Racism- Sotomoyor

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Hacp

Lifer
Jun 8, 2005
13,923
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Originally posted by: DealMonkey
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Funny you should post. My wife is the health care advisor for her college where she teaches. She has a student with a 4.00 and he's blown the curves on the MCATS and his SAT was over 1500.

He has lots of volunteer service, first rate recommendations, interviews well. Everything going his way. He's even white. So he applied the several top medical schools and he was rejected. His family was low income, so he needed financial aid. Too bad they said because if he was a minority he could have gotten money, but it wouldn't matter because they had minority students which were going to get placed ahead of him (who weren't as academically gifted) so he was SOL.

He's not the only one in this position.

The facts are that being white is a disadvantage, and being a white male doubly so. Someone can whip out all the statistics they want, but in the "trenches" it's painfully obvious to everyone.

I think this points to a need to shift 'affirmative action' type programs away from being tied to race and instead tie it to economic need. There are folks of every color who need help going to school.

Then you're discriminating against well off families. No one should be allowed to skip ahead of anyone more academically accomplished. If you got the grades and extras, no one with less should be able to get in before you do.
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
50,879
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Originally posted by: Hacp
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Funny you should post. My wife is the health care advisor for her college where she teaches. She has a student with a 4.00 and he's blown the curves on the MCATS and his SAT was over 1500.

He has lots of volunteer service, first rate recommendations, interviews well. Everything going his way. He's even white. So he applied the several top medical schools and he was rejected. His family was low income, so he needed financial aid. Too bad they said because if he was a minority he could have gotten money, but it wouldn't matter because they had minority students which were going to get placed ahead of him (who weren't as academically gifted) so he was SOL.

He's not the only one in this position.

The facts are that being white is a disadvantage, and being a white male doubly so. Someone can whip out all the statistics they want, but in the "trenches" it's painfully obvious to everyone.

I think this points to a need to shift 'affirmative action' type programs away from being tied to race and instead tie it to economic need. There are folks of every color who need help going to school.

Then you're discriminating against well off families. No one should be allowed to skip ahead of anyone more academically accomplished. If you got the grades and extras, no one with less should be able to get in before you do.

We aren't talking about putting someone financially disadvantaged above someone else, but allowing quality students to participate regardless of their color or wealth.
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
50,879
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Originally posted by: mattpegher
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Originally posted by: mattpegher
I just spent 9 hours doing a state mandated course in "cultural competency", in which they spend every moment demonizing a white doctor for not being culturally sensitive to his patients. The hero's of the story were a hispanic female doctor and an african male resident. The problem is that in presenting this material which is designed to aid physicians in overcoming cultural ignorance (in the strict definition of lack of knowledge) it failed to see the reverse racism that it placed on the white male physician. Implying that he had no desire to be aware of the cultural effects that his patients were under.

Historically the state usually goes to far and in the wrong direction in its attempts to eliminate social injustice. I think it is time to reaffirm that old saying that"Justice is blind".
Cultural differences exist and always will but it seems that every race and gender is encouraged to celebrate theirs except for the white male.

This is one of the reason that hate groups such as the KKK find new recruits from outside of their lineage. Failure to recognize this effect only serves to fuel racial hatreds.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

Did they stereotype white doctors? If so how.

The material presented obvious racial issues that a first year med student would recognize without any training and created a white male physician that was oblivious to them, and reluctant to adapt. Painting him as insensitive, white-centric and unwilling to change.

So they stereotyped the white guy and made him ignorant and insensitive. Did they make the black guy a ghetto rapper, and the Hispanic doc an illegal immigrant?

Nope, they were perfect in practically every way. It was you who are at fault, because you are The Man, and The Man keeps people down.

Seriously, if people want to clue people in with "sensitivity" training, they need to understanding that painting people they want to reach as assholes isn't sensitive.
 

mattpegher

Platinum Member
Jun 18, 2006
2,203
0
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Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Originally posted by: Hacp
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Funny you should post. My wife is the health care advisor for her college where she teaches. She has a student with a 4.00 and he's blown the curves on the MCATS and his SAT was over 1500.

He has lots of volunteer service, first rate recommendations, interviews well. Everything going his way. He's even white. So he applied the several top medical schools and he was rejected. His family was low income, so he needed financial aid. Too bad they said because if he was a minority he could have gotten money, but it wouldn't matter because they had minority students which were going to get placed ahead of him (who weren't as academically gifted) so he was SOL.

