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So You Flunked A Racism Test. Now What? [NPR.org]

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You're probably at least a little bit racist and sexist and homophobic. Most of us are.

Before you get all indignant, try taking one of the popular implicit-association tests. Created by sociologists at Harvard, the University of Washington, and the University of Virginia, they measure people's unconscious prejudice by testing how easy — or difficult — it is for the test-takers to associate words like "good" and "bad" with images of black people versus white people, or "scientist" and "lab" with men versus women.

These tests find that — regardless of how many Pride parades they attend or how many "This is what a feminist looks like" T-shirts they own — most people trust men over women, white people over minorities, and straight people over queer people. These trends can hold true regardless of the gender, race or sexuality of the test-taker. I'm from India, and the test found that I'm biased against Asian-Americans.

 

[For more of this story, written by Maanvi Singh, go to http://www.npr.org/sections/co...racism-test-now-what]

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I was reminded of an essay I had to read for a high school English class, entitled: "The English Language is my God-damned Enemy", which noted negative connotations to certain words in their dictionary definition. "Black" was one of the words addressed in the essay.

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