Hap wrote:He didn't. He said he didn't want to read something that appears to be saying that.
It doesn't "appear to be saying that." It's a critique of an entirely different Whedon show,
Dollhouse, which I've never seen (which is why I didn't comment on it).
Really, I probably shouldn't have mentioned the Firefly episode; that's my own pet peeve, and the message from the blogger above is different. I should have started a different topic for my own stuff... anyway don't let my opinions dissuade you from reading her blog, which is opinionated but also very much on point IMO.
Gullible Jones wrote:Again, he didn't put words in your mouth. It was directed to those who do presume to know another's mind.
I don't presume to know Whedon's mind, or what he intended. I'm just saying that, intended or not, the scene comes off as maybe a bit racist. My example was more to make a point that Whedon can and has gotten things wrong before.
disclaimer: I too have not and will not read the linked article, nor have I seen the episode in question
The article is about a different show. And you should read it, and the blog, because the blogger has some interesting things to say.
Having biases based on someone's ethnicity is not necessarily racism. Biases are part of human nature, there is not a person alive that does not have them, and there is no way that you will *ever* eliminate them, at least until there is some kind of cosmic shift in our perception of the universe. What makes one racist is realizing these biases, believing that they are right, or not caring whether they are or not, and consciously acting on those biases, whether by speech or by deed...
"Racism" by the academic definition specifically refers to a bias that serves the current power structure. It can be unintentional. A white guy portraying a black guy as a psychopathic sex criminal definitely has racist undertones, IMO.
Real racism is evil and insidious, but the people who engage in it are
not necessarily evil and insidious.
Being hyper-vigilant for any microscopic sign of racism, sexism, ageism, any other ism you can think of is counterproductive. It numbs people to the bigger picture that these are still issues and we do need to address them. It carries these issues to ridiculous extremes, and only serves to make the general population roll their eyes and think "oh god, it's another one of *those* people". We have enough of these isms that are in your face and systemic that we don't have to try and interpret every minute detail of an individual's life as an indication that they are some kind of 'ist'.
On the contrary, I think that
- You are what you eat (metaphorically speaking)
- It helps to know what goes into your food, even if you don't change your diet as a result
Also, being some kind of 'ist' doesn't mean one is a bad person... Up to a point, anyway.