iwantwinners said:
sycasey said:
The Republican/conservative narrative about Black Lives Matter, black crime, black poverty, and black families is so convincing that African-American voters vote for Democrats 90% of the time. Well, at least they got Ben Carson.
While true, this is not an argument in support of the 'rightness/wrongness' of said 'narrative', which is what we're after here, or in any conversation, I assume, unless maybe I'm unveiling the priorities of certain folks, which is that being right is relatively meaningless compared to feeling good.
What is the 'narrative' on these matters? Let's focus on what is correct. The conclusion I arrive at is the underachievement of certain groups has little to do with race and everything to do with culture and values. I believe this not because I want to, or because I chose a narrative that I prefer -- I don't like coming to this conclusion. I wish the Leftist regressive dream were true, that if only we could magically eliminate every racist thought and action from the ethos overnight, blacks would start graduating HS more, going out to get more jobs, stop having children before wedlock and having jobs, stop killing each other at rates much worse than other groups.
The poverty argument is not true. Black poverty was extremely high pre-civil rights movement in an era where racism was sanctioned and cultural racism was rampant, yet the crime rate was much lower than today, when 13% of the population commits over 50% of the homicides, most of them intraracial. The single parent household rate went from something like 15% in 1960 to 72% in 2013. The counter culture 1960's affected all races adversely, as crime across the board went up and so did single parent households. Government became the new daddy, and adversarial sub-cultures within the black community developed, manifesting itself in a gangster rap of the 80's and 90's, which glorified and romanticized attitudes, values and a culture that are rejected in almost every other realm of our society: sexism, misogyny, violence, homicide, homophobia, rape, the list is seemingly endless. But all races of the left combine to either acquiesce, deny, apologize, defend, and even lionize attitudes and values when expressed in this medium. The placation of the problems within these communities is helping sustain these issues.
This is a long topic, but show me an underachieving community, and I will show you a culture/value problem. I don't know if they are wrong or right for voting 90% Democrat. However, I don't believe in identity politics, so I find the idea of voting for a group that typically favors policy that happens to "benefit" the group you identify with based on your race sort of a misnomer
You proclaim that your conclusion about a problem with black "culture" and "values" is clearly "correct," yet the only evidentiary support you provide are statistics showing that, yes, there are problems with crime and broken families in the African-American community. Sure, you're right about that. But I see no real attempt here to connect that to any potential CAUSE of such problems. (Other than to point to the violence/misogyny/homophobia expressed in rap music, as if that's the only kind of popular music from that era to express such things. Have you listened to any heavy metal or punk rock lyrics from that time? Paragons of virtue, those artists were not.)
These problems do not exist in a vacuum. Here's one possible cause: right around the time period you cite (late '60s to early '70s), a few things happened. One is that the Civil Rights Movement (featuring MLK et al) agitated for and eventually won more rights for black Americans. In response, Nixon and the Republican Party specifically began to employ the "Southern Strategy" to start winning over Southern voters again. This was a deliberate (and fairly well-documented) attempt to divide the country along racial lines and convince white voters to vote with them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_strategyAnother thing that happened was that America's "War on Drugs" began in earnest. That's not something you can entirely lay at the feet of Republicans; the war ramped up through both Republican and Democratic administrations. Many argue that this war disproportionately impacted black families, as sentencing and enforcement was generally harsher for blacks.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_on_drugsWhat does that mean? More black men in prison means more broken homes, which means more youths turning to crime, which means more of them in prison. This also leads to more reliance on government safety-net programs, not because they want to, but because they have to. A vicious cycle, not all of it based on black people having a worse "culture" or "values," and in fact you could argue that this culture EMERGED from the bad situation a lot of these families found themselves in. There's a lot more to unpack here than your original comments would let on.
You are logically correct that African-Americans voting heavily Democratic does not PROVE they are right that Republican and/or conservative ideas about how to help their community are wrong-headed. However, I would argue that if I were truly interested in helping a group of historically oppressed people (and not just scoring political and rhetorical points to help my own causes), I might listen to what they have to say about their problems and where they come from. If 90% of them said my ideas were wrong, that would give me pause. If I didn't really care about that and only cared about how this debate could benefit me, then I would very easily ignore them.
Now, let's talk about how this might relate to immigration. I'm sure you will vociferously disagree, but the general feeling I get from your posts is that immigration is strictly a self-centered enterprise for you. If immigrants don't immediately benefit you or your country, then they shouldn't be let in. Anyone who wants to advocate for more immigration needs to show that this will immediately and monetarily benefit the country, or no deal. I think that's short-sighted. Yes, of course those things should be a concern. But is there not also a moral obligation to help those in need as much as possible? What about those from war-torn countries, sometimes from wars we had a hand in starting? What about one of the foundational values of the country, embodied on that Statue of Liberty quote about tired, huddled masses yearning to breathe free? That is the real push-pull dynamic at play here, the practical issues of immigration policy butting up against the values we want to embody as a nation. If you lose the latter, then I think you lose the plot a little bit. Ruthless self-interest, IMO, only takes you so far.
Of course it's also true that a pure "open border" scenario wouldn't work either. For good reason, you want to (at minimum) try to prevent terrorists or other criminals from entering the country for nefarious purposes. Some vetting will always be required. Here's the thing: no one is arguing that it isn't. "Open borders" in the way you describe it is not a serious position advanced by any elected officials in Congress. The questions are of degree and purpose.
Here's what's actually being debated right now: how to handle DACA recipients. When Trump made his "s***hole" comments it was not in a meeting where someone was trying to convince him to support an "open border" policy, it was in a meeting with Senators to discuss a potential deal on DACA. This is about undocumented immigrants who were brought to the country as children (through no fault of their own), who were temporarily granted (by Obama) some manner of legal protection to remain in the country, as long as they (1) maintain a clean criminal record and (2) manage to keep a job or stay in school. To me, those seem like the kinds of immigrants who have demonstrated their worth to our society and who should be allowed to stay. What exactly is the utility of making comments about "s***hole countries" in this context? Is there any way that kind of comment is helpful here?