this post was submitted on 06 Dec 2024
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I have an economics teacher that made this claim in class yesterday. I wanted to know other people’s thoughts about it.

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[–] TheWeirdestCunt@lemm.ee 42 points 1 week ago (4 children)

I had a university lecturer who claimed that climate change was racist "because Bangladeshi women can't swim"

Idk how some people end up being able to teach sometimes

[–] Vaggumon@lemm.ee 17 points 1 week ago

All I could think was: Aliens don't wear hats on Tuesdays because Tuna Helper is in Retrograde

The irony of them making a racial and gendered generalization on swimming skills lmao.

It's always bothered me when people will blame a phenomenon and call it racist, when the systematic racism lies in our society and its response to the phenomenon. Climate change isn't consciously choosing to target minorities, but societies are choosing not to support the minority groups disproportionately affected by it.

[–] Vanth@reddthat.com 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I'd bet a dollar it was a comment on the disparate impact of climate change on women and people of color, using Bangladeshi women being statistically less likely to know how to swim as an example. But sure, climate change is racist because Bangladeshi women can't swim, that's a much more juicy soundbite.

Bangladesh is a very populous country that lies almost entirely at sea level, and the Ganga and Brahmaputra flood at least once a year. The problem isn't not being able to swim in calm water. The best swimmer in the world would still die if he got caught in one of those currents.

At a public awareness March in my country a speaker claimed COVID was racist because it disproportionately killed indigenous peoples.

You could argue that is correlation, where the cause was actually being unvaccinated. This was an antivax march, so obviously it was the government's fault, not being unvaccinated.