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There's a reason people who aren't the majority race often have race top of mind.
this territory is moderated
Okay, I'll bite. What's the reason?
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Maybe you should ask someone who's experienced it.
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20 sats \ 6 replies \ @optimism 9h
I have. So I can ask myself.
But isn't there also a reason why religious minorities often have that? Cultural? Gender? Sexual?
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Sure. It's useful to consider the difference when the minority status is noticeable only after conversation and intimate contact (many religious ones; sexual ones; cultural ones) vs when it's immediately noticeable to anyone in visual range, but any difference can lead to different affordances in interaction.
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27 sats \ 4 replies \ @ek OP 9h
[race is] immediately noticeable to anyone in visual range
That’s the point I didn’t bother enough to mention myself, thanks
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100 sats \ 3 replies \ @ek OP 8h
But to be fair, @optimism also has a point.
These insecurities aren’t limited to race, since, as he mentioned, every race everyone has insecurities, which might also come from fear of losing your job, and we don’t want to accidentally cause a conflict, so we tend to overcorrect for niceness.
But since race is immediately obvious to anyone, I think everyone has experience with this “anxious niceness” in that context, which is why the talk focused on that.
Thinking more about this, this topic also seems very related to the second season of The Rehearsal about aviation safety (first officer being too nice / not assertive enough even though the captain is obviously about to kill everyone on board).
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222 sats \ 2 replies \ @optimism 8h
If you've ever lived in a very religious town where you're one of the few not showing up for worship, it's also very obvious. Or in general if you're a stranger in a smaller community. And you'll feel it too. I've been in those situations too. Can't speak to gender or sexuality discrimination much but I figure they're the same, especially if we're talking about the place you live.
I get what you mean though, but I'm asking questions because race is probably the most abused characteristic to explain social phenomena.
Also, I don't think that race differences is why US service workers are overtly nice to you. Comforting small-talk is a cultural thing, I'd assume that it is originated both by a shared principle (being excellent) and by the dependency on gratuity, but I can very well be wrong about that because I've never worked in the service industry in the US.
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100 sats \ 1 reply \ @ek OP 8h
race is probably the most abused characteristic to explain social phenomena
I agree. I am worried that it becomes, or already became, self-referential.
Also, I don't think that race differences is why US service workers are overtly nice to you
Yes! I didn't feel that way at the time; I only started to consider it because of this video. But I'm not that white or that black that I have to seriously consider it.
But that's also related to what I meant by self-referential: now that I'm more aware of it than before, I'm considering it (ever so slightly) more, so it could have more impact on my behavior, which could cause other people to also consider it more, so it could also have more impact on their behavior, and so on ...