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Cat-Eating Haitians and Broken Politics

 
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Manage episode 440286973 series 3533518
Contenuto fornito da Free Black Thought. Tutti i contenuti dei podcast, inclusi episodi, grafica e descrizioni dei podcast, vengono caricati e forniti direttamente da Free Black Thought o dal partner della piattaforma podcast. Se ritieni che qualcuno stia utilizzando la tua opera protetta da copyright senza la tua autorizzazione, puoi seguire la procedura descritta qui https://it.player.fm/legal.

Political Discourse

CAT-EATING HAITIANS AND BROKEN POLITICS

How we talk about one another matters

Delano Squires

Springfield, Ohio presents an opportunity to have serious debates about one of the most important issues facing America today: immigration. Unfortunately, we are not having serious policy discussions. You can tell we’re not because politicians and pundits are focused more on explosive (and largely unsubstantiated) claims of people eating cats and geese than on wages, demographic change, cultural compatibility and assimilation, or why some employers feel they can’t consistently fill job openings with longtime residents.

The challenges facing the people in Springfield are one issue. How they are discussed in the media, by politicians, and by social commentators is another.

And right now, one question we should all be asking ourselves is this: When is stereotyping acceptable and how common must a particular behavior be among a group of people for us to legitimately attribute it to the entire population? Whatever answer we decide on collectively—if that’s even possible—needs to be applied consistently.

Journal of Free Black Thought is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

This point goes far beyond immigration. Some conservatives who typically oppose assigning guilt on a group level (e.g., to the police) have had no issue doing so when it comes to Springfield. Some of the same people who are still upset at Hillary Clinton for her grossly generalizing “basket of deplorables” comment have no problem making blanket statements about the “other” if it advances their political goals.

How we speak about people, including ones we don’t know, understand, or perhaps even like, matters. One reason why is because most Americans, including 95% of those on social media (where the debate about Haitian immigrants has raged), are far too sensitive to stomach name-calling (e.g., “savages”) if it became our default mode of political communication. In other words, most people can’t take what they can easily dish out. This observation is one thing that unites every identity category—individual and intersectional—in our culture. Many people have the tongue of a lion and the ears of a lamb, but you can’t generalize and stigmatize when mocking outsiders and then start squealing like a stuck pig when the same standard is applied to your preferred identity group. This is one reason we should use our words to turn up the light and turn down the heat when it comes to our most important policy debates.


Delano Squires is a Research Fellow in the Richard and Helen DeVos Center for Life, Religion, and Family at The Heritage Foundation.

He is also a contributor to Blaze Media, where he writes about faith, family, and culture, and to BlazeTV’s Fearless with Jason Whitlock podcast.

Delano's articles and essays have been published by Newsweek, The American Conservative, The Federalist, The Institute for Family Studies, Black and Married with Kids, The Root, and The Grio. He appeared on the Free Black Thought Podcast to discuss creating a black marriage culture and other topics in February.

Before joining The Heritage Foundation, Delano worked for the District of Columbia government for more than a decade. During that time, he provided free technology training classes for job-seekers, ex-offenders, and senior citizens. He also created digital exploration programs for K-12 students, subsidized internet service and provided free computer repair for low-income families, and ran several citywide public awareness campaigns.

Delano won the 2016 State Technology Innovator Award from the National Association of State Chief Information Officers (NASCIO) for his work on converting a bookmobile into a Mobile Tech Lab that was used to bring internet access and training to D.C. public housing communities.

He spent his final year in D.C. government with the Office of Gun Violence Prevention (OGVP), working with residents and local stakeholders to address violent crime in the nation’s capital.

Delano grew up in New York City and earned his bachelor of science degree in Computer Engineering from the University of Pittsburgh and a graduate degree in Public Policy from The George Washington University. He resides in Maryland with his wife and their three young children. Follow him on X here.

