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Things were quieting down a lot here in the past few days. The airlines had
resumed flying; a few with 'special schedules' that involved minimal time on the ground, but they were flying. Shops are open, and I went out to the city center for dinner each of the last two nights, feeling the calm returning. I had just started putting in internet time looking for rental cars in Wales and making housing arrangements for next week, as my plans are now to get out of here on Sunday. I *almost* posted online yesterday that all was well, and thanked everyone for your emails of concern and encouragement. However, this morning, another coup was attempted, and its all up in the air again as to whether or not the planes will fly. No one knows anything at this moment. I was awoken by a phone call from my boss at 4 am saying that there was a coup attempt going on, to stay indoors and to stay down. It was dead silent outside, the power was out, and I could see my neighbors (including my bosses wife) in the yard talking, so I grabbed my go-bag and flashlight, told them where I was going, and hoofed it through the woods on campus down to my girlfriend's house, as I knew she would be terrified. When I got there, we quickly tossed together her go-bag, then nervously went back to sleep. Suddenly, the gunfire erupted outside the school again, along with a few very long, loud blasts from a .50 cal. A few mortars went off, and then a tank let go with a BABOOOM!! No one reported hearing an explosion, or the whistle of the outgoing shell, but it was only about 50 meters from our house and it knocked things off the dish rack and rattled the windows and doors. If you have never been near a tank firing, you're missing something. If you haven't been near one firing with incoming rounds coming in to a position right near your house, you ain't missing anything!! A short while later, an APC with a roof-mounted 50 cal drove right past our house, several guards with AKs at the ready riding on top, and turned down towards the city. I guess at that particular moment, with the tank shaking our fillings, the stress from the past week of uncertainty, and hearing the continued gunfire around me was the worst time of the past few months. I was pretty spooked. After that it got quiet, with sporadic gunfire farther and farther away, and then I started intercepting the UN announcements telling the residents of downtown to stay indoors and stay low. Eventually, those reports turned to an 'all-clear' and the word was that it was over by 10 am. Anyway, the current word in the news is that at the time we got our wakeup calls at 4AM, the rebels (a band of about 20 palace guards) had taken the radio and TV tower, announced their coup, and turned off the city power. Then the next half-hour of silence was them heading up to the palace. They got intercepted at the military camp right outside our school, so the gunbattle we heard at dawn was the government troops surrounding the rebel band, and the tank fire and 50 cal fire was the gunbattle with the rebels. The APC that drove by was the rebel leader and about 8 comrades escaping, and the last we have heard is that they managed to get beyond the city, out by the airport (damn), and were being pursued in a rolling gunbattle. At least the gunfight is going in the other direction, but this puts everything back into uncertainty mode. I have a week before my course in England starts, so I can wait for the flights to resume, but of course I'd rather be casting dries to seatrout in Wales than hiding out in my house waiting to be hit by a stray round. My neighbor said he found some dirt craters in his front yard from the gunfights, so we are definately in the line of fire now. If no other groups take advantage of this unrest, this might turn out to be a one-time thing. Otherwise, its the slippery descent back into hell for Kinshasa, and I can't wait to get out of here for the summer! More if it develops. As it stands, all is calm again, there's no word on flights, and I am definately keeping my head DOWN! --riverman |
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"riverman" wrote in message ... snip More if it develops. As it stands, all is calm again, there's no word on flights, and I am definately keeping my head DOWN! --riverman Myron, Get the hell out of there will you! There are other teaching jobs to be found, I'm sure. The dry fly thing in Wales sounds like the best of ideas as far as you're concerned. /Roger 50 cal, Geeez! I see why your head is DOWN. |
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"Roger Ohlund" wrote in message ... "riverman" wrote in message ... snip More if it develops. As it stands, all is calm again, there's no word on flights, and I am definately keeping my head DOWN! --riverman Myron, Get the hell out of there will you! Great idea, Roger. Got any idea HOW?? They just cancelled today's flights, so I now have about 6 more colleagues for company who were scheduled to fly out this afternoon. There are other teaching jobs to be found, I'm sure. The dry fly thing in Wales sounds like the best of ideas as far as you're concerned. Oh, yeah. I am so craving that feeling of standing in a chalk stream, water squeezing my legs through my waders, green leaves overhead, that sweet sound of trickling water, a splashy rise somewhere downstream and those cool little air currents that rise up in the crisp, fresh morning light...... --riverman (SWING LOW......sweeeet char-i-ot-t-t.........) |
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Otherwise, its the slippery descent
