It’s no secret that Ye Olde Blogge is on vacay in the heart of Tuscany in a 19th century villa that sleeps the small army of family members that we’ve assembled here. It’s good times with the extended in-laws with good food and very good wine. And, as it goes when adult siblings gather with their families, stories get exchanged. Since Ma Belle Femme’s family is Canadian, some, okay, many, all right, most of those stories feature hockey at all levels of play.
I LOVE to see the hand-of-god in my life or synchronicity, whether you believe in god or not. It is far more entertaining than just plain old coincidence, and this post is the result of god putting several examples of overt racism and implicit bias in my face. Obviously, the only response that a vacationing full-time citizen and part-time blogger can have is to write a post about it. Otherwise, you risk the wrath of god or Carl Jung, and, quite honestly, I don’t know which is worse.
This particular story concerns racism and the reaction of very average white people to it. It illustrates the difference between explicit racism and implicit bias and how difficult it is to combat that inner bias that we all carry to some degree. After the anecdote and discussion, we’ll push on to all of the racism and implicit bias in the news of late to, you know, help sort out how implicit bias makes all of the authoritarianism in the country worse.
A Story of Implicit Bias, Overt Racism, and Collusion by the Well-Meaning
Ma Belle Femme’s sister has three daughters. They all play or played hockey. The oldest one wasn’t a very high achieving player, but she was okay. The middle one captained a national championship team, but no longer plays. And the youngest one plays on a high school team. My brother-in-law has coached all of their teams and was one of the coaches during this incident. They showed us a video of a foul that happened during one of their recent games.
During the middle of the opening period, the opposing team is set up in front of the net. Their center is fixing to receive the puck and, probably, take a shot, when a defensive player comes in and checks her hard. Nothing illegal, the ref is right there. The shot goes wildly off target and is cleared by the defense and play begins to turn down the ice.
The star center skates up behind the defensive player — skates over a meter to get to her — and stick checks her — lifts her stick horizontally to the ice with both hands — and strikes the girl in the back of her neck level just under the helmet while saying loudly, “Fucking n***.” The girl falls to the ice. The play is called for being unnecessary roughness or whatever it is called in hockey. Sorry, I didn’t catch that part.
The girl could’ve been ejected from the game, especially for the use of a racial epithet. The practice of the league is to suspend players for multiple games for such language. My brother-in-law says he complained to the league, they instituted an investigation. The ref claims not to have heard her say anything despite clearly being next to the play in the video. The opposing team claims none of them heard anything, and, of course, the offending player denies saying anything. However, all of the girls on my niece’s team swear they heard her say it.
The head of the league calls my brother-in-law to say that they investigated and found no grounds to suspend the girl despite it being one of the most vicious checks in the history of hockey. As my brother-in-law says, in twenty years of coaching, he had never seen anything like it, and none of his players had ever accused anyone of ever using a racial epithet, but suddenly they do now out of the blue and this incredibly viscous check just happened because passions are high in a game?
The Race Issues Presented in the Story
In our resulting discussion, I bring up implicit bias and the role it played in the ref not calling it on the spot. My brother-in-law’s remark was, I don’t know what was in his mind. He was defending the ref from accusations of racism because that’s what white people do. Here are the issues:
- IMPLICIT BIAS is not racism. It is internal and held outside of your conscious awareness, while racism is explicit and conscious. Most white people don’t understand the distinction.
- RACISM is rarely explicitly expressed in such settings. The use of racial epithets slip out because our brains are otherwise occupied and the filter that stops us from using them is inaccessible.
- I DON’T SEE COLOR is a disingenuous defense against racism because we all have associative networks of ideas that are activated to help us navigate the world. When we see a person, especially a person of color, the associative network that includes their particular ethnicity is activated. Part of all of our networks concerning Black people is the n-word. The only question is how strong is the connection to our Black associative network. If it is weak, it is less likely to “slip” out. Simple as that.
- OBVIOUSLY, the connection to the n-word for the player in question was strong enough for it to get used over other choice epithets that frequently get used in that situation, say if the offending player were white.
