kay wrote:However, as history has shown, it does not take much to bring something from the level of jovial fun-poking to full-blown anger, hatred and violence.
We agree that this is a bad thing and needs to be stamped out. The only question, really, is how to go about eradicating this mentality completely. Is it due to cultural/environmental factors or is it hardwired into our genes? Some parts of society find such behaviour abhorrent, so we know that at least part of humanity does not have it hardwired or that the hardwiring can be overridden in some people. A cultural/environmental change would be much easier/quicker to effect, compared to a change in the genetic make-up.
*WOW, this answer got long.
If people feel a connection or kinship with each other, they tend to feel bad about hatred and inequality.. we're unfailingly empathetic. You can only break empathy by making people feel disconnected from each other - using slangy/insulting terms for competitors/rivals, communicating anonymously (see YouTube comments, trolling etc etc), subscribing to racist/classist viewpoints - the more charicatured and less 'human', the less empathy we naturally feel. This is exploited intentionally by people like eugenicists and unintentionally by the people who started Chavscum.co.uk
Society is an extended family at its heart. Other hominids had big family groups, but they didn't do the Homo Sapiens trick of sticking with every other group of non-related humans they found... whereas Neanderthal's seemingly lived in groups of up to 20 or so, we banded together into groups of hundreds, thousands, millions and these days, billions... this isn't the behaviour of a naturally hateful animal... our history suggests that we used to inately understand the reason for society - together, we are stronger - but the intervening millennia and never-ending competition for scarce resources have confused the issue to the point we find it difficult to even define society these days.
The sections of society that get most offended by sectarian thought do so because they naturally realise that humanity should be one - they realise it's better for everyone to live in a society without alienated populations, so therefore everyone's struggle must be everyone else's. If the kids on the estate can't afford to live dignified lives and are shown by the age of 10 that society doesn't care about them, then they're going to cause problems for the rest of us... it's
everyone's responsibility; society isn't autonomous, it's an aggregation of all our personal actions. We have to think about the collective experience as much as the personal.
Those who spend their lives looking for and pointing out differences are doing so for the same reasons and are often even well-meaning with regard to their friends/family, but (IMHO) are simply short-sighted. It might seem personally beneficial in the short term to insultingly exclude a section of society... they can be ghettoised, they can be omitted from large parts of the economy and they can be looked down on as if they
chose their situation, making us all feel a bit better about ourselves - but in the long run, we see a life-of-crime staying in families for generations, we see riots, we see Jeremy Kyle guests... they don't give a damn about anyone because nobody ever gave a damn about them.... it should never boil down to "Me Against The World". Society has failed if it does.
Of course, there is another ethical/philosophical question to ask: Who are we, the ones who see such behaviour as being deplorable, to say that such behaviour is unacceptable? It's almost the ultimate question of "Us vs Them".
Definitely this. I would've been laughed out of most places on the Internet by now for being a bleeding heart liberal hippy throwback.
Laszlo wrote:Oh, actually, if you want something to bond us all we need something we can all hate together.... alien invasion?
It's a shortcut, but that would
definitely help.
