@slomo: happy to see you took yourself out of RI quarantine: you are my favorite psychopath.
Having skimmed the thread (& as someone raised in an ultra-liberal environment with lots of stories to tell, as most people here know), one thing I'd suggest is that the word "racism" is essentially meaningless at this point in history, and that, when a word becomes meaningless and yet is still being used, it becomes counter-productive, even damaging. There are a whole slew of words which I feel essentially the same way about, and most or all of them pertain to or stem from the "neoliberal" set, since, whatever Trump's victory suggests, this is the dominant ideological narrative right now.
It's a certain kind of viewpoint, generally, that relies on words like "racist" and "racism" to argue its points, and the people who use those words (at this thread, for example) generally do so for a specific reason. Guess what? It's the same reason people have used the word "nigger": to stigmatize a whole group of people.
Personally, and this is probably something I knew
as a child, I've started to see how all these -isms and -phobias are just red herrings, because there's one thing happening here and it trumps (no pun intended) all its variations: scapegoating. When "liberals" fight "racism," they condemn large numbers of people, without ever meeting them or talking to them, not for the color of their skin but for their
beliefs. In the process, the anti-racists exalt themselves and their views to a higher moral plateau (rightly or wrongly), by doing the same with whatever minority (or "minority") they are defending (the liberals' pet-cause; for my grandfather it was blacks, gays, and murderous mobsters doing jail time; almost certainly pedophiles too). This creates privileged "minority" classes (I put "minority" in quotes because the definition isn't always based on numbers), and, as everyone knows, these "minorities" get special treatment ~ for
having been discriminated against previously.
As I see it, if: a) a person is not permitted to express their opinions or feelings about someone or a group of people (or even national policy that relates to certain people, such as immigration laws) without being stigmatized; and b) that same (latter) someone or group of people is not merely protected from "prejudice" but is also receiving special treatment (being idealized, essentially) and is being presented as in some way beyond reproach (since any reproach is seen as discrimination) . . . What happens?
Trump happens.
Those associated ~ rightly or wrongly ~ with the original perceived persecution drives (misogyny, racism, homophobia, etc) then become the persecuted "minority" (the underclass); and so naturally their anger, frustration, & hostility increases, as well as their numbers.
I've avoided using concrete examples because of course this area of discussion is filled with land mines designed to go off at first contact, to provoke archetypal/emotional responses and not rational ones. But also because, in a way it doesn't matter, since
it is all scapegoating, all the identical social principal that's being applied to achieve the ends of an actual privileged minority class. What can be said about this group is very little. But they may not even
be racist, homophobic, or misogynist
at all, because they may be something far beyond such limited and limiting terms (terms they would have coined deliberately to befog the rest of us); they may view themselves as superior to all humankind, as we think of the term, regardless of type or orientation.
It is a lot easier to fool people than show them how they have been fooled.