Quote:
Posted by
Bill Ryan
Quote:
Posted by
neutronstar
I grew up in a small town in Iowa where there is not much diversity at all, and I see the racism there.
Okay... can you build on this thread, as an educational vehicle (hopefully!), and explain what you saw, what form it took, and why it was there? (And, importantly, why you call it or regard it as racism? (Maybe it was! But we can't tell, because we don't know what you're describing.)
You see, the word is loosely used... that's my thesis. What I'm really interested in is what the roots of it are, and why it's there — and if it's NOT racism, what is it really?
I can be more specific. Because here, In Ecuador, I'm in the cultural minority situation.
I'm a migrant, living in Ecuador. I'm not an Ecuadorian. I barely speak the language. This not my country. I really don't properly belong here, and I know that.
I like the local people, and I don't much like most of the Americans I see here. But I can feel the quiet, low-key, silent attitudes towards me... sometimes, in some places.
This isn't about race. No-one dislikes my white skin. Quite a few Ecuadorians have fairly white skin, too.
They just think I don't really belong here, and they disrespect (I believe) that I've not taken more trouble to learn the language. I think they see me (and the other Europeans and Americans) as a kind of economic migrant ...
because it's cheap here. So we take advantage of that, and the truth is that we give very little back, indeed.
I'll say it again. This is not racism. But the locals are worried. They don't know, and are given no safeguards, where this is all going. I can feel it.
To put it even more bluntly:
I'm here because I legally can be, but it's 100% entirely selfish.
It's all about me, and my safety, comfort, enjoyment, and personal well-being. I'm as friendly as I possibly can be to the local people (I live in a farming community, as one of the only
gringos for miles). Some of them are really friendly back. Others literally look the other way. I can feel their thoughts.
Is this their racism? Not the way I understand it. They simply don't want me to be here.
Should I go home? Where's home? I don't have one. I have no family, anywhere. I might as well be a Syrian refugee.
If there were forums in Ecuador (and maybe there are! How would I know?), the local people might well be discussing, with some emotion, the problem of their country being overrun with
Americanos. And they'd be entitled to.
At least, unlike in some other parts of the world, the migrants aren't bringing degrees of crime and abuse with them. But that doesn't stop the locals from being worried, and I'm part of the problem here: I'm certainly no part of any solution.
The local people's attitudes about this would not be racism. They're simply worried about the integrity of their country, and their culture.
Just as I was, when I lived in Britain, and went into that hairdresser's in Leicester... before I immediately turned round and instinctively walked out.