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647 647  
648 648  = Dating =
649 649  
650 -{{expandable summary="Study: Positioning Multiraciality in Cyberspace – Treatment of Multiracial Daters in an Online Dating Website"}}
651 -**Source:** *Social Forces*
652 -**Date of Publication:** *2016*
653 -**Author(s):** *Stephanie M. Curington, Kevin K. Anderson, and Jennifer Glass*
654 -**Title:** *"Positioning Multiraciality in Cyberspace: Treatment of Multiracial Daters in an Online Dating Website"*
655 -**DOI:** [https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/sow007](https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/sow007)
656 -**Subject Matter:** *Race and Dating, Multiracial Identity, Online Behavior*
657 -
658 -{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
659 -1. **General Observations:**
660 - - Data drawn from **over 1 million messaging records** from an online dating site.
661 - - Focused on how **monoracial users** (especially Whites) interact with **multiracial daters**.
662 -
663 -2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
664 - - **Multiracial Black/White and Asian/White women** received **fewer responses from White men** than their monoracial counterparts.
665 - - White daters showed **stronger preferences for monoracial identities**, particularly **own-race pairings**.
666 -
667 -3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
668 - - **Multiracial men** fared worse than multiracial women across most pairings.
669 - - **Latina/White and Asian/White multiracial women** were **more positively received by Black and Hispanic men**.
670 -{{/expandable}}
671 -
672 -{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
673 -1. **Primary Observations:**
674 - - White users demonstrated a clear pattern of **in-group preference**, preferring other White users (monoracial or partially White) over more ambiguous multiracial identities.
675 - - Authors suggest this reflects **"boundary-maintaining behavior"** and **"latent racial bias"**.
676 -
677 -2. **Subgroup Trends:**
678 - - **Multiracial women with partial minority backgrounds** were more acceptable to non-White men than White men.
679 - - Multiracial daters were **often treated as ambiguous or “less desirable”** in ways the authors frame as **resistance to racial integration**.
680 -
681 -3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
682 - - The most rejected group? **Black/White multiracial men**, especially by **White women**, which the authors do not frame as bias in the same way.
683 - - The study shows **asymmetrical concern** — when Whites select inwardly, it's seen as racial boundary policing; when minorities do it, it's not pathologized.
684 -{{/expandable}}
685 -
686 -{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
687 -1. **Strengths of the Study:**
688 - - Large, real-world dataset gives useful behavioral insight into **racial preferences in dating**.
689 - - Raises legitimate questions about **how race, desire, and group identity intersect**.
690 -
691 -2. **Limitations of the Study:**
692 - - Frames **normal in-group preference among Whites as "resistance to multiraciality"**, rather than neutral human patterning.
693 - - Ignores **similar or stronger in-group preference among Black and Asian users**, which could indicate *universal patterns*, not White exceptionalism.
694 - - Uses CRT framing to subtly **morally indict Whites for preferring Whites**, while exempting other groups.
695 -
696 -3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
697 - - Treat all in-group preference equally across racial groups — not just when Whites do it.
698 - - Disaggregate by age, education, and regional variation to control for confounds.
699 - - Consider whether **multiracial identity is ambiguous** by nature and if that ambiguity reduces clarity of signals in dating.
700 -{{/expandable}}
701 -
702 -{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
703 -- Provides a data point in the **ongoing academic effort to pathologize White selectiveness**, even in private, personal domains like dating.
704 -- Demonstrates how **racial preferences are only considered “problematic” when they preserve White group boundaries**.
705 -- Supports analysis of **how DEI-aligned narratives seek to dissolve in-group loyalty under the guise of openness and inclusion**.
706 -{{/expandable}}
707 -
708 -{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
709 -1. Investigate how **media and dating platforms reinforce multiracialism as normative** despite evidence of natural in-group selection.
710 -2. Study the **psychological effects of being told your preferences are morally wrong if you're White**.
711 -3. Explore how **multiracial identities are strategically framed** depending on political or cultural goals — exoticization, integration, or guilt projection.
