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Post-Women's March: white women, working class, and people might need to reflect

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Plum

Member
So what really got you was the framing of the photo? That's it? That's a problem. If the entire message is lost because you take issue with the framing of the photo, that's how we get here.

The entire basis of photojournalism is using photo framing and composition to show a message. No matter who was responsible; the photographer themselves, the person holding the sign or both of them, it's clear that they framed that picture in a way implying that some of the blame falls on those three women's feet. If that weren't the message then why not crop those two out?
 
I have no idea what point you're trying to make here.

Sorry, I guess it was "if a percentage of a group of people voted for Trump, then we should admonish the group as a whole for not voting for Clinton" like the tweets imply, can generally be applied to the roughly 50m who voted for Trump which includes all minorities.

Or I guess its just I am confused on the premise. Roughly half the nation voted for a monster, including folks from all walks of life. Does deriding a group because members of it voted for Trump or abstained from voting (or voted 3rd party, same thing) really benefit the half of the population who voted Clinton and who want to correct this wrong?

And look, I am not trying to be antagonizing here, but isn't the true "enemy" Trump and the GOP? What do the people gain by infighting, by saying "well I supported him less than you did"?
 

StoOgE

First tragedy, then farce.
So what really got you was the framing of the photo? That's it? That's a problem. If the entire message is lost because you take issue with the framing of the photo, that's how we get here.

The framing of the photo is making a very specific argument against the three women in the background.

Those three women have individual lives that you don't know shit about.

I agree that America has a serious fucking problem with white people who are willing to vote for their economic interests, xenophobia and racism along with a dash of evangelical beliefs and not give a shit that it is actively harming a whole slew of people.

But, my point is, we don't know anything about the three women in the background of that photo, and it is harmful to their individual agency to be dismissive about their actions, hearts of minds.
 

QisTopTier

XisBannedTier
So what really got you was the framing of the photo? That's it? That's a problem. If the entire message is lost because you take issue with the framing of the photo, that's how we get here.

A picture is worth a thousand words :p The framing of it is fucked up and makes the picture hateful not meaningful.
The framing of the photo is making a very specific argument against the three women in the background.

Those three women have individual lives that you don't know shit about.

I agree that America has a serious fucking problem with white people who are willing to vote for their economic interests, xenophobia and racism along with a dash of evangelical beliefs and not give a shit that it is actively harming a whole slew of people.

But, my point is, we don't know anything about the three women in the background of that photo, and it is harmful to their individual agency to be dismissive about their actions, hearts of minds.
StoOgE gets it
 

Crocodile

Member
Then why was the photograph framed the way it was? That is no longer a statistical point, and is now singling out the women in the background of that photo.

And you have zero idea who they are. They could be LGBTQ, Jewish, immigrants, rape survivors. They could be biracial and you have no fucking idea. They could have biracial children and BLM could be incredibly salient in their daily lives.

The issue is not pointing out that white people elected Donald Trump. That is a truism, and one that I am ashamed of.

Framing the photo is a means of taking agency away from the individual and it's counterproductive bullshit.

I had to take a second look because I didn't realize the sign was held up by a Black Woman until just now LOL. The only thing I can tell you is that I don't take the framing of the photograph to be an indictment that those three women in the background specifically voted for Trump (how could you possible know?) but rather a reminder and expression of frustration that for all the solidarity being shown at the march, White Women overall didn't do their part (keep Trump out of office). That its great these women came out to march but a shitton of people like them in the country basically stabbed Women of Color in the back. This seems to be an extension of the constant friction within Feminist circles about how inclusive they are with regards to the concerns of Women of Color. Mainstream Feminism has often been criticized as ignorant or less concerned with issues Women of Color preferentially face. It's also somewhat frustrating politically considering how politically unified Women of Color are and how politically unified White Women are not. I can't force you to feel one way or the other but there is a lot of context behind something like that. I just seems obvious to me to not be an attack on those three specific women in the back but rather the voting patterns of White Women across the entire country.

