4 things white people can do to start making the fediverse less toxic for Black people (DRAFT!)
4 things white people can do to start making the fediverse less toxic for Black people (DRAFT!)
Draft! Work in progress! Feedback welcome!
Feedback welcome! Here's the TL;DR list
- Listen more to more Black people
- Post less – and think before you post
- Call in, call out, and/or report anti-Blackness when you see it
- Support Black people and Black-led instances and projects
Other suggestions?
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Suggestion: treat black people like what they are. People. Like any other human.
How do you even suggest we detect black people around here? O.o
57 0 ReplyNo, "color blindness" perpetuates structural racism. Here's one study looking at that. Seeing Race Again Countering Colorblindness across the Disciplines has a lot more, although it's focused on law and academia.
19 1 ReplyColor blindness perpetuates structural racism. On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a goldfish.
There’s the cultural issues, but those aren’t limited to African Americans vs White Americans on the Internet.
Your rules should apply to everyone, including those two groups. The trickier part is dealing with privilege.
20 0 ReplyThat doesn't apply to online forums. There is LITERALLY no way to determine someone's race from what they write. Unless you're suggesting we open every discussion by asking what a person's race is before we start talking to them? Better yet we can skip that and simply put demographic badges next to people's username, like a yellow star for Jewish people, a pink triangle for homosexuals, and... hm, that sounds familiar, where has that happened before?
9 0 ReplyMaybe add some kind of flag to ActivityPub that's set to your skin colour? Each comment could have a colored border corresponding to your skin tone.
6 0 ReplyIt may sound crazy, but there is a precedent:
@Column('boolean', { default: false, comment: 'Whether the User is a cat.', }) public isCat: boolean;
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No offense but that paper is not at all relevant to the situation described in this thread.
3 0 Reply
Often you don't know whether someone is Black; sometimes you do. I would assume this list is talking about those times when people can tell.
2 0 Reply