Because white people are accustomed to being seen as individuals, they hate being referred to as white people. It chaps their hides. Even laughing at the caucalicious phrase “chaps their hide” is racist, as is any variation of the term “white people,” including, but not limited to, “colonizer,” “mayonaisse American,” “undermelanated,” “a citizen of Rhythmless Nation” or “a Michael Rapaportian.”
Top 10 Ways Black People Keep Racism Alive, According to Wypipo - 2. Say “White People”
- Details
- By Michael Harriot Michael Harriot
- Parent Category: Stereotype, Bias, Racism
- Category: Defining Racism
- Hits: 100984
Article Index
- Top 10 Ways Black People Keep Racism Alive, According to Wypipo
- 10. Play the Victim
- 9. Engage in Identity Politics
- 8. Make Everything About Race
- 7. Discuss History
- 6. Be a Reverse Racist
- 5. Use Facts
- 4. Mention the Words “White Privilege”
- 3. Don’t Blame Black People
- 2. Say “White People”
- 1. Be Black
- All Pages
Page 10 of 11
Vernellia R. Randall
Founder and Editor
Professor Emerita of Law
The University of Dayton School of Law
Email
Recent Articles
- Redefining Refugee Resettlement: Repairing the Cracks in the Pathway to the American Dream
- Assemblages and Actor Networks in the Borderlands--The Apposition of Reproductive Rights along the Mexican-American Border
- Punitive Legal Immigration
- National Security or National Origin? The Implications of Florida's Alien Land Law under the Federal Fair Housing Act
- Reparative Citizenship
- Kala: Disentangling Kamehameha Schools from the 2022 Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative Investigative Report While Actualizing Social Healing Through Justice for its Kanaka Maoli Students
- Teaching Race and Law in the Gen Z Classroom
- The Red Pill: Critical Race Theory, Ostrich Laws, and the 14th Amendment Right to Free and Equal Thought and Dignity
- Environmental Injustice and Covid-19: Addressing the Link Between Pandemics and Pollution in Racial and Ethnic Minority Communities under the Clean Air Act
- Banishing Federal Overstep: Why Protecting Tribal Sovereignty Justifies a Narrow Reading of the Indian Civil Rights Act
Copyright Notice
Race, Racism and the Law
Vernellia R. Randall
licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Fair Use Notice
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, some material on this website is provided for comment, background information, research and/or educational purposes only, without permission from the copyright owner(s), under the "fair use" provisions of the federal copyright laws. These materials may not be distributed for other purposes without permission of the copyright owner(s). In general, the copyright owner is the author of the article.