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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (766180)1/27/2014 3:26:09 PM
From: combjelly  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1575622
 
Tenchu, to claim that we are living in a colorblind world is denying reality. Period.

So, what are the dog whistles and code words on the Left? I can give you a bunch that the Right uses.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (766180)1/27/2014 11:41:28 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1575622
 
'Thug' Really Is the New N-Word

RICHARD SHERMAN INTERVIEW STIRS RACIAL DEBATE

By Kevin Spak, Newser Staff
newser.com
( A new dog-whistle term from the regressives! )
Posted Jan 27, 2014 1:21 PM CST

(NEWSER) – At this point, most people agree that Richard Sherman is not, in fact, a thug. Greta Van Susteren at Fox News even apologized on-air for bashing him, saying a viral Internet graphic comparing Sherman to the actually thuggish Justin Bieber had shown her the light. But Sherman's contention that thug has become "the accepted way of calling somebody the N-word," has proven a bit more controversial. Here's what people are saying:

Sherman is absolutely right, writes Jamelle Bouie at the Daily Beast, pointing out that Trayvon Martin was dubbed a "thug" for "ordinary teenage behavior, like cursing or smoking marijuana," and that in the "right-wing fever swamps … 'thug' is the favored insult for Barack Obama." It's a dog-whistle, marking someone as "a dangerous 'other' without resorting to the kind of language that earns public condemnation."
But Clarence Page at the Chicago Tribune admits that when he saw Sherman's outburst, the T-word flashed through his mind. "I don't use the word 'thug' loosely. Too many African-American males, as Sherman suggests, have been unfairly stereotyped with it. But I also believe we should avoid feeding the stereotype," he writes. Like it or not, athletes are role models for African-American kids.
It's a mistake to call Sherman a thug, agrees Daniel Foster at the National Review, but it's also a mistake to "infer some ready-made lesson about race in America" from the incident. Indeed he was shocked that in his world, among "the conservative commentariat"—where "greater concentrations of racial angst are purported to exist"—reaction was "thoroughly mixed."



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (766180)1/27/2014 11:45:33 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1575622
 
In North Korea, You Want Meth With That?

THE DRUG IS EVERYWHERE, NOT FROWNED UPON, AND A BUDDING COTTAGE INDUSTRY

By Polly Davis Doig, Newser Staff
newser.com
Posted Jan 27, 2014 3:45 PM CST

(NEWSER) – North Korea's growing drug problems are fairly well documented, and the Los Angeles Times today takes a deeper dive into the reasons driving the rise, particularly that of crystal meth. In a harsh nation where the sins of an uncle can doom an entire branch of the family tree, Pyongyang has shown relatively little interest in cracking down on narcotics—pot is legal, opium is a common pain reliever, and meth is used to treat colds, flagging energy, and hunger. "If you go to somebody's house it is a polite way to greet somebody by offering them a sniff," says one North Korean. "It is like drinking coffee when you're sleepy, but ice is so much better."

Meth was long produced by Pyongyang itself, as a cash cow export used to fund Kim Jong Il's whims. But since the state officially got out of the meth business, it seems everyone in the impoverished nation wants to be Walter White. One former miner who tried hawking just about everything finally turned to dealing meth. "It was just enough money that I could buy rice to eat and coal for heating," she says. "North Korean people learn fast to reuse their skills," says another ex-pat of the North Koreans driving a cottage industry large enough to spill over the border with China—along with all the problems inherent with the drug trade. Says the meth dealer, who's since quit: "I was doing bad things because everybody else was doing bad things."