• TheMurphy
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    -97 months ago

    Alright real question here. I’ve noticed after I came on reddit and Lemmy, something I believe I’ve only seen in American media.

    Why is it so important to mention people’s skin colour all the time? This affects 100.000 Americans, and then they mention most are black?!

    Why does that matter? I can’t figure out why on earth they want to divide people up in race like that, like they are a different people. A different kind of Americans.

    It’s not hard to figure out why Americans are so divided, if they get talked about like a different group of people based on skin colour.

    • Ian@Cambio
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      177 months ago

      Because being black isn’t just a skin color. It also includes a genetic predisposition to this disease.

    • @TheBananaKing@lemmy.world
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      67 months ago

      For one, it’s a genetic disorder that’s linked to ancestry.

      For another, there’s a huge social-justice issue around race in the US. Black people are hugely overrepresented in prisons, and there are vast, ingrained and systemic prejudices and barriers to equality everywhere you look.

      This is why ferinstance efforts to enforce photo-ID requirements for voting would significantly disenfranchise Black voters (which is the real reason conservatives keep trying to push for it), because a disproportionate percentage of Black people simply don’t have the means to obtain such ID - vastly more than the number of white people in a similar position.

      Take centuries of explicitly racist law and policy directly excluding and oppressing Black people. Wind back the explicit racism over the last handful of decades, but quietly replace it with exclusion and oppression based on the socieconomic disparity thus created. Now you can claim to have a colourblind legal/etc system, yet continue to preserve and promote disadvantage that ends up depending on race.

      And because social mobility is an absolute joke over there (as it is in most places, tbh), then the opportunities and resources available to you will depend heavily and primarily on the opportunities and resources available to your family and community for many generations back. There’s not just generational wealth to deal with, but generational influence and networking; you can’t be in with the Right People unless your parents were, and neither could they, rinse and repeat. And when the Right People instantly dismiss you on sight, or even just by seeing your name, then you’re fucked.

      So when someone says that a hundred thousand people in the US have a crippling and debilitating disease, and the great majority are Black - yeah, it means something. It means that a chunk of the population are getting a raw deal on top of the shit sandwich they’ve been handed just by being born, and that this is just one more thing that, for the most part, white people don’t have to care about. And because the fucked up healthcare system in the US is so profit-driven, that means there’s going to be vastly less done about it than if it were equally spread across demographics.

      • @jasory@programming.dev
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        -37 months ago

        “simply don’t have the means to obtain ID”

        It can be “disproportionate” and still miniscule. The reality is that the group supposedly being suppressed already has an extremely low turn out rate (non-ID holders aren’t necessarily strongly socially let alone politically active). There have been multiple studies that show that this has very little effect.

        “Voter Fraud” and “suppression” are an interesting case where both sides have been peddling unfounded conspiracies about each other.