PavelM wrote:Ozzz wrote:Общечеловеки на марше.
Вместо того чтобы обзываться, давайте лучше Вы приведете пример того, чем оправдано упоминание расы вне физиологического контекста.
Извините, если обидел. Про общечеловеков было в контексте, что вообще нельзя упоминать расу, кроме как в медицинских/физиологических целях.
а) вы не обязаны отвечать в формах о своей расе (о чем вам прямо там как правило и пишут). А можете и ответить, если хотите помочь федеральным службам в сборе статистической информации. Не хотите помогать - не отвечайте.
б) вот как обьясняют наличие этого вопроса в формах:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/fedreg/race-ethnicity.htmlThe United States government has long collected statistics on race and ethnicity. Such data have been used to study changes in the social, demographic, health, and economic characteristics of various groups in our population. Federal data collections, through censuses, surveys, and administrative records, have provided an historical record of the Nation's population diversity and its changing social attitudes and policy concerns. Since the 1960s, data on race and ethnicity have been used extensively in civil rights monitoring and enforcement covering areas such as employment, voting rights, housing and mortgage lending, health care services, and educational opportunities. These legislatively-based priorities created the need among Federal agencies for compatible, nonduplicative data for the specific population groups that historically had suffered discrimination and differential treatment on the basis of their race or ethnicity. In response, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued in 1977 the "Race and Ethnic Standards for Federal Statistics and Administrative Reporting" contained in Statistical Policy Directive No. 15. These categories also implemented the requirements of Public Law 94-311 of June 16, 1976, which called for the collection, analysis, and publication of economic and social statistics on persons of Spanish origin or descent. Hence, the population groups identified by the Directive No. 15 racial and Hispanic origin categories reflected legislative and agency needs, and not efforts by population groups to be specifically identified.