Journal of Free Black Thought is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

  continue reading

22 episodi

Artwork
iconCondividi
 
Manage episode 440286973 series 3533518
Contenuto fornito da Free Black Thought. Tutti i contenuti dei podcast, inclusi episodi, grafica e descrizioni dei podcast, vengono caricati e forniti direttamente da Free Black Thought o dal partner della piattaforma podcast. Se ritieni che qualcuno stia utilizzando la tua opera protetta da copyright senza la tua autorizzazione, puoi seguire la procedura descritta qui https://it.player.fm/legal.

Political Discourse

CAT-EATING HAITIANS AND BROKEN POLITICS

How we talk about one another matters

Delano Squires

Springfield, Ohio presents an opportunity to have serious debates about one of the most important issues facing America today: immigration. Unfortunately, we are not having serious policy discussions. You can tell we’re not because politicians and pundits are focused more on explosive (and largely unsubstantiated) claims of people eating cats and geese than on wages, demographic change, cultural compatibility and assimilation, or why some employers feel they can’t consistently fill job openings with longtime residents.

The challenges facing the people in Springfield are one issue. How they are discussed in the media, by politicians, and by social commentators is another.

And right now, one question we should all be asking ourselves is this: When is stereotyping acceptable and how common must a particular behavior be among a group of people for us to legitimately attribute it to the entire population? Whatever answer we decide on collectively—if that’s even possible—needs to be applied consistently.

Journal of Free Black Thought is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

This point goes far beyond immigration. Some conservatives who typically oppose assigning guilt on a group level (e.g., to the police) have had no issue doing so when it comes to Springfield. Some of the same people who are still upset at Hillary Clinton for her grossly generalizing “basket of deplorables” comment have no problem making blanket statements about the “other” if it advances their political goals.

How we speak about people, including ones we don’t know, understand, or perhaps even like, matters. One reason why is because most Americans, including 95% of those on social media (where the debate about Haitian immigrants has raged), are far too sensitive to stomach name-calling (e.g., “savages”) if it became our default mode of political communication. In other words, most people can’t take what they can easily dish out. This observation is one thing that unites every identity category—individual and intersectional—in our culture. Many people have the tongue of a lion and the ears of a lamb, but you can’t generalize and stigmatize when mocking outsiders and then start squealing like a stuck pig when the same standard is applied to your preferred identity group. This is one reason we should use our words to turn up the light and turn down the heat when it comes to our most important policy debates.


Delano Squires is a Research Fellow in the Richard and Helen DeVos Center for Life, Religion, and Family at The Heritage Foundation.

He is also a contributor to Blaze Media, where he writes about faith, family, and culture, and to BlazeTV’s Fearless with Jason Whitlock podcast.

Delano's articles and essays have been published by Newsweek, The American Conservative, The Federalist, The Institute for Family Studies, Black and Married with Kids, The Root, and The Grio. He appeared on the Free Black Thought Podcast to discuss creating a black marriage culture and other topics in February.

Before joining The Heritage Foundation, Delano worked for the District of Columbia government for more than a decade. During that time, he provided free technology training classes for job-seekers, ex-offenders, and senior citizens. He also created digital exploration programs for K-12 students, subsidized internet service and provided free computer repair for low-income families, and ran several citywide public awareness campaigns.

Delano won the 2016 State Technology Innovator Award from the National Association of State Chief Information Officers (NASCIO) for his work on converting a bookmobile into a Mobile Tech Lab that was used to bring internet access and training to D.C. public housing communities.

He spent his final year in D.C. government with the Office of Gun Violence Prevention (OGVP), working with residents and local stakeholders to address violent crime in the nation’s capital.

Delano grew up in New York City and earned his bachelor of science degree in Computer Engineering from the University of Pittsburgh and a graduate degree in Public Policy from The George Washington University. He resides in Maryland with his wife and their three young children. Follow him on X here.

Journal of Free Black Thought is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

  continue reading

22 episodi

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