values.
values.
Black Nationalism is the name given to empower movements among black Americans, emphasizing their African origins and identity, their pride in being black, their desire to control their own communities, and sometimes the desire to establish a black nation in Africa or some part of the United States. An examination of the roots of these movements and of the beliefs, strategies, and goals of each will show how they were connected and how they influence the appearance, behavior, and attitudes of Dee/Wangero.…
Often when racial inequality and discrimination is being discussed, we get to think of terms such as “white privilege” and American history with the Civil Rights Act in 1964. But we think of it, mainly as history. And that, according to Tim Wise, an anti-racism activist and American writer, is the biggest self-deception of the modern American world. Throughout an article posted on his own webpage, concerning school shootings, Tim Wise discusses the general American attitude towards this relatively new phenomenon in American society. With the use of especially pathos Wise argues that the most concerning thing about these events is how society is handling them afterwards. The problem is, according to Wise, that white people tell themselves ‘white lies’, and therefore never think that such actions could be taking place in their communities. He claims that there’s a reason why this happens in the outwardly ordinary societies. It’s because the people, trying to maintain at certain surface of innocence, refuse to see the signs of trouble, even when it’s going on before their very eyes.…
The documentary “Race and Terror”, by VICE news documents the events that happened during the Charlottesville rallies, and the protestors’ views on the results of the protest. Throughout the film, Vice news portrayed obedience, violence, and authority shown by white nationalist, alt-righters, and neo-nazis in order to explore human identities. The documentary relates to the first two units that we have learned in our psychology course, more specifically prejudice, empathy gap, morality, and cognitive dissonance. Throughout the documentary, authority is seen differently from both sides.…
1. The three components of the American System were establishing a new protective tariff, starting a new transportation system and restoring the national bank. Henry Clay thought that each of these components would strengthen and unify the nation because he thought the American system would unite the nation's economic resources because the south would grow food and raise animals that the north would eat and in return the south would by the manufactured goods the north made. A new transportation system would allow trade between the north and the south. Now America could finally become independent economically. And the tariff would help because during the War of 1812 British merchants brought a great deal of products to the United States and sold them at much lower prices than American made goods, so the tariff would raise the prices of the British goods so the American merchants could sell their products at a lower price.…
As the nation expanded into the west at an increasing pace, arguments over slavery in the west became more and more heated. The disagreement between the north and the south eventually led to the civil war. The expansion to the west also encouraged the disunity of sectionalism and the unity of nationalism.…
The article "What White Supremacists Taught a Jewish Scholar about Identity" by Abby L. Ferber talks about experiences related to race, culture and color. The article describes the cultural differences, clashes and the discriminatory or racial behaviors that are the result of social practices. Ferber believed that her identity as a Jew owed more to persecution and to her love of her family than to religious observance or historical tradition. She suspected that, as a child, her pride as a Jew might have reflected her pleasure in self-dramatization. She began a research to find out more about the white supremacist, which made her explore and find out the contradictions in her own racial identity. Ferber describes that when people know she is Jewish she is viewed as another race, but otherwise she is just another white American which proves that it is instilled and followed by society.…
As we know it is very statistical for people of the dominant race to have a high position in the work force and usually people who have this position tend to look down to people who they believe are less than them. Especially in the workforce this is one place where it was always competitive and constantly having the knowledge that if you're not doing what needs to be done, you can easily be replaced without any hassle. In addition the factors that are related to work most prominently has three main components which include race, gender, and education. Unlike others some would disagree and say that I’m wrong and the factors to getting a job just deals with education, and in that manner they would be considered wrong. Moreover I say this because…
Similarities in anti-racist and racist discourse: Dutch Local Residents Talking about Ethnic Minorities” is an article written by Maykel Verkuyten, Wiebe de Jong, and Kees Masson. These author participates in an academic conversation focusing on similarities of Anti-Racist and racist, more specifically on trying to teach us that we must understand Racist in an objective manner in order to find a solution for the ongoing issue of racism. This conversation involve many brilliant minds and opinions that lead up to a variety of conversation such as Discourse and the denial of racism (1992), Race, Ethnicity and community in three localities (1996), Preparing urban teachers for schools and communities: An Anti- Racist Perspective (1999),Anti-racist perspectives: what are the gains for social work?, and Anti-racism and the critique of ‘ white’ identities (1996), each scholar seem to revolve around the point that we need to understand the racist in order to stop racism. . In this review of literature, I will be discussing this academic conversation in further detail, focusing on the points made by the author that we must objectively understand a racist point of view in order to find a solution to fight racism.…
