I personally don't like Clinton, the fact that a lot of her campaign funds come from really shady sources like dictators and other unsavoury world leaders is horrifying.
What are some of the policies of theirs that you don't like?
Also, Jimbocz didn't say everyone's dislike of Obama and H Clinton was due to racism and sexism, but that 'so many people's' is. I'm not sure what the rough breakdown of that would be as I'm sure the amounts would vary person to person, but in my mind that's probably 60-75%? A good majority at least.
As to racism... We are seeing, because of Donald Trump's campaign, that there is a LOT more racism in the US towards blacks, hispanics & latinos (they're different), Muslims and other minorities that many of us didn't realise was still a major factor. If you've read Harper Lee's To Set a Watchmen, you may be feeling a bit like the Scout character. (It's not a well written book by any means, but it was the precursor to To Kill a Mockingbird.)
Yes.
Bigotry still exists. Go to the Fox news website and look at the comments. To what degree does that affect things? I have no idea.
But it is complex. Watching a beastly show here called
Immigration Street, they interviewed this older, white English couple who lived in an area experiencing a pretty high level of recent immigration.
Immediately I pegged them as bigots for the things they said. But listening to them, they expressed this feeling of no longer belonging....in a community they had lived all of their lives. The languages they heard on the streets, the smells of the cooking....the corner shop changing.
I remember watching those town hall meetings regarding the Affordable Health Care Act.....such anger. But many were people with medical conditions...and they felt their level of care was being threatened.
I think on an individual level, I can't disregard their feelings. And I can't ignore that humans may have a natural bias towards "sameness".
But also, we, as humans, have the rarest of gifts, the ability to use reason and empiricism to address these things.
And with that in mind, when I hear talk of "Let's just build a wall to keep them out" it strikes me first of all that on a pragmatic level, it's silly. Walls don't work. Too, it ignores the reality of movement. People have forever moved about. They will continue to do so. In our modern world, movement is now easier than ever.
How can I then support someone, when they disregard rationality?