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Rich black people don't have the same privileged to buy justice as rich white people?

That's not true. From basketball players to music icons like Michael Jackson the rich can buy a certain level of justice.

If you think the white rich still have it easier. I think we are focusing on the wrong thing. The 1% or .1% percentages have it better than everybody else regardless of color.



> Rich black people don't have the same privileged to buy justice as rich white people? > > That's not true.

Kinda funny how you made up a statement that they didn't say and then started arguing against it. Congratulations, you fought yourself and won.


It was in response to the parent post. Below is a direct quote.

"A courtesy not afforded to the largely not-rich, not-white general prison population. "


but in your direct quote, it clearly says "not-rich, not-white", so clearly the direct quote was not talking about "rich blacks"


The phrase can be interpreted two ways.

To simplify this comment, when I say "black" I mean "not white". Easier than to keep typing non-white, etc.

You have a quadrant of four categories:

1. Rich and white

2. Poor and white

3. Rich and black

4. Poor and black

You are interpreting the statement to refer to "people who are not (rich or white)" - which with Boolean logic expands to "people who are not rich and not white)". Looking at the first form, this means category 4 (people who are poor AND are not white). It also means that poor white people get this privilege, and rich non-whites do.

The other person is interpreting it as "not (rich and white)" which means all the categories except 1.

Hence the confusion.


in English, comma separated lists of adjectives or other descriptors are almost always understood to have AND between them, not OR. OR must be explicit, otherwise AND is implicitly assumed.

This is not just a matter of two equally valid alternative explanations: a reasonable reading of the original sentence "not poor, not white" (along a minimal amount of thought about the context and subject matter, e.g. prisons clearly are not full of rich blacks) would have easily led to the other person realizing that it was category 4 that the parent was talking about, not 1-3.


> Hence the confusion.

Why would anyone believe that there was confusion? It smells like ideology to me.


I think rich any-people shouldn't get a free-ride buuut... The comment you're responding to focused on privilege being the primary differentiator, but you focused in on "largely not-rich, not-white general prison population", please read comments a bit closer.


I know it wasn't the main point but using false race stereotypes need to get called out regardless.




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