Terez, on 20 July 2013 - 05:37 AM, said:
I was going to start a thread, but then I recalled the existence of this thread.
Curious as to how much coverage the Zimmerman trial/verdict/aftermath have been getting outside the US. It has been pretty intense here, not just because of news coverage but because of Facebook/Twitter which all of you non-American users have no doubt been subjected to in some form or another. I'm sure my dose has been extra-intense because I live in Mississippi and follow my local newspaper and TV news station on Facebook and often jump into the comments on these things. From the outside it's easy to see the states of the former Confederacy as a bunch of GOP-voting white people and easy to forget that we have the highest per capita black populations in the US, though the non-Southern cities are similar and sometimes blacker overall. Anyway, the commentary in local social media has been extremely ugly. I've seen a lot of talk, mostly from the right, about an impending "race war", which many white southerners look forward to with great anticipation. The phrase "The South will rise again" carries a lot of implications, and you might say those sentiments have gone into overdrive.
The crazy thing is that it seems to have come out of nowhere. There were some media discussions about the Trayvon killing when it happened, so I kind of expected the trial to be like that, but it didn't end up that way at all. It's like all the dormant American racism has come to the surface. You might say it started to go into overdrive when Obama was elected, or while he was running, and especially when he became president, but it was always kind of lurking in the crazy corners of the internet and on Fox. Now it's everywhere. It's nuts. In a way, I think it's good that it's all coming to the surface so maybe some people somewhere will wake up to the intensity of the problem, but it's still kind of overwhelming.
I lived in NC from 89 -98. Made a few trips down into southern Georgia to livestock auctions. That "the south will rise again" shit was hiding just below a lot of people's outer shell. So I have zero problem believing the intensity level now.
What has shocked me is the intensity of the anti-women stance that showed up in this last election cycle. I can understand the pro-life stance. But I was blown away by the number of people who proved that their pro-life stance is just cover for "women should be barefoot, pregnant, and in the kitchen."
Also, I was shocked, but less so, by the intensity level of much of the opposition to the AHCA. I understand much of the opposition to this part or that part. What just blew me away was the apparent percentage that claim to believe that all health care should be "if you can't afford it, learn to live without it."
There is a spirit of meanness in this country that I just can't quite get my head around. And I think that spirit is what lies below all of the above. That spirit is nothing new. But what seems (to me) to be new is the number of people in this country who seem to share it. It's rather fucking depressive.
World English Dictionarymean 2 (miːn) — adj
1.chiefly ( Brit ) miserly, ungenerous, or petty
2.humble, obscure, or lowly: he rose from mean origins to highoffice
3.despicable, ignoble, or callous: a mean action
4.poor or shabby: mean clothing ; a mean abode
mean·ness (mnns)n.
1. The state of being inferior in quality, character, or value; commonness.
2. The quality or state of being selfish or stingy.
3. A spiteful or malicious act.
"Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom." - Viktor Frankl