- WAS IT REALLY RACIST? is the question that the ref was asking themselves in the heat of the moment. That sense of doubt is what most white people experience when we experience racially-tinged or adjacent or explicit events. It’s the question the league commissioner asked themselves. It is the question my brother-in-law asked himself.
The White Fear of Being Labeled a Racist
The fear of the racist label is a universal fear of all white people. Since we cannot distinguish between the actions and behaviors that are the result of implicit bias and those that are overtly racist, we choose to ignore them all. Instead of acknowledging our national past of racism and the systemic racism that is still clearly present and active, we collude with racism. We make excuses. We look for caveats. We blame the victim. We contort ourselves into a Gordian knot rather than accept the possibility that we might could just possibly harbor a bit of bias against Black people somewhere in the dark corners and recesses of our unconscious.
If we would acknowledge that very human probability and accept that we too can in the right circumstances be racially insensitive, we could actually go along way to eliminating systemic racism and reduce the harm that our micro-aggressions cause to those they are directed at.
But, white people as a group, as a whole, as a vast majority, don’t. Instead, we put our heads in the proverbial sand, stick our fingers in our ears, sing la-la-la-la, and are seduced by racist dog whistles.
Implicit Bias and Overt Racism in the News
Let’s now turn our attention to the news and the implicit bias and overt racism that we are witnessing there.
Jason Aldean and Try That in a Small Town
Apparently, there is a person named Jason Aldean who is a C & W music star who did a song he called, Try That in a Small Town that promotes murder and mayhem against those with which he disagree:
Well, try that in a small town
See how far ya make it down the road
‘Round here we take care of our own
You cross that line, it won’t take long
For you to find out, I recommend you don’t
Try that in a small townGot a gun that my granddad gave me
Try That in a Small Town by Jason Aldean
They say one day they’re gonna round up
Well, that shit might fly in the city, good luck
His granddad’s gun was going to remedy, among other things, committing such free speech statements as stomping on or burning a flag or committing a crime lie car jacking or robbing a liquor store because the Second Amendment really means armed white citizens are judge, jury, and executioners of us big city folk. Basically, he’s saying that American small towns are to woke liberals what sundown towns were to Black Americans… or Barack Obama.
Just in case you didn’t get the message, he filmed part of the music video at the Maury County Courthouse that was the site of the lynching of a Trayvon Martin-type in 1927 kinda like Reagan using the Mississippi Burning Murders as a backdrop for a states rights speech in the run-up to his presidential campaign.
There is nothing overtly racist in the song or video, but the anger, hatred, and violence are explicit and the racism is left to barely muted dog whistles. Dog whistles appeal to implicit bias. I doubt Jason Aldean is overtly racist. I’m sure he lets Black people not only buy tickets to his concerts, but also attend.
Now that people are exercising their free speech rights by criticizing his violent rhetoric and racially inflammatory symbolism, he’s been defending himself by that conservative standby, lying out of his ass! He claims that all of the footage in the music video is from the US, but, of course, it wasn’t. And, when he was called on that, we go to the other great conservative standby, the flying monkey squad descending en masse on critics with death threats and threats of violence because freedom.
Call me old fashioned, but I always thought that we were innocent until proven guilty and that justice came at the end of a court trai and not at the end of a gOoD gUy WiTh A gUn’S bArReL.
Emmett Till National Monument
Speaking of the rank and vile citizenry being judge, jury, and executioner, we have the Emmett Till and Mamie Till-Mobley National Monument being designated by President Handsome Joe Biden this week.
In case you didn’t know Emmett Till was the 14 year-old boy who was visiting family in Money, Mississippi in August of 1955 when a white woman, Carolyn Bryant, inexplicably lied and accused him of “whistling” at her and talking lewdly to her. This so enraged the “Try That in a Small Town” crowd that they took Emmett Till beat him, tortured him, gouged out an eye, and then killed him, and then, just for good measure, killed him again by throwing him in a river.
Rachel Maddow has a great retelling of the story, as she always does, and the explanation for why creating an Emmett Till national monument is so important.
