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When Purchase Recommendations Go Bad

nixman99 writes "An article on MSNBC describes what happens when 'View Similar Products' recommendations go bad. From the article: 'The company said it was alerted to the problem early yesterday afternoon after word began spreading among bloggers. When visitors to Walmart.com requested Planet of the Apes: The Complete TV Series on DVD, four other movies were recommended under the heading Similar Items. Those films included Martin Luther King: I Have A Dream/Assassination of MLK and Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson.'"

33 of 370 comments (clear)

  1. Seems like a good recommendation by riflemann · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why are people apologising for this recommendation? IMHO, this is actually a fairly good recommendation!

    POTA is a movie about civil rights, in this case across species, not races. One species (the monkeys/gorillas) effectively enslaves another species (humans) and the base message of the movie is about the struggle for emancipation by this enslaved species.

    So exactly how is a movie about enslavement and emancipation not related to real life civil rights issues?

    I'm not American so I'm not really exposed to this over-the-top sensitive PC stuff, but this seems just silly to me. Franky, I find the people who did the complaining about this issue offensive and ignorant.

    1. Re:Seems like a good recommendation by drgonzo59 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The sexual harassment thing itself is sexist. Try and accuse a female boss of flirting with you if you are a guy and see how far that takes you.

      --Oh but she did wink at me!
      --Whatever, she was just being nice/--Whatever she was just being funny

      But if it is the other way around, the male will be out of the door immediatly, before anoyone can say "lawsuit".

      --Oh but he winked at me!
      --WHAT???! He's GONE!

      I am not saying that sexual harassment or racial bias should take place, but in efforts to stop it they've swung the pendulum the other way too far.

    2. Re:Seems like a good recommendation by riflemann · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How can a computer "know" that, for instance, Planet of the Apes has a similar idea, or whatever you wish to call it, as Martin Luther King? It hasn't watched the movie, certainly. It doesn't know the history. How can it make such a link?


      The computer doesnt "know". It bases recommendations on things such as what other buyers bought or looked at, or perhaps it even looks into the description of the movie and looks for connections with other film descriptions.

      In this case, the program probably connected something about 'enslaved' and 'struggle for freedom' in the POTA description, with something about slavery and freedom in the MLK documentary.

      Put two and two togetherm, and you've got an appropriate link.

      I suspect the problem with all this has to do with the title. If POTA had instead been called something like "The struggle for freedom from opression" then walmart wouldnt do this racist act of dropping the connection.

    3. Re:Seems like a good recommendation by nwbvt · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Its because there is an old ethnic slur comparing people of African descent to monkeys. You may not have heard of it and the computer almost certainly has not heard of it (it is just doing statistical relations), but people can still get insulted regarding it.

      And it certainly does not just occur in the United States. I remember a couple of years ago Conan O'Brian did a show in Canada and did a segment making fun of French Canadians which he got run out of the country for. And then there are plenty of examples in the Islamic world throwing fits whenever someone uses the word 'crusade'. And don't get me started about Europe where even mentioning events that happened 70-60 years ago is illegal. You didn't mention where you are from, but I'm sure there people are also bound to get offended by some innocent remark.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  2. It actually makes good sense by Walter+Wart · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When Planet of the Apes first came out it was revolutionary. It took the Lords of Creation - White men - and put them in a situation where they were the oppressed, the minority. Someone else was in charge and no worse, perhaps better, than the astronauts. The movie asked questions and had a discussion of race in America that would have been unthinkable without the fig-leaf of science fiction.

    So yes, it was appropriate. Those who are offended never looked deeper than the skin. Which is sort of the problem.

    --
    The man who never alters his opinion is like the stagnant water and breeds Reptiles of the Mind -- William Blake
  3. in a positive light by roseblood · · Score: 3, Insightful

    pull out your rose tinted glasses and try to see it this way:

    The Planet of the Apes is a social commentary in the form of a sci-fi film, MLK was a historic figure who made great efforts to make society more equal.

    Trying to view a glass that's half full I'll try to see that as a connection that some software somewhere made. Of course the victocrats(glass half empty types) will see nothing beyond the titles of the connected products. To them I say get over it and try to look beyond the superficial.