He's not the only one in this position.

The facts are that being white is a disadvantage, and being a white male doubly so. Someone can whip out all the statistics they want, but in the "trenches" it's painfully obvious to everyone.

I think this points to a need to shift 'affirmative action' type programs away from being tied to race and instead tie it to economic need. There are folks of every color who need help going to school.

Then you're discriminating against well off families. No one should be allowed to skip ahead of anyone more academically accomplished. If you got the grades and extras, no one with less should be able to get in before you do.

We aren't talking about putting someone financially disadvantaged above someone else, but allowing quality students to participate regardless of their color or wealth.

I am a bit concerned about financial need scholarships and grants since there is always someone who becomes inelligible due to percieved ability to pay. If my parents had been a bit poorer than I might have had my undergraduate completely paid for rather than having to work my way through school. I certainly could not have pulled from their meager earnings without significantly impacting the family. We are talking about a bit of a competition of the poor. The poorest get the money and the slightly poor get screwed.
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
50,879
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I am a bit concerned about financial need scholarships and grants since there is always someone who becomes inelligible due to percieved ability to pay. If my parents had been a bit poorer than I might have had my undergraduate completely paid for rather than having to work my way through school. I certainly could not have pulled from their meager earnings without significantly impacting the family. We are talking about a bit of a competition of the poor. The poorest get the money and the slightly poor get screwed.

Well doc, the answer is sliding scale

Financial aid ought to take in a wider range of factors than it currently does. The total ability to pay is analyzed and assistance is given along a continuous spectrum of financial needs depending solely on what's needed.
 

n yusef

Platinum Member
Feb 20, 2005
2,158
1
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How can you deny the existence or prevalence of racism on a forum where people feel comfortable saying things like,

Originally posted by: BarneyFife
There is no need to beat around the bush. Detroit is what happens when you let black people run a major city. Its a corrupt ghetto.
 

Chaotic42

Lifer
Jun 15, 2001
34,356
1,536
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Originally posted by: n yusef

White men do have less experience than other people in certain situations. For instance, how many men, white or otherwise, have experience being a thirteen year-old girl? The SCOTUS recently heard oral arguments on a case about a thirteen-year-old girl who was strip-searched by her school because she was accused of possessing ibuprofen. The male Justices thought nothing of this, and compared it to stripping in the locker room of a gym class.

It's not because they're males, it's because they're idiots. Anyone who would approve of strip searching someone over ibuprofen has a warped sense of reality. Boy, girl, man, or woman, that shouldn't happen to anyone.

 

OrByte

Diamond Member
Jul 21, 2000
9,303
144
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This article satsified a couple of points for me that have cropped here on P&N lately.

First: Congressional republicans are weary of labeling Sotomoyor a racist. In fact, the only ones that use that label are people like Rush, Cheney, and Newt. Hmmmm quite a crowd no?

But really, Congressional Republicans know that they run a very real risk of losing support if they continue down this reckless and WORTHLESS road of personal attacks and rhetorical nonsense. Calling Sotomoyor a "racist" makes no sense and they KNOW IT.

Second: Congressional republicans are FEARFUL of crossing the aforementioned gang of sleezeballs. And people wonder why the rest of the thinking world says that Rush and Cheney and Newt have so much power? They don't even hold official positions in US government and Republican US Officials are afraid of them!!!

pathetic

story

GOP senators sidestep harsh criticism of Sotomayor
By PHILIP ELLIOTT, Associated Press Writer Philip Elliott, Associated Press Writer Sun May 31, 4:41 pm ET

WASHINGTON ? Leading GOP senators on Sunday offered more subtle criticism of the first Hispanic nominated to the Supreme Court, but passed up the chance to stifle racially charged critiques of Sonia Sotomayor by some fellow Republicans.

The party out of power in Washington is struggling to develop a unified political strategy to oppose the Supreme Court nominee.

Sotomayor, an appeals court judge, already faces scrutiny from conservatives over a 2001 remark that her experiences as an Hispanic woman would lead her to better decisions than those made by a white man. Talk-show host Rush Limbaugh has called her a "racist" while former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, saying a "Latina woman racist" is unsuitable for the court, has called for withdrawing the nomination.