One of the big points in Maddow’s story was that starting in 2008, there were signs put up along the river bank where the murder is thought to have taken place. The signs were systematically destroyed and desecrated until a sign was made from the same armored steel plating that tanks and other armored vehicles use. People were so proud of their abuse of a sign that three good old boys from Ol’ Miss drove down to it just to shoot it up with their guns — presumably — they posed for a picture next to it. I’m sure they sent it to their mothers for framing.
When Southerners talk about preserving their heritage by conserving their monuments to the Confederacy, this is what they’re talking about, overt racism and the desire to cause real harm to real people physically, mentally, and economically.
Alabama’s SCOTUS Defying Moment
Alabama decided to follow its gutting the Voting Rights Act with blatantly radically racially gerrymandered congressional district maps that were so bad, even the radically racially biased SCOTUS struck them down and ordered them to redraw them so that there were two minority-majority districts.
Alabama went all Andrew Jackson on the Court and redrew its maps so that the ONE minority-majority district was reduced from 55% Black to 50% and another district’s Black population was increased to 39% because you and what army, amirite?
This is blatant racism and absolute defiance of the rule of law. Remember, states rights is euphemism for slavery. They’re hoping for a further eroding of voting rights and greater freedom to disenfranchise those who won’t vote for them.
What do we conclude from all of this?
- All of us know to condemn overt racism.
- When condemning overt racism means that we have to be the lone voice speaking directly to the racist or a crowd of onlookers whose views are ambiguous — the bystander effect — we’re much less likely to speak up.
- When exposed to racist dog whistles, ambiguity once again enters the picture, and we’re much less likely to speak up and our inner racist is likely to be appealed to.
- And when racism is blatantly expressed and goes unchallenged, we’re far more likely to respond to racist dog whistles with racist behaviors and atttudes.
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Racism is an inherent characteristic in the dna of humanity and has been so since the beginning of recorded history and will be so til the end of time. No great empire; no great country has ever risen without racism and no country on the face of the earth would be what it is today without racism and its insidious effects….The positive and the negative ions make up a cohesive and workable balance in created things and if either the positive or the negative were absent from the formative elements of any material conceptualization, the reality of the entity would cease entirely. Therefore, no civilization could long endure without the negative influences of racism and no nation has ever risen without the element of racism. So in real terms, racism might reasonable be seen as a creative force within nations. I know for sure that the economy of The United States would never have advanced to the Industrial Revolution without the reality of racism. Can someone logically dispute this notion so that I can sleep more peacefully tonight?
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Howdy John!
I think we have to go back to basic definitions here. In the vernacular, racism, bigotry, prejudice, bias, discrimination, stereotype all mean about the same thing, but they don’t when we’re talking social behavior.
Racism means that one thinks that one race is superior to another if not all others, and, therefore, it is permissible to have two sets of rules or laws. One set that governs the superior race and another set that governs the targeted race. As Nelson Mandela said, when rights are not universal, they are no longer rights, they are privileges. Either we all have the same rights, or some of us are privileges.
Bigotry is the stubborn belief that your views are correct. When applied to ethnicity and race, it is the stubborn belief that one race is better than another. The difference between bigotry and a racism is that bigotry is by definition expressed as an individual, whereas racism can be applied to a group.
Prejudice is the negative pre judging of something or the formation of an unfavorable view of something before any evidence has be considered. When applied to ethnicity or race, it is holding a negative view of a particular group without evidence to support it.
Bias is holding a particular feeling or tendency about something without regard to evidence or having an identifiable reason. When applied to race or ethnicity, it is being hostile or favorable towards a particular group despite evidence to the contrary.
Discrimination is making a distinction in favor of or against something based on a group characteristic rather than on individual merit.
Stereotype is the overgeneralization of a set of characteristics to a group or seeing the individual members of a group as being same without regard to individual differences.
All of these terms can be applied the individual, but only racism can be applied to a group. All of these terms have a universally negative emotional charge to them, so that when discussing issues like nationalism, state-building, empire expansion, one has to be careful in their use because people react emotionally to the words rather than considering the evidence being presented. A kind of bias.
