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I can't think of any scenario where the law doesn't already provide protection and recourse.
Stand Your Ground disagrees, as one example.
I can't think of any scenario where the law doesn't already provide protection and recourse.
Calm down tex.....I simply asked a question. I fully understand that racism still exists and quite frankly it pisses me off. I asked my question simply because I had never heard of a dating site being racist...etc.I can only talk about what I have seen in various places, especially in the South, that I have lived. They are my own experiences and my own interpretation of them so I don't want to hear a bunch of s$*t...but what I'm talking about are the super-restrictive dress codes at bars, the members-only clubs and billiards lounges, the massive networks of private schools founded post-brown v. board, the public transportation systems that end just outside of white neighborhoods, white neighborhoods that are kept white with gates and housing authorities and even some things I've seen with police. I'm not some bleeding heart liberal but the de facto segregation and discrimination that exists in this country, at least in the South, is very real.
The law says only white people can stand their ground against black people?I can't think of any scenario where the law doesn't already provide protection and recourse.
Stand Your Ground disagrees, as one example.
The law says only white people can stand their ground against black people?I can't think of any scenario where the law doesn't already provide protection and recourse.
Stand Your Ground disagrees, as one example.
So, black people can't get IDs?Tons of laws are not overtly racist, but the intent and result is racist. Voter ID laws, for example.
There is a difference between the actual law and the implementation of the law. The law itself is not racist that I know of.
The individual laws themselves are important but not the end all - you still have the systems that enact and enforce those laws, the people that write them, and tons of other things in place that are still very much perpetuating inequality.
That's the (incorrect) argument. Voter ID laws are in place because of a problem that doesn't even exist. There is almost zero voter fraud in this country, yet the Republican right champions voter ID laws to combat this alleged fraud. Voter ID laws overwhelmingly affect poor minorities - most who live in cities, don't drive or can't afford a car, and therefore don't have an ID. They'd need to pay a small fee and actually go get an ID to vote, yet these laws make no provisions to get people IDs for free or at no inconvenience. Now you might say it sounds lazy or ridiculous, but it's just one more hurdle and one that is specifically designed to keep minorities from voting. There is no reason for that hurdle to exist. It is a racist and specifically targeted proposed law, designed to keep these people from voting, with the goal being political gain. Yes, it is racist.So, black people can't get IDs?Tons of laws are not overtly racist, but the intent and result is racist. Voter ID laws, for example.
Then fix the law by making it free and accessible?That's the (incorrect) argument. Voter ID laws are in place because of a problem that doesn't even exist. There is almost zero voter fraud in this country, yet the Republican right champions voter ID laws to combat this alleged fraud. Voter ID laws overwhelmingly affect poor minorities - most who live in cities, don't drive or can't afford a car, and therefore don't have an ID. They'd need to pay a small fee and actually go get an ID to vote, yet these laws make no provisions to get people IDs for free or at no inconvenience. Now you might say it sounds lazy or ridiculous, but it's just one more hurdle and one that is specifically designed to keep minorities from voting. There is no reason for that hurdle to exist. It is a racist and specifically targeted proposed law, designed to keep these people from voting, with the goal being political gain. Yes, it is racist.So, black people can't get IDs?Tons of laws are not overtly racist, but the intent and result is racist. Voter ID laws, for example.
So, if speed limit laws gives cops an opportunity to discriminate by pulling over more black men then white women, why not get rid of speed limits? I know my pocket book would have more money in it if they did.There is a difference between the actual law and the implementation of the law. The law itself is not racist that I know of.
Yeah...I already touched on that:
The individual laws themselves are important but not the end all - you still have the systems that enact and enforce those laws, the people that write them, and tons of other things in place that are still very much perpetuating inequality.
The point is that the law might not be overtly racist, as tschu points out, but the law allows for racism to continue, and there are many such laws that still perpetuate a racist institution.
So, if speed limit laws gives cops an opportunity to discriminate by pulling over more black men then white women, why not get rid of speed limits? I know my pocket book would have more money in it if they did.
Thank you for making my point.So, if speed limit laws gives cops an opportunity to discriminate by pulling over more black men then white women, why not get rid of speed limits? I know my pocket book would have more money in it if they did.
Or instead of getting rid of them you could modify them to like, I don't know, prevent cops from having the opportunity to discriminate using their racial bias? What is the point you are trying to make here?