    --
    There are lies, damned lies, and statistics.
  4. The same thing happened to me. by Phariom · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When I looked up the 1979 film "The Cracker Factory," which about a woman who drifts in and out of asylums, I got the following recommendations:

    8 Mile
    Over the Top
    Bean

  5. Blame by quokkapox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So we can blame the unthinking machines and the corporations that use them for our own cultural and racial bigotry. Nice.

    --
    it's a blue bright blue Saturday hey hey
  6. what exactly is so offensive? by theonlyholle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't get it - what exactly is so offensive about those recommendations? Could it be that's only offensive in a climate that is so obsessed with political correctness that you cannot make perfectly innocent recommendation without some people reading whatever malicious intention into it? Honestly, I don't understand this, but I think it makes me a little bit happier that I'm living in Europe...

    1. Re:what exactly is so offensive? by malkavian · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Astounding. Absolutely astounding.
      First, the second biggest examples of racism in Europe are the Neo Nazi movement, and of course the highly nationalistic political parties (BNP in the UK for example).
      The football league is just a marketing ploy to give the masses something to be tribal about while making shed loads of money.
      And, like it or not, human nature is tribal in nature (which is why you have cliques of friends you like, and masses of people who don't interest you).

      The first biggest example of racism in Europe? The Anti-Racism laws, and the new Inquisition that comprises the various Anti Racism committees.

  7. hierarchies by tunesmith · · Score: 3, Insightful

    planet of the apes was loosely considered an allegory on race relations, or at least recognized to have spurred discussion on race relations, (although I don't exactly see how anyone thought it would be a good idea to have it be suggested by using apes).

    anyway if you categorized these things in terms of hierarchies or in terms of degrees of separation, and they wanted to boost the relevance of MLK stuff, they'd boost the levels of search depth to find connections, even tenuous connections, to make things that had even a remote connection to one of MLK's supercategories recommend the MLK media.

    technology can make people look pretty damn stupid, but as a progressive, I'm pretty embarrassed by the progressives that were so sure they saw overt evidence of deliberate and corporate-sponsored racism in this. I'm not saying there wasn't a racist in wal-mart that thought it would be funny to manually link POTA to MLK, but it's not even close to the only possible explanation. All people have to do is remember the old grapevine game to realize how easily an intent or an idea can corrupt itself by just being passed three or four links down a chain.

    --
    skkkoooonnnggggkkk ptui
  8. Well the Civ 4 example is insulting by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The Marthin Luther King example can indeed be seen as both being about racism and the fight against it. The original Planet of the Apes was using the sci-fi trick of turning the roles around to give its message.

    Star Trek (the episodes that are not pure action or particle of the week thrillers) does this a couple of times. I am reminded of the color difference episode where we meet two races locked in a fight to the death, the one being black/white and the other being white/black.

    TNG had an episode to show how stupid judging people on their sexual preferences is but showing a race that is purely homosexual (a 1 gender species that still used two people to procreate is off course the ultimate same sex race) with the sexual weirdos being those who tended to have heterosexual feelings.

    This is indeed the eye of the beholder, it took me a while to figure it out even what the problem was. Apparently blacks are apes.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting by thesandtiger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If one grows up being compared to monkeys as a way of demonstrating that they are less than paler people, and more generally as a paternalistic term used to put one in one's place, one gets somewhat sensitive to monkey related stuff.

      Sometimes this can be very blatant - Howard Cosell saying "Would you look at that monkey run?" when describing a black football player. Sometimes this can be less blatant, and a "clever racist" (if there is such a thing) will try to say "Well, Planet of the Apes is social commentary and so is MLK, so it's just those darkies being overly uppity again!) And, yes, sometimes it can be absurd - I have some friends who attend a church that insists they boycott King Kong because it is, and I quote, "An interracial love story designed to show the black man's unquenchable and self-destructive desire for white women."

      So, I'd say it's somewhat disingenuous to say "Gosh, I don't know why people would get so upset that someone is comparing Monkeys Gone Wild with Martin Luther King! It's so absurd!" It comes off as rather false.

