wareyin
Penultimate Amazing
Why not ? Its a reasonable question.
Is it a reasonable question? What could anyone possibly gain by anonymously answering a question about race?
Why not ? Its a reasonable question.
As someone who knows quite a few activists, it's just not something that many people care about. It's like the howling over "trigger warnings" - aside from PTSD and others who've been through truly traumatic things, it's just not a thing.
What could anyone possibly gain by anonymously answering a question about race?
Where she was told it would not be shared with anyone.
That makes me wonder about how seriously I should take the State Bar of Texas when they make promises of confidentiality, but it hardly makes me think "what was she trying to gain by anonymously noting her race as NA?"
A sense of subjective personal identity, perhaps?
I thought she said she did it for networking purposes.
Hillary was never liberal. She may have worn a mask at times (can't think of when) but I see nothing about her that is liberal, now or ever.
Bill Clinton was in office decades ago. He was pretty liberal with his wedding vowsbut other than that? Not so much.
<snip>
What does that mean, exactly? And how does filling out a line you've been told will not be linked to you give you this personal identity?
Are you seriously asking how a person can think a thought?
Both.Which of these constitutes identifying yourself to someone:
1. Saying your name to them.
2. Writing your name down in a secret location you expect they will never see.
Both.
No. If I were asking that question, I would have typed "how can a person think a thought?"
Actually, that question seems about as useful as "how can someone invested in wrongly interpreting something fail to understand their error?" For examples, see conservatives attempting to claim some sort of gain from answering a question described as "The following information is for statistical purposes only and will not be disclosed to any person or organization without the express written consent of the attorney".
You asked the question 'what does that mean?' in response to someone answering 'what did she gain?' with 'a subjective sense of personal identity'. The proposal, which I agree with, is that Warren simply felt a little special to have a (precarious) claim to exotic ancestry. A thoroughly human peculiarity shared by millions.
I fail to see how that has anything to do with SELF identification.How can you identify yourself to someone if no one can ever see it?
I fail to see how that has anything to do with SELF identification.
Thank you for answering with an explanation of what "subjective sense of personal identity" means. It comes across as a group of buzzwords, which when spouted off together like that doesn't actually mean anything.
As for whether or not Warren or millions of others feel special by answering a statistical question that will not be (or rather is not supposed to be) ever disclosed to anyone else? I rather doubt that. It seems the opposite of special when done in an anonymous manner for statistical purposes only.
Oh, sorry about that. I revise my answer thusly: You can't, obviously.Nor I but that wasn't the question you were directly responding to.
It does confirm however, that Warren (just as I did) felt that her Native American heritage was an important part of her ethnic makeup. The dominant culture can seem invisible to those raised in it, which makes the more exotic parts (Irish and Italian and NA for me) stand out more strongly.
You have inadvertently picked one of the least convincing analogies possible, given your current interlocutor. I happen to hold an admin role in a large private atheist group. We periodically have giant blow-ups about whether and when to include trigger warnings on our posts. The most recent of these was just last July, resulting in a few hundred comments and not a few rage-quits. (Feel free to PM me if you're an atheist and you'd like to see all the intranecine drama for yourself.)
Why not ? Its a reasonable question.