Baratunde Fiveton به بررسی پدیده آمریکایی های سفیدپوست می پردازد که پلیس را به سیاهپوستان آمریکایی که مرتکب جنایات … خوردن ، راه رفتن یا به طور کلی "زندگی در حالی که سیاه می شوند" می کنند. در این گفتگوی عمیق ، اندیشه آور و غالباً خنده دار ، او قدرت زبان را برای تغییر داستان های آسیب به داستان های شفابخشی نشان می دهد – در حالی که همه ما را به چالش می کشد تا در سطح بالایی قرار بگیریم.

گفتگوهای TED را فقط برای شما توصیه می کنید! اطلاعات بیشتر در

کانال TED Talks بهترین گفتگوها و اجراهای کنفرانس TED را به نمایش می گذارد ، جایی که متفکران و دست اندرکاران برجسته جهان در 18 دقیقه (یا کمتر) صحبت از زندگی خود می کنند. به دنبال گفتگو در مورد فناوری ، سرگرمی و طراحی باشید – به علاوه علم ، تجارت ، موضوعات جهانی ، هنر و سایر موارد. شما خوشحال هستید که به این ویدیوها پیوند دهید یا آنها را جاسازی کنید ، آنها را به دیگران منتقل کنید و این ایده ها را با افرادی که می شناسید به اشتراک بگذارید. برای کسب اطلاعات بیشتر در مورد استفاده از TED برای اهداف تجاری (به عنوان مثال یادگیری کارمندان ، در یک فیلم یا دوره آنلاین) ، لطفا یک درخواست رسانه را در اینجا ارسال کنید:

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50 پاسخ به “چگونه برای از بین بردن نژادپرستی ، یک سرفصل در یک زمان | باراتوند تریستون”

  1. His examples have nothing to do with race and everything to do with stupid people. He should have spent the day at a police station, the calls are stupid regardless of race. How's this for a headline, 'Black Cop Shoots White Woman, Who Called Police.' (Justine Ruszczyk)

  2. I've been amazed to watch this video with great care cause it's truly comfortable to see a black man like this one do this kind of inspirational thing just to remind us that we've been called to live together and also to know we're one people in a just one planet. I'm breathtaking and so pleased that you do first the action by your words.

  3. I love how in this ted talk comment section all the people that praise is views get at least a thousand likes, but the ones that bring argument into it struggle to get 100 likes.

  4. Racism is always interesting to be talked, and it is occurring in entire countries. Well including my country, Last day I did the Test Doll to measure racism on children, if you curious about the kids responses you can watch on my channel. It mad me sad tho

  5. He is dumb. Maybe because he doenst have a father and his mother are just like any other women, expect people to change instead of changing things. The solution is actually to enforce punishing the citizen that waste police time with either fines or jail time. If you dont know who your neighbor is but call the police on them even after they already said they own the place then you need to be fined with the cost of the police being there. If you call police on stupid reason such as having a bbq on a public space then you need to be fined a few hundreds as the cost of having police wasting their time there. What happened to being arrested for wasting police time with prank calls? This is no different.

  6. NO. JUST NO. Survivor of sexual assault? Explain to me how can you die from sexual assault? Like this is both pathetic and patronizing. It is so pathetic that you need to feel like you overcome something just by being groped. And it very patronizing that you think women cant survive anything meaningful other than being groped. I guessed everyone should now just refer to themselves survivor of lies. Since everyone had been lied to and lies are more dangerous than some perv with too much time on their hands.

  7. I am mesmerized at how many people in these comments go blinded by the "racism" part, and missed this entire point.

    Firstly, all of you who think he is only pointing out racism by whites against blacks, never made it past his first level. I understand he continues on with whites doing it to blacks, but that was likely more for consistency of story telling. These speakers have little time to make their points. He points out how the reversed roles are still considered racism as well, and how doing so (reversing the roles) would accomplish nothing but cause the same issues.

    Second, he points out that whatever they are doing, it boils down to just living their life. Which he goes on to point out later more examples of activities done.

    Third, he points out that the important part to start changing is our reactions to these activities other people are doing. The important parts are not who the person is, who you are, or what the other person is doing. The important part is to change the way we react and/or take action upon seeing another person living their life.

    Lastly, he points out that everythimg he talked about in this ted talk of his is not just about racism. It is about any unjust or unfair treatment that has become systemic, and he goes on to list out a few examples like misogyny and other abuses of power.