The Senate's top Republicans didn't disavow those assessments, although they urged different language to oppose President Barack Obama's first nominee to the high court.

Those appearing on Sunday's news shows walked gingerly when it came to criticizing a member of the fast-growing Hispanic population. They risk a potential backlash from their conservative base because Limbaugh and Gingrich hold tremendous sway among the Republican faithful.

"I definitely think we need to have the respectful tone and we need to look at the record," said Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, a Republican from Hispanic-heavy Texas. "We need to have the responsibilities that have been put on us by the Constitution taken very seriously."

The Senate's Republican leaders have cobbled together a strategy that recognizes they don't have the votes to block Sotomayor. They have combed over her record on the federal bench ahead of confirmation hearings and questioned whether she would be unbiased in her decisions on the high court. They have also watched quietly as Limbaugh, Gingrich and former Bush adviser Karl Rove have attacked Sotomayor.

"She brings a form of bigotry or racism to the court," Limbaugh said on his radio program last week.

"The real question here that needs to be asked, and nobody on our side, from a columnist to a TV commentator to anybody in our party has the guts to ask: How can a president nominate such a candidate, and how can a party get behind such a candidate? That's what would be asked if somebody were foolish enough to nominate David Duke or pick somebody even less offensive."

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on Sunday refused to criticize that remark, although he said it doesn't represent his view.

"Look, I've got a big job to do, dealing with 40 Senate Republicans and trying to advance the nation's agenda," said McConnell, R-Ky. "I've got better things to do than be the speech police over people who are going to have their views about a very important appointment, which is an appointment to the United States Supreme Court."

Sen. Jeff Sessions, the top Republican who on the Judiciary Committee, similarly said he wasn't going to baby-sit conservative commentators.

"I think that she is a person who believes that her background can influence her decision. That's what troubles me," said Sessions, R-Ala. Although he would prefer that they not call Sotomayor a racist, he said, "people have a free right to speak and say what they want and make the analogies that they want."

Sotomayor, nominated Tuesday to replace Justice David Souter when he retires, suggested in 2001 that her experiences influence her judicial decisions. The White House has said she likely regrets her choice of words but has stood by her nomination.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., also a member of the Judiciary Committee, said that he doesn't think Sotomayor is a racist. However, Graham, who is white, said she should apologize for comments that suggest "all the hardship she has gone through makes her better than me."

Sen. Jon Kyl, the No. 2 Republican in the Senate and a Judiciary member, declined to call Sotomayor a racist.

"I'm not going to get drawn into characterizations before I have even met her," Kyl said.

Obama's allies lined up in Sotomayor's defense on her comments about race.

"As long as you put rule of law first, of course, it's quite natural to understand that our experiences affect us. I don't think anybody wants nine justices on the Supreme Court who have ice water in their veins," said Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

Obama wants Sotomayor's confirmation hearings to wrap up before Congress heads on a summer vacation in August. McConnell and Sen. Pat Leahy of Vermont, the Democrat running the Judiciary Committee, said they would not be boxed in by a White House timeline.

"I will meet my timetable," Leahy said, adding his could be different from Obama's plan.

Hutchison and McConnell appeared Sunday on CNN's "State of the Union." Sessions and Leahy spoke to NBC's "Meet the Press." Graham spoke on "Fox News Sunday," Kyl on CBS' "Face the Nation" and Schumer on ABC's "This Week."
 

mattpegher

Platinum Member
Jun 18, 2006
2,203
0
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Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
I am a bit concerned about financial need scholarships and grants since there is always someone who becomes inelligible due to percieved ability to pay. If my parents had been a bit poorer than I might have had my undergraduate completely paid for rather than having to work my way through school. I certainly could not have pulled from their meager earnings without significantly impacting the family. We are talking about a bit of a competition of the poor. The poorest get the money and the slightly poor get screwed.

Well doc, the answer is sliding scale

Financial aid ought to take in a wider range of factors than it currently does. The total ability to pay is analyzed and assistance is given along a continuous spectrum of financial needs depending solely on what's needed.

