|
|
|
|
|
by handsaway
1403 days ago
|
|
The idea that statements can have the "colors flipped" and be equivalent assumes a context where there exists racial and ethnic equality, which there isn't. A white person saying "I don't want brown people to move into this neighborhood" and a brown person saying "I don't want white people to move into this neighborhood" are only equivalent if you evaluate those statements without a social and historical context. In this example how do we think that a legacy of redlining, gentrification, and racial wealth inequality would impact the motivations of the speakers? |
|
This is presupposed by moral relativism, which can disintegrate the whole conversation incredibly quickly if we're not careful.
I think that most people would agree that truth can exist outside of a given context. To argue that all truth requires context is a _very_ slippery slope that most aren't truly committed to.
With that being said, something is racist regardless of who says it. There isn't a differentiation based on any sort of perceived, favored group. It's incredibly difficult to be consistent with the opposing stance.