What do black people stereotypically like




















Now, many words act as substitutes for the slur that, more than any other, has come to define race relations in America. These words are united by a hurtful message: Black people don't deserve to be treated with respect or regarded as fully human. Whether it's commentators implying that Michael Brown deserved to die because he was a "thug," or civic leaders peddling racial welfare stereotypes, coded racial language seeps into mainstream conversations far more than most people assume.

It's an easy, yet insidious way for the speakers to prompt or stir up an audience's negative biases against black people. Individually, these instances might seem insignificant. But taken collectively, the common use of these coded words — words otherwise assumed to be free of any political or historical context — serve to reinforce stereotypes that stem from a sordid history of slavery, segregation and unequal treatment under the law.

Many decades ago, the word "thug" referenced people who engaged in organized crime. But in more recent years, especially in the wake of the murders of Trayvon Martin and even Brown, many whites and others dismissively use the word to describe young, black people — especially black men — implying that they're violent, irrational and shouldn't be taken seriously.

Going even further, there's even a clear implication that young black murder victims somehow deserved to die because they're so-called thugs.

It's the logic that belies the online fundraisers for Officer Darren Wilson, with some supportive whites praising him for killing a kid that would've "eventually become a problem anyway.

And it was all because of they way they looked, spoke or dressed — in other words, the color of their skin combined with the clothes they wore. The label even extends to Latino males, many of whom end up enduring similar public scrutiny, should they end up being crime victims or identified as alleged perpetrators, regardless of whether they actually participate in gangs. It's important to note that although the word stemmed from organized crime, it is almost never used in reference to the Ku Klux Klan or the bankers on Wall Street , individuals who effectively brought the economy to a grinding halt while pilfering money from poor and working-class taxpayers.

Historically, blacks have been part of both major parties. When African American men first obtained the right to vote after the passage of the 15th Amendment in they nearly all identified and supported the Republican Party and its candidates; rewarding the Party of Lincoln for its commitment to ending slavery and expanding black civil rights.

However, as political power was gradually returned to Southern Democrats, in part through the compromise which resolved the disputed presidential election, African Americans, who at this time nearly all resided in Southern states, were once again stripped of their voting rights.

It would not be until the early 20th century, following the large-scale migration of African Americans to Northern cities in search of employment and refuge from the repressive Jim Crow policies of the South, that we would see African Americans reengaging in party politics. In the North, the Democratic Party, through its commitment to organized labor would for the first time begin making inroads with black voters.

While the historical antecedents of black Democratic party support are rather straight forward, understanding how it is that, for nearly 50 years, black Americans have been able to remain unified in their support for the Democratic Party, is a more complicated question, especially given the growing economic and political diversity of African Americans over this time period.

Supporting the Democratic Party has come to be understood as just something you do as a black person, an expectation of behavior meant to empower the racial group. In the book we argue that in an effort to leverage their political strength as a minority group in a majority based political system, black Americans have come to prioritize group solidarity in party politics. News U. Politics Joe Biden Congress Extremism. Special Projects Highline.

HuffPost Personal Video Horoscopes. Follow Us. Terms Privacy Policy. Part of HuffPost Entertainment. All rights reserved. Casey Gane-McCalla, Contributor. Suggest a correction. What's Hot. You guess what they do for a living. You guess what they want out of life. That scenario was based only on gender and age, which humans have possessed from the dawn of their existence.

But race entered the picture when humans started migrating from modern-day Africa, their melanin adjusting to the climates they moved to, creating the myriad skin tones that we have today. Neuberg says that in general, young men tend to have stereotypes of being more criminal, more impulsive, and more dangerous.

The narratives we imagine for black men are particularly bleak. The problem, in other words, is both the reality born of historical prejudice and injustice, and the fantasy, born of a natural impulse and subconscious prejudice. And so much of that comes from thoughts each group has about the other groups background: for young black males, the fact that white cops see themselves in a position of power and able to dole out punishment at will and for no apparent reason; for white cops, a sense that young black males are out to stir up trouble.



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