      For further reading, I recommend "How to Rent a Negro" - pretty funny take on a less than funny subject.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
    2. Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting by jcnnghm · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Howard Cosell was not a racist. He used to call lots of small, quick players "monkeys", including white players. (Don't quote me on this, I remember hearing at one point he used to refer to his own children and grandchildren as "monkeys" as well.) Further, Cosell didn't even understand why what he said could be considered inapropriate at first. Blatant racism - hardly. The trouble is that true racists hear something and then decide that the person is a racist based upon themselves.

      This reminds me of the South Park episode about the flag, with the black figure hung and a bunch of white figures around the black figure. The boys don't see anything wrong with it because they don't see white people hanging a black guy, they see 4 guys hanging another guy. Chef sees it as blatant racism. Racism is in the eye of the beholder.

      I took King Kong to be a movie about capturing a giant ape. If you see racism in the pairing of Planet of the Apes and MLK, or in King Kong, perhaps you should take a look in the mirror, because the real racist may be closer than you think.

      --
      You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. - Winston Churchill
    3. Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting by Jerf · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There are really two types of racism.

      Real racism is not in the eye of the beholder. Real racism is when you irrationally use the characteristics you believe are true of a "race" to judge a member of that race. It becomes especially destructive when the characteristics believed true are false and derogatory, and especially destructive when it involves judging the value of a person (something not intrinsically wrong in certain contexts... "would I hire this person?" "is that person going to try to kill me?" we make value judgements every day).

      This is as close to an emprically verifiable term as you can ever get when dealing with humans, assuming you can get at the inner state of the person.

      The second type of racism is in the eye of the beholder, and it has gotten to the point where "That's racist!" is one step shy of "I don't like that!", only much, much meaner. The distinguishing characteristic of this kind of "racism" is that if the accuser can come up with any reason that the accusee might be doing or saying something for a racist reason, regardless of how likely or even how true that reason is, the accusee can be presumed racist, and should therefore be vilified. Fortunately, I think we're very near the point where that accusation will have been so overused that it will be diluted into nearly no effect.

      As a homework exercise, estimate the probability that this form of racism will ever be "eliminated", and consider the consequences of your answer.

      Often, it's hard to tell which is which. I prefer to cultivate an attitude more like the South Park children than the current attitudes of people who are hypersensitive about the second type of racism. This is the first I've heard that "of course" King Kong is a stand-in for black people. Personally, I thought he was just a giant monster. Since this accusation is a "projection" type accusation, I am inclined to think this is the second kind of "racism."

      (Incidentally, the second type of "racism" is not itself really racist. It's just evil, in every sense of the term, especially including how it destroys the one afflicted with it. No apology for that belief.)

    4. Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting by dnoyeb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I beg to differ. Just because some are not experienced to know racism when they see it does not mean it exist only in ones eye.

      It could be rasicm or it could be stupidity. Not enough information to say. But to try and say people who claim to see racism, is due to their own racism is wrong.

    5. Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting by oirtemed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While you make some good points, you are going a little too far with the whole if you see it you are probably the racist. I have the ability, and I'm nobody special, to examine things relatively objectively and see how certain things may be percieved or intended a certain way by others without having those perceptions or intentions myself. Even if the boy doesnt see that flag as racist, its intent could still be as such. Furthermore, whether or not the act of pairing those movies was an intended racist act is really irrelevant: the point is that it could be percieved as such and offend somebody. Now you may not care about that, I'm not really PC so I don't, but I bet walmart does. Cosell may not have intended those remarks to be racist, but they could be percieved as such and if he couldn't fathom how it could be construed as innappropriate then I'm sure he could have been informed and his veil of ignorance lifted. Just cause someone can see how something could be a racist act doesn't make them racist. It makes them perceptive.

    6. Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting by tthomas48 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You have to look historically to see why King Kong could be an interracial love story. The original was from 1933. A time when interracial dating was a horrible taboo and a black man dating a white woman would be a "monster". The second movie was in 1976 which was when hollywood started realizing the power of both civil rights type stories and that black audiences were a large untapped market. This was when King Kong became a sympathetic character, unjustly persecuted by a world that cannot understand him. Sounds like the plot of 90% of the blackploitation pictures made around the same time.

