My interpretation is that this is about identity, and it is a reaction to the liberalization of values throughout the 1st world.
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Replying to @fchollet @neurobongo
which explains why it mostly involves older, less-educated, white people, and is a global phenomenon (rather than just US).
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Replying to @fchollet
well, the economic part is global. Globalization is crapping in the uneducated, who previously had status from color of skin...
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Replying to @neurobongo
Maybe, but if the crux of the issue is the economy, then why is it happening in 2016, when unemployment is at 5%?
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Replying to @fchollet @neurobongo
and why is the racist far-right more prominent in better-off countries like France and Austria than it is in Spain or Greece?
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Replying to @fchollet
I guess the point I would argue is that people care much less about "identity" than "status"
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Replying to @neurobongo
re: "status" --for EU immigrants, signals of cultural difference trigger anger but signals of social/economic success don't
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Replying to @fchollet @neurobongo
for instance, the emotional reaction to a woman in hijab vs. a black man in a suit.
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Replying to @fchollet @neurobongo
so it seems to me that the issue is mostly cultural, both in Europe and in the US
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Replying to @fchollet
and whatever the cause, it's all very depressing...
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