• 8 Posts
  • 34 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • No, it doesn’t ignore that. Analysing the social construct of race shows that, in most cases, white people are treated better than people of colour.

    I never “excused” the behaviours in my initial reply, I explained them. But we know why it happens, and the decades of racism that people of colour faced (and still do) contributed to it. The best way to solve the problem is to adress it, not to ignore it.

    If a black person does something bad because of this social construct, we would adress it by trying to prevent the conditions that make someone do this. Better education, social safety nets and sensitization helps a bunch.

    The same goes for a white person. If they do something bad becauwe of this social construct, we also adress it. We can educate them by explaining why what they did had racist undertones, or, in this case, to not be one of the not marginalised people who talk over someone who is marginalised in an antagonistic way. Be compationate, stop playing the devil’s advocate all the time and just listen.

    Poiting out the injustice going on between races isn’t racist. That’s like saying that if you tell someone that they are being rude to you (and they are), that you’re being rude by pointing that out.

    Empircally, race doesn’t matter, but we made it matter in our society. Just look up what a social construct means.






  • That’s not how social contructs work. Money is a social construct, yet people talk about it and need it to live. Language is a social construct but it has a huge impact on communication. And we acknowledge that all these constructs are real and keep affecting us.

    The problem with race isn’t just that it’s a social construct, but the fact that it’s a social construct used to make a hierarchy out of arbitrary traits. It’s still maintained and keeps affecting people.

    Therefore the only way to address the consequences of that construct is by looking at certain issues through its lenses.

    For example, if we would look at poverty in marginalised groups without taking into account that construct, the conclusions would be that these marginalised groups are poor because they “made poor decisions” and deserved it.

    However, if we take it into account, we can acknowledge the fact that the discrimination that marginalised groups face, aswell as their family background (ex: slavery) contributes a lot to the reasons as too why they are poor than people that aren’t marginalised.

    It shouldn’t have been a race issue, but because of how race keeps affecting these issues, it is. So we address it that way.

















  • Wait I didn’t notice you were the same persone on the mental health community! Hi again!

    I understand the second and the third reason, but I don’t think I understand the first ( I tend to be slow at times haha). Do you mean that since people have seen others not work, they think of us negatively if we don’t work?

    Well anyways damn, your wife reminds me a lot of my parents. I’ve also got much to say, but I can’t type much right now.

    Rest well!


  • Same honestly. Although mine happens less frequently, what hurts the most is when people around you diminish your pain.

    My parents expect me to stand up while my legs hurt, and despite being warned by the doctors several times, they still try schetchy medecine and tell me to drop the medecine that actually works. When their “medecine” didn’t work, it was somehow my fault, or I wasn’t in that much pain.

    They also ignore the doctors advice for my mental health, also claiming my problems are fake and that I’m doing it for attention. I’m honestly tired.

    Is this a common thing for people with chronic illinesses? I don’t understand how people could act so cruelly towards those in pain.