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    Default Trump has made America less racist

    Fascinating article. Worth reading with an open mind. I am going to post it in it's entirety. https://spectator.us/racist-incidents-down-trump/

    Trump has made America less racist
    Anti-black and anti-Hispanic prejudice has declined since 2016, new study shows

    Ross Clark

    The election of Donald Trump has, of course, unleashed the latent racist which lurks within millions of Americans. We know this because enlightened opinion keeps telling us so. The New Yorker, for example, ran a piece in November 2016 declaring ‘Hate on rise since Trump’s election’, and quoting a list of incidents collected by the Southern Poverty Law Center – including the experience of a girl in Colorado who was allegedly told by a white man: ‘Now that Trump is president I am going to shoot you and all the blacks I can find’. TIME magazine, too, ran a story in the same month announcing ‘Racist incidents are up since Donald Trump’s election’. In March 2017 the Nation asserted ‘Donald Trump’s rise has coincided with an explosion in hate groups’, claiming that 100 racist organizations had been founded since Trump began his presidential campaign.

    And so it goes on. Just as with Britain’s vote for Brexit, Trump’s strident language and his concentration on issues such as migration is supposed to have coarsened political discourse – legitimizing racist and xenophobic opinions in people who might otherwise have been shamed into silence. By this narrative, even slightly immoderate speeches, posters and campaigns by politicians become magnified through the lens of public opinion into something much more sinister. A speech on migration, goes the theory, can all too easily erupt into bar room arguments and end with a Muslim or a black man having his head kicked in.

    It sounds vaguely plausible, but is it true? Not if a new paper by a pair of sociologists at the University of Pennsylvania is anything to go by. Daniel J. Hopkins and Samantha Washington set out to measure the effect of Trump’s election on anti-black and anti-Hispanic prejudice, using a randomly-selected panel of 2,500 Americans whose changing opinions have been under study since 2008. The academics report that they had been expecting to measure a rise in racist opinions, writing: ‘The normalization of prejudice or opinion leadership both lead us to expect that expressed prejudice may have increased in this period, especially among Republicans or Trump supporters’. They had been led to expect this, they say, through an extensive reading of recent literature in social sciences which, they say, supports the notion that racist attitudes lie dormant inside many people, waiting to be triggered by certain events – of which the election of Donald Trump might be one. There could, after all, hardly be anything more calculated to awaken an incipient racist than the president calling Mexicans a bunch of rapists.

    Yet the study found exactly the opposite. Americans, claim Hopkins and Washington, have actually become less inclined to express racist opinions since Donald Trump was elected. Anti-black prejudice, they found, declined by a statistically-insignificant degree between 2012 and 2016, when Trump was elected. But then after 2016 it took a sharp dive that was statistically significant. Moreover, contrary to their expectations, the fall was as evident among Republican voters as it was among Democrats. There was also a general fall in anti-Hispanic prejudice, too, although this was more evident among Democrat voters.

    It is a similar story to that in Britain, where the attempt to link Brexit with rising xenophobia has been somewhat debunked. A murder of a Polish man in the town of Harlow in August 2016 was widely attributed to Brexit – but eventually declared by police not to have been a hate crime at all. Similarly, a smashed window in a Spanish restaurant in South London on the night of the Brexit vote was initially widely reported to be an expression of euphoria on the part of xenophobes – but was later revealed to be an attempted burglary.

    So has Trump actually been a good thing for race relations in the US, and if so, why? The University of Pennsylvania study is a little shy on this point, but raises the theory that people have found Trump’s pronouncements on migrants, Mexicans and so on to be so reprehensible that it has inspired them to think about their own attitudes. It is possible, they write ‘that Trump’s rhetoric clarified anti-racist norms….given that the declines in prejudice appear concentrated in the period after Trump’s election, it seems quite plausible that it was not simply Trump’s rhetoric but also his accession to the presidency that pushed public opinion in the opposite direction’.

    Well, maybe. It might be added that the election of Barack Obama also caught liberal opinion unawares. That event, it might be recalled, was supposed to be the breakthrough which led to a kinder, gentler America. Instead it seemed to be followed by a more fractious period in race relations, culminating in race riots in Ferguson, Mo., in 2014. Maybe social science has got it the wrong way round: it was the sight of a mixed race man in the White House who brought out in the inner racist in Americans who are inclined towards those feelings, while the reassuring sight of white man back in the Oval Office has calmed them down.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Sailor View Post
    Fascinating article. Worth reading with an open mind. I am going to post it in it's entirety. https://spectator.us/racist-incidents-down-trump/

    Trump has made America less racist
    Anti-black and anti-Hispanic prejudice has declined since 2016, new study shows

    Ross Clark

    The election of Donald Trump has, of course, unleashed the latent racist which lurks within millions of Americans. We know this because enlightened opinion keeps telling us so. The New Yorker, for example, ran a piece in November 2016 declaring ‘Hate on rise since Trump’s election’, and quoting a list of incidents collected by the Southern Poverty Law Center – including the experience of a girl in Colorado who was allegedly told by a white man: ‘Now that Trump is president I am going to shoot you and all the blacks I can find’. TIME magazine, too, ran a story in the same month announcing ‘Racist incidents are up since Donald Trump’s election’. In March 2017 the Nation asserted ‘Donald Trump’s rise has coincided with an explosion in hate groups’, claiming that 100 racist organizations had been founded since Trump began his presidential campaign.