Would it have been better if she had a drawing of a fictional White Woman on her sign instead? (this is a legit, non-snarky question)
 

FyreWulff

Member
And don't call it "white fragility".

reaction:

This is how you get 8 years of Trump.

blame the targeted community for putting in the oppressor rather than the ones that put him in and are not targeted by his policies

Individual agency means nothing, and I am personally responsible for the actions of members of my racial group that I have absolutely nothing in common with.

disown the negative while embracing the benefits of being white

Believe me, I tried to convince my family of Trump voters not to do it. I got through to TWO of them out of the 20 or so I spoke with.

it's so hard, I didn't get the instant results I'm used to being able to get due to my white privilege

I'm also a card carrying member of the DNC, maxed out my donations to HRC and was at the March.

gonna need blood and sweat and skin in the game in addition to dollars. as soon as you went home from the march, you were no longer actively engaged. POC are engaged 24/7. Whether they like it or not.

But I'm sure my wife and I are part of the problem.

Counter productive as fuck. I get that POC are mad, and they have every right to be, but blaming members of a group of people for the actions of other people of that group is not altogether useful and is frankly dismissive of the decades of work some of these women have done to advance the cause of feminism out of hand because they are white.

Because a lot of earlier feminists specifically excluded POC from the movement. They often promoted bans on interracial marriage and wanted suffrage only for white women. That didn't just disappear overnight.

and therefore we come back to the white fragility:

I have every right to be mad for being lumped in with the action of people that I loath and vehemently have opposed my entire life.

white people: collectively benefitting each other but absolutely hate being identified for being a collective that needs to work more to talk to other white people instead of pushing black people out in front of them and going "don't worry i'll spot you 10$"


"being lumped in" is what POC have to deal with from the white population CONSTANTLY. Having your identity removed is part and parcel of being non-white in this country and feeling like you've been betrayed or hurt by simply being addressed as part of the group you are is one of the literal examples of white fragility.
 

celljean89

Neo Member
That's a single type of racism.
The idea that minorities can't be racist is only damaging race relations more.


1418.gif
 

LionPride

Banned
Isn't the framing of the photo the whole point? To grab the attention of white women? Otherwise, wouldn't the photo be cropped to only feature the woman with the sign?

The entire basis of photojournalism is using photo framing and composition to show a message. No matter who was responsible; the photographer themselves, the person holding the sign or both of them, it's clear that they framed that picture in a way implying that some of the blame falls on those two women's feet. If that weren't the message then why not crop those two out?

The framing of the photo is making a very specific argument against the three women in the background.

Those three women have individual lives that you don't know shit about.

I agree that America has a serious fucking problem with white people who are willing to vote for their economic interests, xenophobia and racism along with a dash of evangelical beliefs and not give a shit that it is actively harming a whole slew of people.

But, my point is, we don't know anything about the three women in the background of that photo, and it is harmful to their individual agency to be dismissive about their actions, hearts of minds.

A picture is worth a thousand words :p The framing of it is fucked up and makes the picture hateful not meaningful.
The message itself is still meaningful. More white women voted for Trump than not. Fact. While i do not like the photo itself. The message ain't lost on me, I understand what is being said. I won't let it stop me from understanding what is being said.
 
How many of you actually read the Original Post? I don't mean read tweets and furiously typed away. I mean read it?

No offense to Messofanego because he's a good poster, but the whole OP is a meandering mess.

It's centered on the belief that a significant portion of white Woman's March participants voted for Trump, based on no apparent evidence.
 

Cartman86

Banned
Seems like the movement should (and may already be) use white people as a legitimizing element so concerns of minorities can be brought to those masses. We know what would have happened if this was primarily a black march. It needs to be truly intersectional for it to really succeed. I don't think this can be the 60's era marches designed to simply show the humanity of black people. Cops don't use hoses or dogs like that anymore. The problems facing minorities are much more entrenched and normalized across the entire country. It's not just "those southern rednecks". You can't show someone a documentary like "The 13th" in a march. Huge numbers of all different types of people voicing concern for each other however may get people on the sidelines asking the questions.
 

Plum

Member
The message itself is still meaningful. More white women voted for Trump than not. Fact. While i do not like the photo itself. The message ain't lost on me, I understand what is being said. I won't let it stop me from understanding what is being said.

