Dissimilarities between perceptions of caste system among Indians & of racism among Americans
My
 experience suggests perceptions of the caste system among Indians and 
of racism among Americans have two key differences, one of degree and the other of kind.
The one of degree is longevity.
 Thousands of years older, India's caste system has had that much more 
time to get thoroughly marinated in people's psyche. Inequities that 
should rightfully horrify any decent mind have thus become part of daily
 life, meaning people display a shocking degree of acceptance about the 
whole kit and caboodle of caste. Such wholesale acceptance of structural
 inequities is somewhat less visible except to discerning eyes in the 
frantic churn of huge, bustling metros, but much more so going down to 
smaller towns, becoming especially visible in the hamlets and villages 
of rural India.
The one of kind is 
the diabolically clever manner by which the Indian caste system was kept
 in place through history, by ascribing actions of the past life, one's 
past life's karmas, as the arbiter for present life caste.
‘Born
 low caste or worse yet, casteless Dalit in this life? Too bad, only 
means you committed awful sins in your past life so you're fated in this
 one to beg, be a cobbler, dispose of dead bodies or clean other 
people's toilets.
Born a high caste 
in this life? Excellent, earning it by your past life good deeds, you 
merit all the advantages bestowed upon you in this life by the mere 
accident of birth.’
The Indian caste 
system evolved to maintain social order by distributing power 
hierarchically and hereditarily. Its in-built advantage was a permanent 
and permanently oppressed under-class of casteless Dalits serving as the
 pressure release valve to mitigate inherent power distribution 
differences among caste Hindus. As for the Dalits? Conveniently 
self-serving answer in the form of 'Too bad, they're fated to carry in this life the burden of their past life karma'.
 Maintaining such a spurious charade for so long took a seriously 
devious level of con-artistry. After all, one can't petition for better 
equity in this life by summoning one's past life in court to provide 
evidence under oath of past life virtues, can one?
Similarities between perceptions of caste system among Indians & of racism among Americans
Segregation.
 Both American racism and Indian casteism malevolently twist the notions
 of purity and pollution to foster and maintain untenable levels of 
structural social and cultural inequity. Forceful black segregation 
followed by white self-segregation to affluent neighborhoods and better 
endowed school systems are eerily similar to how Dalits were kept 
segregated in India.
‘No, not among us, 
your community needs to live leeward down where the effluents flow out 
to from our pure caste habitations and no, you aren't welcome in our 
temples either. Stay away from us, you dushtas! Even your shadow must 
not cross us.’
What could breed more 
easily than suspicion and mistrust when population segments are kept or 
keep themselves separate? That makes it easier to filter and dole out 
privileges based on caste or race. After all, there's no law that a 
black man caught with marijuana should spend years in jail while a 
similarly culpable white man either pays a small fine or goes free. One 
can have any number of laws on the books but selective interpretation 
and application, which can be sub-conscious and therefore that much 
harder to pin down, thus end up actively shaping common perceptions, the
 easiest among them making a self-fulfilling prophecy out of the 
demonizing trope of excessive criminality among blacks.
Denial.
 American racism and Indian casteism also have in my opinion similar 
degree and vehemence in hand-waving away benefits one accrues from 
accident of birth. Both have instituted various forms of welfare 
subsidies and affirmative action programs as attempts to expiate past 
inequities, eliciting immediate incessant howls of 'foul, foul, unfair'
 from some of the generationally privileged. Why? Apparently life is 
zero-sum. Government attempts to tilt the scale away from generational 
inequity to benefit one apparently do so at the expense of another, who 
as a result is directly deprived.
As these 
efforts visibly benefit their poorest, Dalits in India and blacks in 
America, recriminations against them are usually barely restrained and 
easily provoked into full bloom. For example in America, Ronald Reagan 
needed but one example, that of career grifter Linda Taylor - Wikipedia,
 to excoriate legions of welfare recipients as Cadillac-driving welfare 
cheats and use as an excuse to start gutting the American social welfare
 system, a process that each successive administration has only added to
 to different degrees but not reversed, at least not substantially until
 the ACA Medicaid expansions.
Growing up in India, the arguments against affirmative action were variations of, 'What
 do you mean? I was born dirt poor and look how successful I've been. 
I'm a self-made person. I didn't depend on government hand-outs.'. 
At least materially, those who spoke thus were indeed born relatively 
poor and ended up firmly within the ranks of the relatively affluent 
middle-class. So what benefits were they hand-waving away?
How
 about a long lineage of literacy? Literacy is a priceless advantage, a 
generational privilege so easily taken for granted, it can be and indeed
 is entirely glossed over. Everyone in my family could read and write, 
even my great grandmother. Even today how many middle-aged Indians could
 claim even their great grandparents were literate? When I started to 
learn to read and write, I had not just access to all the necessary 
materials but indeed birth advantage meant just about everyone in my 
formative environment was able to help me along every step of the way.
Mind
 you, even those within my circle who grew up poor and claimed to be 
self-made somehow managed to attain multi-lingual fluency, being fluent 
in not just several Indian languages but also English, clear evidence if
 such were even necessary that even the so-called dirt poor aren't 
homogenous, with some endowed by caste (or race in America) with 
structural advantages of support networks and connections that rote 
political discourses choose to conveniently overlook.
Resentment.
 Another standard trope common to Indian casteism and American racism is
 the lowering of so-called standards and norms. Well, maybe the first 
few generations of literates among the generationally fettered would 
fluently deploy better vocabulary, syntax, grammar and spelling if 
they'd also been so lucky as to have their formative environment be 
staffed and stuffed with those capable of helping them every step of the
 way day in, day out but they just didn't.
For
 the most part, in both India and America they've merely had difficult 
and unstable access to poor schools in poor neighborhoods, staffed by 
poorly paid, poorly trained and likely poorly motivated teachers, access
 to few or none after-school resources, and certainly little access to 
knowledge and learning within their own families, communities and 
neighborhoods, not from any lack of moral fiber but simply as the 
reality of how structural social and cultural inequity plays out.
Rather
 than individual merit alone, intergenerational wealth and resource 
transfer greatly influence one's own success in life. Disproportionate 
numbers among Indian Dalits and American Blacks lack the resources to 
help finance their children's college education, help them make down 
payments on their houses or leave behind a bequest or inheritance, 
advantages the rest take for granted, and which help them both build and
 retain wealth across generations.
However, 
admitting such essential truths means letting the proverbial cat out of 
the bag, that such inequities exist not by accident but on purpose, to 
keep a permanent underclass of cheap and desperate labor available at 
the ready to do the bidding of the rest of society comprised of relative
 winners by birth. In that respect, not just perception but also purpose
 of caste in India and of racism in America are entirely yoked.
https://www.quora.com/Is-Indias-perception-of-the-caste-system-similar-to-Americas-perception-of-racism/answer/Tirumalai-Kamala
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