Widebrim
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,557
Typical.
Working in a country where you are not a citizen and being paid under the table is a scam. Everyone else has to work and pay income tax, but its okay for this man, because he's a "minority." As soon as someone suggests that this should be reported, someone else will pull the minority card. So we all have to turn our heads and let the minority get away with murder - Or in this case, assaulting a co-worker - because it would be racist if we said something.
A black youth gets pulled over for a busted taillight: Racial profiling. An Aboriginal man gets arrested for parading the streets drunk: Infringement of fundamental rights. A Sikh man won't wear a helmet while riding a motorcycle: Religious persecution. These are laws that everyone has to abide by for the safety of themselves and others. Ethnicity has nothing to do with it.
In Tom's case, that man should be fired and taken to the police, no question - And if he were any other American man, he would be.
Well said. We have certain standards and laws which exist to protect the general populace, and to ensure the greater good. While we do have fundamental human rights, and these must be respected, it is not all about me and my right to do whatever I want, especially if I think that my particular group has been maligned in the past.
I believe that society should (to a certain extent) take its cue from the armed forces, where pulling the "whatever" card still doesn't get you very far. During my time in service, I saw men of all different ethnicities/religious backgrounds not only equally rise to the top, but just as equally get their behinds delivered to them in a sling. (I say "men" because I didn't really serve with females.) We were taught that in the Army there is only one color, and that's green. I recall one White kid referring to an NCO as a Black sergeant; another Black NCO immediately got on the kid's case, and yelled that there are no "Black sergeants," just green ones. In the service, if you mess up, you get "smoked;" it's that simple, and trying to make it a racial/religious issue usually gets you no sympathy.