christiefan915
Catalyst
He said white people don't know what it's like to be poor and then he said he grew up poor. Rather contradictory.
There must have been some nuance in his comments that we're unaware of because it is contradictory.
He said white people don't know what it's like to be poor and then he said he grew up poor. Rather contradictory.
There must have been some nuance in his comments that we're unaware of because it is contradictory.
This is an example of what I would call "politically correct." Not the Trump version, which is mocking a disabled guy or suggesting that a woman is menstruating.
I heard the context of his remarks after I read the quote, and I got what he was trying to say. It wasn't as clear cut as the isolated quote at face value.
There were a number of black people upset at his comment so while he might have tried to be 'politically correct' he came off insulting them.
This is an example of what I would call "politically correct." Not the Trump version, which is mocking a disabled guy or suggesting that a woman is menstruating.
I heard the context of his remarks after I read the quote, and I got what he was trying to say. It wasn't as clear cut as the isolated quote at face value.
There were a number of black people upset at his comment so while he might have tried to be 'politically correct' he came off insulting them.
That doesn't surprise me. It's who we are now.
What he said shouldn't have been offensive. It was clumsy, but it shouldn't have been offensive.
I grew up in Oakland, CA and I had a number of black friends/classmates that were middle to upper middle class. They did not grow up in the ghetto. I can see why black people wouldn't like it.
My take on it was that he was talking specifically about the inner city experience - not just dealing w/ poverty, but with things like "stop & frisk" and all that.
"It's a black thing - you wouldn't understand." That used to be a slogan of sorts. That's essentially what he was getting it, but again, it came out pretty clumsy. He knows there are poor white people.
I grew up in Oakland, CA and I had a number of black friends/classmates that were middle to upper middle class. They did not grow up in the ghetto. I can see why black people wouldn't like it.
Honestly, I don't think there is anything about what he said - even at its most basic/face value interpretation - that was saying there are no middle or upper class blacks.
This is really the kind of stuff I just think is too much. There is real racism out there. This ain't it.
From a political perspective he's often viewed as this old white dude coming from an all white state that isn't in touch with blacks and minorities. That can be debated of course but comments like this don't help him overcome that image and his percentage of the black vote is quite small.
Well, I'd agree with that. He really dates himself with "ghetto" (which shouldn't offend people, but it's a really old-school term for sure).
Totally off topic, but I watched that thing on the Nixon/Kennedy race last night on CNN. It was fascinating in that Nixon was good friends with MLK, and Republicans used to really get most of the black vote. Most of the KKK guys at that time were Democrats. Kennedy really changed all that.
Times have really changed.
From a political perspective he's often viewed as this old white dude coming from an all white state that isn't in touch with blacks and minorities. That can be debated of course but comments like this don't help him overcome that image and his percentage of the black vote is quite small.
That doesn't surprise me. It's who we are now.
What he said shouldn't have been offensive. It was clumsy, but it shouldn't have been offensive.