    The point of this talk was not about the clickbait title of just racism. It was basically a creative way to say what has been said countless ways before. We must change ourselves in order to change societal norms. There is a lot of unfairness, injustice, and abuse or power and people in the world. The first step to correcting even a little of it is to identify it, and then we can fix those issues in ourselves one at a time.

  8. I'm black, WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH. Thanks Ted for the anti-white propaganda, sure I seen a bit of the one about time being racist against black people too, there's so much bullshit I don't know about.

  9. I reject his hypothesis that he "got lucky" … that is the norm. Police shooting people, black or otherwise, is rare, and doing it for no reason other than skin color is even more rare. He spends too much time reading the news, that's the actual problem here.

  10. wow okay. he even says not everything is about race but he uses articles that make everything about race. I guarantee in the majority of those headlines he referenced. the police weren’t called because of race but since the person who called was white and the person having the police called on, just so happened to be black. so they added it into the headline. let’s also not forget that while people make up 73% of US population and black people only make up 13%

  11. I’m sorry people who are yelling “playing the victim card” but because he went to Harvard. Money doesn’t have a color. Money can’t protect him from a bullet. Anyone afraid of blacks and brown will see his color first. Then ask questions later. Most immigrants with the most degrees are Nigerians, but people still think they’re stupid Africans. Knowledge and money doesn’t help if they only see your color.

  12. My brother (white) is a property manager, AKA paid to do the landlord's work for him. My brother states that he has been called at night because a (black) male resident was taking out the garbage or walking home from the late shift, sometimes prefaced with "I'm not racist, but…" My brother is pretty sick of this, because of course he has to check only to find no one (because they entered their unit in the meantime).

  13. This is one of the only talks I have ever seen legitimizing "white supremacy" in the modern era and an alleged reality of black people having to "live in fear" that has come across as logical, respctful and truly genuine. I am thankful for this and mostly agree with the message wholeheartedly. ☺

    However, I believe there are issues in both the black and white communities that have contributed to this awful vicious cycle, such as all the fake hate crimes perpetrated by the black community and just general snobiness and wanting to keep the comfortable status quo in certain parts of the white community. I would also like to see some data on the most common demographic of the white people who call the police on black people. I have a strong hunch on what it is.

    🎈 LAST BUT NOT LEAST; I make regular content over at my channel for whoever wants to come join the party! 😁 🎉

  14. I think the majority of the problem here stems from each group’s fundamental view of the police. White people see the police as people meant to “uphold justice” which for some people means coming to stop ANY MINOR LAW EVER BROKEN ie not having a permit to sell water. The black community however views the police with fear and distrust due to the decades of mistreatment they have faced and as such aren’t going to escalate the situation by calling the police on somebody . Meaning that opportunity for violent police force is not present and the people they would have called the cops on aren’t put in harms way.

  15. yes, not easy. But i would refer to Candace Owens. She seems to be more factual, and that would help the black communauty far more than his prose. The only thing he has not discussed is the glaring obviousness of a media wanting to exacerbate racial tension and the fact that white police officer are far more cautious when dealing with black individual. The statistic are not in his favour, the media headlines yes. Media are puppets to owner wanting to polarise, divide opinion and fragmemt the population in angry pieces. Do not believe everything written down or uttered out on TV. And yes, there always be idiots with white supremacist view, best avoid them.

  16. Him saying he was lucky in the case where he was stopped, implies that the majority of police interactions with black people result in force/death. I don’t think the numbers would support that. That is unfair to the vast majority of law enforcement. However, I did enjoy most of the presentation. But the problem isn’t systemic, it exists with individuals. Civil discussion like this goes a long way toward educating and changing minds. Much better than the screaming, dividing, and crafting of headlines for clicks.

  17. i love how this TED talk has more dislikes than most. Truely, some idiots have wasted their evenings disliking things so they feel like they have some control on their reality.

  18. Police interact with tens of thousands of black people every day without any of them being shot, but let's pretend the literal 1 out of 100,000 getting shot is the norm. It's way easier to cry about that than to focus on fixing your actual problems, like all the blacks in gangs shooting each other.

  19. I'm reading the comment and some of them made me chuckle, it's fascinating how you can discredit racism and all of these experiences that people went through when your life is on the line and when you're not subjected to this violence.

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