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by beaconstudios
2817 days ago
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personally, I think the majority of people have acted like this (or perhaps more "live and let live") by default for a long time. However, basic morality is not the only operator of people's behaviour, and other operators can override morality such as economic exploitation, group conflict, education, stereotypical perception of other groups, and so on. Basically, it's a really complicated series of systemic issues that leads to things like racial inequality. Fundamentally I don't think people hate groups because they look different (beyond a small amount of subconscious in-group/out-group bias), they hate because of fear, conflict, they dehumanise to exploit, they misunderstand, basically just the whole gamut of human flaws driven by systemic issues in the economy, in justice, in culture and other systems we operate within. The idea that we can fix these problems by curing the symptom rather than the disease seems illogical to me. or TL;DR: bias is mostly a learned behaviour, with probably some inherent subconscious bias from our evolutionary roots. |
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The majority of people where at what times?
Does it actually matter why people hate, only that they do?
Your argument seems to be that all racism etc is systemic and structural, and therefore there's no individual responsibility?