Seriously speaking, when these riots "end", they will never actually be over because the thoughts which gave birth to them will still be floating in the minds of all who participated.
How do you convince generations of people who have been manipulated their entire educational careers into believing that "all white people are privileged" and that "all white owe apologies and reparations" to change their attitudes?
It's actually easier than you think.
Advertising strategies.
We need a catchy campaign to drive certain points home that will trend. And it must not be offensive; but still be the truth.
Sounds like a impossible order, doesn't it? But the answer for this dilemma is found in history.
We must emphasize which "wave" our ancestors rode. Most white Americans have ancestors who did not arrive in the United States until after the Civil war. They arrived during the "3rd wave" of immigration 1880 -1914 or the much later 4th wave.
Most of the college age kids marching around like fools have absolutely no idea that their ancestors bear no responsibility for slavery because they weren't even in the United States.
Nor do they bear responsibility for the "Jim Crow" laws because they themselves (their ancestors) were subject to discrimination during their assimilation.
It is this historical ignorance which allows the communists to guilt trip the white youth into thinking "they" should bear the weight of ancestral sins.
With this thought in mind, I suggest a "They rode the wave" campaign. A logo of a group of immigrants atop a wave of water (representational) with the dates 1880-1914 3rd wave and another with the corresponding dates for the 4th wave needs to start circulating.
They rode the wave 1880-1914 needs to trend Twitter. Also, the dates for the 4th wave.
And we need a website where we can post our ancestors stories of their "privilege" upon arriving in America. My Grandmother had the privilege of scrubbing floors on her hands and knees in downtown offices for pennies. She was no different than the majority of immigrants who arrived with nothing and worked hard to make a better life for her children.
We need to hammer home that "They rode the waves" until the kids realize their history was never one of "privilege"
Seriously speaking, when these riots "end", they will never actually be over because the thoughts which gave birth to them will still be floating in the minds of all who participated.
How do you convince generations of people who have been manipulated their entire educational careers into believing that "all white people are privileged" and that "all white owe apologies and reparations" to change their attitudes?
It's actually easier than you think.
Advertising strategies.
We need a catchy campaign to drive certain points home that will trend. And it must not be offensive; but still be the truth.
Sounds like a impossible order, doesn't it? But the answer for this dilemma is found in history.
We must emphasize which "wave" our ancestors rode. Most white Americans have ancestors who did not arrive in the United States until after the Civil war. They arrived during the "3rd wave" of immigration 1880 -1914 or the much later 4th wave.
Most of the college age kids marching around like fools have absolutely no idea that their ancestors bear no responsibility for slavery because they weren't even in the United States.
Nor do they bear responsibility for the "Jim Crow" laws because they themselves (their ancestors) were subject to discrimination during their assimilation.
It is this historical ignorance which allows the communists to guilt trip the white youth into thinking "they" should bear the weight of ancestral sins.
With this thought in mind, I suggest a "They rode the wave" campaign. A logo of a group of immigrants atop a wave of water (representational) with the dates 1880-1914 3rd wave and another with the corresponding dates for the 4th wave needs to start circulating.
They rode the wave 1880-1914 needs to trend Twitter. Also, the dates for the 4th wave.
And we need a website where we can post our ancestors stories of their "privilege" upon arriving in America. My Grandmother had the privilege of scrubbing floors on her hands and knees in downtown offices for pennies. She was no different than the majority of immigrants who arrived with nothing and worked hard to make a better life for her children.
We need to hammer home that "They rode the waves" until the kids realize their history was never one of "privelege"
Seriously speaking, when these riots "end", they will never actually be over because the thoughts which gave birth to them will still be floating in the minds of all who participated.
How do you convince generations of people who have been manipulated their entire educational careers into believing that "all white people are privileged" and that "all white owe apologies and reparations" to change their attitudes?
It's actually easier than you think.
Advertising strategies.
We need a catchy campaign to drive certain points home that will trend. And it must not be offensive; but still be the truth.
Sounds like a impossible order, doesn't it? But the answer for this dilemma is found in history.
We must emphasize which "wave" our ancestors rode. Most white Americans have ancestors who did not arrive in the United States until after the Civil war. They arrived during the "3rd wave" of immigration 1880 -1914 or the much later 4th wave.
Most of the college age kids marching around like fools have absolutely no idea that their ancestors bear no responsibility for slavery because they weren't even in the United States.
Nor do they bear responsibility for the "Jim Crow" laws because they themselves were subject to discrimination during their assimilation.
It is this historical ignorance which allows the communists to guilt trip the white youth into thinking "they" should bear the weight of ancestral sins.
With this thought in mind, I suggest a "They rode the wave" campaign. A logo of a group of immigrants atop a wave of water (representational) with the dates 1880-1914 3rd wave and another with the corresponding dates for the 4th wave needs to start circulating.
They rode the wave 1880-1914 needs to trend Twitter. Also, the dates for the 4th wave.
And we need a website where we can post our ancestors stories of their "privilege" upon arriving in America. My Grandmother had the privilege of scrubbing floors on her hands and knees in downtown offices for pennies. She was no different than the majority of immigrants who arrived with nothing and worked hard to make a better life for her children.
We need to hammer home that "They rode the waves" until the kids realize their history was never one of "privelege"