The message of the photo, and the tweet, are that those who protested somehow are still responsible for Trump getting in. No ifs or buts, that's the only reading one can get from the composition of the photo and the wording of the tweet. If "More white women voted for Trump than not" is your message then why not post a picture of a voting statistics graph instead?
 

PillarEN

Member
It's the racism and anti-abortion stance.

Is the anti-abortion a Christian issue for the most part (well it is I don't know I'm asking since it's rhetorical)? Like if you are white Christian women then being anti-abortion is likely to be super super high on your list? What's the breakdown of Christian white women?
 
I don't get the issue. They showed up, they protested. The protest was for women's rights, minority rights, LGTB rights, immigrant rights.

So 53% of white women voted for Trump. I doubt they were there. And even if they were, good on them for turning their backs on him now. Would rather have had it sooner, but that is too late now anyway.
 

LionPride

Banned
No offense to Messofanego because he's a good poster, but the whole OP is a meandering mess.

It's centered on the belief that a significant portion of white Woman's March participants voted for Trump, based on no apparent evidence.
And no one has responded to what was actually said really. More responses have been in relation to a picture or tweet
 
It's going to be a much higher conversion rate than minorities could achieve by trying to talk to them.

That's the point.


Are there any studies on this?

It seems reasonable, but then again, people aren't reasonable. People often double down on their pre-existing views when presented with information that counters it.

I've wondered sometimes if white people have an even harder time than minorities in convincing other white people of anything having to do with race. Because white people have no credibility on the subject. Clinton could talk about racial issues, but does anyone presume her to be genuine on the subject? Nope, the opposite. She was considered fake and calculated by many. The rich white liberal in an ivory tower.

Whereas Obama was credible on racial issues. Republicans still disagreed with him, but they at least believed that he believed what he was saying.
 

akira28

Member
It is a way to delegitamize the genuine upset and anger that these women (and men) feel about what is happening to their country and place the blame for what happened at their feet.

.
I think it just shows how wide the gulf is between the different perspectives.

the picture doesn't imply or even suggest those women voted for Trump. What it does suggest is sobriety in the face of what we actually have to deal with. Smile if you want, but none of us have anything to really smile about. We have fields and stables full of Herculean tasks and right now we aren't even agreed on what to shovel first.

Its not enough to fight "against Trump" this time. I don't see their feelings being legitimized. They are just being offered extra data and being told they need to handle that business too.
 

Fuchsdh

Member
Tangentially related to what we're talking about here, I think there's a point people miss when talking about why Clinton lost the election—there's a lot of ways to win.

Clinton could have done a better job in her campaign.

More white women could have voted for Clinton.

More minorities could have voted + voted for Clinton.

More people could have voted, period.

I think it's helpful to remember that it can be no one's fault as well as everyone's fault for the election, and that singling out groups for non-individual actions is not exactly morally sound, nor is it pragmatically helpful. We have multiple paths to winning elections, whether converting white folks, getting more colored folks to the polls, getting young people to become regular voters and active in state politics, etc. There's plenty of ways to skin this cat, and we can work on addressing all of them.
 

LionPride

Banned
The message of the photo, and the tweet, are that those who protested somehow are still responsible for Trump getting in. No ifs or buts, that's the only reading one can get from the composition of the photo and the wording of the tweet. If "More white women voted for Trump than not" is your message then why not post a picture of a voting statistics graph instead?
That picture is out there, why it wasn't used in the OP, I don't know. A black woman held up a graph of who voted and who they voted for
 

cackhyena

Member
Is the anti-abortion a Christian issue for the most part (well it is I don't know I'm asking since it's rhetorical)? Like if you are white Christian women then being anti-abortion is likely to be super super high on your list? What's the breakdown of Christian white women?

Among catholics? Most certainly. I know a few and that's all they mentioned in their vehemence for denying Hillary the White House. Among Evangelicals, it rates high, maybe not on the same level, but it's pretty damn high.
 

Leunam

Member
This is how you get 8 years of Trump.

Individual agency means nothing, and I am personally responsible for the actions of members of my racial group that I have absolutely nothing in common with.

Believe me, I tried to convince my family of Trump voters not to do it. I got through to TWO of them out of the 20 or so I spoke with.

