Why do people look back on Pearl Harbor as some sort of 1940s 9/11? It wasn't an attack on civilians, it was an attack only a bunch of military warships that were parked in Hawaii after Japan declared war a few minutes prior to the attack. We would've done the same thing if we had been facing a nation much more powerful than we were. Maybe its the fact that its on American soil. People really need to understand that this isn't a land crowded for space and soil isn't sacred. When you live elsewhere in the world, there's a chance that you are going to be on the same spot your family has been for ages. In the United States? It might be two generations back, at most. I mean shit, if you're going to blame the Japanese for anything in World War 2, that whole Rape of Manchuria thing was a pretty big deal. Oh wait, they aren't white people. Nevermind. These tweets are why people need not white friends. If you have only white friends, and most of them are men, you're going to act like a racist asshole because there's nobody there to look at you and get personally offended. #Carma.
It's too bad though that there are some that happen to have "not white friends" and use them as some kind of buffer, as if having friends who aren't white means that they can't possibly be racist or have deeply ingrained racist beliefs. It's too bad that "hey, y'know, sometimes I forget you're not white" is often issued with the idea that that's some kind of compliment. Most people don't think about context when it comes to historical events, viewing things from the past only from the lens of their own experience. Let things go undisturbed and un-evaluated for long enough and they'll rot from within.
Maybe the Chicago Area Radio Monitoring Association has an interest in baseball and racism.
Those tweets suck. They suck hard. That said, I wonder how many positive things were written about the effort? How much of this is focusing on a small minority of d-bags to the detriment of normal people everywhere?
Yeah, you're right. It's a bad batch of apples. Man, that guy was close though and it blows my mind that some people had this reaction. I know a lot of people who want to become Americans, who would really contribute to this place, but seeing people be shitty because they feel like they're owed something for being born in a certain place gets to me, even though I know they're in the minority.