back into hell for Kinshasa, and I can't wait to get out of here for the summer! --riverman Ya know, that idea of "getting out of there for the summer" would turn into a permanent proposition for me. I've found that when students are out of school in hostile situations (i.e. riot season in the ROK), things go downhill real quick. All that teenage testosterone added to the mix is a bad thing. -- Frank Reid Reverse Email to reply |
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"Frank Reid" wrote in message ... Otherwise, its the slippery descent back into hell for Kinshasa, and I can't wait to get out of here for the summer! --riverman Ya know, that idea of "getting out of there for the summer" would turn into a permanent proposition for me. I've found that when students are out of school in hostile situations (i.e. riot season in the ROK), things go downhill real quick. All that teenage testosterone added to the mix is a bad thing. Yeah, I know...and from outside my brain it seems like an incredibly simple choice. It seems like it all boils down to "what kind of maroon would come back to a place where they could be in physical danger, just to teach school? Whatever the cost, whatever the hassle, whatever the logistics: get out of town and stay out of town. Simple, EOS, case closed. This is NOT what you signed up for." But then the details start to cloud the issue. a) The school WILL go on in the fall, and I would be remembered as the Guy Who Tucked Tail And Ran by all those folks who stayed behind. That would follow me to the marketplace, and I might find later jobs a bit harder to get, as many places experience some danger. b) Then there's my girlfriend and her son who starts his senior year next year. He's not enrolled in another school, he is South African by passport, and if we pull out we gotta go through the process of getting him enrolled *somewhere* (but not the US as they are not citizens). Which raises a real question about 'where would I go?' Since we don't have jobs anywhere, that is a real problem. And starting at a new school in his last year would be a pretty mean thing to do to him, too. c) Then there's the probem of my belongings....if I fly to Europe as planned, I can only take 20 kilos for free, and the rest of my 300 kg will cost me $12 a kilo to ship, and then I'm standing at an airport in Brussels with 300 kilos of boxes, and then what?? So that means I would have to, at this last minute date, change all my flights to the US (where I get 140 kilos for free), however my girlfriend would need to sort out her Visa, and her son's. And their stuff. I would, basically, be abandoning them. d) I *could* leave a ton of stuff behind, and just fly to the US or Europe with less stuff, but then I'd miss grad school in England, which would me $5K poorer fro nonrefundables, and another year farther from my Master's. I might also lose my teacher's certificate which is due to expire this summer since I *need* these credits now to renew. No, I'm in the middle of A Plan here, and it has connections into a Lot Of Other Things. It would be incredibly difficult, expensive and inconvenient to yank the cord right now. If I was being targeted, I'd be out of here on a log raft this afternoon, but I think the presence of several thousand other non-Congolese, and the constant affirmation from folks who lived through the pillages of '91 and '93 tells me that, strange as it sounds to the outside world, it would just be too sticky, too chicken****, and too disloyal to a lot of people to cut bait yet. Sometimes, you just gotta hang in there in an ugly and stupid situation... :-( --riverman |
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"Frank Reid" wrote in message ... Otherwise, its the slippery descent back into hell for Kinshasa, and I can't wait to get out of here for the summer! --riverman Ya know, that idea of "getting out of there for the summer" would turn into a permanent proposition for me. I've found that when students are out of school in hostile situations (i.e. riot season in the ROK), things go downhill real quick. All that teenage testosterone added to the mix is a bad thing. Frank Reid Reverse Email to reply Hi Frank, I agree with you. Spent a year in Seoul from '90-'91. Interesting to see the riot police, in various types of vehicles, position themselves in different parts of the city early in the mornings, because they apparently knew when and where things were generally going to happen. I was doing legal investigations at the time for the Army across Korea, and it certainly modified my travel plans a bit. Only came close once, but in the aftermath of a riot . . .the riot gas was still pretty heavy in the air. (in Korea seems that injury or death was a normal fact) Still can't imagine Riverman hangin' around down south. (but some great stories from Grandpa some day, if he gets his butt out of there . . ..hint,hint, HINT) BestWishes, DaveMohnsen Denver |
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In article , riverman
wrote: "Frank Reid" wrote in message ... snipped disloyal to a lot of people to cut bait yet. And clearly unethical that cutting bat! ;) Allen |
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"Allen Epps" wrote in message ... In article , riverman wrote: "Frank Reid" wrote in message ... snipped disloyal to a lot of people to cut bait yet. And clearly unethical that cutting bat! ;) Allen i must say, allen, that at least where i come from, cutting bat is far more unethical than cutting bait. yfitons wayno (maybe it's just a cultural thing...) |
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In article , Allen Epps
wrote: In article , riverman wrote: "Frank Reid" wrote in message ... snipped disloyal to a lot of people to cut bait yet. And clearly unethical that cutting bat! ;) Allen or bait! |
Latest from Kinshasa...