712 -{{/expandable}}
713 -
714 -{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
715 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:Curington et al. - Positioning Multiraciality in Cyberspace Treatment of Multiracial Daters in an Online Dating Websit.pdf]]
716 -{{/expandable}}
717 -{{/expandable}}
718 -
719 -
720 -{{expandable summary="Study: “A Little More Ghetto, a Little Less Cultured”: Are There Racial Stereotypes about Interracial Daters?"}}
721 -**Source:** *Sociology of Race and Ethnicity*
722 -**Date of Publication:** *2020*
723 -**Author(s):** *Andrew R. Flores and Ariela Schachter*
724 -**Title:** *"“A Little More Ghetto, a Little Less Cultured”: Are There Racial Stereotypes about Interracial Daters?"*
725 -**DOI:** [10.1177/2332649219871232](https://doi.org/10.1177/2332649219871232)
726 -**Subject Matter:** *Interracial Dating, Racial Stereotyping, Online Behavior*
727 -
728 -{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
729 -1. **General Observations:**
730 - - Used **experimental survey data** from a nationally representative sample (N = 1,070).
731 - - Participants evaluated hypothetical dating profiles of White individuals who expressed interest in Black, Latino, or Asian partners.
732 -
733 -2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
734 - - **White men interested in Black women** were rated as **less cultured, more aggressive, and lower class**.
735 - - White women interested in Black men were **viewed as less intelligent and more promiscuous**.
736 - - **Interest in Asian partners** did not carry the same negative stereotypes; in some cases, it improved perceived desirability.
737 -
738 -3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
739 - - **Latino partners** were seen more neutrally, though men who dated them were seen as more “dominant.”
740 - - Across the board, **Whites who dated within their race were viewed most favorably**.
741 -{{/expandable}}
742 -
743 -{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
744 -1. **Primary Observations:**
745 - - Interracial daters—especially those dating Black individuals—are **subject to negative assumptions** about intelligence, class, and morality.
746 - - Stereotypes persist even in **hypothetical online contexts**, showing deep cultural associations.
747 -
748 -2. **Subgroup Trends:**
749 - - White men who prefer Black women face **masculinity-linked stigma**, often tied to “urban” or “ghetto” tropes.
750 - - White women dating Black men are **framed as sexually deviant or socially undesirable**, particularly by other Whites.
751 -
752 -3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
753 - - The most negatively perceived pairing was **White woman/Black man**, reinforcing long-standing cultural anxieties.
754 - - Respondents judged interracial daters not just by race but by **projected cultural assimilation or rejection**.
755 -{{/expandable}}
756 -
757 -{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
758 -1. **Strengths of the Study:**
759 - - Reveals **latent racial boundaries** in contemporary dating preferences.
760 - - Uses **controlled experimental design** to expose socially unacceptable but real biases.
761 -
762 -2. **Limitations of the Study:**
763 - - Relies on **self-reported reactions to profiles**, not real-world dating behavior.
764 - - **Fails to analyze anti-White framing** in the assumptions about White participants who prefer other races.
765 - - Assumes stigma is irrational without investigating **rational in-group preference or cultural concerns**.
766 -
767 -3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
768 - - Include **reverse scenarios** (e.g., Black or Latino individuals expressing preference for Whites).
769 - - Examine how **media portrayal of interracial couples** influences perception and desirability.
770 - - Account for **class and education overlaps** that could explain perceived traits.
771 -{{/expandable}}
772 -
773 -{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
774 -- Highlights how **Whites who date outside their race—particularly with Blacks—are pathologized**, even within their own community.
775 -- Shows that **Whiteness is penalized** when paired with non-Whiteness, reinforcing social costs for racial mixing.
776 -- Useful for understanding **how stigma around interracial relationships is unevenly applied**, with anti-White moral overtones.
777 -{{/expandable}}
778 -
779 -{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
780 -1. Study how **in-group dating preferences differ across races** and are morally interpreted.
781 -2. Investigate how **class and education** affect perceptions of interracial relationships.
782 -3. Examine whether **Whites are disproportionately judged** when deviating from group norms vs. other races.
