The smiling racism of Fox News

Fascinating. Watters says the quiet part out loud and our resident maga/alt-right flunkies bray call the old racist excuses without addressing what that clown actually said.

Watters is rich, you idiots! He feeds your willful ignorance and bigotry to mske you feel better while his superiors and leadership wipe their feet on you. Pathetic.
 
I agree with you, but we're overlooking an important factor in the dynamic.
Given the prospects for future generations, thoughtful Euro-Americans are, not because I am one, the most socially responsible in their procreation.

I'll get grief for this, but I very honestly believe it, and I absolutely deny that it's a racist sentiment. It's an accurate and confirmable observation.
Responsible Euro-Americans actually take into consideration the likely quality of life for possible progeny. Certainly not all, but a higher percentage of black and brown people do not, and that's reflected in the birth rates. It's probably not a genetic racial predisposition but more likely a cultural one..
I love it when bigots and racists try to "intellectualize their disgusting ideology.

Let me just pull the rug out from under your pile of nonsense: check out the percentages of welfare/social services for SINGLE WHITE UNWED MOTHERS. Then you might want to check the FBI stats on who is committing the most rape and incest crimes.

Watters idiocy doesn't track with the history of racist rhetoric. On one hand black folk are careless, immoral folk having kid in and out of wedlock with abandon. NOW YOUR boy says black folk have to increase their population to make sn impact in yhr voting demographic.

A racist clown contradiction of which those trying to justify or excuse miss.
 
I won't even give him that, Dutch. Back in the day I was an executive secty for a partner in an investment firm in NYC. I know greed, but the smart folk knew how to keep personal prejudices under raps to a degree, if they had them at all. Watters and his ilk have found the perfect medium and political climate to let it all hang out with little fear of repercussions and great monetary gain.

Let's get real. Ever since that NY Times article came out almost 30 years ago saying that by 2040 whites will be a minority in America, a lot of folk just ain't been right! And like you said, people are capitalizing on that ... in the most disgusting manner, I may add.
This is a little off topic but your comment about America becoming less white made me think of it.

Lowell High School is the top public school in San Francisco and is merit based (you have to test in). For a lot of lower income San Franciscans who can't afford private school, Lowell is their dream school.

The school is only around 20% white and a majority Asian. But black students claim they experience racism and an anti-black environment.

This article was in the SF Chronicle this week (for some reason they don't count mixed race kids as black).

So even though we're in one of the most progressive cities in the country with a very large non-white student body, this is being reported.


Lowell High has spent years recruiting Black students. Just 7 plan to enroll as freshmen this fall​


Efforts to enroll more Black students at San Francisco’s premier public high school have yet to pay off, with no more than seven African American students joining the nearly 700 freshmen expected in the fall.

Lowell High School has faced criticism for its lack of diversity for decades, with its academically competitive admissions process leading to a disproportionately Asian American and white enrollment. Students have long complained of racially charged incidents as well as a lack of Black teachers.

How to address the issue and whether to change the admissions process from a merit system to a traditional lottery is perhaps one of the school district’s most contentious debates.

For years district officials have offered application help, peer support and incentives to encourage more Black, as well as brown, students to consider attending Lowell, which generally requires top grades in middle school and high standardized test scores.

That includes guaranteed admission to Lowell for students who attend Willie Brown Jr. Middle School, as long as they meet the minimum academic admission requirements, a “golden ticket” in place since 2014. The Bayview neighborhood school has historically enrolled a disproportionate number of the district’s Black and brown students.

This year, 52 Black students applied to Lowell and 13 got in. Four of the 13 were assigned to another district high school they ranked higher for the fall enrollment process, and seven have said they plan to go to Lowell.

Overall, 2.1% of Lowell’s 2,589 students this year identify as Black compared with 7% district-wide while 46.1% of the school’s students are Asian American (26.5% district-wide), 15.3% are white (12.1% district-wide) and 15.3% are Hispanic or Latino (35.3% district-wide).
Another 10.4% identify as two or more races, which include some who identify as African American and other races or ethnicities, district officials said.

Increasing that number isn’t an easy lift. It requires deciphering the needs of individual students, said Bobby Pope, partnerships manager of the district’s African American Achievement and Leadership Initiative.

“The numbers are one thing,” he said, “but the story that goes with the numbers is really how you get a clear picture of what was happening.”
Mentors or tutors are provided for middle school students who have faced significant challenges — poverty, homelessness, trauma, foster care, family issues, immigrant backstories — which has affected learning.

But it’s also about challenging the preconceived ideas Black students have about Lowell and themselves. Many are choosing not to go because they’ve heard about the lack of diversity, the racial issues or the stereotypes they could face at an academically rigorous school.
Senior Ivana Carroll, who is in a leadership role with Lowell’s Black Student Union, wanted to go to Lowell, mostly because it was her parents’ dream school.

