To white standards, there is a general trend that black people are more masculine, and that asians are more feminine. There are black women called "looking like a man", while white women stereotype black men

The “Black brute,” “Mandingo,” or “Black buck” tropes reflect a potent supposition that Black men are unstoppably sex-crazed beasts

which itself is a stereotype built off the masculine stereotype of men being insatiable sex maniacs.

Asian men are twice as single as asian women, because asian women date at a large rate outside of other asians, but asian men are not able to at the same rate, and asian men are oftentimes excluded as possibilities altogether from women.

https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/hcoltheses/120/ goes a lot into how this has happened over history.

Now, I don't want to focus on relationship dynamics. I add the relationship dynamics and studies there at the start to establish that blacks are masculinized and asians are feminized there.

So, when we look at other social areas, do we see gender effects having the same affects race has for asians and blacks?

In the justice system:

Men are discriminated against. Jail and punishment is something men should have, but we must avoid it for women. Whether actively advocating for removing women from prison, or men receiving higher rates of arrests and incarceration for drug offenses

In the justice system, black people and hispanics are more likely to be arrested, and get longer sentences than whites. Asians are mostly similar to whites, with some slight favor.

Education

Education is something actively pushed for women to get into, and men are discriminated against through lower marks on grades, less scholarship opportunity, and more difficulty in admissions.

Do we see the same thing with race? Well, no we actually see the opposite at play here. While women outperform men, asians outperform blacks so that follows the same trend, and to a much higher degree. However, in higher education often asians receive discrimination while blacks get favoritism, the opposite of what you would expect. This is racial discrimination that does not conform to the asians feminine, blacks masculine stereotype.

Getting a job

Nowadays, women are favored over men for white collar positions. When looking at race, white candidates are preferred over both blacks and asians. So this does not conform to it either.

perceived threat

Imagine walking past someone alone at night in a hoodie. What if they are a black man, a white man, an asian man? Do you think the black person is seen as more dangerous than the white, who is more dangerous than the asian? Can't find a good study for this - but I know black man is hoodie is seen as more dangerous than white, and I imagine even moreso then asian. Conjecture and projection.

More thoughts

I think that the asian and black discrimination mirroring gender discrimination is only applicable to things related to physical power and violence or domination. Sex and relationships is not really about violence, but physical prowess and domination certainly to a degree. Similarly, people seen as strong and violent should go to jail - and this extends into nonviolent offenses too. Women and asians are seen as less strong, less violent. Men and blacks are seen as strong and violent.

Please comment about more stuff and connections race and sex may have with this. I don't want to spend all day researching and thinking about this it


gender and race and justice system, some half-structured expansion on it

Gosh dang, it's hard to actually find info on gender differences in arrests rates despite being very VERY easy to find racial discrepancies.

Prior works have suggested that females are less likely than males to be arrested for the same offenses (e.g. Novak, Brown, and Frank 2011; Novak et al. 2002). The same result appears to manifest in our analyses, as the effects of formal social control capacity are almost universally higher for males.

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01639625.2019.1596548 - Unfortunately this article is not free (I have access through my university)

Interestingly, one of the sources found this "Specifically, male adults were significantly more likely to be arrested than females, but no such relationship was observed for juveniles."

For example, some call the war on drugs a war on women because of the women imprisoned, even though it's mostly male.

Some scholars have argued that the ‘war on drugs’ has become a war on women, contributing significantly to the escalating population of women in prison1

Most people already know about racial issues, but I'll leave some with that here too: http://www.justicepolicy.org/uploads/justicepolicy/documents/vortex.pdf

The Relationship between Race, Ethnicity, and Sentencing: Outcomes: A Meta-Analysis of Sentencing Research https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/208129.pdf