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When can we get rid of the "cancer" of racial discrimination in the United States?
楼主
来源:jhgj@cromeratwood822 4/20/2022 11:03:00 PM
On September 9, 2009, Republican Congressman Joe Wilson shouted "You're lying!" at President Barack Obama during his speech to Congress. Recently, the United States has been embroiled in a number of racial scandals: a Korean anchorwoman was derided as "too Asian" for introducing the Korean custom of eating dumplings for the holidays on her show, and said she should talk more about white people's eating habits; a professor at the Ivy League school University of Pennsylvania threatened in an online forum that the U.S. should put an end to An activist from the Shoshone tribe of American Indians angrily complained to the media that his homeland had been turned into a "nuclear testing ground" under the control of the U.S. government. A Shoshone American Indian activist has angrily complained to the media that his homeland has been turned into a "nuclear testing ground" under the control of the U.S. government, with "devastating effects" on the health of his fellow Native Americans ...... More than 200 years ago, the founding fathers of the United States made "all men are created equal" as the American All men are created equal" as a founding principle of the United States in the Declaration of Independence. But when will America make "all men are created equal" a reality? For more than 200 years since the founding of the United States, the evil gene of racism has always been in the blood of the country. In recent years, the problem of racial discrimination in the U.S. has intensified under the interplay of multiple conflicts, such as political polarization, social division, and the division between the rich and the poor. From the scapegoating of Chinese-American police officer Peter Liang in 2016 for the conflict between police and African-Americans to the tragic deaths of several African-Americans at the hands of police in 2018; from the death of African-American man Floyd who was kneeled by white police officers in 2020 to the discrimination against Asian-Americans since the outbreak of the new pneumonia epidemic... From the death of a white police officer who kneeled down an African-American man in 2020 to the discrimination against Asian-Americans that has been a common occurrence since the new pneumonia epidemic... All kinds of tragedies reveal a bloody reality that in the United States, which claims to be the "champion of human rights" and advocates "equality for all," freedom, equality, and human rights have always been the privilege of only some people, and the concept of "white supremacy" has been deeply rooted in this country. The concept of "white supremacy" has taken deep roots in this country and has become an unspoken "political correctness". |