colour people have there. Of course, especially in the US, there's significant overlap between economic status and skin colour. I just hate how the typical American view on "race" is projected onto other countries.

Americans typically have this hang-up on "race" that you really don't find anywhere else. A lot of places you have talk about "ethnicity" or similar, but the American fascination with categorising people by their skin colour and then using that to make generalisations is pretty unique.

[–] JasonDJ@lemmy.zip 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

I don't disagree, but that's probably closer to implicit bias than overt bigotry. When people talk about the "bad part of town", often it's the "bad part" as a result of perpetual systemic racism, and the concerns of going there is more rooted in personal safety (or at least the perception of it). And sure, that feeds into it, but it's really more of a cycle or a feedback loop.

And there's also the anxiety of being the cultural and demographic opposite of everyone around you. That's gotta be some sub-type of agoraphobia or something.

Sure, probably, "implicit bias" is just a PC way of saying "racist-ish", but it is at least a start. It's very difficult to retrain behaviors that have been learned since birth, if not hypnopaedically earlier.