I feel like some of my life-long friends have been slowly falling down into a racist suburban american paranoia ideology.

For example: I've lived in a lot of neighborhoods as an adult that are less than 99% white. Therefore where I live is "ghetto". That my friend will somehow be a victim of random acts of crime for visiting. That they can't visit after dark etc.

Or sometimes they'll just pull statements out of the air, usually with little to no prompt. Like In a group chat, someone brought up the month of June, another friend said "is that Juneteenth? Do we need to pretend to care when that is?" Very thinly-veiled "humor" and that's being extremely generous by even pretending to call it that.

The instinctive answer is "find new friends lol" but I don't like that answer.

First, because I genuinely believe my friends are good people, and want to do good, despite their ignorance. Second, the basis of most racism is that I believe they fear what they don't understand. And sure, there sure be some onus on them to attempt to learn. But how?

Third, I hope that by challenging their views in a constructive way, perhaps they might reconsider even for a moment how they view the world. And forth, if I found new friends, this people would continue to exist, now unchallenged by opposing thought which will only further incubate themselves in their sinkhole ideology.

So what are some ways to approach this? If I say the obvious "like this is racist as fuck", it's only going to make them defensive. And it's kind of dumb I even have to be gently cognizant because white people see racism as an immortal, intentional act. So the conversation goes nowhere if you call a white person racist since they'll automatically get defensive.

I'm kind of rambling at this point. Would like to hear ways everyone here tries to save friends you see sinking down the suburban pipeline when it comes to micro (and semi-macro) aggressions.

  • discontinuuity [he/him]
    ·
    3 years ago

    My only suggestion is to invite your friends to meet people of color and discover for themselves that their stereotypes aren't true.

    • TheDeed [he/him, comrade/them]
      ·
      3 years ago

      If you do this at least warn the person you’re bringing them to meet… most of us would rather just not interact with racists, not being setup unknowingly to be some racist’s learning opportunity.

    • Catherine_Steward [she/her]
      ·
      3 years ago

      That really doesn't work on your average American liberal's brand of racism. They rarely meet a black person and think "wow, why isnt this guy currently beating the crap out of me or robbing me or something" they just think "wow, this is one civilized black guy!" No matter how many "exceptions" they meet, they always believe in the rule unless that is specifically challenged.