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The question "Why must you be so racially prejudiced against Japanese!"
In the criminal case, the defense argued that the investigators were racially prejudiced.
In this same debate he characterised scientists as "racially prejudiced".
But we do talk about the Jews, the French, the young, the talented and the racially prejudiced.
The ones that start off with 'I'm not racist but' are always the most racially prejudiced.'
"She had no blood pressure problem until she got a supervisor who she felt was racially prejudiced.
The only white people who commit crimes against black people, goes the public belief, are racially prejudiced white extremists.
She would have suspected that all the PAC officers were old-guard, white and probably racially prejudiced.
The absolutely obvious double standards based on MPs race makes it very clear who our institutions are really "racist" (racially prejudiced) against.
Some admit overtly to racial prejudice and some voice seemingly unwitting racially prejudiced beliefs.
One recent study (Jowell and Airey, 1984) for example, found that rather more than one-third of the sample described themselves as racially prejudiced.
Overall, though the various criminal justice agencies were seen as differentially culpable with regard to racial discrimination, racially prejudiced attitudes were thought to be widespread.
The Cay, Taylor's story of a racially prejudiced white boy stranded with a black man, has become perhaps the most beloved of his young adult novels.
Lord Scarman found no evidence of a policy of racial discrimination and prejudice, although there was no doubt that some individual officers were racially prejudiced.
This outburst, like some later scenes, makes a clear link between Nell's feeling of dissatisfaction in her relationship with Jacko and her racially prejudiced opinions.
Her racially prejudiced views didn't help the matter, but it was what she was thinking rather than what she said which added flame to the fire of her anger.
She recalls that her male relatives struggled to find employment, and she remembers that her school friends would tell mean racially prejudiced stories that they didn't completely understand.
This did not apply to trolls, naturally, because it is very difficult to be racially prejudiced against creatures seven feet tall who can bite through walls, at least for very long.
These voters supposedly have harbored a concern that declaring their support for a white candidate over a non-white candidate will create a perception that the voter is racially prejudiced.
She sends Jinx notes and presents, even accosts him on the public bus - an act of considerable daring in the late 50's in the racially prejudiced town of Hammond.
During the 1960s and 1970s a perception of Biggles as unacceptably racially prejudiced, especially considered as children's literature, drove the Biggles books from many public and school libraries.
While the report acknowledges that "ill considered, immature and racially prejudiced actions of some officers" contributed to the riots Lord Scarman only acknowledges "unwitting discrimination against Black people".
The board that handled promotions was ordered to look at the records of eligible black colonels and to determine if they had been given lesser assignments or evaluated negatively by officers who were racially prejudiced.
In 1970, Myers and Bishop selected groups of highly racially prejudiced students and groups of less racially prejudiced students to discuss a number of racial issues.