Giving Students the Tools to Fight Hate

Original (Archive)

Between 2010 and 2019, children were victims of hate crimes more often than the general population. But on top of this, racism doesn’t need to take the form of hate crimes to cause serious negative impacts. The American Academy of Pediatrics has identified racism as a social determinant of health that has negative outcomes on the health and well-being of children. To reverse those outcomes, children must be given tools to develop a positive self-identity and build survival skills in an increasingly hostile society.

Unfortunately, across the United States, more and more states are criminalizing education by instituting book bans and educational gag orders that would remove essential historical and cultural context from the curriculum. Not only must we reverse these bans, but—given the rising threats to children’s psychological and physical health—we have a collective responsibility to include scientifically-backed practices in our pedagogy that will instill resilience against fear and ignorance.

The Academy points to internalized racism as posing a “direct threat to the emotional health, racial self-identity, and self-esteem of Black children.” This is a clear and present danger, as 90 percent of Black children and adults report having experienced racist encounters. Even the secondhand impact of witnessing the chronic violence against Black people can have a traumatic impact. Unfortunately, none of these circumstances are new to Black families.

Parents of Black children find that they must equip their children with tools and mechanisms in preparation for bias through a process called racial socialization. Social scientists have long identified some key parenting tools Black families use to protect their children from the harmful psychological impacts of racist encounters.

The American Psychological Association describes racial socialization as “the way in which parents teach their youth how to navigate the often contradictory messages or teach them what it means to be Black.” Social psychologists have found that this process often entails a few core components: cultural socialization (which includes celebrating racial or ethnic heritage and cultural traditions) and the preparation for bias—both of which “anti-woke” legislatures seek to dismantle.

As young as five and six, Black children begin noticing and expecting white people to have better possessions and jobs. Without an understanding of the systemic racism they live in, Black children internalize racist messages to the detriment of their self-image and health. When children experience the illogical impact of racist harm, without racial socialization, they may think it’s a result of who they are, instead of the system they’re in, damaging their self-image.

As parents and caregivers, we may not feel comfortable with every concept the books in our children’s library hold. We may take offense with the language an author uses. The material may challenge our long-held beliefs. But discomfort is a poor reason to limit true and accurate information from our educational systems, especially when the American Medical Association has identified racism as a public health risk. To date, white discomfort has not been identified as such.

The United States’s long history of racism and discrimination still impacts our present differences in success. How do we explain the differences in racial educational achievement gaps, lifetime wealth accumulation, and mortality rates when we are forced to ignore systematic and historical barriers to education, jobs, and housing? In the absence of giving our children real explanations, there are a plethora of racist explanations to fill the vacuum.

When we don’t prepare Black children through racial socialization, they will come to rely on the racist explanations that are readily available in our society, internalizing the shame that lies in the foundations of this nation. Fighting back against book bans is a start. Still, as long as elected and school officials are making decisions based on white supremacist fears rather than historical facts, it’s up to everyone who cares about the health of our children to supplement their education by understanding the impact of racism and helping them practice skills to build resilience.
 
Black children internalize racist messages to the detriment of their self-image and health
If that's true then they're internalizing the pandering and low expectations and being treated like they're delicate, retarded and dangerous rather than treated as equals and held to the same standard as literally every other race and creed.
 
If that's true then they're internalizing the pandering and low expectations and being treated like they're delicate, retarded and dangerous rather than treated as equals and held to the same standard as literally every other race and creed.
This....

It's not the epic own the activists think it is to claim that black folks are so utterly fragile getting called a NAME just ONCE will destroy their entire life's potential.
 
There's a lot here to pick on, I choose to pick on this:

The American Psychological Association describes racial socialization as “the way in which parents teach their youth how to navigate the often contradictory messages or teach them what it means to be Black.” Social psychologists have found that this process often entails a few core components: cultural socialization (which includes celebrating racial or ethnic heritage and cultural traditions) and the preparation for bias—both of which “anti-woke” legislatures seek to dismantle.

I feel like this paragraph itself could have been a wholeass essay, because it's loaded with some interesting claims. The link is broken, annoyingly.

