Tuesday, September 7, 2010

The point of these criminal examples is to prove that members of one specific race is not increasingly likely to being a serial killer, bank robber, rapist or anyone who is a danger to society for that matter.

The nature of a crime committed has to do with personal choices, circumstances, mentality and a number of other factors – none of which include race.

This leads me to my next question; why when a man hides the dead bodies of many women in his farm are all farmers not then stereotyped and profiled? If instead of a caucasion, Robert Pickton had been a Muslim and instead of being a farmer he was a cab driver – how would this case have been used to target the Islam minority? The truth is though, that he is a white man, therefore his race was not punished for his actions, because white privilege would never allow that to happen.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010



An obvious solution that would force change to happen

A good start to making those in authority treat all diverse members of society (criminal, innocent or suspected) equally would be to include visible minorities as hired law enforcement. Yes, there are currently police officers who are not just white – but when you look at the statistics there is definitely room for improvement in including a range of nationalities among those who protect and serve.



In 2006, the Law Commission of Canada stated that "…in spite of concerted efforts to increase diversity in police services in Canada, women, members of visible and ethnic minority groups, as well as Aboriginal peoples, remain significantly underrepresented, compared to their representation in the communities being policed" (based on 1996 Census data). Data from the 2006 Census show that, for Canada as a whole, this continues to be the case for visible minorities and women.



Although this picture may look strange at first, I urge you to analyze why it forces you to do a double take - is it because there are hardly any officers of the Muslim nationality? The turban the clearly represents another culture? Is it the fact that a job that is so exclusively "Canadian" is being performed by somebody who does not appear to be born in Canada? If the reason was any of these suggestions, my point as to how minorities are not as readily included in law enforcement has been proven.

Monday, June 7, 2010


The role of the media in racial stereotypes & crime


This is an interesting perspective of how the media presents minorities. To see the entire article click on the link below.

No one wants to be called a racist. When you ask people why they think African-Americans are on a crime spree, Latinos are flooding the country with drugs, or Asian-Americans are banding together to put "real Americans"--read whites--out of business, they will immediately tell you they saw it on the local news or read it in a newspaper.

So, what's the answer? The more than 5,000 minority journalists at a recent Unity conference in Atlanta said the solution is to increase racial and ethnic minorities in news management ranks so that those who report, edit, and decide what goes on the media are proportionately representative of the public at large.

The number of minorities in the media have increased from four percent to more than 10% in recent years, but the Unity participants believe that rate isn't fast enough. Certainly, they are right. It is unconscionable that the men and few women who manage the media continue to do so without the benefit of enough input from racial and ethnic minorities to make a difference.



http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1272/is_n2594_v123/ai_15897250/

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

White Thief Disguises Himself As Black Man To Rob 6 Banks



This video shows how quickly it was believed that a bank
robber was African American, especially being based on
stereotypes this would naturally be the assumption anyways.

The criminal who did in fact commit the crime used
the misconceptions about race in modern society for
his own benefit - and to an extent it worked.

What does this say about how people of differing
nationalities are either critically examined or assumed
to have behaved in certain ways?



The media plays a huge role in filtering those who are presented as committing crimes and being dangerous to society. How many times has the opening criminal description of a suspect been “a tall black man ...” or “a Hispanic expected to be escaping to his home land...” on the evening news? The norm of describing and grouping criminals primarily by their race perpetuates who is assumed to be more likely of acting in categories of deviant ways.

The first line of the above post seems to sum up modern North American attitudes very well, nobody wants to be accused of being racist, or have their opinions on race viewed as being discriminatory instead of political. But by the media delivering evidence and language that isolates minorities as being the “visibly dangerous members of society,” people are continually being classified by their nationalities and racial appearances. Pertaining to crime, the content that media outlets surround society with don’t just create stereotypes - they cause entire races to be victims of propaganda and fabrication.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Throughout this year I have written a number of critical reflections about diversity issues and stories. Analyzing various topics including the relation between poverty and race, the danger of not letting immigrants in danger receive citizenship, how temporary workers are in many cases unfairly treated and how culture is viewed in relation to terrorism has allowed me to learn about specific topics in detail and apply the knowledge I have gained in studying diversity.