783 -{{/expandable}}
784 -
785 -{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
786 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1177_2332649219871232.pdf]]
787 -{{/expandable}}
788 -{{/expandable}}
789 -
790 -
791 -{{expandable summary="Study: E Pluribus, Pauciores (Out of Many, Fewer): Diversity and Birth Rates"}}
792 -**Source:** *National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)*
793 -**Date of Publication:** *2024*
794 -**Author(s):** *Umit Gurun, Daniel Solomon*
795 -**Title:** *"E Pluribus, Pauciores (Out of Many, Fewer): Diversity and Birth Rates"*
796 -**DOI:** [10.3386/w31978](https://doi.org/10.3386/w31978)
797 -**Subject Matter:** *Demography, Social Cohesion, Diversity Effects on Fertility*
798 -
799 -{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
800 -1. **General Observations:**
801 - - Used large-scale demographic, economic, and census data across **1,800+ U.S. counties**.
802 - - Found a **strong negative correlation between local diversity and White fertility rates**.
803 - - Quantified impact: a 1 SD increase in ethnic diversity leads to a **4–6% drop in birth rates**.
804 -
805 -2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
806 - - Decline most pronounced among **non-Hispanic Whites**, especially in suburban and semi-urban areas.
807 - - **No significant birth rate drop observed among Hispanic or Black populations** under the same conditions.
808 -
809 -3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
810 - - Diversity increases linked to **reduced marriage rates**, especially among Whites.
811 - - Authors suggest **“erosion of social cohesion and trust”** as mediating factors.
812 -{{/expandable}}
813 -
814 -{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
815 -1. **Primary Observations:**
816 - - Ethnic diversity significantly **reduces total fertility rates**, independent of economic or educational variables.
817 - - **Social fragmentation** and perceived dissimilarity drive fertility suppression.
818 -
819 -2. **Subgroup Trends:**
820 - - White populations respond to diversity with lower family formation.
821 - - **Cultural distance** and loss of shared norms are possible causes.
822 -
823 -3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
824 - - High-diversity metro areas saw steepest declines in White birth rates over the past two decades.
825 - - Study challenges mainstream assumptions that diversity has neutral or positive demographic effects.
826 -{{/expandable}}
827 -
828 -{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
829 -1. **Strengths of the Study:**
830 - - Offers **quantitative backing for claims long treated as taboo** in public discourse.
831 - - Applies **robust statistical methods** and cross-validates with multiple data sources.
832 -
833 -2. **Limitations of the Study:**
834 - - Avoids discussing **racial preference, ethnic tension, or cultural conflict** explicitly.
835 - - Authors stop short of acknowledging **the demographic replacement implication** of sustained low White fertility.
836 -
837 -3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
838 - - Include **qualitative data on reasons for delayed or avoided parenthood** among Whites in diverse areas.
839 - - Examine **media messaging and policy environments** that could accelerate these trends.
840 -{{/expandable}}
841 -
842 -{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
843 -- Confirms a **central premise** of the White demographic decline thesis.
844 -- Demonstrates that **diversity is not neutral** but **functionally suppressive to White reproduction**.
845 -- Offers solid **empirical support against the utopian assumptions** of multiculturalism.
846 -{{/expandable}}
847 -
848 -{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
849 -1. Examine **fertility effects of diversity in European countries** experiencing immigration-driven change.
850 -2. Study **how school demographics and crime perception** affect reproductive decision-making.
851 -3. Explore **policy frameworks that support demographic stability for founding populations**.
852 -{{/expandable}}
853 -
854 -{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
855 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:12.Gurun_Solomon_Diversity_BirthRates.pdf]]
856 -{{/expandable}}
857 -{{/expandable}}
858 -
859 -
860 -{{expandable summary="Study: The White Man’s Burden: Gonzo Pornography and the Construction of Black Masculinity"}}
861 -**Source:** *Porn Studies*
862 -**Date of Publication:** *2015*
863 -**Author(s):** *Noah Tsika*
864 -**Title:** *"The White Man’s Burden: Gonzo Pornography and the Construction of Black Masculinity"*
865 -**DOI:** [10.1080/23268743.2015.1025389](https://doi.org/10.1080/23268743.2015.1025389)
866 -**Subject Matter:** *Pornography Studies, Race and Sexuality, Cultural Critique*
867 -
868 -{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
869 -1. **General Observations:**
870 - - This is a **qualitative content analysis** of gonzo pornography, particularly interracial porn involving Black men and White women.
