We know this is a stressful time, we hope that our resources are able to bring some comfort in this unstable time. We are experiencing this together!
Understanding Social Discrimination is a tool for us to determine what the fuel may be for a socially targeted event, typically of abuse, harassment, murder, or other crimes publicly. Social Discrimination can be anything ranging from the social system that upholds the underpaying of women (& AFAB Individuals) and People of Color in the modern corporate world, to the murder of a man due to his skin tone and placement around a group of white men. The importance of this statement is that social discrimination is how these social systems are used against those whom they intended it to affect. Such as the Patriarchal Dominance in many work environments that continue to get away with degrading Women and AFAB individuals in the workplace. This degradation is actually hurtful to both the perception and continuous understanding of the women in the workforce. However, if you are wondering how to stand up against Social Discrimination and fight the common threats, you can educate yourself and spend time thinking about your reactions to different situations and the ability you have to change them. You can spend time thinking about how to change the immediate steps you take in a given situation to be more socially responsible.
Hate crimes are rooted in (Systemic) Systems of Oppression that have been upheld by historical/long-serving societal structures. Hate crimes are criminal acts motivated by bias or prejudice against a person or group based on characteristics such as race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability. Historically, these crimes have been used as tools of social control, intimidation, and oppression. In the United States, hate crimes were often associated with racial terror during the post-Reconstruction era, particularly through lynchings and violence aimed at Black Americans to reinforce segregation and white supremacy. Similarly, in Nazi Germany, state-sponsored hate crimes targeted Jews, Roma, and other minority groups as part of a genocidal regime.
In the modern era, hate crimes remain a serious issue globally. While civil rights advances have provided legal protections, incidents of hate-fueled violence persist. Modern hate crimes can range from vandalism of religious sites to violent attacks on individuals, such as the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting targeting LGBTQ+ individuals or anti-Asian violence during the COVID-19 pandemic. The internet has also created new avenues for hate crimes, including cyber harassment and the efficient spread of extremist propaganda on new platforms.
Governments and international bodies have responded by enacting hate crime legislation, aiming to impose stricter penalties when bias is proven to be a motivating factor. However, enforcement and definitions vary widely by country. Tracking and reporting remain challenges, often due to underreporting or lack of legal frameworks.
First we must understand what kind of systems we are looking at.
Patriarchy has been founded on the preconceived notion to sex differences at birth and assumed placement in breeding or procreation for future generations, and the assumed placement of a labor source or provider. While this notion has been getting very old by this time, we have let it up hold several households and leave many spending years in emotional aguish over their true wants and the systems' need to stay alive. If men are home bodies who take care of the young, as their female partner have a larger coporate jobs that provide for the family you are actively breaking this norm. However, don't misguide your sense of praise for breaking away from the norm. The praise goes to those who also teach their children not to rely on a specific sex or gender to provide for emotional needs etc. There is a lot in this world that caters to the male ideology, but in many ways it dis-serves the male population the most by inappropriate expectations and emotional strangulation. This does not negate that the tole the Patriarchy has put on AFAB people and/or women is unattainable by most, and has caused death, abuse, and manipulation in the name of gender superiority. Sexual domination has always been apart of this historical fantasy, but the patriarchy uses this assumed domination to abuse and silence women all the time. Rape and abuse culture is an egregous act and it's important that we take the energy to deal with our biggest predators in the community.
However our systems journey does not lead us just to Patriarchal Systems, but also Racist Systems that further upheld the white male agenda for power and profits. We saw this throughout the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, Fugitive Slave Laws, Emancipation Proclamation, and Jim Crow Laws that have only evolved in their ability to access black communities and gerrymander their counties. Racism has many different ways of manifesting itself in the psychology of white individuals. Racism is something every white person faces, because our environment inherently works for us. It makes sure that we are safe; instead of fearing us and therefore endangering us. Racism and Slavery gave white men with power the ability to control and manipulate the ways in which voting and many other forms of freedom were withheld. Black Communities have faced the most extreme of attacks in our nation's history. It's our job as people today to combat our learned racism and other social systems, so that people can be in this place of freedom with the feeling of actually feeling safe, protected, and free to do so as they please (with reason).
