This is the thread in a nutshell.
I feel sooooooooo sorry for white guys. They just have it incredibly rough. You've convinced me - I'd much rather be Black or Latino than Anglo - they get ALL the breaks without having to face any racism. After all, we're just "fashionable minorities" to you - the REAL victims are the white dudes.
#makeAmericaWhiteagain
Several are given credit for the following quote, but I like to credit it to The Coach :
Most men, when they think they are thinking, are merely rearranging their prejudices.
Knute Rockne
And of course this chestnut :
If everyone is thinking alike, then somebody isn't thinking.
George S. Patton
NDinLA has a brilliant point, which is fraught with irony.
White males, who have been entitled by
generations of social approval, privilege, and deference by every other racial/ethnic, and the opposite gender, are the most entitled group in America today. It isn't the youth, ill behaved or not. It isn't young woman who rebel against stereotypes, or unsolicited sexual advances, they are all outweighed by those that think they have a right to judge others thoughts or actions, and expect others to see things their way with no compromise.
These same white men that have been born into such social privilege tend to whine loudest, kick, moan, and call others names (label others and their actions) the quickest when they are confronted with resistance, or those who behave differently.
Frankly in this thread I have seen a handful of situations that are actually anything of substance, and as pointed out some of them are years old. However, look at the rape, child abuse, domestic abuse, murder, and rates of murder among pregnant women and domestic abuse victims that try to remove themselves from their abusive environments.
Also, look at sexual harassment. Granted, it is perpetrated by those in power, almost exclusively, but the number of men outnumber women, by a significant margin, like ten to fifty times.
I also found the picture from the add by GAP previously, offensive for a different reason. I would ask the dumb asses that thought up that campaign two questions; 'Why would you even think 'girls' couldn't do anything they wanted?' 'And even if you thought it, why would you stigmatize a whole gender by asking a question that implies for some reason they can't, or haven't?'
Finally another quote which explains both the mechanism at work, and the passion with which I rail against this whole set of behaviors :