R
Ridgerunner
Guest
I’ll go you one further. I believe everybody IS a racist in some manner. We don’t react the same way to all “races” in many ways. Some are outright hostile toward those of another race. Some are mildly distrustful. Some are intimidated in the right circumstance. Some feel an obligation to “right past wrongs” on a racial basis. Some, like Joe Biden, welcome the sight of an “articulate” black person as if it was somehow unexpected that such a person could exist.Racism is an equal opportunity employer.
Any individual regardless of sex, race, age, educational background or sexual orientation can be a racist.
One can also be racist towards their own race.
Sometimes it’s just plain stupid. I recall, when in college, seeing a black fellow candidate for the college choir of which I was a starting member, and ASSUMED he could sing well. (Don’t all blacks have good singing voices?) He had the worst voice imaginable when I finally heard him sing.
Some prejudices are passive. If we hear a black person speak with a “black” accent, we don’t notice the accent. But when we hear one with a white accent, we do notice. On the other hand, if a person with an Irish name doesn’t sound like he came from Galway, we don’t notice, despite the fact that blacks have been here longer than the Irish.
Sometimes they’re cultural. One sometimes hears “Don’t mess with a Mexican girl or her brother will cut you up.” Nine times out of ten it won’t happen, but the tenth time it just might, because there is a cultural distrust among many Mexicans toward “Anglos” when it comes to “their” women. You could flirt with a thousand girls of Polish extraction and never get cut up by their brothers, because there’s no cultural assumption on the part of Poles that they need to “protect their women” from, say, men of Irish extraction.