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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "CRT clubs in schools "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]This thread seems to have largely come down to is semantics... some people want to define racism as basically anything race-based and tend to focus on specific examples involving individuals in different scenarios, others think the term has an inherent distinction based on power structure and systems, and they tend to focus a bit more on macro outcomes and aggregate impacts for entire large groups in society. The argument for the former seems more accessible and intuitive as "common sense" to the average layperson (especially-but-not-exclusively the average white layperson), while the latter is a bit more academic and nuanced (nothing wrong with that, some people see "academic" as a negative term but I certainly don't mean it that way... if anything I'm personally more predisposed to be skeptical of anything that people claim is "common sense"). The other big issue I see is that some folks seem to carry the false assumption that addressing the former is sufficient to resolve the latter.[/quote] Or it’s all self interested BS. If in order to “understand” CRT, you need to take a class, then it’s worthless.[/quote] 1) Don't need to take a class. 2) Even if you did, do you think all things that one needs to take a class to understand are worthless, or is this a special exception? [quote]People that are skeptical if common sense need to get a real job, in a business that has customers by selling services and products.[/quote] No. Employment has nothing to do with this. I happen to work for a business that sells services to customers, and while we do ok and have been operating for many years, nevertheless our ability to stay in business relies almost exclusively on our ability to keep those customers happy and returning. We screw that up and we're all going to be looking for work in short order. What does that have to do with this conversation? What one considers "common sense" is usually very dependent on the experiences of that individual, and typically when it comes to political discussions is used as a shorthand to remain willfully ignorant of complexity and nuance around a topic or to learn and absorb new information that might run contrary to their ingrained predispositions. Heck, even Einstein characterized common sense as nothing more than a deposit of prejudices laid down in the mind before you reach eighteen. And here's a good exploration of some of the issues of an appeal to "common sense": https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-power-prime/201107/common-sense-is-neither-common-nor-sense[/quote]
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