Born with a criminal mind and a delinquent attitude — Gnostic Christian Bishop
In a very loose sense what we hate are morally prohibited. — TheMadFool
When we have the courage to risk loss, lack, pain or humiliation, there is no need to hate - that’s just fear talking. — Possibility
Furthermore, why do you conclude hate is triggered by something or is necessary for your belief of yin and yang theme. — Seneca Advocate
I feel that hatreds only feel our souls with negative energy and conducts us in a wrong way. — Seneca Advocate
Therefore, you should choose not to hate anything or anyone; and just disregard it. — Seneca Advocate
How do you know that you were born with these and didn't acquire them as the result of trauma and abuse? — uncanni
And hate eventually leads again to love. — Metaphyzik
The main question for me is are we taking abstractly about ideas here? — Metaphyzik
If we stay in theoria then hate may be simply a state of patterns that are about to shift. Then the question of what brings it about is kind of silly. — Metaphyzik
Reproduction of Evil: A Clinical and Cultural Perspective — uncanni
Everyone has the same aptitude? What does that mean? — uncanni
The author thinks religion comes first — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Hate, like evil, has a good and an evil side and like Yin and Yang, compliment each other. They are not in opposition.
If you look around, you will see a lot more good going on than evil and a lot more love than hate being expressed. In fact, we are too good to each other. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
As the Christian hymn says, Adam's sin was a happy fault and necessary to god's plan.
Strange that Christians call furthering god's plan as a fall.
You seem to be doing the same with nature. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I have no problem with human to human evil. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Oh my. The hate of slavery ended slavery in the U.S. and you seem to think that a bad thing.
How about Rosa parks?
Did her negative energy against segregation lead her the wrong way? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
What???? The book has nothing to do with religion!!!! — uncanni
Hate does not have a ‘good’ side, and we are not ‘too good’ to each other, as a general rule. — Possibility
You seem to be doing the same with nature. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
If you're only interested in justifying and rationalizing hatred and anti-social behavior, — uncanni
To strive to change the status quo in favour of something better is not hate. Frustration, sometimes - but not hate. — Possibility
Perhaps this is your problem — uncanni
To strive to change the status quo in favour of something better is not hate. Frustration, sometimes - but not hate. — Possibility
So you would have told Rosa Parks to not hate having to sit at the back of the bus nor act on that hate.
How about the hate against slavery in the Civil war? Would you tell the north not to hate slavery or go against it?
Ignore evil if you want. I will encourage its hate so that those who can will fight evil. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Come on, one of his examples was slavery: slaves did not feel just frustrated with slavery, though I am sure there was much frustration. They hated their treatment by the slave owners, quite naturally. Perhaps not all of them, but most of them.
Oh, I got so frustrated with being a slave
sounds absurd to me.
I got frustrated with a dead end job or with a boss who didn't let me engage in more creative projects, sure.
Any laws or systems or practices that as a rule dehumanize and mistreat a group are going to lead to hatred. And that hatred would be a perfectly natural and healthy response. Of course there is likely to also be fear involved and great sorrow. — Coben
I agree that hate is likely not the only factor, but it would be one. I don't think frustration would be the main reason either. I was contrasting hate with frustration in relation to slavery.I’m not denying that slaves may have hated their mistreatment, or even hated the slave owners. I’m denying hate as the reason for the change, and I’m denying ‘acting on hate’ as the cause of change. To credit hate with the abolition of slavery or civil rights is a ridiculous notion - likely driven by fears over the rise of the conservative right. — Possibility
If you stick with any emotional reaction it isn't healthy, even the so called positive ones.Hatred may appear to be a ‘natural’ response, but it isn’t a healthy one, and it isn’t justifiable in my book. — Possibility
depends on what it takes to get a better one. Hatred comes up, when it is not pathological, in situations where one is extremely threated, judged (say, as not really human), mistreated in some extreme (for the standards you are used to) way, plus there are power issues or it is very hard to simply avoid to tune out whatever is doing this to you. Hatred, is a very strong version of anger and it means that the attack has been going on for a long time (or is perceived to have been) or is very intense. And we need a large mobilization of energy to do something. So, we get a huge motivation in the form of hatred. Slaves hated their masters, I would assume with great regularity and we understand that since they were insde systematic hate aimed at them, and then also direct mistreatment. They are many situations in capitalism (and