      I believe the current version is simply an homage. I think it has about the same relevance as Gus Van Sant's rendering of Psycho. Just because Van Sant added nothing to hist version, it did not impact the original picture. It also did not change the historical significance of the original picture. In much the same way while the new King Kong may have nothing to do with racism, the two predecessors certainly did and for many people (including those who lived through the times in question), the story will always carry its historical weight.

      I think the problem with the current way we view racism is that we see being racist and being insensitive as the same thing. If your father was lynched during the civil rights era, you might not want to ever see a picture of someone being hanged no matter the color of your skin, and it certainly wouldn't be unreasonable to immediately think as in the South Park episode that if there was a hanging of a black figure with white figures all around that it was a depiction of a lynching. That's how our minds work. Rewiring trauma is a very hard thing. And while it might not be racist it would be insensitive and insensitivity to our fellow man is not something we should aspire to either.

    7. Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting by Hsien · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Theres a differance between believing people of various racial backgrounds are innately inferior/superior and recognising social and physiological differances that may contribute to the inderviduals ability to excel in a particular task. To assume that "everyone is equal in every way" is nieve at best.

    8. Re:Well the Civ 4 example is insulting by lysergic.acid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're right. There's certainly a difference between racial stereotypes and giving merit to a specific culture's accomplishments. But broad generalizations based on race like "asians are smarter than other ethic groups" would be largely inaccurate, hard to prove empirically, and is likely based on cultural stereotypes.

  9. What's the problem? by hattig · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Surely the racism is in the eyes of the people complaining about this, rather than in the programmed system that is probably matching keywords?

    You always get a slightly strange recommendation when shopping on sites with this feature. It is to be expected, categorisation can only go so far...

  10. Re:Highly suprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "stereotypical african american"

    that is one of the most racist things i have every seen written on slashdot

  11. Oh you guys HAVE to be kidding by aendeuryu · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So far I've seen 5 posts modded up pretty high for saying that this isn't as offensive as it sounds, and is even in some ways appropriate. Give me a break. Is racial insensitivity so DEAD in your country that you can't see how putting four influential black icons onto the same page as a B-movie about monkeys is offensive?

    I'm not saying it was maliciously done. Without seeing the algorithm, nobody can know for sure, but I know enough about data mining to know that random stuff crops up. But for the Love of CHRIST show a little empathy.

    I bet people would be singing a different tune if it were four documentaries about 9/11 mixed with Mahmoud Darwish's The Shahid?

    1. Re:Oh you guys HAVE to be kidding by dajak · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So far I've seen 5 posts modded up pretty high for saying that this isn't as offensive as it sounds, and is even in some ways appropriate. Give me a break. Is racial insensitivity so DEAD in your country that you can't see how putting four influential black icons onto the same page as a B-movie about monkeys is offensive?

      According to Amazon, people who bought George Orwell's Animal farm, which is about farm animals, also bought the Schindler's List DVD, which is about Jews. Is that insensitive to Jews, in your opinion?

      POTA is an allegory about civil rights, not a story 'about monkeys'. Relating it to documentaries 'about monkeys' is inappropriate. Looking at the recommendations for Animal Farm it is clear that Amazon's algorithm doesn't understand allegory, just like it doesn't understand political correctness.

      I bet people would be singing a different tune if it were four documentaries about 9/11 mixed with Mahmoud Darwish's The Shahid?

      Amazon doesn't sell it. 9/11 did lead to a substantial increase in sales of books about radical Islam. This just shows that 9/11 and radical Islam are linked in many minds. I don't want Amazon to only recommend books to me that are not 'offensive' for people in my IP range.

      The POTA allegory morally supports civil rights activists like MLK. This is a different kind of association to the one you are making. Some people are actually interested in trying to understand the enemy's point of view. For every one copy sold to a radical youth 9 are sold to disinterested avid readers that want to know what the fuss is about. In the same way as Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf, Rudolf Hoess's memoirs, and Albert Speer's diary are relevant to understanding the mindset leading to the Holocaust, and therefore are related to the Holocaust, Mahmud Darwish's words are relevant to understanding the mindset of radical Muslims. Of course this point is moot, since Amazon doesn't sell any of these works.

