I'm not suprised given that you make your sacrifices at the shrine of the anarchic god of distributive justice. If you construe justice as being all about property rights then of course racism won't stand out as a central social issue.
WRONG SIR, WRONG! I don't think justice is only about property rights. I have other values beyond the libertarian non aggression axiom (I just have the decency not to want to force them on others) and as I already said, I oppose racism.
Defending property rights is the only legitimate reason for which force can be used. That doesn't mean people can't believe in other things, and use non-violent measures to try and evoke positive change.
I'm questioning whether the current approach to trying to discourage racism is effective. As much as I hate racism, I still think people overreact to it. The sorts of hysterical reactions that are common when a famous person makes a racial slur are way over the top. Often these people are just joking, or just made and accidental slip, yet their careers are ruined and they are treated almost like criminals.
The current attitude also means any psycho who wants to make a name for themselves can get a whole lot of free publicity by ranting some racist hate speech.
Personally I would like to see society have more of a sense of humor about racism. Instead of getting angry at racists, we should laugh at them like the fools they are. Instead of being shocked and angry at the use of a word like "nigger," people should use it more often in an ironic sense, and thus rob the word of any power it once had has a derogatory word.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reclaimed_word
Reclaiming racist words is a much better strategy for disarming racists than perpetuating the taboo.
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It's also worth examining what the word "racist" has come to mean. It can mean;
1) Looking down upon people because of their inherent racial characteristics, which is obviously complete idiocy.
But the word racist is also often used to mean
2) Looking down on people because of their cultural practices.
I don't think there is anything wrong with being critical of people's cultural and religious practices, and it is unfair to brand people as racists for doing this.
Social esteem is of basic value to most people, bar a small minority of loners and autistics. Along with this go related concepts of recognition and respect. To have one's identity despised, disrespected or discounted may cause great suffering. More than this, a certain level of respect/recognition is perhaps necessary for social participation - in public discourse, casual conversation, the workforce, and so on. The liberal desire that all individuals be respected, in the abstract, as loci of rational intelligence and autonomous will is no doubt a beautiful one, but I feel that we ought to go further and offer people recognition in terms of their particularity - that is, in terms of their difference and diversity - and this of course includes race (and culture, and gender identity, and spirituality, and politics, and so on). Insofar as we need to support free speech a certain level of racism must be tolerated, but I certainly think that racism becomes a problem of social justice once it becomes systematic and/or institutionalised.
Nice attempt to paint yourself as the compassionate intellectual, and me as the aspie libertarian. What about some compassion for racists? Remember, they are frequently from poor socioeconomic standing and of low intelligence. It is often through no fault of their own that they have been indoctrinated with racist drivel.
Surely if they don't hurt anyone, people who express racist views should also be accorded a basic level of social esteem and respect. As foolish as their views may be, isn't it only more polarizing to treat them as social pariahs?
Our reaction to racism is also a double standard. Sure someone who hates all middle eastern people is a fool. But isn't a fundamentalist Muslim who believes that women have a duty to be subservient to men and should have to cover their body and face in public holding an equally backward and stupid view? Yet in our society, someone who expresses the racist view will looked upon with scorn, while apparently we are compelled to respect the Muslim's crazy view because it is linked with religion and culture.
That's all I'm saying.