CG Didymus
Veteran Member
For most of us today, it is obvious that the color of a person's skin isn't a factor of how smart they are or what they are capable of doing and becoming. Do some societies and cultures keep them artificially down? Still? In the past some people, like white Europeans, which were mostly some type of Christian, thought it would be nice if they could get material wealth out of different regions of the world. Only problem, there were people living there. Those people had to be marginalized to justify taking their lands and resources and making them slaves or even trying to exterminate them or put them on reservations.I agree fully but my perspective is that in order to overcome problems like racism society needs to be proactive in promoting racial harmony.
Just allowing bad relations to continue or agreeing in words that racism is wrong won’t change anything.
Only by turning on a light does one expel darkness. If society does nothing to promote racial unity then racism won’t go away.
Are some people still exploiting others and marginalizing them? Why? They need cheap labor, but they don't want those people living in the same areas that they live in, so they "put" them on "reservations." The inner cities or other poor, run down areas. From there, those people can come work for those other people in the richer, better areas, but they better not stay there or wander around that area, because they don't belong there.
That is starting to break down, and by not putting people down and keeping them down because of their skin color is only a small part of fixing this. The Baha'is have some suggestions on fixing another part of this problem, the unequitable economic system. Many poor work their whole lives but don't make enough money to get ahead. But there is White poor also. Does anyone care about them? Yes, little. Like the liberal parties in the different countries. Religious groups. But the economic system needs cheap, expendable workers. In the U.S. we had people unionize to get better wages and other benefits. Then what happened? Many companies moved their manufacturing plants to other countries that had cheap, exploitable people to do the work.
We can say we are all equal all day long. And that we don't judge a person by their skin, but, in the U.S., when we drive out into the rural areas... who's working the fields? When we drive by the Southern border, who's is staring at us from the other side of the wall or fence? When we get off of the wrong exit and go through the old dilapidated part of the city, who do we see there? With a little bit of anger in their eyes, as if to say, "What are you doing here?" And if you are the wrong color and stay too late, you will get mugged. Then you get out of town, way out of town. Maybe in the middle of some dry, God-forbidden place in the desert. And there you see a once proud people, but now you see empty booze bottles and people just sitting there... waiting for the government to give them some money.
How you fix all that? How's religion going to fix that? The government puts Band-Aids on the problem. Like I said on a different thread, the young people are getting together. And not judging each other by the color of their skin. But it's a low, low level, even maybe the rock bottom part of society. Kids are getting together with music, which could be Rap and Hip hop. They're unifying over taking drugs and making money off of selling drugs. And they are "hooking" up sexually... White, Brown, Black, it don't matter. They are prejudiced. What's religion going to do for them? Many aren't racist with each other, no doubt some are. But they have a common enemy, the screwed up system. The system that keeps them down. The system that expects them to go to school, listen to authority and get a job.
Sure, some kids get out of that place and move on up the ladder. Like the McDonalds commercials that show kids of color working their way through college while working flipping burgers. Kids are being successful at playing that game. Way too many aren't. And way too many don't even want to play that game. So at an early age they get into a neighborhood gang and learn to shoot a gang and rob a store, steal a car and pimp out girls... probably to a few rich guys from the good side of town. So who, other than the other neighborhood gangs, is their biggest enemy? The police. And what do the police see everyday? Gangs, drugs, guns, prostitution and everybody looks alike. They all have hoodies and dark skin. They all are probably up to no good. So both sides pre-judge each other and don't trust each other. How's religion going to fix that?
So beyond getting over judging people by their skin color, Baha'is can talk about how to get beyond an economic system that has exploited people and still depends on exploiting people to get them to work for as little as possible. And, to get beyond a system that gives handouts to those that don't want to work. Not enough for them to get anywhere. But enough to go buy a bottle of wine and drown their sorrows. Religions have been there and are trying to help. But the problem is way bigger than giving them a meal or a place to stay if they've lost their job and are down on their luck. At some point we are going to have to stop playing games, society is screwed up. Can religion fix it?