871 - - The author reviews **select films, not a dataset**, using them to extrapolate broad cultural claims about race and sexuality.
872 -
873 -2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
874 - - Claims that **interracial porn “others” and dehumanizes Black men**, yet selectively **frames Black male sexual aggression as liberatory**.
875 - - The author accuses White male consumers of **fetishizing Black men** as both threats and tools for their own “colonial guilt.”
876 -
877 -3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
878 - - No empirical evidence, just interpretive readings of scenes and film dialogue.
879 - - Repeatedly criticizes **White directors and actors** as complicit in perpetuating “White supremacy through porn.”
880 -{{/expandable}}
881 -
882 -{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
883 -1. **Primary Observations:**
884 - - Argues that **gonzo interracial porn functions as racial propaganda**, reinforcing White guilt while commodifying Black masculinity.
885 - - Portrays White women as willing participants in a fantasy of racial domination that allegedly “liberates” Black men.
886 -
887 -2. **Subgroup Trends:**
888 - - White male viewers are pathologized as both sexually repressed and voyeuristically complicit in anti-Black racism.
889 - - Black male performers are framed as both victims of racial commodification and **agents of resistance through hypersexuality**.
890 -
891 -3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
892 - - Cites scenes where Black male actors degrade or dominate White women as **“transgressive acts” that destabilize White power**, rather than examples of racial hostility or objectification.
893 - - The narrative treats **racially charged sexual violence as deconstructive**, only when it reverses traditional racial dynamics.
894 -{{/expandable}}
895 -
896 -{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
897 -1. **Strengths of the Study:**
898 - - Useful in showcasing how **critical race theory invades even the most apolitical domains** (porn consumption) and turns them into race war battlegrounds.
899 - - Offers insight into how **White heterosexuality is recoded as colonialism** in activist academia.
900 -
901 -2. **Limitations of the Study:**
902 - - **No statistical basis**, relies entirely on biased interpretive analysis of fringe media.
903 - - Presumes **intent and audience motivation** without surveys, viewership data, or cross-cultural comparison.
904 - - Treats Black aggression as empowering and White sexuality as inherently oppressive — a double standard.
905 -
906 -3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
907 - - Include comparative data on how different racial groups are portrayed in pornography across genres.
908 - - Analyze how **minority-run porn studios frame interracial themes** — not just White-directed media.
909 - - Address how racial fetishization **harms all groups**, not just Black men.
910 -{{/expandable}}
911 -
912 -{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
913 -- Exemplifies how **racialized sexual narratives are reinterpreted to indict White identity**, even in consumer entertainment.
914 -- Shows how **DEI and CRT frameworks are applied to pornographic material** to pathologize White maleness while sanctifying non-White hypermasculinity.
915 -- Highlights the **academic bias that treats transgressive content as empowering when it serves anti-White narratives**.
916 -{{/expandable}}
917 -
918 -{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
919 -1. Study how **interracial porn narratives differ when produced by non-White vs. White directors**.
920 -2. Examine **how racial power is portrayed in same-sex vs. heterosexual interracial porn**.
921 -3. Investigate whether the **fetishization of Black masculinity fuels unrealistic expectations and destructive stereotypes** for both Black and White men.
