first of all, how is a people oppressed by a dictator better than a "free" people that might develop materialistic and other kinds of superficiality? secondly, if you only wanted to prove your pessimistic view of humanity here why of all very good cases did you choose this one? here's an example of the results of the usage of chemical weapons in the iran-iraq war (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Haupx...eature=related) and here's the story of a jewish guy being gruesomly tortured to death by muslims in france calling his parents in the process (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilan_Halimi). there's a video of an iranian woman being shot at demonstrations against the unjustly elected mahmoud ahmadinejad (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vlehNLfk90c). one only has to take a look at the world state of hunger and poverty which is a way greater crime by magnitude than all the other ones mentioned here. this stuff happens every day all the time but you chose a gang rape that accidentally took place on tahrir square.
that's an interesting point. perhaps after at least partially and officially abolishing gene based racism this kind of discrimination is the next for humanity to handle.Perhaps you missed my initial posts, but I started with the claim that I could defend racism on some level. So your observation that I have a negative view of all this "superficiality" isn't quite right. Quite the opposite: I agree with you that it's an inevitable feature of human life. My argument is that people who claim they're better than racists probably aren't. Does this mean I find racism intolerable? Not exactly. It just means I see two types of phenomena on a similar level: judging others because of their somewhat culturally defined ethnicity and judging others based on other types of culturally defined values. The latter includes, for example, not giving someone a job because of what they wear, or consolidating one's ties with a group that drives nice cars, wines and dines at expensive restuarants, has proper table etiquette, etc. So my point contests the idea that the latter group is somehow better than the former. By making that point, I am thereby defending some definitions of racism (I can't cover all my bases as everyone has a different definition) as being just as acceptable as our everyday cultural habits: no better, no worse. But most of us typically think, especially in "multi-cultural" America, that we're just fantastic people compared to those ignorant, naughty racists and sexists! Are we?
yea, actually quite inspiring to look at this form of class division as the equivalent to racism. it is as though people would look for ideas that make them better than others by any means. i guess one counter-argument would be that this kind of division is earned instead of inherited which in a narrow sense probably isn't untrue in many of the cases. still, i mostly find those cases important that are related to real discrimination, not just pre-judging or whatever you want to call it.




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