    2. Re:Oh you guys HAVE to be kidding by SpacePunk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Shit happens, get over it. The computer some how thought the grouping was appropriate. I seriously doubt there's someone in a smoky back room that thought it would be a good thing to group MLK with Planet of the Apes. Take the tin-foil hat off, go outside where you can see the daystar, and have a drink.

  12. Evil Walmart by thunderpaws · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The only reason this story is getting attention is Walmart is the current American icon of corporate evil and greed. America is a nation of victims who have nothing better to do than blame their personal failures on everyone else. This story should be humorous.

  13. Re:Highly suprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    usually when people use racial stereotypes they're just trying to be funny, even if their humor is fucked up by other people's standards. but the ggp post presumeably wasn't(unless he was going for very subtle irony). therefore: racist.

    the phrase "afican-american" implies that all black people in america are immigrants from africa, and while most of their ancestors were from africa that doesn't mean they need to be labeled "african-americans" anymore than white people need to be labeled "european-americans". the phrase also implies that all africans are black, which is a racist generalization. but whatever

  14. Why? by t_allardyce · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Instead of making the unlikely assumption that Walmart has a racist policy based on the recommendation of 3 films buy a computer, did anyone stop to ask why the system did this? I mean perhaps the films do have something in common, does anyone star in more than one of them? Do they have the same release date/year? or DVD release date? Do they share composers, directors or crew? Are they all catogorised under "American History"? Maybe the most fucking obvious reason is that several people who bought Planet of the Apes also bought these other films!!

    The press is always ready for a scandel and never ready to actually follow it up with some investigative journalism. I guess its cheaper to just re-broadcast a video feed and pay the royalties or print something direct from AP.

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  15. Re:The Eye Of The Beholder by booch · · Score: 2, Insightful

    He didn't say that black soldiers didn't experience racism. He just said that the French wanted to see their black cocks, not their tails.

    (I hope moderators read the context 3 levels up, or this is going to look WAY off-topic!)

    --
    Software sucks. Open Source sucks less.
  16. Well, I'll say it -- I'm offended! by KFu7 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I guess I shouldn't be surprised that most of the posters here don't "get it." But I guess I still can be.

    Forgive me for lecturing, but I'll stereotype a bit here and suggest that the majority of /. readers don't fall into the group of people who can see offense in this situation either out of ignorance, or unfamiliarity with minorities and their history. I know there's a large contingent out there that believes the white male is an "oppressed" group in America due to affirmative action, Title IX, or other assorted anti-harassment and anti-discrimination laws or rules. I'm sure the strain must be unbearable...

    I love this site and my fellow slashdotters and I come here every day -- but sometimes things are just wrong.

    I Am Not A Conspiracy Theorist (IANACT?) but there could be something more sinister at work here than some computer algorithm linking the social commentary of "The Planet of the Apes" with Martin Luther King's role in the civil rights struggle. Discrimination and offensive racial stereotyping are not dead issues -- they often lie just beneath the surface because there are many who still believe that some people are inferior to others simply because of their ethnicity, skin color or gender. And speaking as an African American (and I don't get up on this soapbox often, folks), this was offensive and I am not amused.

    We all know the posters on this site wouldn't let Microsoft off the hook so easily or rush to defend them so quickly if the folks in Redmond were behind this.

    Now, let the bashing begin! Who needs positive karma?

  17. Re:Why? by d-e-w · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Based on what's been said in a couple of other comments, it sounds like the Wal-mart recommendations system operates via a set of assigned keywords or metadata. Having worked on a similar type of system in the past--they probably have a defined set of keywords that can be assigned for each DVD. When the DVD is entered into the database, it is the data entry person's responsibility to chose a proper set of keywords for the DVD.

    This type of system develops strange biases in several ways, most noteably through human interpretation. Say you have a keyword "black/white relations." One data entry person might only assign that keyword to nonfictional documentaries, while another might assign that keyword to based-on-real-life movies as well. And another person who's particularly sensitive to the underlying messages of movies might assign that keyword to Planet of the Apes (as well as possibly to box collections of ST:TOS).