922 -{{/expandable}}
923 -
924 -{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
925 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:Dinest - The White Man's Burden Gonzo Pornography and the Construction of Black Masculinity.pdf]]
926 -{{/expandable}}
927 -{{/expandable}}
928 -
929 -
930 -{{expandable summary="Study: Gendered Racial Exclusion Among White Internet Daters"}}
931 -**Source:** *Social Science Research*
932 -**Date of Publication:** *2009*
933 -**Author(s):** *Cynthia Feliciano, Belinda Robnett, Golnaz Komaie*
934 -**Title:** *"Gendered Racial Exclusion Among White Internet Daters"*
935 -**DOI:** [10.1016/j.ssresearch.2009.04.004](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssresearch.2009.04.004)
936 -**Subject Matter:** *Online Dating, Racial Preferences, CRT Framing of White Intimacy*
937 -
938 -{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
939 -1. **General Observations:**
940 - - Based on data from **Love@aol.com**, analyzing **over 6,000 profiles** from California.
941 - - The study investigated **racial preferences listed explicitly** in dating profiles.
942 -
943 -2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
944 - - **White women were least likely to express openness to interracial dating**, particularly with Black and Asian men.
945 - - **White men also showed exclusion**, but were more open than White women.
946 -
947 -3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
948 - - The authors labeled preference for one’s own race as **“racial exclusion”**.
949 - - Profiles by non-White users expressing same-race preferences were **not similarly problematized**.
950 -{{/expandable}}
951 -
952 -{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
953 -1. **Primary Observations:**
954 - - **White in-group preference was framed as discriminatory**, regardless of intent or context.
955 - - Dating preferences were interpreted as a **“reinforcement of racial hierarchies”**.
956 -
957 -2. **Subgroup Trends:**
958 - - The study suggested **White women’s selectivity** stemmed from **cultural and structural advantages**, implying racial gatekeeping.
959 - - Did not critically examine **non-White preferences** for their own race.
960 -
961 -3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
962 - - Highlighted that **Latina and Asian women were more open to White men** than to men of their own ethnicity, which was not treated as exclusionary.
963 - - **No racial preference was criticized except when it protected White boundaries.**
964 -{{/expandable}}
965 -
966 -{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
967 -1. **Strengths of the Study:**
968 - - Large dataset from real-world dating profiles.
969 - - Provides rare insight into **gendered patterns of racial preference**.
970 -
971 -2. **Limitations of the Study:**
972 - - **Frames personal preference as political discrimination** when expressed by White users.
973 - - **Fails to control for cultural compatibility, attraction patterns, or religious values.**
974 - - **Double standard** in analysis — **non-White selectivity is ignored or justified.**
975 -
976 -3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
977 - - Should distinguish **racial animus from in-group preference**.
978 - - Include **psychological, aesthetic, and cultural compatibility data**.
979 - - Apply **equal critical lens to all racial groups**, not just Whites.
980 -{{/expandable}}
981 -
982 -{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
983 -- Reinforces how CRT-aligned research pathologizes **White in-group dating preferences**.
984 -- Supports the claim that **White intimacy boundaries are uniquely scrutinized** and politicized.
985 -- Demonstrates how even non-political behavior (e.g., dating) is racialized when it involves Whites.
986 -{{/expandable}}
987 -
988 -{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
989 -1. Study how **dating preferences vary by upbringing, media influence, and culture**, not just race.
990 -2. Analyze **racial preferences across all groups** with equal rigor and skepticism.
991 -3. Examine the **mental health impact of stigmatizing in-group preference** among Whites.
992 -{{/expandable}}
993 -
994 -{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
995 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.1016_j.ssresearch.2009.04.004.pdf]]
996 -{{/expandable}}
997 -{{/expandable}}
998 -
999 -
1000 -{{expandable summary="Study: Black Penis and the Demoralization of the Western World"}}
1001 -**Source:** *Journal of European Psychoanalysis*
1002 -**Date of Publication:** *2009*
1003 -**Author(s):** *Kristen Fink* *Jewish*))
1004 -**Title:** *"Black Penis and the Demoralization of the Western World: Sexual relationships between black men and white women as a cause of decline"*
1005 -**DOI:** *Unavailable – Psychoanalytic essay publication*
1006 -**Subject Matter:** *Race and Sexuality, Psychoanalysis, Cultural Demoralization*
1007 -
1008 -{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1009 -1. **General Observations:**
1010 - - This is a **psychoanalytic essay**, not an empirical study.