I think that is a great idea. Lets not give all the money to a few but spread it out so that everyone under a certain income gets a percentage inversely porportional to income. It might also be porportional to grades, although that would make it more complicated, but it would allow for some of the brightest students to afford the more prestigious schools. Therefore if a poor kid from the projects that is very bright might still be able to get into harvard and yale.
 

QuantumPion

Diamond Member
Jun 27, 2005
6,010
1
76
Originally posted by: Rainsford
Originally posted by: charrison
...
I would like to know what this white privilege is that you speak of. I dont recall anyone giving me a break just because of the color of my skin. And I would be insulted if they did.

It's not that obvious. You're not going to walk into the mall and get a free ice cream because it's "ice cream for white people" day. In fact, it's not about YOU personally at all...it's about the fact that white people tend to be born into better situations overall than black people. And that assumptions made about black people tend to be more negative than those made about white people. And that stereotyping in general happens rarely with white men, but much more often for minorities.

According to Sotomayor, it is about YOU personally (if you are a white person taking a test to become a firefighter).

While anti-minority racism by white people undoubtably exists, it has been fading for decades. I am far more troubled by the spiteful, intentional hatred of reverse racism which is on the rise.
 

jonks

Lifer
Feb 7, 2005
13,918
20
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Originally posted by: QuantumPion
According to Sotomayor, it is about YOU personally (if you are a white person taking a test to become a firefighter).

While anti-minority racism by white people undoubtably exists, it has been fading for decades. I am far more troubled by the spiteful, intentional hatred of reverse racism which is on the rise.

sounds like you have a problem with Title VII, not Sotomayor, since she merely implemented the law as it's written and upheld precendent as it's been established. At least 7 other judges involved in the case felt the same. And possibly 4 or 5 of the Supremes will agree.

Course she could have ignored the law and succumbed to her empathy for Ricci and ruled for him bucking precedent, but then she'd be skewered for judicial activism.
 

OutHouse

Lifer
Jun 5, 2000
36,410
616
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Originally posted by: mattpegher
Don't get me wrong, I think that she will make a fine cheif justice and most of her statements suggest that she will make judgments based on law not politics. That said, I am getting a bit irritated at the openly racist statement coming out of some folks lately. She states that her experience as a latino female would lead to wiser choices than that of a white male. Flip those demographics and every one would be on you like flies on dung.

Why is it acceptable to assert that as a white male, I am privileged and culturally biased. I have had no special advantages. I went to public school in a mixed race suburb. I worked my way through school. Neither, I or any of my ancestors ever owned a slave.

Reverse racism is just as bad as racism.

lol lol lol. many many many many of her rullings have been overturned by higher courts. she rules out of emotion not law.

 
Nov 30, 2006
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Originally posted by: jonks
Originally posted by: QuantumPion
According to Sotomayor, it is about YOU personally (if you are a white person taking a test to become a firefighter).

While anti-minority racism by white people undoubtably exists, it has been fading for decades. I am far more troubled by the spiteful, intentional hatred of reverse racism which is on the rise.

sounds like you have a problem with Title VII, not Sotomayor, since she merely implemented the law as it's written and upheld precendent as it's been established. At least 7 other judges involved in the case felt the same. And possibly 4 or 5 of the Supremes will agree.

Course she could have ignored the law and succumbed to her empathy for Ricci and ruled for him bucking precedent, but then she'd be skewered for judicial activism.
No...she interpreted the law incorrrectly. There's no disparate impact here...you can't promote people to postions of responsibility who cannot demostrate basic knowledge required to properly perform the job duties...especially in situations that may result in injury or loss of life that will arise during the course of daily job activities. I still got $5 here saying she gets overruled.
 

Fern

Elite Member
Sep 30, 2003
26,907
174
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?I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn?t lived that life.?

That ^ statement shows, among other things, a complete lack of empathy for non-latina females, saying other groups can't make as good as decisions as she can is insulting, condencending and decidely not empathetic.

So much for her 'empathy'.

Fern
 

spittledip

Diamond Member
Apr 23, 2005
4,480
1
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Reading the statement in context does not help her at all. Apparently she has said some other distasteful things. It is a matter of time before these comments also come to light.
 

mattpegher

Platinum Member
Jun 18, 2006
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I think to rephrase my original concern and that of many of the posters. As a society we can no longer tolerate the racist comments of minorities. It is no better to call a white person a kracker than to call an african american by the dreaded N word. It has become fashionable for minorities to make blatantly racist remarks about not only whites but about other minorities. And this cultural change has seeped into the subconcious of many minorities just as many whites may not see racist perceptions that they harbor.