I'm also a card carrying member of the DNC, maxed out my donations to HRC and was at the March.

But I'm sure my wife and I are part of the problem.

Counter productive as fuck. I get that POC are mad, and they have every right to be, but blaming members of a group of people for the actions of other people of that group is not altogether useful and is frankly dismissive of the decades of work some of these women have done to advance the cause of feminism out of hand because they are white.

And don't call it "white fragility". I have every right to be mad for being lumped in with the action of people that I loath and vehemently have opposed my entire life.

I mean, you're doing precisely what people are asking you to do given the advantage you have. You use your position to make inroads into a demographic that minorities find tough to crack on an everyday personal basis or on a national stage. What more can minorities like us ask for really? That's an ally we like to have.

But the way you reply and react to the simple broader request for introspection on what more can be done? How quick you were to show everyone your receipts? Maybe the message could have been handled a little more gently, but even though you knew you did everything you reasonably could you still came back with 'I'm sure I'm part of the problem.' Don't try and tell me that's not you being a touch fragile. It's not much different from the previous responses.
 
So we're playing oppression olympics now? I'm sure trans people are thrilled to hear their problems don't matter and they're better off. There's a lot of shit transpeople have to fight and deal with and things that are multitudes more difficult than your insulting reduction to a bathroom bill. Unreal.
You're playing games and feigning outrage, and Im not here for it. I didnt "reduce trans issues to a bathroom bill", I gave an example of an LGBTQ issue that received a massive level of support. You're the one who decided to single out Black males, like we have the economic resources to stop White Conservative anti-LGBTQ agendas.
 
Is the anti-abortion a Christian issue for the most part (well it is I don't know I'm asking since it's rhetorical)? Like if you are white Christian women then being anti-abortion is likely to be super super high on your list? What's the breakdown of Christian white women?

There's a strong correlation between people who voted for Donald and people who identify as Evangelical Christians.
 

Koodo

Banned
Sorry, listening is a two way street and posing for a photo that implicitly blames the women that she doesn't know from Adam is accusatory and intentionally inflammatory behavior that robs that group of women of individual agency.

There are real problems with race in this country, and I do a hell of a job of trying to not white-splain or man-splain issues and I am sure I can do a better job of that, but blaming a subset of a race for the actions of another subset of that race is highly insulting behavior.

I am not responsible for the actions of a bunch of racist shit bags. I will absolutely listen to minorities and POC about what I can do to help and what they know is right for their communities, but I am not going to defend actions that single individuals out and place blame on them for actions they did not themselves take.
Except that sign has nothing to do about individual agency and everything to do about institutional problems. It is not singling out a particular person but rather the white institution that is the root cause of the suffering of minorities. It is not meant to rob anyone's individual agency because it is not meant to even be about individual agency.

And while you are not responsible for a bunch of racist shit bags, the fact of the matter is that as a while male, the actions of those racist shit bags is directly benefitting you. That's the entire reason this argument is about institutionalized oppression: no one can escape being a part of this institution. The problem is that white people specifically are the only ones benefiting from this arrangement, at the expense of everyone else. If white people are specifically benefiting from institutional racism, how else do you propose to call this issue other than by the descriptor of the exclusive beneficiary?

"White women voted for Trump" is not only playing on the statistical outcome of this election, but pointing out the privilege that ALL white women have – both the allies and the deplorable, and how the continued existence of this institutionalized privilege will keep affecting the life of every black and non-white woman.

Since this isn't a sign about individual actions but institutional problems, there is absolutely no reason to be offended nor feel like this is targeting YOU – because it has nothing to do with you as an individual.
 

stephen08

Member
The message itself is still meaningful. More white women voted for Trump than not. Fact. While i do not like the photo itself. The message ain't lost on me, I understand what is being said. I won't let it stop me from understanding what is being said.

Can you articulate it? What makes it different from just a factoid that white women as group marginally favored Trump?

Because for the life of me, I don't see any way to interpret it other than these women are hypocritical because they march now but their demographic supports Trump. And that is problematic for fairly obvious reasons I should think.