Discrimination can often go unnoticed if we are not being diligent in our education and understanding of the world around us. When we are doing new activities or eating new foods we should always ask about the practices or origin or do some of our own research. It's no one's fault if you mispronounce a name once or twice but make sure that you are attentive when people are taking time to share any part of their culture with you. Often times we can do an action and mislabel it with a word or name of something that other wise we wouldn't identify with, and we can recognize this misdoing and make sure that we understand why misusing that word or action is important. The ways we react to criticism is important, especially in relation to cultural sensitivity. Everyone deserves to feel respected and welcome in any environment and setting a boundary can be a scary task. This is another large reason for why your response to the criticism can be so influential to future experiences discrimination attention.
This type of discrimination may be seen as appropriation, which usually is done in a way where someone is using a piece of another community's identity (sometimes without full knowledge of doing so). We always have the potential to learn, so when you learn something you have been doing is inappropriate: do your best to keep calm, understand to the best you can, and don't repeat the action without changing it.
Unlearning Racism is a continuous journey of self-education and community interaction that you hope can help you unlearn the system we all learned as children and young adults. Many of us were not taught strict racism as children, but our elections, media, social platforms, etc., have completely pushed ideals of white men and women. We have a society that has had very low inclusion standards for most modern industries surrounding art and product formation. There are hundreds of products that are never even tested to see if they are positively affective for hair of black communities. While there is a wide gap in the part of the larger population that we serve, we also have a police system with a repetitive nature of being abusive and unnecessary forceful with People of Color and Black community members. Race for a long time has been defined in a similar way to gender, in the way of it being a construct and a way of sectioning groups of people for power redistribution. Race has become a reason for so many to commit murder and abuse People of Color, while skin color has never shown to have any significant differences between groups when it comes to human qualities. However this does not apply to the treatment people recieve today, many medical students are still taught that black patients and patients of color are less likely to feel pain and therefore don't need standard pain relief treatments. We have disparaging numbers when it comes to People of Color getting medical treatment, and the unnecessary complications that occur. Many of these issues can include failure listening to the patient, inadaquate resources to continue treatment on one's own due to social inequities, and the cost of healthcare in the United States of America.
All of these reasons are just a few reasons why really supporting and discussing unlearning your racist tendencies with others around you. If you feel compelled to ask someone if something would be appropriate before doing so, that may also be able to give you a better guide for your actions. Being in a state of constant learning can be confusing and sometimes what you may learn could seem conflicting, but you will learn the in's and out's as we all go. None of us are perfect, but we can all try our best to be better.
The danger of police involvement with People of Color can never be quantified because we have seen some of the most atrocious racial hate crimes committed by police officers. This means that any time a person of color is involved with or speaking to a cop, there is an overwhelming fear for their life and the ability for them to get home safe that night. There has been a steady trend of people of color being targeted and seeked out by our police system. This means that if you are a white person, you should be taking all precautions when contacting the police to be involved in a situation with a Person of Color. If you are required to in an emergency circumstance of course thats fine. However, when white individuals threaten to call police officers, you are directly threatening the life of that person. Often times the police will even shoot before confirming if a Person of Color is armed (which should be illegal); this means that once you have contacted the police, you have no way of protecting that person from harm. Please take into consideration whenever you are calling the police on anyone, the police officers can be rough or harmful to anyone. Recognizing the fear that People of Color face when trying to interaction peacefully or casually with police officers, is recognizing one of the systems and institutions we have created to uphold that social system. If you know the police will be present and looking around, and you invite a Person of Color, please be curtious enough to let them know about the police presence. This has nothing to do with any involvement in illegal activities, but to point out how we can be socially aware of what others may face socially and being poite in recognition.
