Elixir
Made in America
Why did you write that? Did you not read the exchange I quoted? Did you just skim it and assume you got the gist of it from 15% of the words in it? Or are you just so accustomed to judging who's right by whether they agree with you that you felt entitled to ignore the plain meaning of what I wrote and invent a position to ascribe to me that would justify you in believing I'm wrong and cursing at me over it? What is wrong with you?You explicitly endorsed teaching history by blaming a specific race.
<expletive deleted>. The fact that redlining was done by people who were all (mostly? - not specified) of the same race, is not an indictment of all people of that race (or races).
It is an indictment of those people, if in fact it is an indictment at all. Not their progeny or their progeny's progeny.
Painting it as such is merely an excuse for the revisionist history that is part and parcel of the New Republican Way. "Invent your own reality - it's YOUR free-dumb!"
Sorry to be Captain Obvious here, but I'm going to have to, because what you wrote was painfully obtuse. I did not in any way, shape or form suggest that pointing out that redlining was done by people who were of the same race is an indictment of all people of that race. The fact that Politesse pointed it out, and the fact that subsequently I accused him of blaming a specific race, does not entitle you to take for granted that that's why I accused him. He's said a lot of things. You picked out one of the things he's said and you decided, on your own initiative, that that was the one that prompted the accusation. That's a post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy. Moreover, to reach that conclusion, you had to skip over something else I quoted him writing, something that came between the remark you fastened onto and my response to him. Why would you do that? Why would you assume the more recent remark I quoted was irrelevant to the accusation?
Politesse said redlining was a white segregationist social project and history should be taught that way.
Then Trausti agreed with him, but pointed out we can do that without blaming a specific race.
Then Politesse said --> "How?" <--.
Those two remarks in combination are an endorsement of teaching history by blaming a specific race. Politesse advocated teaching that redlining was a white segregationist social project even though he did not believe that could be taught without blaming a specific race.
So get off my case.
Ok - sorry. I should not have called categorical bs if that's all the case you were trying to represent.
I read the most recent exchange, am not going to read back so far as to verify or quibble about what you said.
I'm not "on your case" in any event. I think that redlining WAS "a white segregationist social project" and most certainly don't see that as 'blaming' white people or any contemporary people at all. I don't care if it was space aliens who instigated redlining. But if it was, the history should reflect that fact if we to ever hope to learn from it.