Quote:
Originally Posted by bobabode
If you're talking about busing I have to disagree. The practice isn't coercion in itself, it affords children both black and white the opportunity to see each other as human beings and to form friendships they otherwise would miss out on. Nobody forces friendship on anyone. I don't know of any government coercion that requires anyone to live with anyone else.
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Understood.
Please consider that there are other ways to nudge people into mixing than the federal or state government forcing them together.
For example I think musicians and music venues have done more lasting good than federal
legislative mandates. Same with artists such as poets and actors. While those people are not paid politicians they have palpable effects on our body politic. Look at Ted Nugent on the right for an example from the other side (for the record he loves black musicians and credits them for helping him get his greasy rock and roll middle fingers. Detroiters know that but it is a story he apparently doesn't tell down south for whatever reason. Still note that he doesn't attack blacks. He attacks slothfulness and the Detroit UAW used to be plagued with that.)
A different way to get people together is through laws that require us to ignore skin color in business and employment dealings. Those laws are free while nudging people to work together. The weak points in those laws come from both sides. On the white side are people that come up with ways to perpetually put black business to the bottom of the pile. On the black side are people that milk the system with frivolous lawsuits. Again, while government can be a tolerable crutch with citizens that are well behaved it is not an ultimate solution. An ultimate solution must come from within our hearts.
For the record I grew up as an Army brat. Of course the Army was highly integrated and when I grew up I was color blind. All of us kids, black, white, asian, did not see color. What we saw was good and bad such as who cheated at marbles. I wish every kid could have that kind of experience but it simply isn't practical. Us taxpayers can't afford to stick every budding American family onto an American island in a foreign land for the simple sake that their kids learn to play together. Neither would every budding American family want to go.
I think it was you that posted the answer has to come from within. I agree with that. The problem is taking action. The people that take action tend to get shot at or beheaded and that can be scary. When I was single I did volunteer work in the worst part of Detroit -- a part that is so bad even blacks are stunned when I tell them where I worked. But I admit it was scary and don't do it now that I am married with a child. It's not worth it. The problem is bigger than me but I feel OK that I did my part which is more than most. If everyone did a little our society could kick racism to the curb in one generation. I am confident of that. The problem is that everyone likes different music an no one, not the churches, not the politicians, not the audience can agree on one thing on the the same day.
We grow too soon old and too late smart.