Lordandmaster
Posts: 10943
Joined: 6/22/2004 Status: offline
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I really don't think you can untangle the two so easily, Merc. I'd like to believe it were so simple, but I don't. People in the U.S. are much more likely to sit back and watch poor black people with dying babies than poor white people with dying babies, ESPECIALLY in the South. It's not as though I'm happy about all this, and I'm not saying this just to be controversial and piss people off. I mean, just consider an offhanded comment the other day by Kathleen Blanco, the Governor of Louisiana, who said that part of the reason why so many people were trapped is that they didn't leave the city when they were warned to do so. That is pure racism. As these people have said over and over in interviews, they didn't have the MEANS to leave the city--unlike all the fashionable white folk who are now watching the footage on TV. When white people are victims, everyone assumes they are just victims and the whole country rallies to their cause. When black people are victims, everyone starts asking hateful questions. How did they get into that situation in the first place? Why didn't they leave when they had the chance? Why didn't they do more to help themselves after the hurricane hit? Why do they have to rely on the government to save them? It's such bullshit. Edited to add: And, you know, I'm white, comfortable, and live in the Northeast. No vested interests here. I'm just pissed off. quote:
ORIGINAL: Mercnbeth Now if you said that money and society status had/has something to do with setting a priority I'd agree 100%.
< Message edited by Lordandmaster -- 9/3/2005 1:41:16 PM >
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