Fran67: So, all this ranting about how white people do this or that. Who is really considered "white" these days? I'm part American Indian {but not much, sadly) so how "white" am I? Yeah, I'm white-skinned, but so MANY of us Americans have some real surprises if we look into our ancestry. Makes me laugh about all these White Supremicists.
I agree. There's also the fact that, IMO, the term "white" (or Caucasian) lumps too many different cultures. Someone from England will have a very different culture from someone from Greece or Russia, for example, and lumping them all together seems to be a bit much.
Did you know that there was a time when people of Jewish ancestry weren't considered "white"? (Remember what happened in Germany in the 1930's and 40's?)
Of course, the same could be said of other ethnic groups; for example, I a m pretty sure that different American Indian tribes are different culturally and are really not the same ethnic group. Also, true of Asians; Japan and India are *very* different, for example. It's reasonably safe to assume the same is true of black people; in fact, I hear that the country lines drawn by Europeans in Africa ended up separating parts of tribes and putting some that weren't friendly in the same country.
I note that there are other marginalized groups where this applies; disabilities are quite varied (as are the appropriate accommodations for them; sometimes differently disabled people may have contradicting requirements), and LGBT is an umbrella term that includes many different types of people; did you know that some LGBT people are attracted to people of the opposite gender? (There's also some for which the term "opposite gender" doesn't have a well defined meaning.)
(I assume there is more that can be said about this topic, but there's only so much that can reasonably fit in a single message board post.)