#especially because i think a lot of canada's identity is built around comparison to the us
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I love america and American culture and learning about it
#so cool#i'm canadian and i feel like our national identity isn't nearly as cohesive#that might be why canadians tend to be so much less involved in canadian things. but also#huge american influence here.#so we kinda get absorbed into it all#especially because i think a lot of canada's identity is built around comparison to the us#so we're also kinda jealous of the way america is so globally influential you know what i'm saying#idk. canada is in this weird spot of having an identity built off of being better than the us but also#we're simultaneously sort of seen as just the us the way off-white might as well be white
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not normally political but here goes
I have a lot of thoughts about whatās happening to the Muslim/Arab people in America right now and I just want to say that I understand. Living in a white society, it is so hard being an immigrant, especially if youāre part of a visible minority, and Iām not trying to belittle, devalue, or make light of other minorities that have been oppressed over the years like the LGBTQ+ community, or women in general, but because of whatās going on right now in this context, with this ban, this is about race. They (the Trump administration, Trump supporters, xenophobic/racist people in general) can chalk it up to immigration all they want, but they arenāt fooling anyone. Even though itās said to be temporary, the fundamentals behind even implementing this as temporary action is highly concerning.
If you look at the events that led to World War II, to the Holocaust, it starts with the idea that certain people were creating problems for the German people, that they were eroding the German identity. The ātheyā in this situation was mostly Jewish people, along with others deemed undesirable, unfavourable and ill-suited to the German nationalistic identity. It didnāt take long for it to turn into a debate on the definition of who/what is German and who/what is not, and we see a frighteningly similar pattern right here and right now, in the continued and deliberate attack on anything related to Islam or the Middle East as well as comments made pertaining to the Latino community. When people in Europe needed help, when Jewish people needed help, they were turned away because of the semitism and the prejudice of the 1930s and 40s, and countless lives were lost. It was horrific, and the world said ānever again, never again will we let this happenā, and slogans started coming up saying āas long as people remember what happened in WWII, itāll never happen again,ā and now I have to ask you what was the point of all of these Holocaust Memorials and genocide teachings when weāve just managed to land right back here all over again, after 70 years with more genocides? (Fun fact: after the horrific events of WWII, a new term had to be coined to be able to properly describe the mass extinction and eradication of a specific group. A term that would be able to encompass all the horrors and disgusting activities perpetrated. So they came up with āgenocideā; āgenoā from genos, generally pertaining to human, or group (like genome), and ācideā, a suffix used to express more than just death; but also loss (see suicide, homicide, etc). A word that should send shivers down oneās spine with just the realization of what it represents. Mass death; extinction.) But after 70 years, what have we learned? We havenāt learned anything, clearly.
But getting back to the present; life became so inconceivably difficult for people that were visible minorities after 9/11. If your appearance in anyway suggested Middle Eastern descent or origin, you became someone that could be targeted, that could be demonized because of what your culture represented, because of what your religion represented. People who have been categorized as āBrownā know what Iām talking about and the behaviour such a label entails. It means the comments about terrorism and being a terrorist said so offhandedly, it means āgo back to where you came fromā jokes, it means the glances you would get anytime youād see or hear something about Al Qaeda or Taliban or Isis, it means getting called aside at airport security for ārandom selectionā time and time again because when youāre the brown person travelling in a group of white people it can look suspicious. It happens a lot in Europe, and I understand their fear, I really do. Horrible things have happened in Europe, but horrible things have also happened elsewhere in the world too, for a longer period of time, and that 'fearā that they feel is the point of all the attacks. They (the radicals, extremists, terrorists, call them whatever you want, their point is the same) want to create that fear to isolate and weaken. We call it 'terrorismā because it strikes terror - literally paralyzing, unimaginable, unendurable fear - into the hearts of people of diverse nations. It is meant to divide people, to make people distrust their neighbours because of the way they look or the way they pray or the way they dress. It is meant to create factions amongst people that otherwise have no fight with one another, and to create an environment where people are targeted and demonized and blamed for the actions of others. When we react to violence with violence, fear with fear, terror with terror, we are feeding the beast. We are giving those people that want to create worldwide discord what they want. So letās not let them do that!
