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![]() "Capt. JG" wrote in message easolutions... "Hoges in WA" wrote in message ... "Capt. JG" wrote in message easolutions... "Hoges in WA" wrote in message ... Hm, no wonder you're sympathetic. Lets try again with another group. Say a North Korean ship accidentally killed some friends of yours. Would you then think all Asians are inferior and deserve to be killed? If they did it on purpose would you *then* think all Asians are inferior and deserve to be killed? Stephen No, you're missing the distinction between racism and bigotry. I am selective in my prejudices, not racially biased. I think that's a reasonable argument, but I have a question (or perhaps a comment). Don't you think we need to struggle against our prejudices? I think that allows us to make the claim we're fully human. That would be an ideal. On an intellectual level, I get an Arab magazine bi-monthly and have received it since 1977. I think the struggle is the important part. No one can be 100% successful (unless you're a saint). We all have deep-seated prejudices, but we can and should strive to overcome them. I have learned a lot about Arab culture, history, literature and achievement (Ibn Battuta was a bit of a cruiser!). I can distinguish between an educated Arab and a Palestinian thug from a criminal family. However, until I know where they come from, I treat them with suspicion and relax once I know. If I'm wandering along a street in my home town and a group of Australian Aborigines is coming towards me, male or female, my defences are up at once. If at all possible, I'll cross the street - I can't afford time off work to attend court cases. That's pre-judging or, prejudicial. It's discriminatory, based on hard-won experience. It's also something I will not stop doing and something I won't stop complaining about until they begin to behave. It's also called self-preservation, and I don't see something wrong with it. The circumstance has a lot to do with it. If you were attending some professional conference that had a lot of Aborigines in attendance, would you feel the same way while listening to a lecture? Crime is crime, and it's reasonable to take precautions, but I would have the same reaction if I were about to encounter a bunch of skin heads. If, on the other hand, I was to encounter a group of aborigines in Cairns, on the other side of the coutnry, I would be more likely to be interested rather than suspicious, as most of them have a job and a future to protect. Right... I didn't read this until after I typed previously. :-) I think everyone discriminates, even lefties who say they don't - I just admit I do. I think anyone who is being intellectually honest would say they either do or struggle mightily not to. My attitude is roundly criticised by many of our acquaintances (my wife's really) but mention "American" to an Oz lefty and you get rolled eyes, sneers etc. They don't see their discrimination as being as bad as mine because they think they're entitled to "that" prejudice and I'm not entitled to mine. Just makes my sniping worse. Yes. Entitlement... that's a harbinger of unfettered prejudice. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com That last line of yours is probably the universal underlying factor and to either remove it or minimise it, someone has to move first. (and like everyone else, I always say - Well, I'm not going to, you do it.) |
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