    And so it goes on. Just as with Britain’s vote for Brexit, Trump’s strident language and his concentration on issues such as migration is supposed to have coarsened political discourse – legitimizing racist and xenophobic opinions in people who might otherwise have been shamed into silence. By this narrative, even slightly immoderate speeches, posters and campaigns by politicians become magnified through the lens of public opinion into something much more sinister. A speech on migration, goes the theory, can all too easily erupt into bar room arguments and end with a Muslim or a black man having his head kicked in.

    It sounds vaguely plausible, but is it true? Not if a new paper by a pair of sociologists at the University of Pennsylvania is anything to go by. Daniel J. Hopkins and Samantha Washington set out to measure the effect of Trump’s election on anti-black and anti-Hispanic prejudice, using a randomly-selected panel of 2,500 Americans whose changing opinions have been under study since 2008. The academics report that they had been expecting to measure a rise in racist opinions, writing: ‘The normalization of prejudice or opinion leadership both lead us to expect that expressed prejudice may have increased in this period, especially among Republicans or Trump supporters’. They had been led to expect this, they say, through an extensive reading of recent literature in social sciences which, they say, supports the notion that racist attitudes lie dormant inside many people, waiting to be triggered by certain events – of which the election of Donald Trump might be one. There could, after all, hardly be anything more calculated to awaken an incipient racist than the president calling Mexicans a bunch of rapists.

    Yet the study found exactly the opposite. Americans, claim Hopkins and Washington, have actually become less inclined to express racist opinions since Donald Trump was elected. Anti-black prejudice, they found, declined by a statistically-insignificant degree between 2012 and 2016, when Trump was elected. But then after 2016 it took a sharp dive that was statistically significant. Moreover, contrary to their expectations, the fall was as evident among Republican voters as it was among Democrats. There was also a general fall in anti-Hispanic prejudice, too, although this was more evident among Democrat voters.

    It is a similar story to that in Britain, where the attempt to link Brexit with rising xenophobia has been somewhat debunked. A murder of a Polish man in the town of Harlow in August 2016 was widely attributed to Brexit – but eventually declared by police not to have been a hate crime at all. Similarly, a smashed window in a Spanish restaurant in South London on the night of the Brexit vote was initially widely reported to be an expression of euphoria on the part of xenophobes – but was later revealed to be an attempted burglary.

    So has Trump actually been a good thing for race relations in the US, and if so, why? The University of Pennsylvania study is a little shy on this point, but raises the theory that people have found Trump’s pronouncements on migrants, Mexicans and so on to be so reprehensible that it has inspired them to think about their own attitudes. It is possible, they write ‘that Trump’s rhetoric clarified anti-racist norms….given that the declines in prejudice appear concentrated in the period after Trump’s election, it seems quite plausible that it was not simply Trump’s rhetoric but also his accession to the presidency that pushed public opinion in the opposite direction’.

    Well, maybe. It might be added that the election of Barack Obama also caught liberal opinion unawares. That event, it might be recalled, was supposed to be the breakthrough which led to a kinder, gentler America. Instead it seemed to be followed by a more fractious period in race relations, culminating in race riots in Ferguson, Mo., in 2014. Maybe social science has got it the wrong way round: it was the sight of a mixed race man in the White House who brought out in the inner racist in Americans who are inclined towards those feelings, while the reassuring sight of white man back in the Oval Office has calmed them down.
    Obama’s mixed race had nothing to do with anything.

    Some of Obama’s *responses* to race issues were another matter. But the Dirty Little Secret is the ‘enemy of the people’ faction of the media was responsible for a lot of the unrest under Obama. How many times and how often did they repeat the ‘hands up don’t shoot’ lie? Who gave Black Lives Matter the megaphone? The media.

