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mola | 6 months ago
"Race" is so undefined it's just silly to argue about. We are tremendously more similar than different. We have a visual bias, so a difference in skin color will dominate all other similarities. Then we go and theorize about other differences when we start our division from this arbitrary difference. This is lazy thinking. And a lot of the time is used for hate mongering against some "other".
Of course cultures have different set of values, and this influences the aggregate decisions of the individuals, but taking the next step and forecasting and analyzing a single individual by projecting sociatal bias on them is dehumanizing, and as recent history taught us, is dangerous.
simianwords|6 months ago
I don't think anyone claims that but patterns are significant enough that it is useful in mapping to individuals but within context.
When I'm interacting with an Indian, I can reasonably guess what their values are, what their personalities are and what they find important.
Same when I'm interacting with a woman.
Same when I'm interacting with an older person.
Of course, with context I'll learn more about the person, but I will not dismiss patterns that do exist and are largely true.
If you consciously dismiss these patterns you are just lying to yourself and robbing yourself out of meaningful starting points.
1659447091|6 months ago
How would you do this in the US? Do you count Americans as a race? Or do you do patterns by state/region or city/rural? How can you tell?
graemep|6 months ago
I think culture is also a lot less dehumanising than race because it is complex and therefore less prone to grouping people in the same stereotyped way. Not all South Asian cultures are the same - there is a huge difference between, for example, an urban Sri Lankan (as I was born) and a rural Pakistani. Much as there are huge cultural differences within Europe (e.g. between Wales and Albania).
I do agree that stereotyping leads to dehumanisation, but I also think cultural differences are worth talking about. I also strongly agree that thinking in terms of race rather than culture is very damaging and encourages racism.
t0lo|6 months ago
unknown|6 months ago
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