1011 - - Uses **Freudian and Lacanian theory** to explore symbolic meanings of interracial sex.
1012 - - Frames **Black male–White female pairings** as psychologically disruptive to the White male ego and Western civilization.
1013 -
1014 -2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1015 - - Positions **Black men as symbolic rivals** to emasculated Western (White) men.
1016 - - **White women’s interracial attraction** is framed as rebellion or rejection of Western order.
1017 -
1018 -3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1019 - - The essay proposes that **sexual representation in media** is demoralizing to White culture.
1020 - - Uses **high theory language** to justify what is ultimately an anti-White cultural narrative.
1021 -{{/expandable}}
1022 -
1023 -{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1024 -1. **Primary Observations:**
1025 - - **Interracial sexual dynamics** are framed as central to **Western decline**.
1026 - - **White masculinity is portrayed as passive, obsolete, or neurotic** in contrast to hypermasculinized Blackness.
1027 -
1028 -2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1029 - - Suggests White men internalize emasculation through exposure to interracial symbolism.
1030 - - Sees **cultural loss of confidence** in White society as stemming from racial-sexual symbolism.
1031 -
1032 -3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1033 - - Analyzes media tropes (e.g., interracial porn, pop culture) through the lens of psychoanalytic guilt and transgression.
1034 - - Never critiques the **ideological project of glorifying Blackness at the expense of White identity**.
1035 -{{/expandable}}
1036 -
1037 -{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1038 -1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1039 - - Reveals how **elite academic disciplines like psychoanalysis** are used to mask anti-White narratives in esoteric jargon.
1040 - - Serves as **ideological evidence** of demoralization tactics embedded in cultural theory.
1041 -
1042 -2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1043 - - No empirical data, surveys, or statistical analysis — purely speculative.
1044 - - **Does not critique hypersexualization of Black men** or the dehumanizing aspects of the fetish.
1045 - - Assumes **White masculinity must passively accept its symbolic erasure** as psychoanalytically “natural.”
1046 -
1047 -3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1048 - - Include **perspectives from White men and women** on how these portrayals affect their psychological well-being.
1049 - - Disentangle psychoanalytic theory from **racial guilt ideology**.
1050 - - Explore **mutual respect-based frameworks** for interracial dynamics rather than ones rooted in humiliation or power symbolism.
1051 -{{/expandable}}
1052 -
1053 -{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1054 -- Illustrates how **race, sex, and culture are manipulated to undermine White self-perception**.
1055 -- Demonstrates how **academic elites frame White decline as psychologically necessary or deserved**.
1056 -- Provides ideological background for modern media trends that eroticize racial power imbalance.
1057 -{{/expandable}}
1058 -
1059 -{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1060 -1. Analyze how psychoanalytic language is used to **justify racial inversion in cultural dominance**.
1061 -2. Examine the **role of pornography in demoralization campaigns** targeting White men.
1062 -3. Explore how elite journals create **ideological cover for overt anti-White sentiment**.
1063 -{{/expandable}}
1064 -
1065 -{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1066 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:10.Fink_Black_Penis_Demoralization.pdf]]
1067 -{{/expandable}}
1068 -{{/expandable}}
1069 -
1070 -
1071 1071  {{expandable summary="Study: Trends in Frequency of Sexual Activity and Number of Sexual Partners Among Adults Aged 18 to 44 Years in the US, 2000-2018"}}
1072 1072  **Source:** *JAMA Network Open*
1073 1073  **Date of Publication:** *2020*
... ... @@ -1613,74 +1613,6 @@
1613 1613  {{/expandable}}
1614 1614  
1615 1615  
1616 -{{expandable summary="Study: School Choice Is Not Enough: The Impact of Critical Social Justice Ideology in American Education"}}
1617 -**Source:** *Social Science Research Network (SSRN)*
1618 -**Date of Publication:** *2020*
1619 -**Author(s):** *Eric Kaufmann, David Goldberg*
1620 -**Title:** *"School Choice Is Not Enough: The Impact of Critical Social Justice Ideology in American Education"*
1621 -**DOI:** [10.2139/ssrn.3730517](https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3730517)
1622 -**Subject Matter:** *K–12 Education, CRT, Indoctrination, Teacher Training*
1623 -
1624 -{{expandable summary="📊 Key Statistics"}}
1625 -1. **General Observations:**
1626 - - Surveyed **over 800 educators** and analyzed **curricula, training materials, and administrator communications**.
