|
|
|
|
|
by Throwaway23412
3599 days ago
|
|
"iconography"? Dr. MLK, Jr. literally died 48 years ago. There are people who marched with him still alive today. I don't really get this fantasy that what MLK was protesting just magically went away in less than five decades. We've had wars last longer than that. People who say "It's a class issue" seem to miss that it's much easier to recognize race than class. People discriminated through redlining (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redlining) would disagree that "It's a class issue": >For example, in Atlanta in the 1980s, a Pulitzer Prize-winning series of articles by investigative-reporter Bill Dedman showed that banks would often lend to lower-income whites but not to middle- or upper-income blacks. People who read the stats showing the differences in sentencing between black males and white males, even when controlled for income, would hardly say "It's a class issue." |
|
I am saying it mostly does not matter. I'm also aware this is not a popular view, but put that down to conditioning by the media. Their specialty is to draw attention to some things and not others depending on their bias after all. If the media people don't know, then you won't know, they only see the visible things and the death of investigative journalism and lack of serious big-picture reporting not in service to a paymaster has given them tunnel vision.
Suppose you 'solved' racism.
You would still have all the problems you have today. None of the education, poverty issues are going away just because of a lack of discrimination. Economics is tied up with class in a way it is not with race. The good news is that solving economic problems can solve for social issues like class conflict. Many migrants to America were from the bottom classes of Europe and they did very well for themselves when out from under the thumb of the old system.
Europeans have been dealing with class issues for centuries and we know what they look like. You don't have our history, yet, but you're going to. Social mobility in Europe is higher in Europe than in the US now, although perceptions have that in reverse.
If you believe otherwise then you believe that the US is following a different trajectory than nations before it, and I see no evidence for that belief.