Its an example of #Drama, #Givemepity, and #Racehustle. I disapprove. Whatever sympathy I have for her need not interfere with my opinion of her little trashpiece. That was unwarranted. I apologize.
She feels that the worker is painting her parent, and hence the society is painting the minority swath, in a light she doesn't want reflected. I will take the time to ask why an American wasn't educated to the point of literacy. I will point out that while the economy is down, there are plenty of jobs and hopefully plenty of opportunities to find programs that teach basic literacy. Its a blog.
Why is this logical progression of this post apparently backwards? You have first the conclusion, then the argumentation, and then the premise. Just curious.
Also, I'm not sure what's the object of that post.
You'll have to explain what you mean.
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In addition to the social-worker/society painting her mother/the-minority-races in a light she doesnt want reflected (The trained, objective social worker was personable, thorough, and objective in her work and the author is upset that when history looks back it will look like the mother was unemployable by her own volition), the social worker likely considers herself to not be racist. In short, that not enough attention and humanity was given.
She's claiming that even 'white people' who consider themselves progressive and equal-minded are hurting the black race.
-And I rather firmly believe that equality will take time, sure, but it will ultimately come from merit. This article isn't presenting anything but a cry for sympathy. The mother was a fine example of a person, but why wasn't she educated to literacy? There is likely some programs that offer that.