"riverman" wrote in message ... Things were quieting down a lot here in the past few days. The airlines had resumed flying; a few with 'special schedules' that involved minimal time on the ground, but they were flying. Shops are open, and I went out to the city center for dinner each of the last two nights, feeling the calm returning. I had just started putting in internet time looking for rental cars in Wales and making housing arrangements for next week, as my plans are now to get out of here on Sunday. I *almost* posted online yesterday that all was well, and thanked everyone for your emails of concern and encouragement. However, this morning, another coup was attempted, and its all up in the air again as to whether or not the planes will fly. No one knows anything at this moment. I was awoken by a phone call from my boss at 4 am saying that there was a coup attempt going on, to stay indoors and to stay down. It was dead silent outside, the power was out, and I could see my neighbors (including my bosses wife) in the yard talking, so I grabbed my go-bag and flashlight, told them where I was going, and hoofed it through the woods on campus down to my girlfriend's house, as I knew she would be terrified. When I got there, we quickly tossed together her go-bag, then nervously went back to sleep. Suddenly, the gunfire erupted outside the school again, along with a few very long, loud blasts from a .50 cal. A few mortars went off, and then a tank let go with a BABOOOM!! No one reported hearing an explosion, or the whistle of the outgoing shell, but it was only about 50 meters from our house and it knocked things off the dish rack and rattled the windows and doors. If you have never been near a tank firing, you're missing something. If you haven't been near one firing with incoming rounds coming in to a position right near your house, you ain't missing anything!! A short while later, an APC with a roof-mounted 50 cal drove right past our house, several guards with AKs at the ready riding on top, and turned down towards the city. I guess at that particular moment, with the tank shaking our fillings, the stress from the past week of uncertainty, and hearing the continued gunfire around me was the worst time of the past few months. I was pretty spooked. After that it got quiet, with sporadic gunfire farther and farther away, and then I started intercepting the UN announcements telling the residents of downtown to stay indoors and stay low. Eventually, those reports turned to an 'all-clear' and the word was that it was over by 10 am. Anyway, the current word in the news is that at the time we got our wakeup calls at 4AM, the rebels (a band of about 20 palace guards) had taken the radio and TV tower, announced their coup, and turned off the city power. Then the next half-hour of silence was them heading up to the palace. They got intercepted at the military camp right outside our school, so the gunbattle we heard at dawn was the government troops surrounding the rebel band, and the tank fire and 50 cal fire was the gunbattle with the rebels. The APC that drove by was the rebel leader and about 8 comrades escaping, and the last we have heard is that they managed to get beyond the city, out by the airport (damn), and were being pursued in a rolling gunbattle. At least the gunfight is going in the other direction, but this puts everything back into uncertainty mode. I have a week before my course in England starts, so I can wait for the flights to resume, but of course I'd rather be casting dries to seatrout in Wales than hiding out in my house waiting to be hit by a stray round. My neighbor said he found some dirt craters in his front yard from the gunfights, so we are definately in the line of fire now. If no other groups take advantage of this unrest, this might turn out to be a one-time thing. Otherwise, its the slippery descent back into hell for Kinshasa, and I can't wait to get out of here for the summer! More if it develops. As it stands, all is calm again, there's no word on flights, and I am definately keeping my head DOWN! --riverman you're ****ed............................. |
Latest from Kinshasa...