All of these small reflections do not relate directly to my blog, but they are topics that individually have roles in my overall argument of how there is discrimination in modern society that needs to end. A lot of the basic knowledge I needed to understand different perspectives and fundamental information about the nature and importance of diverse studies have been learned and applied in each of these reflections.


It is my hope that by including my perspectives on these issues others will gain insight and personally reflect and share what they think needs to be changed in order to improve society.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Reflection #1
September 30, 2010
This video forced me to raise several questions concerning the amount of racial poverty that exists in Ontario’s capital, Toronto and Canada in general. When reading the statistics that were posted on the screen throughout the video, I found myself constantly rewinding and pausing to make sure that I had read them right – concepts including “how racialized poverty rates went up 361% between 1980-2000” (“Understanding the Colour of Poverty in Ontario – Part One,” 2007) anywhere in Canada seemed so shocking I figured I must have misread the fact. Why are people in racialized groups at a higher risk for poverty? The only suggestion I thought of that could even begin to answer this question is circumstance. The only real difference between people who immigrate to Canada and those who don’t is where we were born. It does not mean one group is more highly skilled or harder working than another, some people are born into privilege and some are simply not. It is a common stereotype that immigrants or specific racial groups are poor because they don’t work at jobs that require intelligence that is adequately paid for. It was stated in (“Understanding the Colour of Poverty – Part One,” 2007) that “the hardest part of settlement for immigrants is getting a job.” It is the thinking of many that the majority of Caucasians and Canadian born people simply have the work ethic to get hired for skilled jobs and maintain them and that is why our poverty levels are less than other racial communities. But if this is the case, why in this video did we see an immigrant who was a qualified accountant driving a taxi because the reality was that he could not get hired to work at the accountant job he wanted to do. It is unlikely that he has not been employed for the job he is primarily qualified for due to any other factor than his race. As I watched him explain how he sometimes feared for his life while working I wondered, is the Canadian governments idea of resources for immigrants really as pathetic as offering them safety for dangerous jobs such as being a cab driver in the form of a camera that can only do as much as aid in the capture of a potential murderer that enters their taxi?

In class we discussed the reality of how open to the idea of immigrants Canada actually is in comparison with the perception of how we are seen to view those who come to our country to live from other areas of the world. Canada has a reputation that includes the idea we welcome multiculturalism and diversity however, documentaries like (“Understanding the Colour of Poverty – Part One,” 2007) bring forth the inconvenient truth that several racial groups are suffering treatment of inferiority in silence. How can Canada ever expect to evolve from this disgusting behaviour if we do not even admit it happens and recognize how much change still needs to take place? I suggest that although poverty is an extremely difficult problem to find solutions to, and it is inevitable that it will always exist – it should not be categorized by a discriminative ways of thinking such as racism. The geography of where someone was born and their skin colour should have nothing to do with what occupations they attain in the country of Canada.

Living in poverty, in my opinion, is not living at all – it only existing. People who require the governments resources for those living with little to no money are not a burden on “the system,” they are “the system.” Canadian immigrants are just that – Canadian. They are entitled to the same equal treatment and opportunities as any Canadian born individual and one racial group being more acceptable than another is a ridiculous concept that forwards nothing but ignorance and negativity. I believe strongly that occupations should not be reserved for only those who are “worthy” to have designated roles in society because of the circumstances of their birth or specific opportunities they have been given in their lifetime. Working unreasonably long days in order to make enough money to barely support oneself or family is unnecessary suffering that undoubtedly affects the quality of life of many people living in this Canada. I suggest that this video’s main objective was to educate people about the shocking level of poverty in Toronto (which is a place that I assume was chosen to accurately represent other areas of Canada as well). The visuals of people facing this discrimination is meant to both shock and evoke compassion among those who did not understand this conflict to the same extent prior to watching this video. It is my understanding that the elements in the documentary the (“Understanding the Colour of Poverty – Part One,” 2007) are meant to generate a change – if not in action at least in thought and recognition. This video creates discourse concerning racial poverty providing altercations of the perceptions surrounding the issue of colour in relating to how occupations and economics in Canada are distributed in actuality. The tolerable and generous impression the country of Canada commonly has strongly contrasts the stereotype that perception is reality.