“For me, personally, I didn’t go through heavy racism here,” she said, adding that some students would make racially tinged jokes or say inappropriate things. “But I don’t really take it to heart … if somebody’s choosing to just be ignorant, then I’m not going to stress on that.”

That’s part of the answer in getting more Black students to Lowell, Pope said.

“The goal is to … give them a strong sense of self and identity of who they are,” he said.

But it’s also critical to refine the culture and environment, “to make it safer, improve the equity, reduce the racism that is all in the world that we are.”

The school has pushed Lowell student and alumni tutors into middle schools while also sending out Black and Latino/Hispanic students to school sites to do presentations about their experiences, said Lowell High Principal Jan Bautista.

She noted that 66% of the nearly 100 Black and mixed-race Black students at the school are on the honor roll.

“It’s flipping that narrative of African American students’ failure rates and all that,” she said. “Let’s look at the successes and what’s going well and what is working well. Because that’s where you find the power, is building on those successes and those strengths of students.”

The idea is to defeat the message “that students aren’t welcome here and it’s too hard,” she said.
Yet that thinking doesn’t just plague potential students.

Kayden Buckett said he stood out amid the nearly 700 freshmen when he started at Lowell in the fall — a tall teen and one of 17 Black students in his class.

“It was weird, coming from a mostly black and Hispanic (middle) school,” he said. “It was a hard transition, like walking in class, you don’t see people like me in the hall. I just automatically think these people don’t like me, they don’t see someone like me here.”

His grades plummeted. He wanted to transfer. His counselors encouraged him to stay. For now.

Freshman Legacy Bean, who attended the diverse Willie Brown Jr. Middle School, chose Lowell for the opportunities it would give him. But when he arrived in the fall, he found it presented more of a culture shock than he expected — few Black peers and other classmates nonchalantly using the racial epithet “N—.”

“Many people would think it’s a joke when they don’t really know the true history behind it,” he said, “even when I would explain it to them.”
He too has thought about leaving. Based on the community environment, he would probably recommend someone like him to choose another school.

“But opportunity wise, I’d say to come here for sure,” Legacy said.

In the past decade, the Black freshmen class at Lowell has ranged from 1% to a high of 2.5% this year — with the exception of the two years the school switched to a lottery admissions during the pandemic.

Given the lack of test scores and widespread impact on grading, the admission process for the fall of 2022 and 2023 was not based on merit, but rather the same mostly random process used at the other large high schools in the district.

During those years, nearly 4% of Lowell’s ninth graders were Black. While the school board at the time considered making the change permanent, given the increase in diversity, the ensuing uproar resulted in the recall of three board members and the return to merit admissions.
This month, the second lottery class will graduate, returning the school to a fully merit-based study body this fall.

It’s possible the 2026-27 freshmen class will have the smallest proportion of Black students in recent memory, although district officials note there were also 34 mixed-race applicants for the upcoming fall semester who identified as Black Hispanic or two or more races with Black as one, officials said. Of those students, 16 plan to attend Lowell in the fall.

It’s unclear whether Kayden will be there to welcome them.

With his freshman year winding down, he said how he feels about being at Lowell is “kind of” better, “but it’s kind of still the same.”
The same nagging thought continues to plague him.

“I feel like I don’t belong here,” he said.

Still, he “might not” transfer at the end of the year because at Lowell there’s “good learning, a good education,” he said.
Kayden wants the word to get out that there are Black students at Lowell.

“We want them to join us,” he said. “They get a better education, we get more Black students, right?”


 
I love it when bigots and racists try to "intellectualize their disgusting ideology.

Let me just pull the rug out from under your pile of nonsense: check out the percentages of welfare/social services for SINGLE WHITE UNWED MOTHERS. Then you might want to check the FBI stats on who is committing the most rape and incest crimes.

Watters idiocy doesn't track with the history of racist rhetoric. On one hand black folk are careless, immoral folk having kid in and out of wedlock with abandon. NOW YOUR boy says black folk have to increase their population to make sn impact in yhr voting demographic.

A racist clown contradiction of which those trying to justify or excuse miss.
I will not be called a racist for observing the obvious fact that Euro-Americans are generally more responsible about procreation, this despite fully acknowledging facts regarding the unfortunate white trash element within our number. Black or not, you remind me of Dutch Uncle: begin with what you want to believe and then cherry pick facts to support it.

I can't disrespect hypersensitive blacks like yourself because I've never walked a mile in their shoes--obviously. We must simply acknowledge that we don't think alike and that further discussion between us would not likely be productive.
 
Fox has its chosen demographic -- disgruntled, grievance-filled, bitter white people, mostly 50 and above.
Oh,.....so then EXACTLY like you. Disgruntled? Yep....grievance filled? yep that's you. Bitter? You betcha, White? Yep. Above 50? Yep....you are WAYYYY above 50. Way above 60 actually.
 
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