She doesn't like white people. Which is fine, I guess, if I had only met urban soy liberals I would hate white people too. It's not important rn, all we need is hated of censorship and pussiness to unite us, we can work other shit out as we struggle together.
Yes. Compulsory affinity is not a constitutional mandate (although it is a divine directive to love one another). There is a difference between being prejudiced and being discriminatory. Every single person on the planet has likes and dislikes, preferences and notions which cause us to judge others before we can know them well enough to decide to trust and like them---hence prejudging. You haven't judged them, per se but are reacting on inherited OR instinctual clues as a means of self-preservation. It is NORMAL to be suspect of others whom do not belong to our own group by apparent means (appearances or at first glance, socially and culturally, ethically and religiously, and even politically). Being prejudiced is normal, natural, and universal. The problems arise when we discriminate, which is to say when we treat people differently based solely on our untested prejudices. Discrimination is illegal, prejudice is not.
She doesn't like white people. Which is fine, I guess, if I had only met urban soy liberals I would hate white people too. It's not important rn, all we need is hated of censorship and pussiness to unite us, we can work other shit out as we struggle together.
So lets say I don't like black people.
Is that also fine?
Yes. Compulsory affinity is not a constitutional mandate (although it is a divine directive to love one another). There is a difference between being prejudiced and being discriminatory. Every single person on the planet has likes and dislikes, preferences and notions which cause us to judge others before we can know them well enough to decide to trust and like them---hence prejudging. You haven't judged them, per se but are reacting on inherited OR instinctual clues as a means of self-preservation. It is NORMAL to be suspect of others whom do not belong to our own group by apparent means (appearances or at first glance, socially and culturally, ethically and religiously, and even politically). Being prejudiced is normal, natural, and universal. The problems arise when we discriminate, which is to say when we treat people differently based solely on our untested prejudices. Discrimination is illegal, prejudice is not.
Updooted