1627 - - Found that **CSJ ideology is deeply embedded in public school systems**, including charter and magnet schools.
1628 -
1629 -2. **Subgroup Analysis:**
1630 - - Teachers reported being trained to believe **Whiteness = privilege + harm**, not just historical context.
1631 - - Administrators disproportionately **disciplined or suppressed dissenting White teachers or parents**.
1632 -
1633 -3. **Other Significant Data Points:**
1634 - - **Majority of educators fear retribution** if they question CSJ orthodoxy.
1635 - - **Curriculum mandates racial self-critique** primarily for White students, often starting in elementary grades.
1636 -{{/expandable}}
1637 -
1638 -{{expandable summary="🔬 Findings"}}
1639 -1. **Primary Observations:**
1640 - - CSJ ideology **functions as an implicit worldview**, not a neutral teaching tool.
1641 - - “Equity” in practice means **dismantling of perceived White dominance**, often through emotional manipulation of students.
1642 -
1643 -2. **Subgroup Trends:**
1644 - - White students and teachers report **feeling targeted or dehumanized** in diversity sessions.
1645 - - Minority students were often **placed in victim-centric identity frameworks**, reinforcing grievance politics.
1646 -
1647 -3. **Specific Case Analysis:**
1648 - - In several documented districts, **student activities included “unlearning Whiteness” workshops**.
1649 - - One district mandated that teachers **“de-center White perspectives”** in all classroom subjects.
1650 -{{/expandable}}
1651 -
1652 -{{expandable summary="📝 Critique & Observations"}}
1653 -1. **Strengths of the Study:**
1654 - - One of the few empirical studies documenting **systemic ideological bias in education**.
1655 - - Strong evidentiary base drawn from **firsthand educator testimony** and training materials.
1656 -
1657 -2. **Limitations of the Study:**
1658 - - Study is based on **self-reported perceptions**, though many are substantiated with examples.
1659 - - Focus is primarily U.S.-centric; international parallels not explored.
1660 -
1661 -3. **Suggestions for Improvement:**
1662 - - Future studies could **quantify the academic and emotional impact** on White students.
1663 - - Comparative analysis with **non-CSJ schools** (e.g., classical models) would clarify causal impact.
1664 -{{/expandable}}
1665 -
1666 -{{expandable summary="📌 Relevance to Subproject"}}
1667 -- Documents how **CRT-aligned ideology disproportionately targets White students and teachers**.
1668 -- Confirms that **school choice fails to protect against ideological indoctrination** when CSJ is systemic.
1669 -- Supports the need for **explicitly anti-indoctrination educational frameworks** grounded in neutrality and merit.
1670 -{{/expandable}}
1671 -
1672 -{{expandable summary="🔍 Suggestions for Further Exploration"}}
1673 -1. Investigate **legal protections for students against compelled ideological speech**.
1674 -2. Study **alternatives to CSJ pedagogy**, such as classical liberal education or civic humanism.
1675 -3. Examine **psychological outcomes** of guilt-based racial framing among White children.
1676 -{{/expandable}}
1677 -
1678 -{{expandable summary="📄 Download Full Study"}}
1679 -[[Download Full Study>>attach:11.Goldberg_Kaufmann_CSJ_Education_Impact.pdf]]
1680 -{{/expandable}}
1681 -{{/expandable}}
1682 -
1683 -
1684 1684  {{expandable summary="Study: Segregation, Innocence, and Protection: The Institutional Conditions That Maintain Whiteness in College Sports"}}
1685 1685  **Source:** *Journal of Diversity in Higher Education*
1686 1686  **Date of Publication:** *2019*