communism of course) where it is not easy to just change jobs, get out from under the thumb of mistreatment. It is understandible that people will hate sometimes. It is not healthy to be mistreated with regularly, but the problem is not the hatred when it arises. The problem is that we are in that situation. Of course there are unhealthy patterns of hatred. I am not arguing that hatred is always a natural and/or healthy response to situations. And one can fixated on an emotional/attitudinal position. One can also feel comfortable hating when one actually is, deep down, confused or scared or both, and it feels easier to blame others. What I am disagreeing with is the idea that per se hatred is bad or unhealthy. This is like blaming the immune system for redness and swelling around an infection, at least, on many occasions.If you have to hate your dead end job or your boss before you will act, then you’re doing yourself a disservice. — Possibility
I agree that hate is likely not the only factor, but it would be one. I don't think frustration would be the main reason either. I was contrasting hate with frustration in relation to slavery. — Coben
If you stick with any emotional reaction it isn't healthy, even the so called positive ones. — Coben
It is understandible that people will hate sometimes. It is not healthy to be mistreated with regularly, but the problem is not the hatred when it arises. The problem is that we are in that situation. Of course there are unhealthy patterns of hhatred. — Coben
How did you measure that?Hate and acting on hate - by and on behalf of slaves - did more to fuel the fear and hatred that sustained slavery, than it did to abolish slavery. — Possibility
I didn't say anything about acting on it. If we are talking about slaves, they had very little power, so it was whites fighting and arguing against white practices, then actually killing people over it. It took the deaths, by intentional killing, of thousands of people to end slavery. Now most of the soldiers on the Northern side were probably not haters of slavery, except the black regiments, who while brave and serving well, played a small role in the whole project. But I am sure many abolitionists had hatred for the practice of slavery. Along with compassion, sense of justice, empathy and other motivations.You cannot argue that slaves who hated their masters and acted on it furthered the cause to abolish slavery in the US one iota. — Possibility
And again, sure hatred can lead to serious problems. So can 'good intentions'.One of the biggest fears of the slave states was a violent uprising similar to the one in Haiti from 1791 - the only ‘successful’ slave rebellion that established a free state ruled by former slaves (and was maintained by slaughtering the entire white French population in 1804 - hardly a justifiable act of hate). Hate drove all sides of the conflict in Haiti, and resulted in so much cruelty and violence. — Possibility
AGain, how do you measure this? determine it? If we talk about Rosa Parks and the Civil Rights movement, we are not talking about being motivated by frustration. Of course there was frustration in there. And of course there was yearning for something better and other motivations. But there was a lot of hate in there also. It is perfectly natural when one is treated as a rule in a hateful manner, over long periods of time, and this includes treatment of your children in this way, to hate back. The problem is not in that responding hate. Yes, sometimes this hate can lead to actions that are not ok. But the problem is not the hate, it is the cognitive elements - that revenge is good or even will help you, for exampe, is one cognitive element that can lead to acting out in certain ways. To tell those blacks that if they hate it is unhealthy and wrong, is just adding more oppression on them. And MLK himself was extremely pissed off towards the end of his life. Listen to his last speech in that church where he keeps saying 'If I should die...' There's rage in there. He got frustrated with the government and whites and since he was not just anti-racist but socialist he has a lot of issues that had gone from frustration to at least very strong anger.Frustration is sufficient to motivate positive, courageous, intelligent and realistic action towards a better outcome — Possibility
It's a reality that we respond to certain kinds of treatment with strong anger. That is a reality. We are social mammals with limbic systems tightly involved in our reactions to treatmetn by others. THAT IS REALITY. Many people tell us that we must accept the reality of what is outside us, but the inside we must suppress, detach from, radically control, judge. But the inside is real also. I can't see how I can come to love others if I hate parts of myself as my starting point, especially in the face of mistreatment.The situation is a problem, yes - but more so is hatred when it arises. The situation one is in may be extremely unhealthy and seem impossible to avoid. That the situation occurs is a reality, whether or not we want it to occur or think it should occur at all. We have to accept that reality first - whether we like it or not - before we can begin to address it. Hatred arises from a refusal to accept the reality as it stands. There are no healthy patterns of hatred. — Possibility
You are unable to convince me of anything. I can't take you seriously — uncanni
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