As an aside, as a heterosexual male, I have many anti-gay teachings through my life, and it is only as I age that I notice them. I still will find myself having a laugh at a gay joke or reference. Something that I see as prejudical and wrong, so I try to catch myself before I allow this type of behavior.
You see from birth, I have been taught that I was inherently racist and must avoid and atone for the suffering of the minorities at the hands of white america. I believe that most minorities have been taught that it is acceptable for them to flip the table on whites and free for them to criticize other races not their own. As a society we need to recognize this form of racism as equally unacceptable.

Sotomayor, has lived a "rich life" but one that has taught her that she does not need to be equally sensitive to all races.
 

feralkid

Lifer
Jan 28, 2002
16,794
4,887
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Originally posted by: mattpegher
I think to rephrase my original concern and that of many of the posters. As a society we can no longer tolerate the racist comments of minorities. It is no better to call a white person a kracker than to call an african american by the dreaded N word. It has become fashionable for minorities to make blatantly racist remarks about not only whites but about other minorities. And this cultural change has seeped into the subconcious of many minorities just as many whites may not see racist perceptions that they harbor.

As an aside, as a heterosexual male, I have many anti-gay teachings through my life, and it is only as I age that I notice them. I still will find myself having a laugh at a gay joke or reference. Something that I see as prejudical and wrong, so I try to catch myself before I allow this type of behavior.
You see from birth, I have been taught that I was inherently racist and must avoid and atone for the suffering of the minorities at the hands of white america. I believe that most minorities have been taught that it is acceptable for them to flip the table on whites and free for them to criticize other races not their own. As a society we need to recognize this form of racism as equally unacceptable.

Sotomayor, has lived a "rich life" but one that has taught her that she does not need to be equally sensitive to all races.




That explains everything.



 

OrByte

Diamond Member
Jul 21, 2000
9,303
144
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Originally posted by: Fern
?I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn?t lived that life.?

That ^ statement shows, among other things, a complete lack of empathy for non-latina females, saying other groups can't make as good as decisions as she can is insulting, condencending and decidely not empathetic.

So much for her 'empathy'.

Fern

She is comparing her "richness of her experiences" to white men who haven't had "her life" and saying that she can reach better conclusions as a result.

It is funny how two people can read the same statement yet come to completely different conclusions. I see no lack of empathy in a statement that was not meant to be sympathetic to any race but her own.

The statement is decidedly self gratifying. The statement is also worded horribly. But I cannot draw the conclusion that she lacks empathy that you do...based on one statement. The statement was MEANT for her to talk up her own past and experiences and how that makes her a wiser person.

You aren't going to find much empathy for others in a statement such as that.


 

Fern

Elite Member
Sep 30, 2003
26,907
174
106
Originally posted by: OrByte
Originally posted by: Fern
?I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn?t lived that life.?

That ^ statement shows, among other things, a complete lack of empathy for non-latina females, saying other groups can't make as good as decisions as she can is insulting, condencending and decidely not empathetic.

So much for her 'empathy'.

Fern

She is comparing her "richness of her experiences" to white men who haven't had "her life" and saying that she can reach better conclusions as a result.

It is funny how two people can read the same statement yet come to completely different conclusions. I see no lack of empathy in a statement that was not meant to be sympathetic to any race but her own.

The statement is decidedly self gratifying. The statement is also worded horribly. But I cannot draw the conclusion that she lacks empathy that you do...based on one statement. The statement was MEANT for her to talk up her own past and experiences and how that makes her a wiser person.

You aren't going to find much empathy for others in a statement such as that.

That you "see no lack of empathy in a statement that was not meant to be sympathetic to any race but her own" says it all; too bad you don't understand your own words.

I agree and acknowlwdge it is a single statement, therefore we must examine her body of work (and other unguarded remarks) to see how deep this sentiment runs within her. However, it is widely thought that we reveal our truest self when among those those we feel most comfortable with - isn't that what we've been taught in the MSM, at least as far as Repubs/conservatives go?