In this essay written by African American Shelby Steele, he tells of the hard times of his people. He leads the reader through his experiences in the civil rights movement and compares the life of an African American in the 1960’s and one in the present day. He writes that African Americans today would have to use ever ounce of their intelligence and imagination to find reasons for them not to succeed in today’s society. He goes on to say that African Americans use the harm done for them in the past and try to use it as guilt for the white Americans. It goes on to explain the importance in fighting for a cause in a group and not breaking off as individuals.…
In his book, Jenson reviews the history of racism in the United States and its evolution into a closeted mentality, which still holds a power over many non-white citizens. It is this subtle power relationship that Jensen contends is the reason why the United States is a white supremacist nation. With radical honesty, hard facts, and an abundance of difficult, personal experience, Robert Jensen lays out strategies for recognizing and dismantling white privilege. He attempts at demonstrating that if white people are to make a meaningful contribution to ending white supremacy, they have to be willing to be harsh in their assessment of themselves personally, while at the same time staying focused on the importance of a larger system of power. He believes that we have to go deeply into ourselves and simultaneously connect to a larger political analysis and movement. As Jenson expresses, our history books speak much more lightly on the evolution of our country, which minimizes our responsibility of creating and maintaining this white supremacist society we have developed. Jensen’s approach on addressing this topic is to create emotion, and provoke questioning the foundations we have built our belief systems upon, which could easily take a reader down a path of frustration, anger, confusion and sadness. I personally felt all of these emotions, and more, while reading this book.…
It comes as no surprise that an overwhelming majority of the founding fathers held racist sentiments which manifest itself in passing legislation that protected slavery. Racism and white supremacy, as stated by Walton and Smith, “involves the belief in the superiority, inherent or otherwise, of a particular group and that on this basis policies are made to subordinate and control it.” White Supremacy thrives as a result of a strictly enforced subordinate-superordinate relationship between the minority and majority. This ideology plays an integral role in the shaping of race relations, particular interactions between whites and blacks, in the United States. These ways of thinking seem to go against the passionate words of the constitution calling…
Before tackling the issue of racism in Germany or elsewhere, we first need to be aware of the term “racism” and its origins. According to Professor Marion Kaplan’s lecture, racism is a 15th century idea created following European observations of perceived biological markings. Racism denotes a hierarchy of superiority and inferiority based on factors such as gender, skin tone, and other biological characteristics. The word race stems from Arabic ras, which means beginning, origin, or head (Burleigh 23). Racism connotes external differences in people who are singled out and denigrated for their religion, physical appearance, or socioeconomic status. Racism began before WWII in Germany, but the way the Nazis carried out violence through racism,…
The 20th century was a time of rapid development and innovation all around the world, but this competition soon morphed into a form of imperial nationalism in the United States, for a country comprised of so much diversity this can quickly became unhealthy as citizens begin determining what is “un-American”. Plays like, The Crucible, by Arthur Miller can offer a new perspective of the damages caused by our people to our people as a result of paranoia. Blaming individuals, foreign ideas, or other nations for what happened during this time period would be easy, but the United States Government turned its own citizens against each other, they did not hesitate to take away the freedom and security of its own people for the sake of expanding western influence while keeping other foreign ideas out of the United States. This was a century which future generations should look back on and hopefully be able to take the correct steps to avoid making the same mistakes.…
The question we are addressing is how the Aryan Nations influence society. The Aryan Nations was once of the country's best-known enclaves of anti-Semitism and white nationalism. While founded as a Christian Identity outpost, the organization also incorporates neo-Nazi themes; its founder and longtime leader, Richard Girnt Butler, openly Loves Hitler. It is no surprise, then, that Aryan Nations has for many years had members in common with several other white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups and that the Aryan Nations compound at Hayden Lake has served as one of the central meeting points and rallying grounds of far-right extremists of all types.…
Many centuries ago, America was established by the great thirteen colonies. These colonies came from European countries, when the thirteen colonies were established they originally wanted this country to be white supremacy. As the United States also expanded to the west, this mentality always stuck. In all my years of learning about the history of the United States, I always learned that before the colonist arrived to this land, there where Native Americans already living here. These people who came from another world, robbed the land from natives. The colonist White supremacy idea was always the goal through the establishment of this country. As our country grew our diversity of people grew as well; the white people brought Africans Americans…