Questions?
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cm0002@lemmy.worldreplied to koboldcoterie@pawb.social last edited by
Yea, that part is a gender discrimination issue, some doctors will refuse to even tie a woman’s tubes if they’re “too young” saying shit like “What will your future husband think” and if they are married already even saying shit like “You’ll need your husband’s permission/need to be present”
It’s disgusting.
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thejml@lemm.eereplied to teslasaur@lemmy.world last edited by
Plenty of white guys that ditched, divorced, etc their partners after getting them pregnant as well.
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massive_bereavementreplied to phineas_rage@lemmy.world last edited by
I'll give you a bonus one:
"But where are you originally from?" -
gravityowl@lemm.eereplied to teslasaur@lemmy.world last edited by
If you have no data about the “fact” (I wish I could highlight even more how much that is NOT a fact) and are asking users to provide evidence that supports that to you, maybe the question is not legit then, is it?
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draghetta@lemmy.worldreplied to phineas_rage@lemmy.world last edited by
Are you guys ok over the pond? I thought every panel after the second was just silly but then I read the married guy’s comment…
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kaitco@lemmy.worldreplied to positivewhat@lemmy.world last edited by
I can’t speak to the ones about holding babies because I try to generally avoid that, but I’m a black woman, and I feel these to the depths of my soul.
I remember some girl in college literally asking me “Oh, are you from a broken home?” It took me a minute to even understand the question.
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We’re both Eastern Europeans in Western Europe, so not visible minorities until we open our mouths.
We were recently house hunting, and my wife is the sole earner.
I can’t count how many times we had to explain that, or how many times we were disadvantaged against people with the opposite situation. When we applied for a joint bank account with both of us working, guess whose name they put on the account. Or try getting hired without getting asked about your family situation. For her, it always comes up in “small talk” in interviews, very obliquely of course. For me, maybe six months to one year into the job.
On the other hand, she opens the street door every time there’s a heavy delivery, as they don’t try to have her carry heavy cargo to our apartment like they do to me, despite it being paid for.
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jettrscga@lemmy.worldreplied to teslasaur@lemmy.world last edited by
BREAKING NEWS Racism is now okay. Forum user suggests there’s probably even data backing it up.
Even if the data showed an insane 95%, it doesn’t justify treating an entire race differently. To me it seems weird that we still track that kind of data separately by race.
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natakunox@lemmy.worldreplied to teslasaur@lemmy.world last edited by
Lol that’s a stereotype. One parent not being in the picture is a poverty thing. Not a black thing. Since poverty disproportionately effects black Americans out seems like it’s a black problem but it’s a system of oppression problem.
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dexa_scantron@lemmy.worldreplied to gravityowl@lemm.ee last edited by
That’s why the term “misogynoir” exists. It’s both, and they pile on and increase each other.
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taiyang@lemmy.worldreplied to phineas_rage@lemmy.world last edited by
Here’s a bonus I saw at college: “Can I touch your hair?” it’s an especially weird one.
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ricecake@sh.itjust.worksreplied to teslasaur@lemmy.world last edited by
It is more common for black fathers to be absent according to certain demographic measures.
However: race is not the only factor to the statistic, and the statistic in not defined well through time.
At one point “divorced or never married mother” was the basis for the statistic. Shifting it to “father lives in a separate home” is better but still misses that you can live in a separate home and still be there for your kid. That’s before you get to adoptive fathers and all the other non-biological support roles.For all those measures, economics is a better predictor than race. Race serving as an indirect measure of economics is its own can of worms and bias.
Finally, a question can be statistically valid and still be biased, inappropriate, or just rude.
“You’re black, so I don’t want to assume your child’s father is around” is all of those. -
skunkworkz@lemmy.worldreplied to massive_bereavement last edited by
Or white person: “You speak [West European language] very well”
“Uh thanks you too”
White person:
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teslasaur@lemmy.worldreplied to thejml@lemm.ee last edited by
Nice whataboutism. Not saying anything about the reason, but you automatically go for the “the others do it too.” I just question the honesty of the postulation in the meme. Since the father is more often than not in the picture, as is evidenced by data collected and more often than not an argument for why black men fall into crime more often than others, it is a valid question. Dont know why a doctor would ask such a question though. Seems fake.
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teslasaur@lemmy.worldreplied to gravityowl@lemm.ee last edited by
Its a rhetorical question for you to see the flaw in the picture painted by the “meme” centerforhealthjournalism.org/…/impact-absent-fat…
Look at the graphs for single motherhood journals.sagepub.com/doi/…/00027162221120759
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jol@discuss.tchncs.dereplied to taiyang@lemmy.world last edited by
I’m not black but Hispanic and get this often because of my curly hair. I actually love it but understand some people might not like it. But at least they ask. Had some people just pat my hair to feel it which is really weird.
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teslasaur@lemmy.worldreplied to natakunox@lemmy.world last edited by
Look at the graphs and compare the relative Poverty between latinos as blacks. Then looks at the graphs showing single mothers. There is some correlation between poverty and single motherhood, clearly. But there is definitely a great disparity between the various poor that you just can’t wave off as “racism”. It might be systematic, but not only a system perpetrated by the white majority, cause then the graphs would be equal for latonis and blacks. So perhaps there is a systemic issue within the black community causing men to not take responsibility for their own children?
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NoIWontPickANamereplied to taiyang@lemmy.world last edited by
That’s funny, because I had a lady I work with tell me to feel her hair.
We were talking about how she always had different hairstyles, and then she explained all this stuff about weaves and fake hair, and then she had me feel her hair to tell the difference.
I did not retain all/any of the knowledge of artificial hair, but I do remember she always had kickass hair styles.
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izzyscissor@lemmy.worldreplied to teslasaur@lemmy.world last edited by
The fact that you “know it’s a talking point” but don’t know the statistics makes me feel that you should re-think who created the statistics in the first place and why.
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nonailsleft@lemm.eereplied to positivewhat@lemmy.world last edited by
USA privilege, probably