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If you think that Jeong's
tweets are equivalent to
actual racism, you don't
understand what racism is
and how it affects people.
If you think that Jeong's tweets are NOT equivalent to actual racism, you don't understand what racism is and how it affects people. limits their opportunities.
Ask yourself: would Jeong have been accepted to Harvard and Berkeley if she was white, or male or as old as Sullivan? You know that the answer is negative.
Given that elite US universities like Harvard and Berkeley are known actively to discriminate against whites (and even more against asians in the context of technical subjects -- in other words asian men), males and old people, you your 'definition' of racism is in direct contradiction with the rest of you claims. old white men are not
actually threatened.
Old white men are
actually threatened.Different ethnic groups always fought each other (contemporary examples: shiites vs sunnis, jews vs palestinians, croats vs serbs, muslims vs US (Iraq, 9/11), buddhists vs muslims, hindus vs muslims ), but in the past US whites had numeric superiority over other races (and -- arguably -- other advantages like better education), which gave security, but with demographic changes, this security is withering away, which makes it more likely that the annihilatory phantasies ethnic groups have of each other (but usually don't express too publicly, or only obliquely ... have a look at Rastafarianism ...) will be acted out. just arbitrary rules about words.
I recommend those rules as a heuristic: if by swapping <you own ethnic group> to <other ethnic group> you turn a statement S into a statement S' such that you feel S' is racist to <you own ethnic group>, then you should strongly assume that S will be perceived as racist against <other ethnic group>. Therefore it is prudent not make statement S.That's a good rule to follow in life. It's pretty clear that Jeong understands this. The reason she made these sexist, racist, and agist tweets are also very clear: being controversial on Twitter brings attention. Indeed nothing but extremes bring attention on social media. Sufficient attention on social media brings money. Jeong monetises sexism, racism and agism to get a cushy job at the NYT, because the NYT know very well -- like any journalist -- that racism brings outrage, brings clicks, brings money. |