right, yeah, had to include the "almost" to encompass KKK members, nazis, etc
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This entire category of behaviours is extremely rational in situations it evolved from. That said, many situations in which it doesn't fit.
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My Sami ancestors dreaded the Chuds, because they showed up to raid, rape and murder. Saxons feared my Norse ancestors, Romans the Saxons...
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I blame nobody in Syria right now if they have a fear/hatred of bearded Arabs, or Afghan minorities of Pashtos, etc. etc.
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However, what often seems to happen is that hatreds and fears transfer mostly by hearsay and cultural bigotry, rather than lived experience.
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I have an "irrational" loathing of Romani people after I was attacked by a bunch of youths and pickpocketed separately in 1 year in Prague-
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- plus several other beliggerent or malevolent encounters in the same city. I know the problems these communities suffer, and yet...
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I would never justify applying these aversions on an individual basis, or to repress or otherwise attack communities, but it's not idiotic.
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Especially, as is often the case with reprehensible groups like Jihadis and Nazis, if the ethics of their cultural group are evil.
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yeah "almost" was meant to exclude cases like hatred for groups w evil goals, tho important to be very cautious about applying "evil" label
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The difference is you don't have to label people explicitly. Heuristically avoiding skinheads, Romani thugs etc. will mostly serve you well.
But it's important for the individual to recognize that this sort of evasion/loathing/whatever is utilitarian, not truth or divine mandate.