Racial socialization means one of two things:

1. How to navigate often contradictory messages
2. How to teach them what it means to be black

These things are themselves processed in one of two different ways:

1. Celebrating racial or ethnic heritage or cultural traditions
2. Preparing for bias

So "racial socialization" can have four different permutations.

If these four permutations are how black kids learn to live in the world as black people, it feels like a huge amount of the load is being carried by "preparing for bias."

Like if I look at this through a feminist lens, obviously girls and women have to navigate contradictory messages, and FRFR I think learning what it means to be a woman is a lifelong process, as most worthwhile things are. But to me, "preparing for bias" shouldn't be one of two modes to look at these things through. Especially not juxtaposed with "celebrating heritage and cultural traditions." And super especially since "heritage and cultural traditions" can't be interpreted through the lens of bias.

Thinking about what it means to be a woman, one of the options is being a total whore. Sex for pay. This is a message that contradicts with a lot of other options, either practically or morally. If you choose the AMHOLE path early in the game, the odds of getting to the Governorship or being a Mormon mommy blogger certainly diminish.

This is where "preparing for bias" as a column entry sort of breaks down.

One of the things you learn as a woman is that no matter what you do, someone's going to have a damn problem with it, so basing your self-formation on who is going to have a damn problem with it is self-defeating.

People have problems with whores, people have problems with governors, people have problems with Mormon mommy bloggers. If you go through life on the defensive, you're not going to win.

And to slice it a slightly different direction, if you think that anyone who looks down on any whore, governor, or mommy blogger is always being totally sexist and their opinion is trash, then what is the value in that person's moral judgement themselves?

At the end of the day, how do you feel about your choices? Are you looking to your heritage and people for the best in yourself, or are you hung up on shit other people say?
 
The black inferiority complex is out of control. Fuckers are 6 years old and already hating on whitey 'cause they ain't whitey. This 'racial socialization' is one big cope.

How do we explain the differences in racial educational achievement gaps, lifetime wealth accumulation, and mortality rates when we are forced to ignore systematic and historical barriers to education, jobs, and housing?
Let me try.
Racial educational achievement gaps: go to a school in a black neighbourhood. There's your answer.
Lifetime wealth accumulation: the term 'nigger rich' is called that for a reason, you know.
Mortality rates: too much fried chiken, too much graep soda, and too much fentanol (like gorge floid).
 
They had the tools in the early 2000s and 90s. Globohomo took them away.

If I say 'nigger' in a public space now, ie college, workplace or online forum, people have meltdowns and have to go to therapy because they can't even comprehend hearing it. Breaks their programming. Whatever happened to just ignoring it instead of chimping out and giving yourself stomach ulcers over it?
Let me try.
You should visit the Niggers Eating Cornstarch thread in Off Topic > Food for the wonderful eating habits of melanated individuals.
 
The left loves turning kids into activists. The right should give students tools to fight weirdos libtards.
They really do. I've asked one of my aunts why she thinks it's a good idea and it's basically because the kids get to be their mouthpiece, but also get a lot of positive attention from their circlejerkers.

She didn't quite use those words, but rather said the kid enjoys it, and it's a good experience for them.

god, i can't stand my wealthy shitlib relatives when they bring up stuff like this
 
As young as five and six, Black children begin noticing and expecting white people to have better possessions and jobs.
So, niglets as young as 5 can recognize that they live in a nigger shit hole because their biological father is in the jail 2 counties over?

Apparently all we have to do is, stop niggers from brainwashing niglets for 18 years and the problem will go away.
 
The short version of this nonsense article/argument: "We must teach black children that there is nothing they could ever do to succeed without blaming everyone else and OC voting democrat"

Literally that's it. A demand that we program every black child to view any and all negative outcomes as signs of racism and to never ever look inward or take responsibility for their lives or actions. Critical race theory.
 
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They had the tools in the early 2000s and 90s. Globohomo took them away.

If I say 'nigger' in a public space now, ie college, workplace or online forum, people have meltdowns and have to go to therapy because they can't even comprehend hearing it. Breaks their programming. Whatever happened to just ignoring it instead of chimping out and giving yourself stomach ulcers over it?
And the same could be said if we said the K-word about Jews.

oh cool, theyre handing out bibles now?
Imagine instead if it was the Koran.
 
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