I would maintain that racism is not an inherent quality in humanity. The others are and have been demonstrated experimentally. I would also maintain that racism is not necessary for the development of a large conglomeration of people into a nation or empire. One of the empires that did not view their core members as being superior to others, for example, is the Mongols. In fact, they were able to build and maintain the largest empire in the history of humankind without using the idea of racial superiority.
Your analogy, like all analogies, to ions falls apart when applied to the racial beliefs of societies. It is not necessary to view another ethnic or racial group as being inferior.
Human beings do need to have distinct groups. In psychology these are usually termed in-groups and out-groups. One way to sharpen the boundary between the in-group and out-groups is to emphasize the differences and this often leads to denigration of the out-groups and boosting the in-group, but again, it doesn’t automatically lead to the dominance of the in-group to the out-group.
I take particular exception to your contention that the US would never have industrialized without racism. I don’t find that supported by any historical evidence simply because slavery is not a more economically viable system than paying your workers a living wage. Well supported arguments have been made that the costs of slavery inhibited economic growth in the US, especially the South.
The relationships between groups of peoples both within a country and without is much more nuanced than the blanket statements, racism is inherent in human DNA and no country could achieve its current status without racism. In fact, I would say both of those statements are false and not supported by any historical, sociological, or psychological evidence or findings.
Huzzah!
Jack
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Thank you for this great, thoughtful post. The sad thing about the stupid Jason Aldean song is that it makes me not want to visit any small towns any time soon. I have to remind myself that there are in fact some great people who live in small towns, and their businesses frequently rely on tourist money to survive. This rural vs. urban hostility has really gotten ridiculous at this point.
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Howdy Karolina!
Thank you for your comment and useful insight. I apologize for not replying sooner. I’ve been traveling and, as I will explain in a post soon, had some inconsequential, yet dramatic, medical issues crop up. Right now, I’m wallowing in jetlag, which seems like it should be a better procrastination excuse than it actually is. I mean, being up at 4:00 AM, what else are you going to do if not reply to the comments on your blog, right?
I know that our rural neighbors don’t like it when we traffic in stereotypes of them being racist, poorly educated, barely democratic hicks, but Jason Aldean’s song goes a long way to perpetuating the stereotype. My daddy’s people are from the Deep South. I’ve spent more than my fair share of time in small southern towns listening to openly racist bullshit, anti-intellectual conservative ideas spouted as coming from the gospel. Over the intervening 40 years, it has only gotten worse.
We just returned from a trip to Italy and Switzerland and marveled over their small towns and villages. I’m not saying that racism and bigotry don’t exist there, any casual observer of European soccer realizes just how deep the anti-Black racism goes, but it was such a relief to be in places where you felt like everyone was respected and accepted and that hostility was being barely held back just because your accent was funny and you couldn’t get the language quite right.
Anywho. Duty, i.e. the doctor, calls.
Huzzah!
Jack
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It’s okay…as you can see, I’m not always that much better myself at timely responses. And while I suspect that Swiss and Italian small towns are indeed plenty charming, part of my antipathy towards the rural lifestyle comes from having grown up in the Polish countryside, which was about as bigoted and intolerant of differences as possible (I got plenty of that coming my way just for not being Catholic!) Hence why I’m naturally distrustful of small towns…wherever in the world they may be. That being said, I hope your issues clear up soon, and I really really appreciate you following my blog 🙂
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Howdy Karolina!
There is definitely a positive correlation between intolerance and conservatism with the greater the intolerance, the more conservative, but not necessarily the reverse. With the Italian fascist party ruling Italy now and the German fascist party plotting a violent coup and polling in second place, there is no shortage of intolerant fascist conservatism in Europe… or anywhere else in the world, having lived on four continents.
I have found blogging to be the most satisfying of the social media forums. I marvel at the variety of blogs out there and the supportiveness of the community. I’ve made some good friends blogging. I’m always happy to follow and comment on blogs. I just don’t always have the time to, especially once the school year starts (I’m a teacher).
Silver lining: I struck another item from the bucket list, shot by a laser. As I passed kidney stones, the amalgamated or conglomerated or some damn erated into a massive six millimeter sized stone — the doc was freaking out because I had a 1.7 mm stone, just to give it some perspective — so he had to cut it with a laser to get it out. The positive is that you get to watch the whole thing on a monitor if you want. In a former life, I was a medical social worker and can discuss the ickier side of life with anyone, so let me know when you’re limit has been reached.