    And on and on. I don’t know why it changed under Trump—but I’m glad it did.
    Coup has started. First of many steps. Impeachment will follow ultimately~WB attorney Mark Zaid, January 2017

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    Quote Originally Posted by Sailor View Post
    Fascinating article. Worth reading with an open mind. I am going to post it in it's entirety. https://spectator.us/racist-incidents-down-trump/

    Trump has made America less racist
    Anti-black and anti-Hispanic prejudice has declined since 2016, new study shows

    Ross Clark

    The election of Donald Trump has, of course, unleashed the latent racist which lurks within millions of Americans. We know this because enlightened opinion keeps telling us so. The New Yorker, for example, ran a piece in November 2016 declaring ‘Hate on rise since Trump’s election’, and quoting a list of incidents collected by the Southern Poverty Law Center – including the experience of a girl in Colorado who was allegedly told by a white man: ‘Now that Trump is president I am going to shoot you and all the blacks I can find’. TIME magazine, too, ran a story in the same month announcing ‘Racist incidents are up since Donald Trump’s election’. In March 2017 the Nation asserted ‘Donald Trump’s rise has coincided with an explosion in hate groups’, claiming that 100 racist organizations had been founded since Trump began his presidential campaign.

    And so it goes on. Just as with Britain’s vote for Brexit, Trump’s strident language and his concentration on issues such as migration is supposed to have coarsened political discourse – legitimizing racist and xenophobic opinions in people who might otherwise have been shamed into silence. By this narrative, even slightly immoderate speeches, posters and campaigns by politicians become magnified through the lens of public opinion into something much more sinister. A speech on migration, goes the theory, can all too easily erupt into bar room arguments and end with a Muslim or a black man having his head kicked in.

    It sounds vaguely plausible, but is it true? Not if a new paper by a pair of sociologists at the University of Pennsylvania is anything to go by. Daniel J. Hopkins and Samantha Washington set out to measure the effect of Trump’s election on anti-black and anti-Hispanic prejudice, using a randomly-selected panel of 2,500 Americans whose changing opinions have been under study since 2008. The academics report that they had been expecting to measure a rise in racist opinions, writing: ‘The normalization of prejudice or opinion leadership both lead us to expect that expressed prejudice may have increased in this period, especially among Republicans or Trump supporters’. They had been led to expect this, they say, through an extensive reading of recent literature in social sciences which, they say, supports the notion that racist attitudes lie dormant inside many people, waiting to be triggered by certain events – of which the election of Donald Trump might be one. There could, after all, hardly be anything more calculated to awaken an incipient racist than the president calling Mexicans a bunch of rapists.

    Yet the study found exactly the opposite. Americans, claim Hopkins and Washington, have actually become less inclined to express racist opinions since Donald Trump was elected. Anti-black prejudice, they found, declined by a statistically-insignificant degree between 2012 and 2016, when Trump was elected. But then after 2016 it took a sharp dive that was statistically significant. Moreover, contrary to their expectations, the fall was as evident among Republican voters as it was among Democrats. There was also a general fall in anti-Hispanic prejudice, too, although this was more evident among Democrat voters.

    It is a similar story to that in Britain, where the attempt to link Brexit with rising xenophobia has been somewhat debunked. A murder of a Polish man in the town of Harlow in August 2016 was widely attributed to Brexit – but eventually declared by police not to have been a hate crime at all. Similarly, a smashed window in a Spanish restaurant in South London on the night of the Brexit vote was initially widely reported to be an expression of euphoria on the part of xenophobes – but was later revealed to be an attempted burglary.

    So has Trump actually been a good thing for race relations in the US, and if so, why? The University of Pennsylvania study is a little shy on this point, but raises the theory that people have found Trump’s pronouncements on migrants, Mexicans and so on to be so reprehensible that it has inspired them to think about their own attitudes. It is possible, they write ‘that Trump’s rhetoric clarified anti-racist norms….given that the declines in prejudice appear concentrated in the period after Trump’s election, it seems quite plausible that it was not simply Trump’s rhetoric but also his accession to the presidency that pushed public opinion in the opposite direction’.

    Well, maybe. It might be added that the election of Barack Obama also caught liberal opinion unawares. That event, it might be recalled, was supposed to be the breakthrough which led to a kinder, gentler America. Instead it seemed to be followed by a more fractious period in race relations, culminating in race riots in Ferguson, Mo., in 2014. Maybe social science has got it the wrong way round: it was the sight of a mixed race man in the White House who brought out in the inner racist in Americans who are inclined towards those feelings, while the reassuring sight of white man back in the Oval Office has calmed them down.
    Fake News from a web site with a strong right-wing bias.

    Race relations have gotten worse, but that's not Trump's fault.

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    Quote Originally Posted by StoneByStone View Post
    Fake News from a web site with a strong right-wing bias.

    Race relations have gotten worse, but that's not Trump's fault.
    Have I missed a race riot while I was away lol?
    Coup has started. First of many steps. Impeachment will follow ultimately~WB attorney Mark Zaid, January 2017

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    Quote Originally Posted by Darth Beto Omar View Post
    Have I missed a race riot while I was away lol?
    Not yet, but race-based attacks have gone up.

