Badge for the Out Campaign for Atheists
Badge for downunderfeministscarnival.wordpress.com

Article written by tigtog

tigtog (aka Viv) is the founder of this blog. She lives in Sydney, Australia: husband, 2 kids, cat, house, garden, just enough wine-racks and (sigh) far too few bookshelves. You can read more about Viv on her bio page.

14 responses to “Complacency, Indifference and Intent (or lack thereof)”

  1. Helen

    (Also, “racism” is a big important word that should be reserved for Nazi death camps, genocides and slavery, not for “just” a few bashings here and there or for the systemic economic exploitation of ethnic minorities.)

    Apparently the fact that Nitin Garg is dead and many others have had their lives changed forever by trauma and injury is neither here nor there.

  2. Nacey

    Thank you for this, TigTog. Just – fantastic. Great post.

  3. Beppie

    Well said.

  4. Lefty E

    well put Tigtog.

  5. Perla

    Thank you for this. Sometimes it feels like a person has to run around in a white hood burning crosses in order for their behaviour/attitudes to be considered even remotely racist/”problematic.”

  6. [C]ould our swaggering Aussie bigots be snivelling cowards?

    If they’re anything like the swaggering USian bigots, it’s very likely.

  7. Linda Radfem

    “It also removes socio-economically advantaged kids from the local public schools, so that the immigrant kids don’t get to mix with them socially AND also don’t get the advantage of working with them and competing against them in the same classrooms…”

    Yeah because historically, poor kids in public schools have benefited SO much from that.

    More importantly, Mr & Mrs Privileged take not only their kids out of the school, but their financial support and their time and their volunteer work. All of which they are in a much better position to donate than are the families of new immigrants. That’s what makes a school – it has nothing to do with the kids of rich people just naturally being more of an asset.

  8. SunlessNick

    Sometimes it feels like a person has to run around in a white hood burning crosses in order for their behaviour/attitudes to be considered even remotely racist/”problematic.”

    Even then, there are those who’d consider the term applied “too quickly,” attributing the incident to a misguided sense of humour and free expression (I can’t point to a link, but I’m certain that was applied to a cross-burning not too long ago; because they didn’t actually burn or hang anyone, you see).

    Weird how calling someone racist is censured more heavily than engaging in racism.

  9. TimT

    I don’t think all of these are valid examples of ‘structural racism’.

    So called ‘white flight’ – white parents sending kids to private schools – is a phenomena largely made up by the mass media. It’s well known that kids attending private school have risen in recent times, in comparison with kids attending public school. The Age attempted to portray this recently as a ‘white flight’, but the term itself is misleading, since ‘white’ is susceptible to so many different interpretations – ‘Anglo’, or ‘Celtic’, or ‘Western European’, or ‘British’, or ‘European’.

    And people probably don’t send their kids to private school to put them in a more ‘white’ environment, since private schools are full of people from all sorts of different nationalities.

    As for moneyed people moving out of areas with high crime rates, that seems like a sensible economic decision and not necessarily racism. You certainly can’t stop people doing that.

    So I think the solutions to crime/attacks on Indian students comes back to good old law enforcement, and legislative/economic decisions by councils and governments to extend the privileges and freedoms currently enjoyed by more privileged people. So MORE scholarships in private schools and colleges and universities, etc.

  10. TimT

    The Age attempted to portray this recently…

    Referring to The Age newspaper, obviously. Small clarification.

  11. I don’t think all of these are valid examples of ’structural racism’.

    You’d be wrong. Your attempt at splaining is duly noted.

  12. lilacsigil

    since private schools are full of people from all sorts of different nationalities.

    Well, sort of. I attended the only non-Catholic private school in my rural area, and it was more racially mixed than my state primary school. The reason for that was that all the Asian people in the area (Malaysian, Indian and Singaporean) at the time were medical professionals who sent their kids to private school; and the Aboriginal people in my area had been forcibly relocated to towns outside the area of my state primary school two generations earlier (those that survived the massacres, at any rate). So while it superficially looked like I was going to a more racially mixed school, the reasons behind that – higher requirements for non-British immigrants, cherry-picking immigrants from former British colonies, and attempted genocide of the actual local people – told a rather different story. If I went to that same state primary school now, there would be Sudanese and Nepalese kids, Croatians and Cambodians. But my high school is still mostly white, plus kids of Asian (and now Russian) professionals.

n.b. our posts are closed to new comments after 60 days. If you wish to discuss a closed post, please use the latest open thread.

Switch to our mobile site