• @SplashJackson@lemmy.ca
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    -37 hours ago

    Where is it harder to be hispanic or black? In Hispanola or Africa? Life isn’t equally oppressive across the entire world

    • 2ugly2live
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      54 hours ago

      Oh, me, me! I’m based in the US, but here are a few 🤗

      • It’s harder for us to get loans for businesses. Most financial services are either harder or more expensive (Ex: You live in the hood and want to start a business, the area you’re in is “coded” a certain way, and you get higher loan rates because they assume you to be more risky by default)
      • A lot of POC are behind in generational wealth/security because they were barred from communities and businesses that could have been passed down
      • We are paid less
      • Neighborhoods with high POC population usually get less funding
      • Less political power because of how the counties were purposely broken up, so our voices aren’t heard as loudly
      • Racial profiling
      • We are more likely to get arrested, and serve harsher sentences
      • Until recently (and still in some places), natural kinky hair had to be “fixed.”
      • Colorism
      • People with heavy accents (not limited to Hispanics of course) can have a harder time at jobs, especially if they’re phone base as people can be mad disrespectful
      • In our current political environment, Latin Americans are the target of a lot of vitriol, illegal or not
      • I can’t speak for Latin Americans, but when traveling, Black people have to worry about different things like: Are they racist? If so, how much? Will they let me in businesses? If I’m going for work, will they let me? If I’m not rich, will I still be treated well? We can’t just go back packing, because many countries will not be hospitable, either due to race, skin color, or both
      • Being spoken too in slang because they assume that’s how you talk
      • For hobbies, cosplay. POC are routinely dragged for not being the right color or what have you
      • For kids, they are seen as older and more dangerous than other non-POC their age and therefore are treated harsher
      • “Don’t send no Mexicans to my house” - Actual customer
      • Even if you get a job, you may be taken off a job because of your skin (there are plenty of stories of people who refuse POC doctors, nurses, etc. I personally was not able to teach a child when abroad because of my skin color, even though I was the only one with a degree).
      • Having your name, apperence, hair style mocked, until it’s been absorbed by white culture and becomes “cool.”
      • Having your accolades covered up or ignored (A modern example would be that Renegade dance. The creator was a black girl, but a white girl took off with it. They even had her teaching a dance she didn’t create)
      • If a show or movie has a POC in it, you have to brace yourself for cries of “wokeness,” even before the movie is out
      • Being assumed as a diversity hire, regardless of your cardentials
      • Something a bit more basic, but make up, hair products, etc. A lot of viral trends are shown on pale skin only, and some popular products don’t make darker colors at all, or very few shades. It wasn’t until I was in high school that I could find my regular hair products outside of a beauty supply shop.
      • POC women and girls are hyper sexualized and are often see as the cause for physical and sexual abuse instead of the victim
      • “You speak so well.”
      • “Are you the first person in your family to finish highschool/college?”
      • Being the only black kid on the class when they start the slavery lessons.
      • “Don’t you speak English!?”
      • For black women, we are routinely mocked not just outside our race, but inside. Many black men don’t fuck with black women because they drank the kool-aid
      • Having to regulate your feelings because you don’t want to be the “angry” black person
      • “Oh, I didn’t meant you. You’re one of the good ones.”

      Of course, these have different levels of severity, some of these are not just applicable to POC, but this was a sampler of you will. Hope that helps!

      • @SplashJackson@lemmy.ca
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        14 hours ago

        Thanks for the list! I’d be a dirty liar if I said none of the points applied to Canada, as I’ve experienced 3 of those personally. But not the entire list. Seems to me that the US is not a very good place to be non-Aryan. So why not move somewhere cooler?

        • Flying Squid
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          12 hours ago

          non-Aryan

          I’d say it’s not a good place to be Aryan at all.

          And maybe you shouldn’t misuse the same words the Nazis intentionally misused in the future.

          • @SplashJackson@lemmy.ca
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            120 minutes ago

            I’d say the term has since been appropriated, the same way that all facial tissues are mostly referred to as kleenex. If the proper Aryans wanted exclusive right to the name, they should have made more use of it

            • Flying Squid
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              115 minutes ago

              Yeah, stupid ethnic group just allowing a genocidal European nation on another continent co-opt their identity like that!

              Just like those other people from India just allowing Europeans to call the people indigenous to the Americas by that name too.

              Clearly if they were superior, like white people true Aryans, they would have protected the name by international trademark.

              • @SplashJackson@lemmy.ca
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                10 minutes ago

                Finally, someone gets it. If trademarking intellectual property was wrong, Disney wouldn’t have pioneered the field!

        • 2ugly2live
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          12 hours ago

          Can’t afford it myself, and I don’t know any country lacking insurance adjusters 😅