ARE WE ALL RACISTS?
Posted by Tim Bryce on August 12, 2015
BRYCE ON RACISM
– The answer might surprise you.
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Often considered the touchstone of a person’s perspective on life, the word “racist” has been so overused, it has become the punchline for jokes and in danger of losing its validity. The word is as overused and abused as the word “technology” which seems to be applied to everything. The word “racist” was originally created to describe a person who believes a particular race is superior to another. However, it has morphed into something used outside of race, such as when discussing political or religious inclinations. In other words, it has gone way beyond the color of a person’s skin. For example, consider how Black Liberals treat Black Conservatives. It is no longer just about the color of your skin, it is also the politics you observe.
By today’s standards, I contend we are all racists. There is always some faction we do not agree with or share our views, be it based on race, religion, sex, ideology, politics, business, or cultural nuances. As such, we dismiss them out of hand. A lot of it is based on ignorance, but I also believe it is rooted in our animal instincts as “competitive domination.” Such a loathsome perspective of another group results in a variety of adjectives and nouns, such as bigot, extremist, fanatic, opinionated, segregationist, supremacist, zealot, chauvinist, sexist, etc. In reality, such words suggest nothing more than “intolerance” of another group. For example, many heterosexuals do not understand or accept the homosexual perspective, it is “unnatural” to them and, as a result, do not wish to be associated with them.
People of different cultural or religious backgrounds cannot find compatibility either, they do not understand their customs or beliefs, or perhaps there is some history whereby factions fought in the past and have difficulty burying the hatchet today. To illustrate, I visited Saudi Arabia a few years ago where I was teaching some management classes. In talking with my Saudi contacts after hours, I asked about their relationship with Israel. I made the observation the Israelis were not going away any time soon, so why not develop a dialog to see what the two countries had in common. I was politely, but sharply, rebuffed. The Saudis made it clear they had no desire to have any connection whatsoever with the Jewish state.
The biggest problem with being a racist is when it turns to hate and violence which, of course, leads to confrontation, maligning the character of another group, dirty deeds, and war. Most of us though keep our racism in check to avoid such incidents. We may not like another group, but we are unwilling to break the law.
Consider the disparity between the following groups:
– Whites, Blacks, Latinos, Asians, etc.
– Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Atheists, and others.
– Upper, middle and lower socioeconomic classes.
– White collar workers versus Blue collar, management versus unions.
– Liberals and Conservatives, Socialists and Capitalists.
– Intellectuals versus the unsophisticated.
– Heterosexual marriages versus Homosexual versus Polygamy versus extramarital affairs.
– North versus South, East versus West.
– The executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government.
If we have a problem with any of these groups, and say so in public, we are considered racists. According to political correctness though, we are all supposed to live together peacefully and accept the foibles of each group. Anyone who believes this is taking it in the arm. Think how bland and awkward our lives would be if we truly believed this. We would have to be on guard 24/7 to prevent any faux pas from occurring. Rather, it is our diversity that makes our world interesting. Some things we will like, others we will not. It’s like Sushi; you either like it or you do not. Since it is not universally accepted, should we eliminate it completely and replace it with something like Soylent Green? As human beings it is virtually impossible for us to agree on everything. Completely eradicating the racist concept would only lead to a life of mediocrity.
Accusing someone of being a racist is today’s politically correct way of putting someone on the defensive by saying, “I do not like you.” The reality is, it no longer matters as the word has been overused and watered down.
Those who do not believe they are racists better take another look at themselves in the mirror. They are not being honest with themselves.
Keep the Faith!
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Tim Bryce is a writer and the Managing Director of M&JB Investment Company (M&JB) of Palm Harbor, Florida and has over 30 years of experience in the management consulting field. He can be reached at timb001@phmainstreet.com
For Tim’s columns, see: timbryce.com
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Copyright © 2015 by Tim Bryce. All rights reserved.
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Wayne Brown said
I agree with you totally on this point, Tim. The faster we get over this word and the fear of it, the quicker we begin to find solutions to the real problems around us. Most of what I see in racism is an exercise in faulty logic, sometime out of ignorance and sometimes out of sheer convenience. One can be 100% for Ben Carson for president but because the disagree with the actions of Barack Obama, they are labeled a “racist”–illogical but again, convenient. I believe the word will disappear from use by the Left (the primary abusers of it) when those it is pointed at ignore the label and continue their direction. If we take their faulty logic to extreme, one could reason that the Democrat Party has convinced much of the nation of their compassion and caring for people of color thus if you are not a Democrat, you are by default a “racist”. Once people begin to realize how faulty such logic is, they then begin to question the credibility of those who employ it with such ease. ~WB
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Tim Bryce said
KIT-AM 1280 – Yakima, WA:
http://newstalkkit.com/cant-we-just-all-get-along-or-are-we-all-racists/
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William Achbach said
For those who so quickly ‘play the race card,’ it is vitally important (in order to maintain the superior moral position inherent in being a ‘victim’) to denigrate one with whom you disagree and to apply as clearly repugnant a label as possible. There are few images as evocative of emotion, in our society, as those associated with racial hatred (the Klan, Nazis, etc.) and especially so for those who lived through the upheaval of the 50s and 60s. Trotting out the images of Birmingham and Selma is guaranteed to effectively mask, for many, the legitimate questions about why so much legal progress has borne relatively little social and economic fruit.
The ‘fear of the unknown…or unfamiliar,’ that was the lot of many white Americans in pre-civil rights days, also gave rise to another version of ‘playing the race card,’ as ‘phobia’ or the suffix ‘-phobe’ came into common usage as another label used to denigrate those with differing points of view on social issues. To be called ‘homophobic,’ is just another (slightly less overt) way of saying that a person is too stupid to realize that it is irrational to be afraid of a gay person, when, in fact, fear (rational or otherwise) have nothing to do with one’s opposition to the lifestyle. Not much difference, actually, between such tactics and those of the Nazis: effectively dehumanize the opponent, and that will justify taking away that person’s voice.
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