Personally, Iām a 17 year old Canadian-born girl of two Indian immigrants, born in Winnipeg, one of the whitest (demographically), most-racist (anecdotally) cities in Canada, where after three months, we moved to MontrĆ©al, spent eight years in one of the most cosmopolitan cities in North America, and then finally moved to Calgary where we are now; and I think itās fair to say Iāve seen a lot of different aspects of what Canada looks like, of what a fairly healthy and functioning diverse country looks like and the truth is, itās not always fair and itās not always equal. Itās not always kind, either, and thatās the harsh truth. The notion that a country thatās as generally accepting as Canada is is without flaws is, well, a flawed ideal. Work still has to be done in Canada, but I think itās safe to say that more work needs to be done in America. I could talk about my own story and my familyās story and just kind of how weāve seen the world evolve - but then I remember that āevolveā is not the right word, because weāre not becoming something better, weāre just changing, so instead - how itās changed in the 15 years since 9/11. But that wouldnāt change anything. That doesnāt help people that are scared right now, that feel isolated and alone right now, and that have had terror struck into their hearts because of what 'theirā president said, because of what 'theirā president has done and how he said he would protect the rights of all people in his country. Well, itās been a week on the job President Trump, and youāve already failed.
When 9/11 happened, this Islamophobia started, and no one knew what to call it back then, there wasnāt really a word for it. It was just this concept that the Islamic countries were dangerous, and that their ideas were dangerous, and that you have to watch out for them because thereās something wrong with them, and people never really got over that and itās still visible in the aftermath and the consequences of wars that western countries had no part of getting involved in; but thatās a conversation for another day. When people started comparing Trump to Hitler, I really hated that trend, because you canāt compare the genocide of 10 million people deemed 'unfavourableā by a sociopath to the ramblings of a racist, rich, white man. I mean there was really no comparison, and itās unfair to the Jewish population to say that, but never did I think Iād see the day that Trumpās executive policies would align him closer to Hitlerās iconic (sorry, but true) and infamous ideologies than any other head of state since WWII. The fact that his administration has had the audacity to flat-out lie on national television to the very population it swore to serve on its very first day in power is an ominous sign. And nearly every executive order signed since has just further cemented that Trump is a petulant child who is so stubborn he demands that his views and opinions become the law and basis on which to run the country. Because he seems to have forgotten that the core of democracy is that it is run by the people, for the people. Because he is a hypocrite above all else.
But to go back to what this post was originally about. Race. To the people out there who say race is a human construct: that may be true. But to think that we can live in a post-race world is just naive. Unfortunately, that is not the way our world was built, and so we will have to fix it through the limits and barricades the generations of people before us have set up. That means accepting that race is real, that it wonāt just go away, and that there truly is a race problem, not only in America, but in caucasian-centric nations around the world. I mean, the idea of being Middle-Eastern or Arab is so taboo that Christianity insists on depicting Jesus as white. You can argue that it was derived from different times, and thatās itās just tradition, but if you know itās wrong now, then why not invoke change? Hello? Jesus was a Jewish man from the Syria-Israel-Palestine-Egypt geographic area. He is 99.99% likely to have been brown, with black hair and a thick beard. To think or demand otherwise is frankly, pure stupidity. But itās not necessarily those believersā faults, and Iām not here to stir up religious dissent. Itās simply one of the consequences of a system that demands white-washing everything to be at a purity level acceptable for white people, who have always seen themselves as superior, even if it hasnāt been blatantly obvious. Sorry to white people who do care, I and Iām sure many others appreciate the support, but making a difference starts with realizing that the milennia of white-washing and racial negligence that has occurred to create a āproperā society whose idols fit into a range of āwhite appropriatenessā is a system and a concept that need to be changed. And it means stepping up for Black Lives Matter, for DACA/DAPA, and speaking out against religious intolerance when mosques go up in flames or black churches go through mass shootings. It means giving a damn beyond grumbling at the tv, āthis is bullshit.ā Iām guilty of this too. But we can help invoke change by speaking, by not staying quiet, by taking the leap and breaking the taboo silence that makes us fear being called an overzealous social justice warrior. Donāt be afraid to speak your mind. I had to work up the courage to type this, let alone post it for the world to see. But I feel lighter now, so I would definitely recommend it. Change begins by showing support and getting the word out, letting people know that someone out there really does care, and is not okay with whatās going on.
I literally can not believe that we (humanity) have been civilized for nearly 10,000 years and are still unable to grapple with the concept that skin colour does not a person make. Does not define worth or ability or reputation. And no, just because Iām brown doesnāt make me biased in this cause. It makes me a victim, it makes me a bystander, it makes me a sympathizer, it makes me a supporter, and most importantly, it makes me human. Because racial discrimination isnāt just un-American. Itās inhumane.
I would be happy to hear any thoughts people wanted to share! I donāt have all the info, nor do I know all the proper tags to spread awareness, but itās all out there and all over and trending so if shouldnāt be too hard to find! Spread kindness y'all :)
#i condemn the muslim ban#muslim ban#news#politics#screw trump#speak out#no ban no wall#i was missingwaterbottles#bellarkelifestyle
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