LGBTQIA+ and the history of violence with the police system have a long history as well. While the threat has seemed less threatening in recent pasts, the increase of anti-LGBTQIA+ legistlation has made it very unsafe for people who are within the queer community, when dealing with law enforcement. Further, its important that we remember the ways in which homophobia from other societal community member has caused atrocities in the LGBTQIA+ communities. We have to make sure that we are always cautious for the ways that police interact with certain identities as a long history of bias has existed agains the Queer community. There may be members of the Queer community who are not as effected by this fear of law enforcement; however, we must remain aware that the LGBTQIA+ community houses lots of other minorities within it. These other identities held by LGBTQIA+ individuals also posed a threat to their wellbeing when being around possibly hostile or biased law enforcement.
Check out our page on Allyship and What is an Ally? (AL-I)
First part about being an Ally is getting involved and talking to those you know about support options. Allyship includes radical acceptance of all friends and family members who are experiencing discrimination in any realm of social systems. If you have a friend who is disabled you can help them check entrances and exits to buildings and report them to work, school, or campus, staff. If you have a friend who is trans, make sure you support them the best you can by reaffirming their gender identity choice and helping them research treatment options. If you happen to support a cause firmly such as unlearning racism, you can commit yourself to doing things for the community as well. There are many ways in which our poorest communities are affected most by these social systems in place in our institutions. Allyship means doing what you can when you can, and educating yourself between those two groups of time. We always want to feel as thought we have it all together, but remind yourself there is always more to learn and understand about those you don't know. Be open about your imperfections when people discuss any criticisms about how you decide to do this journey. Being a solid Ally isn't always easy, but neither is being apart of any of these communities.
How do you start to address the internalized homophobia you may be facing, first you may be wondering what we are referring to. Internalized Homophobia is the ways in which the way we were taught to respond to homosexuals as young children or young adults; then once realizing your true queer identity you realize all the ways you believed that could never be you because of a false depiction you were provided with when it came to learning about being queer or gay. Many of us need time to deal with this guilt, specifically the guilt wrapped up in once being critical of the queer acceptance. Homophobic guilt can be a source of great pain especially when you experience the same criticism you possibly gave others in your position now. If you are experiencing an awakening where you are unsure how to feel about your past involvement with homophobia and your current queer journey, talking with a mental health professional can easy some of that burden. For some people talking to a queer friendly religious figure can be positive for healing the internalized homophobia.
Gender in itself is a construct of our long standing history in humanity. While we have seen a correlation with gender identity and sexual organs in humans for our history on this planet; there still well-known evidence that humans have always had people who don't identify within their sex given at birth. Being that it is a construct and system that most of our societies have upheld and idolized for its sexual and manipulative nature. Defining Gender as a system means that it has more that the barest of definitions; this system functions on the perception of the self and the people around you. Women and men are given a chance at life all the same, but we all know the creative differences between the ways we parents and instruct younger girls in comparison to boys. This all comes down to the ways each gender perceives themselves, and the other identities around them. Many men are compelled to not show emotion or compassion for others as a way of gaining strength; however, this is a self-harm tactic that most men have learned from those around them and older than them.
When we begin to reframe our experiences surrounding gender, we are merely looking at a the same image with different glasses. While a person may be a person and without identification they remain genderless; however, the moment I tell you she is here or he is there, a completely new perception of the interaction is taking place. This is one of many ways that the way we have made gender a system in our everyday lives. Exploring the understanding of any of our genders, is to go beyond anything our sex at birth might convey. Our gender expression is that of what we have been manipulated over the years to be what it is today. This doesn't mean that your expression is incorrect it just means a lot of interactions helped you form that expression. The different groups of people out there today believe the gender expression somehow infringes on the lives around the person expressing their gender differently, while it has no real impact on those around them. Many people of stereotypical gender expression have experienced several times where the impression of their expression gave someone else a false impression of who they were based on stereotyping. This means that gender is a system that serves very few people in the bigger institutions of modern day capitalism which typically consist of rich white males.