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    Oh no you have to give whites what they want or they'll hate everyone else! Please appease fragile whites!
    "Do not think that I came to bring peace... I did not come to bring peace, but a sword." - Matthew 10:34

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    Quote Originally Posted by StoneOx View Post
    Fake News from a web site with a strong right-wing bias. Race relations have gotten worse, but that's not Trump's fault.
    .

    Quote Originally Posted by StoneOx View Post
    I know trolls don't like hearing this, but if you make the claim, it's up to you to prove it.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Darth Beto Omar View Post
    Obama’s mixed race had nothing to do with anything.

    Some of Obama’s *responses* to race issues were another matter. But the Dirty Little Secret is the ‘enemy of the people’ faction of the media was responsible for a lot of the unrest under Obama. How many times and how often did they repeat the ‘hands up don’t shoot’ lie? Who gave Black Lives Matter the megaphone? The media.

    And on and on. I don’t know why it changed under Trump—but I’m glad it did.
    Dead cops make me smile

    Death to America and its black genocide
    "Do not think that I came to bring peace... I did not come to bring peace, but a sword." - Matthew 10:34

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    Quote Originally Posted by StoneOx View Post
    Not yet, but race-based attacks have gone up.
    Is that so?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Darth Beto Omar View Post
    Obama’s mixed race had nothing to do with anything.

    Some of Obama’s *responses* to race issues were another matter. But the Dirty Little Secret is the ‘enemy of the people’ faction of the media was responsible for a lot of the unrest under Obama. How many times and how often did they repeat the ‘hands up don’t shoot’ lie? Who gave Black Lives Matter the megaphone? The media.

    And on and on. I don’t know why it changed under Trump—but I’m glad it did.
    I noticed a lot of times that it wasn't so much Obama's responses, but rather his lack of them. There was always an uneasy silence after a racially charged
    event, protest or march. He never seemed to take charge with any quick responses and/or any calls for peace or calm or a message of a simple "knock it off".
    He was able to say that to Putin, but couldn't manage to say it here especially when BLM was rampaging. Just an observation.
    Abortion rights dogma can obscure human reason & harden the human heart so much that the same person who feels
    empathy for animal suffering can lack compassion for unborn children who experience lethal violence and excruciating
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    Unborn animals are protected in their nesting places, humans are not. To abort something is to end something
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bernie or Lose View Post
    Oh no you have to give whites what they want or they'll hate everyone else! Please appease fragile whites!
    Like the ones who have to have their fathers give them an allowance, until they're in the 30's, pay their way through College, are afraid of the dark, and have a severe case of Adult Stupidity??
    SEDITION: incitement of resistance to or insurrection against lawful authority.


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    Quote Originally Posted by Stretch View Post
    I noticed a lot of times that it wasn't so much Obama's responses, but rather his lack of them. There was always an uneasy silence after a racially charged
    event, protest or march. He never seemed to take charge with any quick responses and/or any calls for peace or calm or a message of a simple "knock it off".
    He was able to say that to Putin, but couldn't manage to say it here especially when BLM was rampaging. Just an observation.
    I agree that Obama’s leadership on race was ineffectual and/or he tended to come down on the ‘predictable’ side of the equation. That started with the black professor who had the misunderstanding with the cop. Aka Beer Gate.

    Obama jumped right in and tried to make a teaching moment out of it or whatever and ended up all but maligning the cop as a racist. For days and days the whole country was talking about an issue that should have been back-page even in the local papers. Turned out there was nothing to it and the professor and the cop ended up chuckling about it over some beers at the WH lol.

    Unfortunately, it set the tone for race issues under Obama. Or should I say ‘issues that had race read into them’? That’s probably more accurate.

    Ironically, race is less of an issue under the supposedly racist Trump. The country is better off for it.
    Coup has started. First of many steps. Impeachment will follow ultimately~WB attorney Mark Zaid, January 2017

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    Quote Originally Posted by Stretch View Post
    I noticed a lot of times that it wasn't so much Obama's responses, but rather his lack of them. There was always an uneasy silence after a racially charged
    event, protest or march. He never seemed to take charge with any quick responses and/or any calls for peace or calm or a message of a simple "knock it off".
    He was able to say that to Putin, but couldn't manage to say it here especially when BLM was rampaging. Just an observation.
    maybe because BLM was his base????

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    A speech on migration, goes the theory, can all too easily erupt into bar room arguments and end with a Muslim or a black man having his head kicked in.

    It sounds vaguely plausible....
    you can be damn sure that's how it's spun by the propaganda media

    We know this because enlightened opinion keeps telling us so.
    repeat a lie over and over, and it becomes truthiness

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    Quote Originally Posted by StoneByStone View Post
    Fake News from a web site with a strong right-wing bias.

    Race relations have gotten worse, but that's not Trump's fault.
    The Spectator UK is a great magazine only shallow fools like you think otherwise. Ross Clark is also a great writer but it goes without saying that you've never heard of him!

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