Jdsizzleslice wrote:spurgistan wrote:Jdsizzleslice wrote:spurgistan wrote:Jdsizzleslice wrote:The answer to your question is no. But wouldn't you say this is more of an immigration discussion rather than a racist discussion?
I could see these statistics being similar to a poll if it were given in the US.
Since when is a lot of opposition to immigrants not expressed rather racistly? You have anti-Irish sentiment followed by anti-Asian sentiment followed by anti-Hispanic sentiment here in the US, roughly tracking when different races (and yes the Irish and Italians weren't considered to be proper white at the time) roughly tracking when different racial groups immigrated to the US.
It probably happens, but to say that opposition to immigration is rooted in racism is inaccurate.
Well, no, it is, for the reasons I just mentioned. People tend to hate whoever's new. I'm not saying one causes the other, but they're clearly related. It's not like Americans were upset about immigration while it was white northern Europeans moving here.
Read This PostJdsizzleslice wrote:Blanket statements are almost never true. Like saying all Trump supporters are all racists, or all liberals are crazy, etc...
You are making a blanket statement. If you think any opposition to immigration equals racism, then we cannot continue to have a logical discussion. All opposition is not based off the color of one's skin, or the nationality of that person, or etc.
I am opposed to illegal immigration. Does that make me a racist? According to your logic, it does.
#1 opposition to illegal immigration is different from anti-immigration, so, no? There are plenty of racist voices who also rail against illegal immigration, and that's a whole different argument, but the immigration system needs fixing for a lot of reasons, chiefly that it makes exploiting workers even easier than it already is. Also it takes forever to get a visa the legal way, so they should probably change that. A wall won't make immigration easier to do the right way.
#2 I'm not making a blanket statement, just saying that the Venn diagram of "prominent anti-immigration voices" and "says racist stuff" has a whole lot of cross-over, historically and in contemporary times. Big enough where it might be good for your movement to more publically distance yourself from those types of figures and say how you're different. For an allegory, every time somebody says their socialist some galaxy brain asks them how they would inevitably turn us into Venezuela, because the Venn diagram of "socialist state" and "broad economic failure" has some crossover, no? Socialists mostly don't deny that Venezuela under Maduro is (a type of) socialist state and is indisputably in economic collapse, they explain why underlying situations in Venezuela are different. You don't get far in an argument by outright denying the snakes in your ranks.