I don't mean to butt in to this argument, but it seems that the point you are making (ignoring the age aspect) is that people here would have different views if they personally experienced discrimination based on their skin color?
Seems like a fair point, but I don't agree. I'm only 20, but I grew up in Los Angeles, California, in a neighborhood in which whites were the minority. Everybody there hates white people, even the Jews, and I have experienced discrimination. I gotten beaten up and made fun of at schools for being a white man, I've been given subpar services at restaurants for being a "gringo," I've been told that I'm inherently evil by the children of former Black Panthers, and I had a friend who wasn't allowed to hang out with me because I was white. Despite all this, you still can not convince me that there's a mass conspiracy against white people, or that the white man has it rough compared to other racial groups. The fact that I've been victimized a few times in my lifetime doesn't mean **** in the grand scheme of things, or on any sort of macro level. My personal experience is vastly trumped by actual statistics.



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Neither is it true for the UK, where the population is 92% white. One might argue that 'white' being the dominant 'race' is in the privileged position of being immune to racial hatred by means of their dominant position, except in certain very individual circumstances, and to a certain extent your example would be flawed for the UK simply by means of demographic as the racial hatred is more likely to be against 'brown' ( persons of Indian/Pakistani/Bangladeshi origin or descent) 