Prof D
I don't dispute that you are well-intentioned. Personally as a Muslim I find some of the sensitivity towards Islamophobia frustrating, especially as some Muslims use it to their advantage to prevent legitimate scrutiny, criticism and in some cases legal action. It also seems to result in Muslims who need protection from other Muslims being abandoned to their fate due to concerns about Islamophobia or cultural sensitivity, not to mention the time and huge costs involved in trying to be seen to be scrupulously fair. Given the lack of resources for social care and the misery this causes, it's frustrating to think of taxpayer's money being spent on some of these minority causes.
As an Asian woman, I feel the same way about how some women and some ethnic minorities use the current-thinking on racism and sexism to unfairly manipulate situations to their advantage at the severe detriment to people not fortunate enough to be part of their protected group.
Also, I learned a lot from facing subtle and overt racism as a kid - not that I am saying that just because I could shrug off an instance when 2 boys walked either side of me, spat in my face and called me a Paki, such behaviour should be allowed to continue. I do think those situations taught me valuable skills and the over-protectiveness in current society means that my children grow up handicapped to deal with difficult situations, which is why it's more useful as a life lesson that there are a couple of children at my daughter's school who tell my 13 year old daughter that they don't like Muslims. Not only is she resilient enough to shrug it off, which I think will serve her well as she grows older, but thinking about why people think this way has prompted an interest in studying psychology. I sometimes find that society needs to be restrained from its good intentions as it can be suffocating.