EAllusion wrote:That appears to be how it functions for you, because you can't handle even some of the most obvious displays of overt racism being described that way because you view it as a nuclear bomb accusation only reserved for the most heinous expressions of racial contempt. That ends up creating a situation where any pointing out of ordinary racist behavior gets straw-manned into calling people the equivalent of Nazis showing up in arm bands to preach white supremacy. It's like that's the only kind of racism you are capable of seeing. So not even the literal equivalent of a minstrel display for Native Americans can be called racist because that's just going too far. The people doing it aren't literally the Klan or Nazis, obviously, so not racist.
Because you won't explain what's wrong with a person having a Confederate flag flying from their truck, which you clearly view as quite bad, it seems like you genuinely don't get that people use Confederate flag symbolism for things other than supporting the KKK or whatever it is you imagine.
But how are you functioning here, EA?
Symbols hold different meaning depending on the individual who uses them as a form of self expression and the point in time that they use them.
When I was a high school girl down the Shore, we wore
surfer crosses that were previously held as symbols of Nazism. We gave no more thought to the correlation than the kids wearing MAGA hats probably did. To us they were new and different. They were cool. We freaking wore them with our summer tans.
Do you really think that the high school students who picked up MAGA hat souvenirs in DC are as intellectually and politically sophisticated as adults? Do you really think they wore them as symbols of racism?
We're in DC! Let's get Trump hats! Yeah, that'll be cool!
You don't give the high school students credit for thinking like the adolescents that they are. Executive function, EA.
Come on.