I know a lot of people get offended by how I talk about white people. It's cool. I say some pretty hard things about that culture. Ha a few even believe I am 'racist' against them, but I generally just look at that as a deflection to avoid dealing with the reality of the choices that culture makes.

I don't hate anyone. Hating people isn't my thing.

But, you cannot be a rational person and deny the overriding ethos of white America is racism.

Some people ask, 'Ro, why do believe these things about white Americans?'

And my answer is I believe what people tell me.

Despite the fact of the economy being healthier under Democrats, https://www.forbes.com/sites/adamhartung/2012/10/10/want-a-better-economy-history-says-vote-democrat/#6f6f14ccb449 white people continuously vote for GOP candidates that harm their communities. https://www.theguardian.com/society/2012/jun/05/why-working-class-people-vote-conservative

Get upset with me all you want, but what I say about what people is pure fact.

Let's stick with crime.

According the last census, Black Americans represent about 14% of the overall population [PDF link] https://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-06.pdf but are constantly blamed for being responsible for most crime in the US, which is a straight up lie. http://racisminamerica.org/truth-fbi-crime-statistics-race/

To believe 14% of the population is responsible for most crime in a country of 300+ million people is simply irrational.

And we all know that's where racism lives.

Let's make a point about social programs.

One of the main pillars of racist dogma is that everyone other than the largest social group in American benefits from social programs.

The data, however, clearly shows that this is a lie with Black and white folks being pretty much even. https://www.reference.com/government-politics/race-percentage-welfare-recipients-fb9188762a3fe221#

Yet despite this reality, Blacks on welfare continues to be one of the most pernicious beliefs white people carry and is constantly being exploited for votes.

We talked about the economy already, but let's focus on jobs.

White Americans complain a lot about not having enough employment opportunities, which is understandable. What is not understandable is why they continue to support candidates that create policy that reward companies for outsourcing employment. https://aflcio.org/2017/11/7/giant-tax-cut-corporations-outsource-jobs

That doesn't make much sense, does it?

I could go on, but you get the idea.

I don't speak about white Americans in a frank manner because I have some weird dislike for non-melinated people. Hating people based on their level of melanin is absurd to me.

However, when I talk about white people I am talking about the culture of people that subscribe to this ideology and who view the world through this prism.

We see this culture reaffirm itself again and again in the US. And I'm going to honest about that.

The US is not going to get any better until we start having honest conversations about why we are constantly in crisis and why solutions to those problems are not only not being implemented, but ignored.

Based on the data, I believe the core of the problem is white America's intransigence to logic and reason and their refusal to be reasonable even as their decisions kill them.

It just is what it is. If talking about that reality hurts your feelings, oh well.

@Are0h I think you're right. Largely people are ignorant and blind to privilege. Without that basic understanding, or willingness to engage at all, it's... The clincher (I think you thought of this a month or so ago) is when it impacts their way of life, *then* they will listen. Until then, people enable themselves to stay blind.

There will be a way. My children don't think like my parents did (and neither do I). One person at a time, change can and will happen.

@lauraritchie @Are0h I kept thinking that, and yet... that was a lot of young faces in Charlottesville. There are some children who don't think like their parents, in a *bad* way.

@gamehawk @lauraritchie Yeah, exactly. These biases and prejudices are getting passed down from generation to generation.

There is a reason why inequality trends remain the same over long stretches of time.