I love your positive spin on trust in the government. I don't believe its going to change anything. I think its clear we live in a divided country. Republicans hate the government when Democrats control. Democrats hate the government when Republicans control. Trying to create initiatives to move beyond race (which I'm totally on board wi…
I love your positive spin on trust in the government. I don't believe its going to change anything. I think its clear we live in a divided country. Republicans hate the government when Democrats control. Democrats hate the government when Republicans control. Trying to create initiatives to move beyond race (which I'm totally on board with) are problematic because there is zero empathy for the other. That's what I see.
I'm not trying to "win" anything. As I said, I'm 99% pragmatic. I look for reality in implementation. After four years of DEI, Kendi produced nothing with all the millions he spent. Business that have implemented DEI have very little value to show for it. Biden has further divided the country with his emphasis on DEI.
Affirmative Action was making progress and the right focus. Harvard didn't stay true to affirmative action. They started changing what "qualification" meant to change the "race based" balance.
Am I guided by my feelings? I don't believe you have any argument to make that statement. All indications are the country is divided. No one respects congress. Trust in the federal government is at an all time low. The federal government controls the biggest pot of money in the world. All politics is about who gets to control that bucket of money. The only real answer (from my perspective) is to break up the bucket of money. Move power to states and communities and let communities figure it out. San Francisco hasn't figured it out. What community would you point to in the country that is succeeding on "moving beyond race". I would posit that after all the race based legislation and discussions over the last 60 years, if no community is there, maybe the concept is idealistic and race is just part of the human condition. People feel more comfortable with people who are like them - culturally and how they look. Its likely genetically based. There is evidence to suggest that the pension for being religious was promoted as a genetic advantage by evolution.
Maybe its just that you and I see the world through totally different lenses. That you have no ability to see my point of view speaks to the truth of my perspective. Its more than just putting out idealistic concepts. They need to be ground in the genetics and culture of the human condition.
If it helps and you see value in Meyers-Briggs. I'm an ENTJ.
“I love your positive spin on trust in the government.”
😅“Positive spin.” Is that what we’re calling “accurate reading of a poll” now?
It’s not that I can’t see your point of view, I see it all the time online. A lot of people have given into cynicism and fatalism and describe anything upstream of that as idealism and naivety. This perspective has been around since MLK (and long before of course). White *and* black people told him it was impossible to achieve the progress he and others achieved. Even as they achieved it.
So yes, it’s not that I don’t see your perspective, it’s just think it’s based on a narrow and half-hearted attempt to understand the world. And the data that I’ve spent the past few years poring over, including the data you cited, bears this out.
But regardless, a person’s ability to see a perspective says absolutely nothing about how true it is. This is an absolutely bizarre thing to say.
I don’t consider myself to be particularly idealistic. I certainly don’t have a rose-tinted view of human nature. But whatever optimism I have is born precisely from the fact that if you travelled back in time 80 years and described the present day to someone living in segregated America, they’d have said you were idealistic and foolish for not seeing the world as they did. I’m glad they were wrong.
Have race based relations in the country significantly improved since the 60s.
I would suggest that awareness has gone up. Integration has gone up. Those who were aware of their race based biases are acting with less bias. But I don't believe that skin color will ever not be relevant.
I believe humans are conditioned to create communities. Those communities result in like minded culture around people who are like them (including in looks). Can the concept of color eventually evolve to where everyone is some shade of brown. Who knows? I'm not sure why we would even want it to. Its a feel good idealistic concept but is it the best for the human condition. Evolution will sort that out.
I love your positive spin on trust in the government. I don't believe its going to change anything. I think its clear we live in a divided country. Republicans hate the government when Democrats control. Democrats hate the government when Republicans control. Trying to create initiatives to move beyond race (which I'm totally on board with) are problematic because there is zero empathy for the other. That's what I see.
I'm not trying to "win" anything. As I said, I'm 99% pragmatic. I look for reality in implementation. After four years of DEI, Kendi produced nothing with all the millions he spent. Business that have implemented DEI have very little value to show for it. Biden has further divided the country with his emphasis on DEI.
Affirmative Action was making progress and the right focus. Harvard didn't stay true to affirmative action. They started changing what "qualification" meant to change the "race based" balance.
Am I guided by my feelings? I don't believe you have any argument to make that statement. All indications are the country is divided. No one respects congress. Trust in the federal government is at an all time low. The federal government controls the biggest pot of money in the world. All politics is about who gets to control that bucket of money. The only real answer (from my perspective) is to break up the bucket of money. Move power to states and communities and let communities figure it out. San Francisco hasn't figured it out. What community would you point to in the country that is succeeding on "moving beyond race". I would posit that after all the race based legislation and discussions over the last 60 years, if no community is there, maybe the concept is idealistic and race is just part of the human condition. People feel more comfortable with people who are like them - culturally and how they look. Its likely genetically based. There is evidence to suggest that the pension for being religious was promoted as a genetic advantage by evolution.
Maybe its just that you and I see the world through totally different lenses. That you have no ability to see my point of view speaks to the truth of my perspective. Its more than just putting out idealistic concepts. They need to be ground in the genetics and culture of the human condition.
If it helps and you see value in Meyers-Briggs. I'm an ENTJ.
“I love your positive spin on trust in the government.”
😅“Positive spin.” Is that what we’re calling “accurate reading of a poll” now?
It’s not that I can’t see your point of view, I see it all the time online. A lot of people have given into cynicism and fatalism and describe anything upstream of that as idealism and naivety. This perspective has been around since MLK (and long before of course). White *and* black people told him it was impossible to achieve the progress he and others achieved. Even as they achieved it.
So yes, it’s not that I don’t see your perspective, it’s just think it’s based on a narrow and half-hearted attempt to understand the world. And the data that I’ve spent the past few years poring over, including the data you cited, bears this out.
But regardless, a person’s ability to see a perspective says absolutely nothing about how true it is. This is an absolutely bizarre thing to say.
I don’t consider myself to be particularly idealistic. I certainly don’t have a rose-tinted view of human nature. But whatever optimism I have is born precisely from the fact that if you travelled back in time 80 years and described the present day to someone living in segregated America, they’d have said you were idealistic and foolish for not seeing the world as they did. I’m glad they were wrong.
Its a great perspective.
Have race based relations in the country significantly improved since the 60s.
I would suggest that awareness has gone up. Integration has gone up. Those who were aware of their race based biases are acting with less bias. But I don't believe that skin color will ever not be relevant.
I believe humans are conditioned to create communities. Those communities result in like minded culture around people who are like them (including in looks). Can the concept of color eventually evolve to where everyone is some shade of brown. Who knows? I'm not sure why we would even want it to. Its a feel good idealistic concept but is it the best for the human condition. Evolution will sort that out.