EDIT: That is assuming that the framing of the photo is intentional. If you want to argue that it's all about the sign and thus it could be taken anywhere I guess you could do that but I think that is being coy.
 

Plum

Member
That picture is out there, why it wasn't used in the OP, I don't know. A black woman held up a graph of who voted and who they voted for

Got a picture of that? the sign in the OP wasn't a graph.

And it wasn't used because it wasn't the message the OP was trying to talk about, we likely had threads literally just saying that information nearer election date. This thread is specifically about the protests, not specifically about statistics as you're implying it is.
 
The framing of the photo is making a very specific argument against the three women in the background.

Those three women have individual lives that you don't know shit about.

I agree that America has a serious fucking problem with white people who are willing to vote for their economic interests, xenophobia and racism along with a dash of evangelical beliefs and not give a shit that it is actively harming a whole slew of people.

But, my point is, we don't know anything about the three women in the background of that photo, and it is harmful to their individual agency to be dismissive about their actions, hearts of minds.

I don't see it that way, so I don't agree that its point is *specific*.

You don't know what the intent of the photographer was. Or their ideology. Or why they are the person they are. Heck you don't know their race or gender.

I respect you enough to challenge you. I didn't see this photo as singling out three women for blame for Donald Trump. Maybe the photographer didn't want to chop their heads off. Heck, maybe the photographer was their friend, and someone else cropped it.

Instead of talking about whether white women need to reflect on if they could be doing more to convince other white women to be more aware of other people's needs, we're arguing about how mean a photographer is for making three white women look bad.

And I just do not see how that makes anything better.
 

FyreWulff

Member
Whereas Obama was credible on racial issues. Republicans still disagreed with him, but they at least believed that he believed what he was saying.

Obama got called a "race baiter" by people for pointing out the very real systemic racism. Cold hard factual statements of historical events were now "just attempts to stir people up". The typical "I'm not responsible for slavery because I didn't exist then but I'm sure as fuck going to partake in the benefits of that event that exist to the day" "let's just all get along and not yell" quote progressive unquote
 

It legitimizes prejudice and divides us more. When you attack an ally because of their skin color your making things worse.
Not to mention the idea that minorities can't be racist is downplaying race issues between minority groups as well, not just with white people.
Instead of pointing fingers we should be coming together instead of letting Trump win because we're dividing ourselves.
 
Racism is prejudice + power so this cannot be racism

If a homeless chinese dude walks up to me and calls mefor a dirty spic it's still going to be pretty racist.

blame the targeted community for putting in the oppressor rather than the ones that put him in and are not targeted by his policies

disown the negative while embracing the benefits of being white

it's so hard, I didn't get the instant results I'm used to being able to get due to my white privilege

gonna need blood and sweat and skin in the game in addition to dollars. as soon as you went home from the march, you were no longer actively engaged. POC are engaged 24/7. Whether they like it or not.



Because a lot of earlier feminists specifically excluded POC from the movement. They often promoted bans on interracial marriage and wanted suffrage only for white women. That didn't just disappear overnight.

and therefore we come back to the white fragility:



white people: collectively benefitting each other but absolutely hate being identified for being a collective that needs to work more to talk to other white people instead of pushing black people out in front of them and going "don't worry i'll spot you 10$"


"being lumped in" is what POC have to deal with from the white population CONSTANTLY. Having your identity removed is part and parcel of being non-white in this country and feeling like you've been betrayed or hurt by simply being addressed as part of the group you are is one of the literal examples of white fragility.

What are you even trying to accomplish with this shit. I don't understand. You're basically telling someone who is doing as much as can be reasonably expected to go fuck themselves.
 
Holy shit this is stupid. How many white women are there in America? 47% could cover every single white female protester with ample room to spare. This is actually so fucking stupid.

Why the hell are we fighting among ourselves?


This really angers me.
 
"You're going to take those generalizations and insults and you're going to like them if you want to stay in the circle."

If you expect people to take abuse from their supposed allies while putting their whole hearts into defending them, you've got another thing coming.

As a man I defend feminism even when they sometimes make broad stroking claims about horrible things men do because I know that it's not being directed at me and their struggle is way more important than whatever I have going on.
 

