this post was submitted on 03 Dec 2024
259 points (98.5% liked)
People Twitter
5396 readers
428 users here now
People tweeting stuff. We allow tweets from anyone.
RULES:
- Mark NSFW content.
- No doxxing people.
- Must be a pic of the tweet or similar. No direct links to the tweet.
- No bullying or international politcs
- Be excellent to each other.
- Provide an archived link to the tweet (or similar) being shown if it's a major figure or a politician.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Pretty much any ex British colony is heavily biased against darker skin tones, America, India, Israel, it happened to pretty much all of them
For India specifically it's more a continent than a country. There's a bunch of different ethnic groups lumped together, and for most of its history it was never unified. Then the Brits decided they're all Indian and combined them because that makes corruption easier.
The British did not create the caste system.
The British didn't create the caste system from scratch, but they had a huge role in shaping what became the modern caste system. I'm sleepy, so I'm going to quote direct from this BBC article (though it's a good amount article, if you have the time. It does a good job for a summary, imo)
.
.
.
.
.
Apologies for just quoting at length at you. I fear that presenting info this way will give the sense that I am lecturing you, but that is not my intention; a large part of why I share this info is because I learned of this relatively recently and I was astounded by how significant Britain's role was.
Interesting, it sounds like a topic I could learn more about.
Typical British move. Divide and conquer. They invented entire countries and flags so that the Arab World can never reunite.
Typical colonizer move, though Britain is certainly the biggest one, they all did this. The Rwandan genocide, for one of many examples, is a direct result of Germany and later Belgium reinforcing an artificial split between the long-since homogenized Hutu and Tutsi "ethnicities".
Before they did that, the difference between "hutu" and "tutsi" mostly came down to "do you own cattle?"
The common knowledge among those interested in the history is that Britain insitutionalized and entrenched caste in an administrative framework that never before existed in India.
They generally saw their colonial subjects as tools for financial gain and wished they could stay out of the messy sociologic aspects of how different people may relate to each other. On a more fundamental level, they didn't see them as people.
They also implicated skin color in caste in a way that it was not previously. Their perception of the world at the time was very much "white = good" and "anything other than white = bad" and they couldn't help but apply that framework to all human relations.
You're right. They also didn't create colorism, which has existed in every human society since the dawn of time.
What they did do is institutionalize and entrench caste. They applied their racialized view of the world and interpreted caste as "low caste = dark skin = bad" and "high caste = fair skin = good" There is nothing in ancient Indian literature that connects caste to skin tone.
There is however significant literature tying caste to virtue. Low caste individuals in India are disenfranchised similar to African Americans in the US.
The British didn't help the issue by identifying certain castes as innately criminal, subjecting them to constant police surveillance and even imprisoning them premptively.
The Indian government, at its inception, outlawed caste discrimination and there are several affirmative action plans in place to provide increased oppurunities to disenfranchised castes but, similar to the African American community in the US, execution of such plans and positive outcomes are still lacking.
During his visit to Kerala, India in 1959, Martin Luther King Jr. was being introduced by a school principal: "Young people, I would like to present to you a fellow untouchable from the United States of America" Initially shocked, he reflected and then responded: "Yes, I am an untouchable, and every Negro in the United States is an untouchable"
It's weird because there is an internalised class hierarchy in the UK that even the traditional working class seem to adhere to very strictly. And yet the concept of the Dalit seems simultaneously abhorrent.
I don't think their point is that the caste system didn't existed before English colonization, but that India was not an unified and centralized country.
Oh, so I'm racist. Fuck you maybe?
You're an ex British colony?
It's honestly not very unified today. Their national languages are Hindi and English, yet only 55% of the population consider Hindi to be their first or second language. In fact, I asked my coworker from S. India where Hindi is pretty rare, and he said he'd use English if he traveled around India because he's not very comfortable w/ Hindi (despite studying it in school), though he could use Hindi if he had to.
Somehow the government holds things together. I guess people see themselves as Indian despite the extreme differences between regions. So I guess that's something the Brits somehow got right, though they completely screwed up Pakistan (many Indians believe Pakistan and India should be the same country, despite their fierce rivalry).
From what I've heard about Modi it's pretty much the opposite...
It's not a unified system where everyone gets along, it's a rigid caste system (I think technically outlawed but not enforced) where people with power are ok with it because they're not on the bottom, and the people on the bottom don't have enough power to change anything.
There's a reasons Modi's friends are trump, putin, and kim.
Yeah, I'm not a fan of Modi either. But somehow Modi has a high approval rating, which is why I say they somehow hold things together.
The reason for Modi's approval is very similar to Trumps. He's very good at blaming the other (in this case Muslims and several other groups).
He's also in power at a time when India was inevitably going to grow stronger economically and people can feel that. GDP is growing at 7-8% annually which is massive for a country of India's size, even if GDP per capita leaves a lot to be desired.
Though India is developing at a steady pace now and is on a trajectory to be a developed nation in two decades, I don't think I'd rush to give Modi credit for that. It's a relatively untapped market that constitutes a fifth of humanity. It was bound to grow barring war, natural disaster, crippling geopolitical / trade tensions etc. He's just at the right place at the right time and had the right type of divisive rhetoric that seems to be hot all over the world right now.
Sure, and I think the same is true for Trump. He inherited a strong economy and, despite his best efforts, didn't completely screw it up during his first term. Had he won reelection in 2020, I think the economy would have struggled a bit more because his "solution" to the supply chain issues would be tariffs (that's his answer to everything), which would make the supply chain issues even worse, and I think we'd get a double dip like we did when Hoover did the exact same thing just prior to the Great Depression.
But unfortunately, people don't seem to look at longer term impacts to things. I think this is an interesting breakdown on how the economy/market relates to political party choice. According to Ben Felix, people turn to conservatives when they're bullish about the economy (tends to be at the top of a business cycle) and to progressives when they're bearish (tends to be at the bottom), which leads to conservatives tending to preside over market crashes and progressives tending to preside over growth. There's some strong correlation there, and I think the analysis makes sense, at least in general terms.
That said, Modi is in a different position entirely. India has been poised to see massive growth, and all they needed was for one of their major competitors (e.g. China) to falter so they can take their spot. With Trump wanting to punish China, the US will likely turn to India more and more, leading to further growth.
Leaders rarely significantly alter the direction of the country's economy, and their impact tends to be only in screwing things up.
Because 50%+ of India that votes benefits from it...
I think we're just using different definitions of "hold things together"
I thought Modi's policies were generally bad for the populace at large. I haven't been tracking it very well though, so I could be mistaken.
Trump's policies tend to be bad for the population at large (basically triggered the massive inflation we had), and so are Putin's (triggered a ton of sanctions w/ his stupid war), so if his policies are anything like either of those two, then I would assume they'd be bad for average Indians.
But it gets worse the further down the ladder you go.
trump will be bad for his white voters, but he'll treat the people they view as below them even worse
Some people compare themselves to others to judge their worth, so they'll settle for less if others get nothing.