    Somebody selects one of those movies, and gets a bizarre selection of "related" movies which simply reflects the fact that three different people viewed the use of a defined keyword and thus assigned it in three different ways. It's hard to even design business rules to prevent this from happening because it overly limits what the system was designed to do. If a business rule says that only nonfiction documentaries and based-on-real-life movies can receive the "black/white relations" tag, you might end up missing a movie like Crash. If the business rule says instead that you can't assign a tag based on the "underlying" message of a movie, how do you define underlying message? Racism or "black/white relations" (my bet is that the Wal-mart keyword was closer to "black/white relations" rather than "racism" because all the movies that apparently popped up as suggestions were about that particular subset of racism) is the in-your-face message of Planet of the Apes. It's so thinly masked by the story that I'm not sure I'd define it was the "underlying" message. I'm the type of person that probably *would* assign Planet to the "black/white relations" tag, because its consideration of that theme is about the only redeeming factor of the movie.

    Of course, I grew in an area where--due to integration--racism was a pretty major issue and I thought I'd learned most of the various "bad" terms that members of one race (hell, one European background) called members of another race (or other European backgrounds) when I was young. "Monkey" had definitely fallen out of use in my area by the 1980s; first time I was ever introduced to it as a racist term was online about four years ago.

  18. Re:The Eye Of The Racist by Gorimek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From the actual perspective of a racist, it makes obvious sense.

    They're black or brown. They've got that flat nose thing going. They wear little or no clothing. They come from Africa, living side by side with each other. They're clearly related to us, but also clearly more primitive.

    On a continent with many different primate species, it would make sense if they were all related, and the fact that one of them can interbreed with us doesn't mean they're the same, any more than it means that horses and donkeys are the same. Who knows, since they are an intermediate race, they can also interbreed with some monkey species.

    Hopefully unneeded disclaimer: Those are not my opinions, but those I believe are/were typical racist thoughts on the matter

  19. I agree and disagree with all of you by badllama77 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think the problem with everyone's view of this is that it is being seen in one way only by most. This is an innocent match of titles that offended some, and those who say people are overreacting by making this a national issue are correct. In addition it is something that many minorities, particularly African Americans will find offensive. Those with a healthy attitude would laugh at the poor pairing and call it a day, but they should still be a little offended. Would we be less likely to care if we had "real problems", of course we would. In our society many of us have less "real problems" than some other parts of the world or even some of those in our own country. This is a reflection of the wealth of the society as a whole, and that the majority are not facing the "real problems" some people face. As one looks at various countries around the world the number of "real problems" they face is a function of the wealth of the nation. Are those of us who find this offensive oversensitive, I don't think so. As was said earlier, when people have been likened to monkeys in the past, and still face some significant inequalities in society are likely to have a very different perspective on the subject. One of the posts mentioned the different types of racism and separated perceived racism from actual racism. Unfortunately the two are not mutually exclusive, one is born from the other. The xenophobic nature of man is very prevalent throughout the world and its hsitory. The Catholics and the Protestants in England and Ireland, and the Afrikaans, English, and Africans in South Africa are good examples. These are extreme so lets look at the U.S.A.; The Irish immigrants when they first began arriving in numbers were disliked and shut out, the Chinese, the Italians, etc.. The African-Americans are a unique case having been forcefully brought here and treated sub human. This first began in the 1640's and grew exponentially til about 1790 and continued til 1865, only to be replaced by various forms of indentured servitude and of course segregation. All of that being peppered with violence towards African-Americans and the damage done by being relegated to a second class status, the effects we are still dealing with today. About 300 years of this has led to the second type of racism. The perception can be incorrect and at times oversensitive, but let us not think that it is born from a vacuum, it is created by the history. Things have become better, but it has been a very short number of years, not even one lifetime, since the civil rights movement and we still do have work to do. In time I do think it will fade, but you can't erase 300 years with less than a sixth of that time. When my friends who are in the majority ask me to help them to understand what racism today is like, and how it can be disturbing, frightening, apalling, and sometimes humourous, I usually fail. I think until you have been refused service or entry somewhere, had trouble finding work, or been physically/verbally threatened or harassed by not only other citizens but the authorities as well it is hard to really understand. In summary, it makes sense to be offended, but not to make it national news.