
Originally Posted by
darthur
I mean that other countries have less of a *history* of dealing with racism, and so race relationships is less a part of the national consciousness - in most cases, because they have just never had powerful minorities. And yes, I think this does lead to more direct and outward racism than you see in the USA, largely because some people will equate racism with patriotism.
However, I think that outward racism is quite different from stuff like this ad, which IMO is just the product of normal people in a society that is less sensitive (or less over-sensitive, depending on your perspective). And as I said above, I think this insensitivity has more to do with innocence than with racism - these questions only become *really* offensive to people when they have a history of racial violence to look back on.
I think people here are equating this innocence with real racism. Spain as a whole may have both the innocence and the racism, thanks to its lack of minorities, but this does not extend to individual people. Single people can be innocent without being racist (just like a lot of Canada is from my last example). I think that's what's going on here with the Spanish national team, and why Americans, who cannot imagine being innocent when it comes to race, are so unsympathetic.
PS: You seem to be using insensitivity in the sense of selfish thoughtlessness. In America, I agree this is the only kind of racial insensitivity that is possible. I use it to mean, genuine innocence with regards to our (American) racial sensitivities. In the rest of the world, this is very possible, and I think it is a mistake to equate it with racism in any form.