Who was it that described small town conservatives as having broad lawns and narrow minds? Vonnegut, Heller somebody like that.
Huzzah!
Jack
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Ha! My ickiness limit is probably reached a bit sooner than that of someone who is in the medical profession, but it hasn’t been reached yet…plus, getting shot with a laser is kind of cool! Congrats on getting that off your bucket list!
And yes, blogs are by far my favorite kind of online communication. Vastly preferable to the short attention span activities of most social media platforms. If the universe were arranged according to my preferences, blogs would be wildly popular, and Facebook/X/Whatever would have hardly any visitors….
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Howdy Karolina!
The rise of “micro” blogging is a direct result of the Internet itself. The ability to employ sustained attention, and to enjoy it, has been diminishing. I had noticed it in myself. I was reading fewer books. I watched fewer movies. I felt like watching a movie was a waste of time or a poor use of time. It just took too long. I read mostly non-fiction, so stopping after getting most of the pertinent, most interesting, most compelling information or skipping around in the book was okay.
This year, I made an effort to read more fiction and spend more time in silent sustained reading. It’s been fun and entertaining. I also jettisoned the blog-policy of keeping posts between 1,000 and 1,500 words (about 5 minutes reading time). I still do out of habit, but if I end up with an 1,800 word post, I don’t separate it into two as I had been before.
All in all, I think I’m happier this way. I hope you are, too.
Huzzah!
Jack
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I certainly don’t mind long blog posts! I’m very lucky to be married to a bookworm, and he has also pulled me back into long, sustained fiction reading as a hobby. It has made my life better.
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And that’s why god created spouses…
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Ha! Forming a long-term partnership with another completely unique human with their own brilliance, flaws and quirks is definitely one of the more spiritually enlightening experiences in life.
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And satisfying. It is remarkable what our partners will teach us.
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My grandmother would roll her Metis` eyes whenever her husband used that word, which was frequently. I’m not sure there’s ever any escaping that. That it was as often as not applied to anything from the dogs to the sawmill is poor context, or those with dark hearts and light skin. He may well have been as trapped as can be: before the civil war the Wetherspoons did quite well; by the time he and his red, white and black wife and children fled Mississippi for the Oregon wild-er-ness they living in a dirt-floor shack. I’ve seen pictures of it.
I wrote a paper for an anthro class about my trickle-down theory of cultural diffusion, though its emphasis was more towards how even those who were taken to the schools at a young age and eventually sold off as mail-order brides neverless passed on cultural traits.
Other side of the family wasn’t much better: genocidal maniacs fresh off the Mayflower …
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Howdy Ten Bears!
Forty years ago in the mid 1980’s when I was working my way through uni, I worked at a bakery in South Texas. We had counter service and the line would get long on weekend mornings. I remember the whole place coming to a complete standstill when I asked an older woman for her older and she replied, “The colored maid has already taken my order.” I looked at my colleague and she smiled and said that she had.
There is a generational difference with how we use language. In that instance, we all recognized that there was nothing to be gained by taking a 70 year old woman to task. It’s kinda like doctors telling relatives of dying emphysema to let ’em keep smoking because the stress of quitting will do more harm than continuing at that point.
Your trickle-down theory of cultural diffusion sounds a lot like the geographical theory of cultural diffusion that I’ve been writing about lately.
The diaries and letters from the Pilgrims are full of “god really does love us best; there were fields of crops ready to harvest and empty homes ready for us to live in when we arrived.” Of course, those were the results of the small pox epidemic that preceded their arrival having wiped out the Native Americans who had been living there just shortly before their arrival. So, there’s that.
Huzzah!
Jack
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My apologies for my late reply. We’ve been traveling and I’ve had some medical complications during our vacation.
