-> DB> is likely so, you have the emotional approach to life, this
-> attitude y DB> are callously displaying. A black or latino will
-> have had many more DB> doors closed to them--and this creates
-> befuddlement, anger & a bit of DB> despair. One must work so much
-> harder to get the basics, to make need DB> inroads to personal
-> success. This has been the situation for me. I DB> approach
-> interviews strongly and make certain that I do very well i DB>
-> job-testing. I want to make the best impression--and oft DB> how
-> striking I am, how strong and solid my skills are, wha DB>
-> references I have. And then weeks go by with no work--from m DB>
-> agencies. It does not add up, Don.
-> Some of us 'WASP's hide our head in the sand on this issue but I
-> dont. Yes, it is still going on. Its not *as* bad, but it's still
-> there.
It is hard to tell how bad it is, Carol. I keep hearing about the
diminishing unemployment, see government positions posted and have
applied [along with local jobs and the temp agencies]. These
former required testing which I took. My score was 93.6; surely
that is high enough to get SOME consideration--not a word. Scary.
-> Let me add my 2 cents worth on this. When I was in school, we still
-> had 'tracking'. Some kids were 'college bound track' and others were
-> 'vocational skills' tracked. There was an obvious difference. My
-> 'college bound track' classes were almost exclusively white, and
-> the vo-tech track was a high ratio of black people. This makes no
-> sense. It continued thru my HS years, because once folks figured
-> out this was wrong, it was too late to change the lesser training
-> given. I graduated in 1978 from HS.
This kind of program was in style during my high school years and I was
on the college-prep track. In my junior and senior years, I took all
sorts of impressive-sounding classes that looked good on the transcript
but whose contents I have not used since. :)
->
-> Now I hear, the folks arent tracking at all, and that is equally
-> hurting the folks in school, because the teachers cant get a
-> relatively level class so have to teach to the lowest common
-> denominator, and that is hurting the students who *could* do the
-> college track. Its only advantage is it isnt color based anymore.
->
-> Smile, my daughter (4YO) is in a montesouri (sp?) school. Its
-> working well. She and her classmates, in a clean easy environment,
-> are soaking up stuff that will make them perhaps a bit ahead once
-> they start gradeschool. The smartest one is Justin, who as you
-> probably guessed is black. Charlotte is sometimes a little upset
-> because she is behind him on all things, but older than he is.
-> She's better at sports though so is happy enough for now . This
-> is the way it should be. I dont think Charlotte has encountered
-> the word 'prejudiced' yet and certainly wont understa when she
-> does. Thats the future. Lets give them all the time t reality,
-> and forget the silly thoughts our ancestors and paren to us.
->
I very much hope so--and think so. Many adolescence I see about appear
as juvenile and self-centered as ever, but they seem less grossly
ignorant and racially biased than those of my generation.
-> As my end coda, let me say I never considered myself predjudiced
-> (just cant spell that!) but as I grew in my military career, I found
-> remnants of it. I hope to hell I've wiped any lingering traces of
-> it out of myself, because as God is my witness, I *know* it just
-> doesnt make sense to be so. People are people and color has nothing
-> to do with capability. xxcarol
Thank you for your words, Carol. :)
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