I just watched the quoted video clip hosted by twitter further up this thread and he's really saying more than that.Some food for thought. Preface:
1. Racism is bad. Let's get that out of the way because some people won't be able to see past the ragebait topics here.
2. Unpopular opinion from the knee-jerk reactions going around: I think he got taken immensely out of context, and a lot of media companies are making a lot of money off ragebait articles about this right now.
I think what he was trying to say is:
1. He feels like the poll is saying that half of black people polled are self-stated racist against white people
2. He then advocates staying away from people who are racist, because trying to change people who hate other people based on race feels pointless
he's either displaying a level of mental incompetence which should question his capacity to make any significant life decisions, or he's a common racist.
“I don’t want to have anything to do with them,” Adams added. “And I would say, based on the current way things are going, the best advice I would give to White people is to get the h**l away from Black people, just get the f**k away … because there is no fixing this.”
I never read his work, was bored by it. Seeing what happened with him the last few days (a brief TV news story, probably Network national/international news), it looks like his career has been blown to pieces, his own doing. Did he have no idea that the things he said would have this result? Seems like he unconsciously sabotaged himself.If you read up on the guy, you won't patronize his work.
In short: "black people are the real racists, stay the fuck away from them". Gosh, why would that be a problematic statement?Some food for thought. Preface:
1. Racism is bad. Let's get that out of the way because some people won't be able to see past the ragebait topics here.
2. Unpopular opinion from the knee-jerk reactions going around: I think he got taken immensely out of context, and a lot of media companies are making a lot of money off ragebait articles about this right now.
I think what he was trying to say is:
1. He feels like the poll is saying that half of black people polled are self-stated racist against white people
2. He then advocates staying away from people who are racist, because trying to change people who hate other people based on race feels pointless
In short: "black people are the real racists, stay the f**k away from them". Gosh, why would that be a problematic statement?
For further context, he said he "identified as black" for a few years to "feel like he was on the winning team". This speaks quite a bit about how he views things.
Do you know who Ian Miles Cheong is, or why he chose the phrasing that he did?Well, that's the knee-jerk reaction the media's been taking...the context is that he was specifically talking about black people being racist against white people. And of course, racism is an incredibly touchy subject. Based on the (questionable) poll he used:
View attachment 77362
He also addresses "identifying as black" in this video:
Again...it's a hot button topic. If he was going to put something like all of this public, he should have been more careful about it & also been super careful about explaining what he really meant. In the video interview above, he doesn't strike me as racist...just not very savvy about how he controls portraying his image, as now he's on CNN.com as "Dilbert cartoonist does racist tirade". Oh well.
People got their headlines and have moved on. You can tell by the replies no one is taking more than 5s to bother taking in the EXACT context. It's pretty easy to tell if something is racist. Replace whatever color in question in with another, how's it sound now? For example:Well, that's the knee-jerk reaction the media's been taking...the context is that he was specifically talking about black people being racist against white people. And of course, racism is an incredibly touchy subject. Based on the (questionable) poll he used:
View attachment 77362
He also addresses "identifying as black" in this video:
Again...it's a hot button topic. If he was going to put something like all of this public, he should have been more careful about it & also been super careful about explaining what he really meant. In the video interview above, he doesn't strike me as racist...just not very savvy about how he controls portraying his image, as now he's on CNN.com as "Dilbert cartoonist does racist tirade". Oh well.
^^^ Is this really the thread you want your reputation to die on?
why it might evoke a stronger response from black people than it might from white people?
For clarification, I honestly don't care how this comic feels, he could be mini-Ye, I don't know or care enough to spend time to find out, but just pointing out how much of an over reaction the media takes with anything race related if it fits the agenda they want to push.