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Date: May 28th, 2018 4:44 AM Author: High-end fiercely-loyal wagecucks
"When I taught mostly students of color near Oakland, California, it didn’t surprise me when many told me they never had hiked a day in their life, even though they lived within a few of miles of famous state parks and beaches and only a few hours away from Lake Tahoe and Yosemite. Some had never seen the ocean."
And that's one reason the financial resources argument is horseshit. And it's not the white man's fault that the author's own fucking family taught her that getting dirty isn't ladylike.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3670857&forum_id=2#36139102) |
Date: May 28th, 2018 11:46 AM Author: talented sanctuary windowlicker
"In an interview for Everywhere All the Time, a blog about race and travel, Jose Gonzalez, the director of Latino Outdoors, spoke about how even small details, like camping food, can also make the outdoors feel culturally distant: Trail mix? Though I fell in love with it after trying it, when I first laid eyes on it, I thought, why are we mixing peanuts with chocolate? Where's the hot sauce or the chile y limon?"
lol what the fuck.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3670857&forum_id=2#36139844) |
Date: May 28th, 2018 12:50 PM Author: Crystalline coldplay fan gay wizard
I spent a large part of my early 20s worrying about what moments like these meant. Could I honor my identity as both a Latina and a person who loves the outdoors? Here’s how I finally learned I could be both.
- Brought to you by TRUMP 2020
In an interview for Everywhere All the Time, a blog about race and travel, Jose Gonzalez, the director of Latino Outdoors, spoke about how even small details, like camping food, can also make the outdoors feel culturally distant: “Trail mix? Though I fell in love with it after trying it, when I first laid eyes on it, I thought, ‘Why are we mixing peanuts with chocolate? Where’s the hot sauce or the chile y limon?’” In an episode of NPR’s Code Switch podcast, host Adrian Florido and other people of color shared anecdotes of how they too felt culturally out of place in the outdoors.
Congrats libs - you've pushed victimhood mentality so far that they've found a way to feel culturally "out of place" in the outdoors - must be something to feel culturally out of place while all alone away from any people.
Apologies - forgot about the systematic exclusion of minorities and the privilege I have as a white being able to eat peanuts and chocolate trail mix, as opposed to HOT SAUCE or chile y limon. It's almost like trail mix purposefully contains protein rich / calorie dense food and that giving people the shits from hot sauce while they're backpacking isn't the best risk to take.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3670857&forum_id=2#36140101) |
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