Fern
 

Toasthead

Diamond Member
Aug 27, 2001
6,621
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Originally posted by: n yusef
Originally posted by: Atreus21
Originally posted by: eskimospy
Originally posted by: mattpegher
Don't get me wrong, I think that she will make a fine cheif justice and most of her statements suggest that she will make judgments based on law not politics. That said, I am getting a bit irritated at the openly racist statement coming out of some folks lately. She states that her experience as a latino female would lead to wiser choices than that of a white male. Flip those demographics and every one would be on you like flies on dung.

Why is it acceptable to assert that as a white male, I am privileged and culturally biased. I have had no special advantages. I went to public school in a mixed race suburb. I worked my way through school. Neither, I or any of my ancestors ever owned a slave.

Reverse racism is just as bad as racism.

Well first of all if you read her statement in context it is talking about the value of experience, not how whitey sucks.

Second of all, you most certainly have had special advantages for being white, you just haven't been aware of it. Study after study shows that there are explicit, institutional advantages for being white. They aren't your fault, but you should be aware of them.

Who cares about their experiences...what does the LAW SAY... thats ALL THAT SHOULD MATTER.

Disagree with first sentence. Assuming that all white males have had less experience is prejudicial.

White men do have less experience than other people in certain situations. For instance, how many men, white or otherwise, have experience being a thirteen year-old girl? The SCOTUS recently heard oral arguments on a case about a thirteen-year-old girl who was strip-searched by her school because she was accused of possessing ibuprofen. The male Justices thought nothing of this, and compared it to stripping in the locker room of a gym class.

In Justice Ginsburg's words, "They have never been a 13-year-old girl," Ginsburg said. "It's a very sensitive age for a girl. I didn't think that my colleagues, some of them, quite understood."

 

OrByte

Diamond Member
Jul 21, 2000
9,303
144
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Originally posted by: Fern


That you "see no lack of empathy in a statement that was not meant to be sympathetic to any race but her own" says it all; too bad you don't understand your own words.


Fern

I understand completely thanks.

And I did point out earlier that I believed the statement to be "self-gratifying"

What more can I get out of the statement? that she lacks empathy? no. It is a SINGLE statement. Jesus Christ used to go walking around proclaiming he is the "King of Kings." If I were to single out that one statement could I make an argument that he lacks empathy? Sure I could...but it would be a stupid argument because its one statement.

Based on this statement is she racist? no. That's just plain stupid.

Based on this statement does she thinks highly of herself? sure That she thinks highly of her heritage and culture? sure!

All we have are our interpretations. But I really cant see how anyone could conclude anything from that statement other than she thinks very highly of herself and her heritage. Or maybe the fact that she failed to put together a cogent point in this statement. Any other conclusions drawn are questionable because of a lack of sufficient evidence.

I agree and acknowlwdge it is a single statement, therefore we must examine her body of work (and other unguarded remarks) to see how deep this sentiment runs within her. However, it is widely thought that we reveal our truest self when among those those we feel most comfortable with - isn't that what we've been taught in the MSM, at least as far as Repubs/conservatives go?
I question whether or not that was an "unguarded remark" considering it was a written speech in front of a crowd of Latinos celebrating the Latino heritage. Rather, I think it was a statement lacking a cogent point, meant to be interpreted by audience under the theme of race and the racial makeup of the judicial system back in 2001 from her perspective.

If we can rely on generally accepted schools of thought to make our arguments then allow me to posit this;

Actions speak louder than words.
 

Vic

Elite Member
Jun 12, 2001
50,422
14,337
136
It's almost tragic to see how badly the Pubs pwned themselves on this issue. Like watching a blind kid trip and fall.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
74,048
6,600
126
Originally posted by: Vic
It's almost tragic to see how badly the Pubs pwned themselves on this issue. Like watching a blind kid trip and fall.

It looks to me like spoiled privileged brats having a temper tantrum.
 

OrByte

Diamond Member
Jul 21, 2000
9,303
144
106
Originally posted by: Phokus
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21...0/vp/30968650#31005313

(poor white people, they have to sit in the back of the bus and drink from different water fountains now!)

Republicans.txt

Jesuchristo!!!

Rush is saying that the Obama administration hates white people.

let me repeat that in Spanish:

Rush es decir que la Obama administracion odia los blancos (gringos)

I hope everyone just lets that sink in for a moment.....
 
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