Why does one group of people hate another group of people just because of how they were born?
Asked by
Dig_Dug (
4259)
April 6th, 2023
I can’t wrap my head around the fact that people hate each other for the color of their skin or because of their sexual orientation. How does that personally affect the person or group that’s offended?
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9 Answers
So they can feel better about themselves. So they feel superior.
If they had a bad experience with someone from that group they overgeneralize.
If they were taught to fear those people, especially if they don’t know people from that group.
That’s just a few.
It’s pretty stupid to hate people for their skin color or sexual orientation, I agree. It’s also pretty fucking stupid to hate people based on their political opinion, voting history or religious views.
A lot of hate is driven by insecurity and fear. It isn’t very logical but I think the answer lies in the psychology of the hater.
A lot of this is passed down in families. I’ve seen black families who didn’t want any white people around, same for white families/skinheads. I was told by a Vietnamese that I could date their race but marriage was never going to happen with a white girl. They also considered anyone with dark skin lower class, like Thai or Cambodian.
It’s sad but it’s reality.
I was very blessed to be raised by hippies who rejected all that.
It’s rediculous. Live and let live and mind our own damn business. We’re all human.
So, I think it varies. If you’re talking about a situation like ethnic groups that have been next to one another and fighting for a long time (Hindus and Muslims for example), the first hates the second because the second hates the first and vice versa. There’s so much history and animosity built up over so long that both sides raise their kids to hate and resent the other…intentionally or not.
In terms of domestic racism, such as in the US, the main thing is ignorance. The fact is that we are racially segregated. The vast majority of blacks live in the inner cities, and especially when you get to rural whites who have grown up without contact with blacks on any serious level—in such cases, it’s easy for both groups to believe the worst about the other because they don’t have counterexamples in their lives.
Imagine growing up in rural America and all you hear about black folks is news stories from the nearest big city about crime and shootings and what not. That such folks are a small minority of blacks doesn’t dawn on you because you’ve never gotten to really know a real live black person. Maybe you met one or two…but you haven’t KNOWN them. And if your parents complained about black folks or worse, you knew some KKK people who didn’t seem like the terrorists described in the media…it wouldn’t be hard to be swayed.
Now, I’m painting the easy-mode picture. Real life is always more complicated, but I think ignorance…or perhaps a more favorable way of putting it is ‘lack of experience’ with people of the group you’ve been taught to hate…I think that’s the main driver.
It’s not groups. It’s not. It is in fact, individuals. This is an important distinction when you approach this. Failing to do so can and often does make you part of the problem.
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