Therefore let us embark on a policy that will aim to search and detain African-Americans more than other groups. As should be evident, all three policies – border control, virus-related restrictions and “stop and frisk” – share the same idea. The first and third are largely targeted at the poorest. The second, in principle, is applied equitably and depends on where the virus is particularly virulent. That is why its sudden application to those who are not normally subject to any similar statistical discrimination was so shocking.
The virus leveled the playing field and made some of us ponder the general validity of policies that use statistical information about groups to target B2B Fax Database individuals. I believe that "statistical discrimination" policies are now almost inevitable: they save authorities time (as in the case of border controls), they supposedly lead to a reduction in crime (although in New York what made the difference was actually an increased police deployment ) or contain (hopefully) the transmission of a virus like corona.

We should reflect on the moral justification for such policies and how they substitute collective responsibility for individual responsibility or even. Video games: industry, politics and entertainment John Ruoco The left wants to transform the world but does not know it. What is " gamer culture "? Is there politics in video games? What about the workers in an industry that is already as big as film and sports ideo games: industry, politics and entertainment Video games and gaming (something like their "culture") are constantly evolving and went from being considered a mere extension of the toy industry to becoming the hobby of 1.9 billion people around the world.