Macaulay Honors College Seminar 2, IDC 3001H

Modern American Stereotyping

One of the things we saw at the Museum of Chinese in America, as well as something we discussed in class on Monday and throughout the semester, was how certain groups of people became stereotyped in America. In the museum, we saw some of the stereotypes against the Chinese people, especially cartoons reminiscent of Nazi propaganda against the Jews. Today everyone agrees that such stereotyping about a person, or group of people, is evil and wrong. Despite this, our nation, as well as our politics, is littered with this injustice of stereotyping. On one side of the political spectrum, a religion is assumed to be filled with terrorists. While on the other side, someone who supports the President of the United States is deemed a racist deplorable. In modern America stereotyping has not only turned into something about race but also became our media and politics. In the 2016 election, we got a view of this. Our presidential candidates made our politics more about name calling and less about the issues. This problem is also further incited by the American media. I am not saying the media is evil. The press is what makes this country great by keeping our government in check. The problem with the modern media is it promotes this stereotypical culture. This is in part due to the way we intake information. On our phones, we can access stories from thousands of news outlets. The only way a news outlet can attract views is by having a catchy provocative title despite only having shaky supporting facts. All news media on both sides are guilty of this. In turn, our political arguments started to be along the same lines because that is what would make it to the front page. In order to make progress, we need the media to talk about the issues and stop stereotyping in order to sell papers. I believe this to be one of the main causes of the deep divide in modern America. There is no way to have a meaningful discussion if the argument is “I don’t like Trump because he is a racist” or “I don’t like Hillary because she is a crook”. We as Americans should be better than that. We should look at the issues and the facts and not merely make assumptions because it says it on Facebook. We should also look at the people who disagree with us and not assume their viewpoint as automatically stupid but should try and understand their point of view and where they are coming from. This is the only we can make progress and make America great again.

2 Comments

  1. Will Zeng

    I disagree. I think the real danger here is assuming that all news media is fake. They are not all fake and sidenote, Trump potraying all news hostile to him as “fake” is in my opinion one of the most dangerous thing he’s done. Going back to your point, I totally agree if an article just talks about how I don’t like Hillary becuase she’s a crook or I don’t like Trump becuase he’s a misogynist pig, period, then yes that would be wrong, but if these claims in the news were backed up by X, Y, and Z then that wouldnt be propagating a false sterotype, it would be proving a hypothesis. It would be nice if we could all get together and have a big happy jambalaya but the problem is we as Americans aren’t better than that. With Rush Limbaugh and Trump on the right screaming at their constiunients not to compromise and with liberals who feel like everything they stand for are being violated by this presidency, there isnt room for understanding the other. I agree with you, this is a big problem but there’s no easy solution to this. Asking people to listen to each other is a little pretentious. If it was that easy, we would have done it already.

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