Don't you know this is the time of double standards on all sides?
8Reply
deleted
· 5 years ago
I disagree on all counts with white supremacy, I'm not a Nazi, blah blah blah.
But you have to understand that this is why there are white men who feel threatened and marginalized.
Continuing to blame white men for feeling threatened and marginalized will only make the problem of white supremacy worse.
Yep.
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Imagine addressing any problem with emotionally packed, generalized accusations and demands of self victimhood?? There is no possible positive outcome.
5
deleted
· 5 years ago
Honestly and candidly, I'd encourage you to take a step back from that, because the tone of "demands of self victimhood" implies that you don't believe blacks, Latinos, other minority groups have been oppressed in the United States.
My argument is for fairer treatment of those who consider themselves victims. Currently, there is a rising tide of straight, white men who consider themselves victims of society, and I do t think we should cast their concerns aside based on their race, sex, etc.
The solution isn't clapping back and shaming those who want to protect blacks from injustice. It's opening men's shelters and mental health counseling offices.
Edit: grammar
If you think i'm victim shaming, i apologize. You said you're looking for fairer treatment for those who consider themselves victims. I disagree because people, in general, will take the victim path much more often than not. By definition a victim is created when things happen to them, NOT simply because someone decides to consider themselves one.
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I hold the exact same view toward the growing class of white male victimhood. Our society will move forward when we stop treating groups of people differently as opposed to concentrating on individual people and individual circumstances.
Its a huge mistake to think that a Muslim person you just met must be an extremist just because of a few past terror events.
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It's equally wrong to say that a black man is a victim to racism without even having a discussion about his personal past.
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Any time you hear anybody say that an entire large group of people are one thing or another, they are being ignorant. Every Time. So ignore that bs (from all political sides) and start concentrating on individual people.
But you have to understand that this is why there are white men who feel threatened and marginalized.
Continuing to blame white men for feeling threatened and marginalized will only make the problem of white supremacy worse.
.
Imagine addressing any problem with emotionally packed, generalized accusations and demands of self victimhood?? There is no possible positive outcome.
My argument is for fairer treatment of those who consider themselves victims. Currently, there is a rising tide of straight, white men who consider themselves victims of society, and I do t think we should cast their concerns aside based on their race, sex, etc.
The solution isn't clapping back and shaming those who want to protect blacks from injustice. It's opening men's shelters and mental health counseling offices.
Edit: grammar
.
I hold the exact same view toward the growing class of white male victimhood. Our society will move forward when we stop treating groups of people differently as opposed to concentrating on individual people and individual circumstances.
.
It's equally wrong to say that a black man is a victim to racism without even having a discussion about his personal past.
.
Any time you hear anybody say that an entire large group of people are one thing or another, they are being ignorant. Every Time. So ignore that bs (from all political sides) and start concentrating on individual people.