wrote in message ... "riverman" wrote in message ... Things were quieting down a lot here in the past few days. The airlines had resumed flying; a few with 'special schedules' that involved minimal time on the ground, but they were flying. Shops are open, and I went out to the city center for dinner each of the last two nights, feeling the calm returning. I had just started putting in internet time looking for rental cars in Wales and making housing arrangements for next week, as my plans are now to get out of here on Sunday. I *almost* posted online yesterday that all was well, and thanked everyone for your emails of concern and encouragement. However, this morning, another coup was attempted, and its all up in the air again as to whether or not the planes will fly. No one knows anything at this moment. I was awoken by a phone call from my boss at 4 am saying that there was a coup attempt going on, to stay indoors and to stay down. It was dead silent outside, the power was out, and I could see my neighbors (including my bosses wife) in the yard talking, so I grabbed my go-bag and flashlight, told them where I was going, and hoofed it through the woods on campus down to my girlfriend's house, as I knew she would be terrified. When I got there, we quickly tossed together her go-bag, then nervously went back to sleep. Suddenly, the gunfire erupted outside the school again, along with a few very long, loud blasts from a .50 cal. A few mortars went off, and then a tank let go with a BABOOOM!! No one reported hearing an explosion, or the whistle of the outgoing shell, but it was only about 50 meters from our house and it knocked things off the dish rack and rattled the windows and doors. If you have never been near a tank firing, you're missing something. indeed, lived right off woodward ave, in detroit during the 67 race riots, during which the national guard was brought in to aid in restoring peace. i was eight years old at the time, and had full understanding of the circumstances, as i lived in the inner city of detroit during a very racially charged period of our history. having had difficult relationships with my black neighbors- (and having suffered violence in the hands of some many of whom were not happy with having white families in their midst), i fully understood the dynamics of racial tension, and the history involved that would create such an enviroment. i had more difficulty understanding why people took issue with me personally, as i was not and am not racist - although that is irrelevent to this post. anyway, i would watch the tanks drive by my house, see them downtown, and come in at night when the curfew whistle went off, and although i was witness to the tanks, helicopters, and other implements used in "peace keeping missions", i never heard a tank fired- thank god. anyway, that was enough for this eight year old- i can't imagine being eight years old and living through what those children in the middle east experience every day. If you haven't been near one firing with incoming rounds coming in to a position right near your house, you ain't missing anything!! A short while later, an APC with a roof-mounted 50 cal drove right past our house, several guards with AKs at the ready riding on top, and turned down towards the city. I guess at that particular moment, with the tank shaking our fillings, the stress from the past week of uncertainty, and hearing the continued gunfire around me was the worst time of the past few months. I was pretty spooked. After that it got quiet, with sporadic gunfire farther and farther away, and then I started intercepting the UN announcements telling the residents of downtown to stay indoors and stay low. Eventually, those reports turned to an 'all-clear' and the word was that it was over by 10 am. Anyway, the current word in the news is that at the time we got our wakeup calls at 4AM, the rebels (a band of about 20 palace guards) had taken the radio and TV tower, announced their coup, and turned off the city power. Then the next half-hour of silence was them heading up to the palace. They got intercepted at the military camp right outside our school, so the gunbattle we heard at dawn was the government troops surrounding the rebel band, and the tank fire and 50 cal fire was the gunbattle with the rebels. The APC that drove by was the rebel leader and about 8 comrades escaping, and the last we have heard is that they managed to get beyond the city, out by the airport (damn), and were being pursued in a rolling gunbattle. At least the gunfight is going in the other direction, but this puts everything back into uncertainty mode. I have a week before my course in England starts, so I can wait for the flights to resume, but of course I'd rather be casting dries to seatrout in Wales than hiding out in my house waiting to be hit by a stray round. My neighbor said he found some dirt craters in his front yard from the gunfights, so we are definately in the line of fire now. If no other groups take advantage of this unrest, this might turn out to be a one-time thing. Otherwise, its the slippery descent back into hell for Kinshasa, and I can't wait to get out of here for the summer! More if it develops. As it stands, all is calm again, there's no word on flights, and I am definately keeping my head DOWN! jesus, that is just what i was going to say. didn't you say in an earlier post that your girlfriend has a son? what's it like for him? snakefiddler --riverman you're ****ed............................. |
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snakefiddler wrote:
"Greg Pavlov" wrote "snakefiddler" wrote: as i was not and am not racist - I have a very hard time believing that there are more than a very, very few people who are not, consciously or otherwise. well, greg, if there is any question as to where *i* stand on the issue, we can check with my former (second) husband, whom at last check was still black ;-) Doesn't respond much to Greg's thought, though, which I think doesn't have a lot to do with where one "stands". In almost thirty years of living on and off in Africa, I've known any number (few dozen?) clearly racist white Americans and Europeans married to black Africans. Granted, the vast majority of these have been men. On the other hand, of those who, I believe, married interracially to somehow "show", at least in part, that they *weren't* racist, the majority have been women. A more interesting question is what makes a person *a racist*. If what Greg meant is that everyone has or has had racist thoughts or reactions, I think it's true. I think it's also true that most of folks' gut or immediate reactions to situations with strong racial components tend to be more or less "racist" (even if unexpressed, unacted-upon), and that all this doesn't necessarily make the people themselves racists. Don't know you or your ex, of course, but were I to "check" with him and he said, "No, she's not a racist", I'd hear (again without knowing anything else about either), "No, she's no more racist than I am." JR |
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Greg Pavlov wrote:
On Thu, 1 Jul 2004 12:08:52 -0400, "snakefiddler" wrote: i had more difficulty understanding why people took issue with me personally, as i was not and am not racist - I have a very hard time believing that there are more than a very, very few people who are not, consciously or otherwise. I assume you aren't just talking about white people. :-) -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
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"Greg Pavlov" wrote in message ... On Thu, 1 Jul 2004 12:08:52 -0400, "snakefiddler" wrote: i had more difficulty understanding why people took issue with me personally, as i was not and am not racist - I have a very hard time believing that there are more than a very, very few people who are not, consciously or otherwise. well, greg, if there is any question as to where *i* stand on the issue, we can check with my former (second) husband, whom at last check was still black ;-) snake |
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"snakefiddler" wrote in message ... i agree. we all have racially related thoughts- whether they be negative or positive. people are bombarded with racial images, whether from the media, family, or otherwise, and certainly we make very specific associations with a group of people. as long as these impressions don't lead to negative attitudes and behaviours, that is not necassarily a bad thing. there is much to be enjoyed and embraced from other cultures. also inherent in racism, i believe, is the ability to oppress a group of people. this can occur on an individual basis, or on a larger scale, but it must occur to be called racism. Slight nonsequitors, but a couple of stories I heard somewhere recently. The first is real, I think the second one I came across as an anecdote. Some friends of mine were telling me that, when their daughter was in 1st or 2nd grade, she went home with a classmate for a sleepover. When she came home the next morning, she told her parents, in honest astonishment, that "Missy's parents are black!!" A kid came home from his new school, and was telling his parents about all his new friends. It was a multiracial community, so the parents asked if his new best friend Billy was black. He thought and said "I don't know. I'll look tomorrow." :-) --riverman |
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Greg Pavlov wrote:
On Fri, 02 Jul 2004 21:12:17 +0200, JR wrote: A more interesting question is what makes a person *a racist*. If what Greg meant is that everyone has or has had racist thoughts or reactions, I think it's true. .... That's pretty much it. In that case, it's a very poor definition. Defining "racist" in a way that includes nearly everyone removes any power from the word. It puts Jesse Helms and Strom Thurmond in the same category with Martin Luther King, Jr. -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
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"JR" wrote in message ... snakefiddler wrote: "Greg Pavlov" wrote "snakefiddler" wrote: as i was not and am not racist - I have a very hard time believing that there are more than a very, very few people who are not, consciously or otherwise. well, greg, if there is any question as to where *i* stand on the issue, we can check with my former (second) husband, whom at last check was still black ;-) Doesn't respond much to Greg's thought, though, which I think doesn't have a lot to do with where one "stands". In almost thirty years of living on and off in Africa, I've known any number (few dozen?) clearly racist white Americans and Europeans married to black Africans. Granted, the vast majority of these have been men. On the other hand, of those who, I believe, married interracially to somehow "show", at least in part, that they *weren't* racist, the majority have been women. intersting- i would really like to see the dynamics involved in the behavior of these couples that would lead you to that conclusion. i will say this, which i can state from first hand experience, there are much easier ways for a woman to "prove" she isn't racist, than by marrying a black man! i'm sure i don't need to tell you that interracial relationships, marital or otherwise, are