Jack
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This post has been in my Inbox for me to get to. I just got to it. Interestingly, I opened it before, but read it after this one, https://wordpress.com/read/feeds/115935644/posts/4826978138 , where I found the blog posts here: https://ewingperspective.wordpress.com . So, I’d just finished the four there, that address your topic here. Whew. Anyway, I wanted to toss it into the fray. And now it’s bedtime in KS. Thanks for more thinking for me, on my nod-off!
Seriously. I can tell it won’t keep me awake; it’s good for me to work on myself as I drift off. Good night!
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Howdy Ali!
What a treasure trove! Which is quite the example of Jungian synchronicity since I’ve yet another kidney stone stuck in a ureter that has to get removed and I’ll be spending a couple of days in the hospital as a result. At least, now, I’ve got some good reading material, new blogs to follow, and some commenting to do.
We’re all jetlagged, so nodding off is a literal occurrence at our house at just about any hour of the day or night. Which is also my apology for my late reply. It’s been a hectic week.
Huzzah!
Jack
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Here’s to a fine, comfortable recovery!
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Howdy Ali!
I got shot by a laser! I got shot by a laser! Which just goes to show that there’s a dark center to every silver lining! The stones that I was passing conglomerated into one massive stone, six millimeters across, necessitating the doc to cut it with a laser. I got to watch the whole thing on a monitor. So, there’s that.
No fun pain meds, though, just handfuls of pills to take on a complicated schedule three-times per day. The glory of aging is that it requires all of your experience, education, and skills to cope with your medication regime.
We’ve still got a couple of weeks before school starts, so there’s more kidney stone fun in my future.
Huzzah!
Jack
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Yikes. I’m sorry to read that.
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Reblogged this on cabbagesandkings524 and commented:
Calico Jack interrupts his vacation briefly.
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From the description of the attack on the ice, I have to say that if it had been a sword or machete instead of a hockey stick, the kid on the receiving end would be dead and damn near, if not, decapitated. That blow was delivered in a killing rage, in a small enough “town” to get away with it.
And, unless you are on national TV or in a political rally at either extreme, any interaction regarding dog whistles or overtly racist speech or action is always happening in a small town. If you are lucky, it is a “woke” town, but even there, not everybody wants to be woke to their own unconscious bias.
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Howdy Bob!
That’s the way the attack looked. The girl was enraged. Hockey is a full body contact sport. That girl was one of the best forwards in the league, getting checked is a regular event in every game she played in. It begs the question, what was different about this one?
Small town is American euphemism for racism. That’s what is so disingenuous about the Aldean song. He knows exactly what he’s doing. After reviewing the lyrics for the post, I was surprised by the nakedness of the violence in the song. It was no Okie from Muskogee. Someone on the social medias challenged him to hold his concerts and performances only in small towns since big cities are such bastions on wokeism and antiAmericanism. I doubt he will.
And that’s the issue with white America, we don’t really want to be woke. We want to blame our microaggressions and other racial insensitivities on circumstance and those of others on personality. Classical fundamental attribution error. Even though my b-in-law did the right thing by calling it out, he still wasn’t prepared to call it recognize the implicit bias expressed by the ref and league commissioner in colluding with naked racism.
The stubbornness of white implicit bias is one of the chief impediments to the furtherance of our democracy since it makes the white vote vulnerable to cynical authoritarian racist appeals.
Huzzah!
Jack
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This implicit bias has had 500 years of clearly stated racist thinking to worm it’s way into every nook and cranny of people’s minds since the beginnings of the European slave trade of Africans and colonial exploitation. It is a tough nut to crack.
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Especially, if it’s a nut you just don’t want to crack.
Jack
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Yep.
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That’s a neck-breaker, she should be thoroughly checked out for spinal damage.
There is a school of thought that holds the sword as evolving out of a flaying stick …
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Howdy Ten Bears!
It was a dangerous hit, but since my b-in-l and niece were both there, I assume she suffered no lasting damage. Anyone who’s ever wielded a hockey stick knows the damage they can do.
Huzzah!
Jack
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Indeed! Hockey may have a tradition of “Take you knocks and keep on skating.”, but she does need to get checked and make it a part of her routine medical exams.
Very likely. I think of the swords of the Aztecs – wooden shaft edged with obsidian.
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