sure...
but we all do.
A white person eating in a black establishment, gets a little DIFFERENT treatment...
I have a POLISH last name. I still have people who think that POLISH PEOPLE as a RACE are STUPID. (Notice... I didn't say I wasn't) lol
2006-06-22 01:25:37
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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As a black American, I can emphatically say that, yes, we still experience racial discrimination today. Being treating differently solely based on race is something that I live, maybe not daily, but often enough that if effects how I live my life.
Solely based on color, I am often overlooked at retail stores, or on the flip side, followed around the store as if I'm going to steal something; I am often ignored and given poor service at restaurants because people assume that blacks aren't going to tip well; and when it comes to housing, if I want to live in a decent neighborhood, I have to hope that my neighbors are racist who like to paint racial slurs on the property of blacks just because they moved to the neighborhood. It seems as if people just assume that if one is black, one must be less intelligent. People often are surprised when they hear that I can somehow manage to sting together word to make a complete thought.
Fortunately for me, I don't experience too much discrimination. I do know that others, especially men, receive more. Some police are still involved with racial profiling. With the justice system, blacks are more likely to receive harsher sentencing than whites for the same crime. There was a case in my county a few years ago, where a white teen was caught with drugs and pulled a gun on an undercover black cop. The judge gave him a slap on the wrist, told him not to do it again, and let him go because the boy just made a bad decision. If that was a black kid, that kid would have been shot dead.
The workplace continues to be a source of discrimination for some wanting to break the glass ceiling. I even saw a report that said that white men who had served time in jail for a crime were more likely to be hired that a black man with no criminal record. That's just absurd.
Great strides have been made as the decades past but we are not there yet. My fear is that with the growing popularity of gangster rap and the wide use of the "n" word, the move towards racial equality will be set back greatly..
2006-06-22 01:44:29
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answer #2
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answered by truly 6
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I think one of the worst, most prevalent forms of discrimination that blacks face today is the fact that everyone seems to think that only physical ACTIONS (like slurs or beatings) are discrimination.
The form that is most common nowadays is the fact that everyone is convinced that "Oh, slavery is over and so why don't these people just help themselves? They're lazy and ignorant, they should just get jobs." But it's not that easy.
Racism is institutionalized. Many blacks are still confined in ghettos in inner cities, where the school systems are so bad that less than half (and closer to only one fourth) of ninth graders actually graduate from high school. The violence is so bad that many drop out in fear for their lives. Not to mention the TOTAL lack of funding.
Not to mention that if you're poor, you don't have the chance to give your children the same types of advantages that rich white kids have, like educational games, a safe quiet place to study, tutoring, etc.
If you can't get an education because you don't have books or can't go to school without being shot at, how can you build a better life for yourself and your family? How can you get a job that will let you escape from the poverty in inner cities?
2006-06-23 02:44:58
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answer #3
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answered by monckee 2
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They still experience the effects of the racism of the past, but are now faced by their own personal limitations. The only thing that is holding anyone back today is laziness, lack of education or fear of the unknown. The racism of the past has put many black people in poverty today. However, they have every opportunity to get out of it if they will work for it. They have more hand outs and gifts available to them today than white people do. The problem is that they don't know about them or they are just happy to blame white people for the fact that they don't have a Cadillac or a corporate job. It's time to quit blaming racism and start getting to work; and there is a growing portion of the Black American population that agrees.
2006-06-22 12:56:38
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answer #4
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answered by Dr Thunder 1
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Some but not even within a country mile of what is claimed. The race card is always played as soon as someone disagrees.
In addition, we all experience discrimination of some sort. Blacks discriminate aganst whites. The politically correct against the non-politically correct. University and college professors discriminate against Cristhians. Handsome or beautiful discrimnate against ugly. Men discriminate against women. The list goes on and on.
2006-06-22 01:32:04
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answer #5
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answered by williegod 6
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All the time. I have two little black nephews at the age of 10 and 13yrs. old, on their way home from school the other day A group of white children starting throwing rocks at them and calling them the "N" word. My sister is pressing charges on theese kids. You know the saying "sticks and stones may break my bones but words will never hurt me?", well that saying is so inaccurate because my nephews were very much devestated.This is something they will remember for the rest of their lives, it is embeded into their memories forever.I myself hate the fact that they had to endure something so awful at such a young age. Although not just blacks get discriminated ther are whites and hispanics that expierience the same thing from opposite races.
2006-06-22 01:59:06
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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I do agree. I don't think its as bad as it used to be, not by a long shot, but discrimination is still out there. My daughter and her best friend have different skin tones. when they are together in public, I have seen them catch some .. not nice.. looks from other people, not just grown ups, but a few times from other kids. It makes me mad, and makes me realize that people still need alot of work.
2006-06-22 01:31:15
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answer #7
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answered by StillKickin 2
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yes i do there was a man on here the other day and he was like all black people should b shot and they are all lazy and fat. well if he knew anything its actually more white obesed people than there are black obesed people and people dont think we work well hey our people worked for 300 years ith no pay taken out of there home and beaten and hung 2 and we had 2 work the fields and all the "masters" did was ly back and chill. and then when we were free alot of them did not know what freedom was so they stayed on the land. but yea we still do get judge by the color of our skin
2006-06-22 01:27:45
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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From a organic and organic attitude, "race" denotes far more effective diversification of the species than exists in Homo Sapiens: there is one race, and that is "human." what's really being requested is even if Barack Obama has some variety of cultural connection to the custom of African individuals contained in america. For the most section, he does, because he's a guy residing in this usa who's perceived as "Black." for the time of his existence, he has often been perceived as belonging to that team and being representative of it: those who idea black dermis marked one as inferior idea he became inferior; those who idea it denoted better athletic potential or different attributes idea he became representative of his human beings. that is common to argue that through being presented up in a non-Black family individuals he developed by some potential in yet otherwise from "authentically Black" human beings - yet that would properly be accepting the concept Blackness is a narrowly defined element executed in undemanding words through a particular subgroup. it isn't that, and "Blackness" isn't some thing except some human beings's own definition of themselves or others. Barack Obama is black; Colin Powell is black; Robert Mugabe is black: many each body is black, and there are a number of styles of human beings. be conscious: an answer about "black genes" and "white genes" isn't plausible, because there are not any such issues. particular populations have a tendency to have particular accepted appearances, even if the ameliorations are not any further not common and quick genetic markers.
2016-11-15 02:49:52
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answer #9
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answered by karls 4
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Everyone faces racial discrimination at one point in their lives. Its all around us we collectively do it and it will never change. Maybe it is not so obvious as it used to be but it happens.
2006-06-28 11:16:24
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answer #10
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answered by mayrad 3
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Yes, of course. Anyone who doesn't think so are kidding themselves.
In some places the discrimination is subtle but it's still there.
2006-06-22 01:51:45
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answer #11
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answered by Alicia 5
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