It's already been discussed in the thread, but the issue is the thin line between celebrating a difference and mocking it. I tend to agree though, that people are a bit sensitive to interpretations of celebration.In a multicultural society I think we all should celebrate difference, but no one should complain if I like that difference enough to adopt it.
Why are more men incarcerated then women in this country? Is the criminal justice system sexist towards men? As it relates to First Nations representation in the prison system, I would gander it's rooted in socioeconomic factors. Much like ones level of physical health to a large degree correlates to ones income level (i.e. apparently the stats show that if you have more money you are physically more healthy), crime is also correlated with income levels. Unfortunately, First Nations people in this country are statistically poorer then the general population. Unfortunately, one byproduct of a poorer demographic being imprisoned more is a perception issue that said poorer population is inherently criminal - ergo racist sentiment towards said poorer demographic. I'm no expert on the Highway of Tears, but if a bunch of any ethnic/racial group of people go missing in a relatively remote area - that's always going to be a difficult crime to solve. Remote areas lack one of the most important factors in solving crime - witnesses. But again, I'm no ace detective. What I can say with a fair degree of certainty is that poverty and crime will not be solved by trying to shame some random white guy about his choice of hairstyle - no matter how much you project/assume motivations as to why a particular person chooses a particular hairstyle. If crime and poverty can be eliminated by someone having a certain type of hairstyle - I'll be the first volunteer to get said hairstyle!
What are you even talking about???At the end of the day, IF you could study all criminal statistics across racial lines after controlling for economic power of each individual criminal, the racial data would so closely mirror the surrounding population that anybody who ever passed a math or statistics class would be able to clearly recognize as much.
Lol. I started with a rhetorical question knowing I would start a shit storm and lo and behold! My thought is cultural appropriation is the most ridiculous concept the left has come up with to justify creating social division for no reason, other than to express moral superiority, since political correctness. In a multicultural society I think we all should celebrate difference, but no one should complain if I like that difference enough to adopt it.
As a white man, I will lose my dreadlocks when Black people stop straightening their hair.
For those of you who are equating cultural appropriation with racism, is Joseph Boyden racist, or just a talent who mediocre Canlit writers are jealous of?
When Captain George Vancouver first sailed into "English Bay" in 1793 the Royal Navy found the beaches littered with skeletons. Most of the population of the Pacific NW had just died of smallpox and measles, diseases that had been slowly transmitted along the trade routes from the 16th century Spanish invasions of Mexico and Central America.Want to hear a really funny story?
My Irish Catholic ancestors weren’t exactly treated any better by the British than First Nations were by those same ancestors. Cultural appropriation and genocide though are entirely different things.When Captain George Vancouver first sailed into "English Bay" in 1793 the Royal Navy found the beaches littered with skeletons. Most of the population of the Pacific NW had just died of smallpox and measles, diseases that had been slowly transmitted along the trade routes from the 16th century Spanish invasions of Mexico and Central America.
The government of Trutch did their demographic work and their best estimates showed that every First Nations person would be dead of the disease by 1923, and they planned for that. Of course the survivors of the disease passed on their immune systems to their descendants, and after hitting a population low in the early 1920s the indigenous population began to increase. They just weren't allowed to use their traditional resource gathering areas, or their seasonal homes in the more attractive areas of the province. Those were now reserved for the Xwelitem, persons of European descent.
The Catholic Church saw this as an emergency, and documented their efforts to save the souls of the First Nations peoples by separating their children from their parents and placing them in to residential schools, where teachers would stick pins in the tongues of students who spoke their native languages. I have one of those Catholic Church handbooks around here in a box somewhere. They were really quite earnest, and convinced of the rightness of their actions.
Dear White people,Wow what a shit show lol
Can I just say right now that anyone who thinks cultural appropriation is bullshit or not real, thinks reverse racism is real, or thinks the Irish were slaves (I haven’t read every word but I bet it’s in here somewhere) etc etc whatever other whiny bullshit is not welcome to book me unless it’s to pay me to debate you.
So many racist pricks, thanks for showing yourselves
It is. Invented in Birmingham. That's why I never consider Tikka Masala to be Indian, but, the idea is taken from Indian cuisine.Apparently Tikka Masala is actually a British dish originally. However, to be fair the Brits did appropriate curry dishes and have done a terrible job with them.
Because whenever anybody accuses someone of racism, the immediate thought is it's a white person being racist towards a minority, never the reverse.Why is there even a term "reverse racism"?
Racism is racism. No need to fluff it up with other words when it's directed at a certain demographic. Anyone can be a perpetrator or a victim of racism, regardless of their phenotype expression.
Yep. But then there wouldn’t be the oppressors and the oppressed. We all need a narrative. And victim always plays well.Mixing of cultures and races is what begets acceptance and adaptation. Most logical people see borrowing from other cultures as a compliment, not denigration.