Plum

Member
You're playing games and feigning outrage, and Im not here for it. I didnt "reduce trans issues to a bathroom bill", I gave an example of an LGBTQ issue that received a massive level of support. You're the one who decided to single out Black males, like we have the economic resources to stop White Conservative anti-LGBTQ agendas.

Police racism has an entire group that has held multiple major, televised protests trying to stop it. How is that not a "massive level of support"?
 

StoOgE

First tragedy, then farce.
reaction:



blame the targeted community for putting in the oppressor rather than the ones that put him in and are not targeted by his policies



disown the negative while embracing the benefits of being white



it's so hard, I didn't get the instant results I'm used to being able to get due to my white privilege



gonna need blood and sweat and skin in the game in addition to dollars. as soon as you went home from the march, you were no longer actively engaged. POC are engaged 24/7. Whether they like it or not.



Because a lot of earlier feminists specifically excluded POC from the movement. They often promoted bans on interracial marriage and wanted suffrage only for white women. That didn't just disappear overnight.

and therefore we come back to the white fragility:



white people: collectively benefitting each other but absolutely hate being identified for being a collective that needs to work more to talk to other white people instead of pushing black people out in front of them and going "don't worry i'll spot you 10$"


"being lumped in" is what POC have to deal with from the white population CONSTANTLY. Having your identity removed is part and parcel of being non-white in this country and feeling like you've been betrayed or hurt by simply being addressed as part of the group you are is one of the literal examples of white fragility.

I'm sorry, do you have any idea who I am and what my life is about?

Because I can promise you, you absolutely do not. You have no idea what my background is, who I am, or what I do on a day in day out basis, and this post is increadibly dismissive of me and what I am about.
 

akira28

Member
the mere implication..(burn everything!!)
no one is saying those women voted Trump. but are you able to draw an allusion? can you see a message other than "these smiling white women are the problem! Fie!"
 
As a male minority, what bothers me about the women's march is that it places the female gender's concerns vis-à-vis men as being equal to male and female minority's concerns vis-à-vis white people. And that's disingenuous. Promoting understanding between races is the singularly most important, difficult, and complex issue of our times. It's insulting and childish to behave as if a white woman's concerns are equivalent to a black man's. They're not.
 
You're playing games and feigning outrage, and Im not here for it. I didnt "reduce trans issues to a bathroom bill", I gave an example of an LGBTQ issue that received a massive level of support. You're the one who decided to single out Black males, like we have the economic resources to stop White Conservative anti-LGBTQ agendas.

I gave an example, but hey if you want to absolve yourself of all guilt of helping others while condemning everyone else regardless of whether those specific people are helping you or not be my guess. It doesn't make you any less of a hypocritical fool though. Also, I'm not sure what I'm "feigning outrage about", I'm not mad in any sense but you seem to enjoy assumptions. ;)
 

Sunster

Member
It legitimizes prejudice and divides us more. When you attack an ally because of their skin color your making things worse.
Not to mention the idea that minorities can't be racist is downplaying race issues between minority groups as well, not just with white people.
Instead of pointing fingers we should be coming together instead of letting Trump win because we're dividing ourselves.

tumblr_inline_ok7svxj2UJ1rxtcep_540.jpg

I'm not commenting on the photo or tweet. Just that I disagree with you on what racism entails. Power and attitude.
 
Are you being serious? One can never tell on these boards.
That's a very common argument on GAF that minority cannot be racist because they lack the structural power and are such doesn't have supremacy.
If u look in the archive of the forum, u will see a lot of poster with that stance.
 
That tweet and that image are some stupid shit. 53% voted for him, the other 47% didn't. Why wouldn't the women in these marches be in the 47%? This is a distraction that's just causing more division. Women are human beings, they make mistakes, they have faults, they're just as stupid as men sometimes. To say all women have to reflect, man fuck that nonsense. You only learn if you want to learn, and for some people, it's trial by fire. If some of the 53% of women realized they made a mistake after the election they have every right to go out and protest and want things to change.

The only people that need to reflect here are navel gazing pseudo-intellectuals whose only platform for "change" is a fucking tweet.

"Maybe UR the problem, think about that one?"

Fuck off.
 
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