Gender can be expressed on a spectrum of femininity and masculinity, but at the basis of breaking down gender norms and constructs we have freedom of expression. There may be a gender attached to someone's identity but you can act, dress, and be whomeever you want in this world. (Of course this sounds a lot more glamourous than it may be in reality.)
Due to the high range of hate crimes that occur every day surrounding gender and sexual orientation, it has been very important for everyone who is queer in some way to be careful about who they share that information with. It can be dangerous for some of us to share our identifying factors with others. Calling our Significant Others or Family Members: "Partner", "Spouse", "Significant Other", "Sibling", "Pal", (etc.) and other non-gendered specific names can ensure a bit of extra safety. However those who are most inquisitive of these kinds of things may inquire deeper; this is why we encourage our allies to discuss their non-queer relationships and non-queers familiy members in the same way. This has completely de-stigmatized the word "Partner," and "Spouse," allowing for many more queer individuals to discuss their partners in safety at work or in public.
Precarious:
“Precarity (also precariousness) is a precarious existence, lacking in predictability, job security, material or psychological welfare. The social class defined by this condition has been termed the precariat.”
Precarity is a good gauge to use when looking at visible and non-visible identities, because we are gauging the level of danger for a given identity based on different situations. While some people may carry identity privileges, it does not take away from their precarious identities, or the impact they may have in someone’s day-to-day life. When discussing identities and power struggles, utilizing the lens of precarity can help us to navigate complex intersectional scenarios.
Equity as a concept differentiates from equality in that it is a way for us to view the necessity of not having equal support for each person, but rather finding the way for everyone to have equal access to the support they may need to meet their basic human needs and have access to the spaces and resources necessary for human spiritual health. A goal of equity is to acknowledge how the trades that we make of our energy for a common goal, may not always look equal, but have similar weight to each person and their ability to contribute. Equity is a large piece to understanding the best ways we can create more accessible spaces, as well as essential to addressing various kinds of power imbalances relating to hierarchies of race, class, citizenship, sexuality, assigned gender status, ability, and more.
These are mock cities made to train cops and other enforcement agencies on how to contain and handle civilains and mass protest. These are extremely detrimental to our future and the foundation of what our protection agencies are supposed to serve. These cop cities are being built in 47 of the 50 states, and some have many of them; many built in areas that are supposed to serve a disproportionate amount of people of color and minority communities.
Knowing what kinds of relationships we have with the people around us can be very important. Our page on Relationships explains some of the ways that we can identify or relationships with others, but also how these relationships may effect us and the people around us. Avoiding Predators can also be something to look into that we prefer that all individuals prepare for.
There are many reasons we obtain consent from other's, and when it comes to the ways we communicate that there are a few things to know. We all have our own unique history, and sometimes that history has trauma. It is not someone else's job to inform you of the trauma they have endured in the past. If they do communicate that with you, then make sure you are asking how you can avoid retraumatization and other ways to avoid the feelings of trauma. When it comes to sexual activity and other more personal matters these communicated boundaries or understandings, are even more important and vital to keep aware of. No one wants to make the people they care about or are interested in, feel uncomfortable around them. However, not all of us are the best at communication due to the years of inhibition we've endured when it comes to open communication. Knowing that not all of us are good at communication is part of having good communication. We are not always up for deep communication, and sometimes we have trouble paying attention. We can accept our faults and others as normal pieces of human communication. Sometimes lack-of-communication can be a way of communication in itself.
Regardless, the effort that we choose to put into the way we communicate, is going the effect the way our relationships function, and following consent rules is a perfect way to get comfortable with this notion. Understanding properties of consent, can open our minds to the reasons that following other's boundaries are important.