this post was submitted on 08 Dec 2025
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That seems like how it is in the US too.
"Racism is only a thing very bad evil people do. I'm not an very bad evil person. Thus I cannot have done racism."
"what you said was kinda racist"
"How dare you, I'm not a racist!"
The unacknowledged shift from the adjective form "racist" to the noun form "racist" is the best indicator that someone doesn't really get what racism actually is in real life.
As an example of why that's wrong, I can do something stupid without being a stupid.
Many people need to accept that they are not perfect, and be open to learning. Instead, many people lash out. Gotta protect their ego.
True, but nothing new there under the sun.
Everyone always laughs at the people who complain about "woke" and asks them to "define woke", but can you define racism?
Racism
From Wikipedia
From Merriam-Webster
From Cambridge dictionary
As for Woke
From Merriam-Webster
From Cambridge dictionary as "wokeism"/"wokery"
The guy was obviously being a troll.
But, there certainly isn't a consensus on racism. Some vocal elements demand that for for something to be racist, there also has to be a racial power imbalance working in the favor of the person being racist... and they'll use that distinction to explain how actions that would be evaluated as racist by the definitions you provided actually aren't if the target is in a position of racial privilege.
And, personally, I think that definition was literally seeded as a wedge by state actors for the explicit purpose of sowing discord, but here we are.
That's just misapplying an academic definition in a colloquial circumstance, which happens a lot in various disciplines. It's like the "what is a vegetable" question: it means different things to a botanist, chef, and tax collector.
Ah, the American Millennial: the generation that could've led us toward utopia if they cared more about actions than words.
(yes I see the whole academic definitions thing as a specifically Millennial trait)
So just dismiss everything the person tried to explain to you, because you've decided, with absolutely no proof that they're millennial? The fuck is wrong with you?
No??? But, like, a lot of them seemed to not know the difference between "this is what this word means here" and "this is what this word means."
Colloquially, racism means prejudice based on the perception of someone's "race" (ie: ancestry, physical characteristics such as skin tone).
That covers things like assuming a black man knows about gangs and rap based only on their skin color.
There's also the institutional level where individuals might not really think or feel anything about race, but it still is a factor. Stuff like closing polling places in predominantly black neighborhoods, or individual police officers who are given a quota and only assigned to black neighborhoods. Housing in the US has a long history intersecting with the idea of race. "The Color of Law" was a pretty good read on it.
Wikipedia puts it nicely:
To a back person:
"Hey! You're from Philly? I know a black guy from Philly, named Pete. Do you know him?"
I've honestly heard people say stupid shit like that, multiple times in my life.