A new national survey conducted by conservative think tank Manhattan Institute found that Millennial Republicans are more likely to call themselves racist than Baby Boomer Republicans.

A total of 34% of Republican survey respondents between the ages of 30 and 49 answered “I am such person” when asked for their views on individuals who openly express racist views. Only 3% of Republican survey respondents over the age of 65 answered “I am such person.”

A total of 23% of Republican survey respondents between the ages of 18 and 29 and 6% between the ages of 50 to 64 also answered “I am such person.”

  • Itdidnttrickledown@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Boomers aren’t racist in their own eyes because to them what they say is just the way it is. They didn’t make themselves better than all ‘those’ people. Its just the way things are. The flip side of that is I’ve heard some brown skin people make the same claims that they can’t be racist and only white folks can be racist. Far fewer of them though than these heaving slack jawed maga idiots I have to walk around in walmart because they are way too important to be polite.

  • tomi000@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Seems obvious. Boomers are racist but dont even know it. Millennials who are racist choose to be.

  • Garbagio@lemmy.zip
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    14 hours ago

    Alternative title: Millennial Republicans More Honest Than Boomer Contemporaries, Study Finds

  • nocturne@piefed.social
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    22 hours ago

    Could it also be that boomers, while racist, do not consider themselves to be racist? My racist boomer father would tell you he absolutely is not racist, but that everyone loves a racist joke.

    • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      My mom refuses to admit that she’s racist.

      Oh, but when I brought a black man home, she asked me afterwards, “Why do all your boyfriends have… a tan?”

      Don’t worry, I let it out on her. I’m practically 100% Slavic if my brother’s DNA test is to be trusted (it lines up with the family tree I’ve got, so yeah.) I asked if she’d rather I marry a “nice Polish boy” that I have nothing in common with, like she did, like her sisters did, like her mother did. Because why should personal compatibility matter so long as our ancestries are the same?

      She backed off and hasn’t made a peep about my “tan” partners ever since.

      • NeilBrü@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        They think compatibility comes from ethnicity. Because of shared cultural and sanguinary heritage from Poland, your likelihood of sharing the same values, life goals, sense of humor, and physical attraction with a Polish partner is higher.

        While that would seem outwardly true, the reality is that most countries around the world aren’t as ethnically and culturally homogeneous anymore, compared to generations past.

        Personally, I think it’s a good thing. Homogeneity, in nature, leads to genetic stagnation and degradation.

        • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          I get that, for my parents’ generation at least. But I’m the weirdo autistic chick that lives multiple “alternative lifestyles” simultaneously.

          I don’t go to the church I was baptized in, because I’m atheist. I don’t eat the food my culture cooks, because I’m vegan. I’m a pansexual who practices polyamory. I don’t share my parents’ values, nor those of my ancestral culture.

          Which is partly why I gel better with people who don’t share the “dominant” culture around us (in the US.) I get along with others who’ve been marginalized, who don’t “fit in,” who want to burn down capitalism have been on the “outside” for so long that we share a common bond through it. Most people I’ve dated have either been born in other countries and/or have disabilities. It makes sense for me, but from the outside it’s easy to imagine that my mom thinks I’m still “rebelling” somehow (while deep into my 30s.)

    • Sektor@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      You can make mental gymnastics why it is so, but the fact is that ye old boomers grew up in a racist world and is expected from them to be racist. Le millennials had 50 years of efforts and sacrifices to make the world less racist.

      • Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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        6 hours ago

        There are still areas in the South where people grow up in a racist world. Family are racist, friends are racist, school if not actively racist is doing nothing to dissuade it.

  • human@slrpnk.net
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    22 hours ago

    What the fuck is this entire sentence?

    David Hirsch, former Republican candidate for New York State Assembly, on X: “While there are a lot of positives in this poll, there are some disturbing trends being influenced by the Woke Right like rising Holocaust Denialism, and that 12% are antisemitic and 19% accept them. We can fix this and other issues.”

  • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    I’m not at all surprised by this, TBH. For all the dunking there is on boomers, they spent their formative years during the Civil Rights era, no?

    And Gen Y (at least the younger ones) spent their formative years just when things like social media and forums and so on really got going. Where people are and have been trying to curate and groom more white supremacists. Often behind screen names, etc…

    • Ech@lemmy.ca
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      10 hours ago

      It’s not that boomers aren’t racist, they just don’t believe they’re racist. Their version of racism is very narrow, basically limited to calling for the outright murder of all black people. Anything short of that is just “normal” in their eyes.

      Millenials have grown up with a more nuanced definition, though, so those racists understand that they’re racist and also know how to hide and obscure it.

      • SupahRevs@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        There is much more nuance these days. Some anti-racist literature even says that we are all racist but that we can work on not being prejudice. These books will say that part of being anti-racist is seeing that racism exists in lots of ways and that we shouldn’t be denying that these things exist, we should be working on reducing the harm from it.

  • Smoogs@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    So do we actually care anymore that being racist is the problem here or is it just finding new distractions such as intersectional infighting like ageism for hairs to split now?

    • bearboiblake@pawb.social
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      4 hours ago

      I don’t really understand what you mean, intersectionality is about caring about multiple societal issues, such as ageism, racism and class consciousness.

      It’s not about infighting, it’s about uniting the whole working class. The ruling class preys upon our in-group biases to divide us. Intersectionality is how we resist that attempt to divide us.