a very difficult proposition. one must deal with family, community and the world at large. the most basic things, like deciding where to go out for dinner, or vacation, or what movie theatre to attend, or even where to live, can take on new proportions. then there is the issue of children, and deciding how one feels about subjecting them to the dynamics involved in being part of an interracial family. i could go on, and on, but i think you get my point- there *really* are much easier ways to prove oneself as a non-racist. there is also the believed stereotype of *successful* black men marrying white women to prove themselves as worthy of a certain status. of the several interracial couples i have known, none of them fit this catagory. we all did it for love ;-) A more interesting question is what makes a person *a racist*. If what Greg meant is that everyone has or has had racist thoughts or reactions, I think it's true. I think it's also true that most of folks' gut or immediate reactions to situations with strong racial components tend to be more or less "racist" (even if unexpressed, unacted-upon), and that all this doesn't necessarily make the people themselves racists. i agree. we all have racially related thoughts- whether they be negative or positive. people are bombarded with racial images, whether from the media, family, or otherwise, and certainly we make very specific associations with a group of people. as long as these impressions don't lead to negative attitudes and behaviours, that is not necassarily a bad thing. there is much to be enjoyed and embraced from other cultures. also inherent in racism, i believe, is the ability to oppress a group of people. this can occur on an individual basis, or on a larger scale, but it must occur to be called racism. Don't know you or your ex, of course, but were I to "check" with him and he said, "No, she's not a racist", I'd hear (again without knowing anything else about either), "No, she's no more racist than I am." well, that's an interesting statement... snakefiddler JR |
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"riverman" wrote in message ... "snakefiddler" wrote in message ... i agree. we all have racially related thoughts- whether they be negative or positive. people are bombarded with racial images, whether from the media, family, or otherwise, and certainly we make very specific associations with a group of people. as long as these impressions don't lead to negative attitudes and behaviours, that is not necassarily a bad thing. there is much to be enjoyed and embraced from other cultures. also inherent in racism, i believe, is the ability to oppress a group of people. this can occur on an individual basis, or on a larger scale, but it must occur to be called racism. Slight nonsequitors, but a couple of stories I heard somewhere recently. The first is real, I think the second one I came across as an anecdote. Some friends of mine were telling me that, when their daughter was in 1st or 2nd grade, she went home with a classmate for a sleepover. When she came home the next morning, she told her parents, in honest astonishment, that "Missy's parents are black!!" very good - G A kid came home from his new school, and was telling his parents about all his new friends. It was a multiracial community, so the parents asked if his new best friend Billy was black. He thought and said "I don't know. I'll look tomorrow." that one gave me a good chuckle- most excellent. snake :-) --riverman |
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"Greg Pavlov" wrote in message ... On Sat, 3 Jul 2004 09:23:32 -0400, "snakefiddler" wrote: .... i'm sure i don't need to tell you that interracial relationships, marital or otherwise, are a very difficult proposition. ... I see that among people that I know (from an external & thus superficial view). A lot of the same goes on for gay couples. SO TRUE- there isn't a whole lot of difference in the issues that couples of both "type" face. in fact, i think the unifying bond for the two lies in the sexual phobias, and taboos that exist in our society relative to each. however, people tend to have a lot less problem with white men/black women than vice versa, and less with lesbians as opposed to gay men. so, the less threatening a couple is, and the more fantasy inducing another is, the more they are accepted. just a little something for us all to think about, since we're on the subject. snake |
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"Greg Pavlov" wrote in message ... On Fri, 2 Jul 2004 23:00:00 -0400, "snakefiddler" wrote: well, greg, if there is any question as to where *i* stand on the issue, we can check with my former (second) husband, whom at last check was still black ;-) Paradoxically, I don't think that that has much to do with it, only that the degree is likely to be less or it's subsumed or it's directed at other targets. I was not saying that I think that there is something wrong with you, I was questioning your claim on the grounds that just about no one, in my opinion, can make it honestly. well, so what you are saying is that we are all "racists", and the only difference between us is a matter of "degree"? i think that is disingenuous. the mere fact that i acknowledge the fact that willie mays is black, and greg pavlov is white, can't possibly be equated with the fact that the evil sonsofbitches who killed medgar evers did it because they were white and he was black. come on, all of us know, instinctively, who are "racists" and who are not. same same as recognizing "pornography". yfitons wayno |
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