So I get to work today and log onto my computer, the homepage is set to MSN. There's a story today about how 3 men who burned down a predominantly black church the night Obama was elected were sentenced today. Clearly such an act - even if it wasn't obviously racially motivated - is absolutely dispicable and horrible (just so you know, the church was under construction and no one was inside when it burned down, thoughh apparently a number of fire fighters wwere injured while battling the blaze).
But then I go to the comment section for the article which, of course, is filled with people saying that America is full of racists and, in particular, the majority of people who don't like President Obama don't like him purely because he's black. And that's what I take issue with. If you want to delude yourself into believing that all white people in America are just a bunch of racists, that's fine. That's your own opinion and if you really believe that, whatever. But isn't saying that "the majority of people who oppose Obama are a bunch of racists" actually an obscenely racist comment in itself? Are you not making a broad generalization about a group of people - who are implied to be white - based on the actions of a few morons from said group?
Is it not possible to disagree with President Obama without being racist? Are you saying that people such as myself can't disagree with him based on our views of what's good for the country? I don't believe that Obama is deliberately trying to destroy America, I just think that we have vastly different views on what's best for the nation. I really can't help but notice that the majority of the time, the people who cry out "racism!" for any given situation or topic are, themselves, the first ones to bring race into the situation or topic.
Now I'm not saying that true racism doesn't exist in America. As the article I mentioned points out: there clearly are people out there who still hate others based purely on the color of their skin. Yes, I know the US has a history of slavery. Absolutely no pun intended: that was a dark time in the US's history and unspeakable things were done with the belief that one group of people was just naturally inferior to another. But it seems to me that the vast majority of the US has moved on from those times with the Civil Rights movement and such and since they've moved on, they're extremely eager to do anything they can to prove that they're NOT racists.
So if it's true that people only disagree with Obama because he's black and therefor any opposition is based on racism, what about all the white people who only voted for Obama because he's black? Are they not just as racist? They feel some kind of guilt of the past and want to make themselves feel all warm and fuzzy by saying "I'm not a racist, I voted for Obama!"
In short: is it not an obscenely racist for a black person to go on a rant about how racist and evil and bigoted white people are? Does the color of their skin give them a pass on being racist just because a great injustice was done to them in the past? By that logic, is it safe to assume that everyone in Germany is still a Nazi?
This is why racism has been reduced to a "card" that is played for political gain. The sooner America as a nation moves on from its past, the sooner everyone can start living happily together. It just seems to me that those who are stuck in the past and see racism everywhere are, themselves, the biggest racists of all.
Or am I wrong? Is America indeed just a horrible, racist country filled with bigoted rednecks who believe that whites are superior to all others? Is there REALLY a racism problem (on a large, nation-wide scale) in America?
But then I go to the comment section for the article which, of course, is filled with people saying that America is full of racists and, in particular, the majority of people who don't like President Obama don't like him purely because he's black. And that's what I take issue with. If you want to delude yourself into believing that all white people in America are just a bunch of racists, that's fine. That's your own opinion and if you really believe that, whatever. But isn't saying that "the majority of people who oppose Obama are a bunch of racists" actually an obscenely racist comment in itself? Are you not making a broad generalization about a group of people - who are implied to be white - based on the actions of a few morons from said group?
Is it not possible to disagree with President Obama without being racist? Are you saying that people such as myself can't disagree with him based on our views of what's good for the country? I don't believe that Obama is deliberately trying to destroy America, I just think that we have vastly different views on what's best for the nation. I really can't help but notice that the majority of the time, the people who cry out "racism!" for any given situation or topic are, themselves, the first ones to bring race into the situation or topic.
Now I'm not saying that true racism doesn't exist in America. As the article I mentioned points out: there clearly are people out there who still hate others based purely on the color of their skin. Yes, I know the US has a history of slavery. Absolutely no pun intended: that was a dark time in the US's history and unspeakable things were done with the belief that one group of people was just naturally inferior to another. But it seems to me that the vast majority of the US has moved on from those times with the Civil Rights movement and such and since they've moved on, they're extremely eager to do anything they can to prove that they're NOT racists.
So if it's true that people only disagree with Obama because he's black and therefor any opposition is based on racism, what about all the white people who only voted for Obama because he's black? Are they not just as racist? They feel some kind of guilt of the past and want to make themselves feel all warm and fuzzy by saying "I'm not a racist, I voted for Obama!"
In short: is it not an obscenely racist for a black person to go on a rant about how racist and evil and bigoted white people are? Does the color of their skin give them a pass on being racist just because a great injustice was done to them in the past? By that logic, is it safe to assume that everyone in Germany is still a Nazi?
This is why racism has been reduced to a "card" that is played for political gain. The sooner America as a nation moves on from its past, the sooner everyone can start living happily together. It just seems to me that those who are stuck in the past and see racism everywhere are, themselves, the biggest racists of all.
Or am I wrong? Is America indeed just a horrible, racist country filled with bigoted rednecks who believe that whites are superior to all others? Is there REALLY a racism problem (on a large, nation-wide scale) in America?