Posted on Feb 22, 2016
Maj John Bell
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Within the context of achieving the American Dream: Do minorities that are middle-class or affluent feel that they face the same level of discrimination as minorities that are from low-income communities? Is their military experience different than the civilian world?
Posted in these groups: Racism logo RacismNo discrimination sign Discrimination
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Responses: 8
LTC Paul Labrador
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Edited 8 y ago
What I have found is that it's not so much how you look as how you act. Act like an upstanding citizen you generally get treated as one. Act like a gangbanger punk, again, you get treated as one. Now that is not a perfect explanation, and yes, racism still exists, but how you present yourself goes a long way into how people react to you.

As far as race relations go, we are way better than we were in the past. However, it's not perfect and we still have a ways to go. However, I think people use the convenient excuse of racism to cover their personal agendas. And it's nowhere near as bad as the media likes to make it out to be. Remember, the media's job is to sell a story and create viewership. You can't do that when you tell folks, "things are generally OK....."
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SFC Marcus Belt
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Of course not! I'm a middle-class, middle-aged African American, but when I call the cops, they know that I'm a "taxpayer" and call me "sir".

When I was a teenager in public housing, the cops never called me "sir."
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CW3 Stephen Mills
CW3 Stephen Mills
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As a cop, I rarely call a teenager sir regardless of gender, rarely meaning never. Not saying I don't treat them with respect, but sir is reserved for adults.

I agree though, actual racism isn't getting worse. the bar of what we call racism is being lowered. People also have lost the idea that Bigot, racist, prejudice, etc. all have different meanings. IF something offends us we call it racist regardless of if it is or not.
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SFC Marcus Belt
SFC Marcus Belt
8 y
CW3 Stephen Mills - Yeah, they weren't calling me anything respectful either.

My point is that my socioeconomic status has improved my personal race relations.
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SFC Michael Hasbun
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Edited 8 y ago
When it comes to "Race", I think we tend to ignore the underlying problem and focus on it's effects. Homo Sapiens (Humans) are a predatory, territorial species of animal with an atavistic instinct toward tribalism. Now how each human defines its tribe can differ. For some it's race, for some, family, for others it's religion, for some, political party, it can go on and on ad infinitum. Now, so long as we keep classifying ourselves by race, we subconsciously create "other". The only way we are ever going to get past this is to acknowledge that our species is only one race, human. All the rest is genetic irrelevance. Skin color, hair color, none of it make us different races. One race, with aesthetic variance. Nothing more.

I'm starting to suspect we need an external threat to the species to get us to band together...
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