University of Arizona Researchers Use Virtual Reality to Show “Systemic Racism”

Since “systemic racism” is so hard for us White people to wrap our heads around, we literally need it to be wrapped around our heads. This is exactly what researchers at the University of Arizona are doing with their anti-White indoctrination project involving virtual reality. Far from being virtual “reality,” the scheme involves using paid actors to create a really racist environment that White people can experience so as to sympathize with the plight of poor, oppressed Blacks. Apparently seeing a bunch of movies, TV shows, and news reports on this very same subject is not enough.

From Campus Reform:

Bryan Carter — who directs the university’s Center for Digital Humanities and works as a professor of Africana studies — is leading the Anti-Racism Extended Reality Studio, which is testing virtual reality technology as a tool for building digital narratives surrounding racism.

Participants will wear a virtual reality headset while acting as first-person observers in settings like department meetings and classrooms. Actors in the program will carry out snide comments, hostile attitudes, and other common experiences of racism.

Can I have people put on a headset and watch very real videos of White people being psychologically tormented and physically attacked? We would not need actors at all, and actually just forget the headset, since anti-White racism is everywhere you look these days.

Another scenario will involve interacting with a police officer. The user’s responses will impact the direction of the simulation, and the user will be treated unfairly.

You could save the day by saying, “Please officer, get your knee off the neck of that poor Black man! He dindu nuffin wrong!”

Knowing the power of immersive education and knowing that the national conversation is about racism and inequality now, we’re looking at leveraging this new technology to help with that dilemma,” Carter told the university’s news outlet. “By creating these scenarios, we’re hoping to engage people differently and help people step into the shoes of others by being an actual first-person observer. You’re within a space and observing things that are happening around you and to you.”

It really just goes to show that the “systemic racism” conversation everyone is talking about is such a contrived narrative that they have to just make it up.

Carter added that the “invisibility of systemic racism can be uncloaked” with the project.

It’s just like “invisible knapsack” of White privilege children are taught about, where White people not seeing their own privilege is actually an element of their White privilege.

Source

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