It’s almost impossible to think practically and rationally when every fibre of our being screams ‘NO!’ at the thought that human beings just like you and me - who live a life not entirely dissimilar to our own - are choosing to act this way. To acknowledge this is to accept our own capacity to do the same. Even worse, to acknowledge this is to recognise our neighbour’s capacity to behave this way. That’s some scary shit. Most of us don’t have the courage to admit this reality to ourselves. THIS is why we hate. — Possibility
Exactly. A negative reality, while our love biases push us to what we see as a better loving reality. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I see hatred as based on projection, infantile rage and unconscious self-loathing. When people conclude that it's ok for them to hate, they also feel justified to do whatever they want to those they hate. There's a lot of self-righteousness that characterizes hate behavior, which creates a catch-22: I don't have to stop hating because I am right to hate. I'm "protecting Southern womanhood" or I'm "keeping the world safe for democracy." Of course, that's not what's really going on at all. — uncanni
Anyone can choose to live without a moral code or can pretend to follow a moral code while not doing so in reality. I think those are the folks who tend to hate with the most impunity. When people feel no sense of responsibility in terms of how they relate to others, it's like an anti-ethics of anything goes--which is no ethics at all. It's fundamentally anti-social. Those who believe they have a moral responsibility to refrain from doing hateful things to others are practicing ethics. Practice is good! — uncanni
When we encounter someone doing something ‘immoral’ or hateful, do we strive to understand why, or do we blindly attack this threat to our ‘better loving reality’? — Possibility
You may not see unconditional love, but the potential is there, nonetheless. — Possibility
When we hate those who hate, are we justified? — Possibility
I think hate is unnecessary and a completely illogical response to a situation. — Fruitless
If you think love has no conditions, you are sadly mistaken.
That is why you love family and friends more than others.
If you do not, you do not know what love is. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
When we hate those who hate, are we justified?
— Possibility
Reciprocity rules say it is. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
To tolerate those who do not tolerate others is empowering them. It rewards evil with good.
One is either for them or against them. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Here are some concrete examples: the shooters at Black churches and synagogues break my heart. The history of lynching pains me deeply; so do the Holocaust, rape, incest, My Lai, serial killing, etc., etc. ad infinitum. The kind of mentality that is capable of such actions is a very scarey mentality to contemplate. — uncanni
So I guess I'd have to say that I hate the destruction, cruelty and deprivation that very sick people inflict on the world. — uncanni
When face to face with one of these ‘very sick people’, could we NOT hate them? Could we treat them with the dignity deserving of a human being - or would it be very difficult to respond to the person and not the behaviour or mentality that we hate? — Possibility
That we can refrain from hating others by directing our emotions towards attacking the behaviour or mentality is certainly a step towards eradicating hate. — Possibility
but I think that until we can look at people like Trump or Hitler and see ourselves in similar life circumstances, we won’t be able to effect the kind of change that we want to see in the world. — Possibility
And fix him so he won't do it again. — Fruitless
Hate leads to impulsive behaviour, how many crimes and deaths and dreadful events have resulted because of hate and could have been prevented by peace? War. — Fruitless
You must understand that other individuals are no where near in the same thought pattern as you, we — Fruitless
That is why I find it very hard to hate — Fruitless
Reciprocity rules? Are you saying we should go back to ‘an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth’? — Possibility
I don’t need to love others less in order to love my family and friends as much as I do. — Possibility
- @Gnostic Christian BishopYou became your enemy.
- @Gnostic Christian BishopI put what you loved in jeopardy and poof, there was the hate I wanted to show you in yourself.
- @Gnostic Christian BishopI'm not sure I follow. What pattern do you see?
Back? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
You break the law of the excluded middle. Put that in the dust bin. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
When did we stop trying to make the punishment suit the crime? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
(You either get it or you don't) — Fruitless
And Lastly, Can you describe your definition of hate?
Hate to me is the desire to remove that thing from existence. — Fruitless
I don’t need to love others less in order to love my family and friends as much as I do. — Possibility — Possibility
- @Gnostic Christian BishopThat is killing, IMO.
Not hate.
- @Gnostic Christian Bishop thanks :)Nice teaching method.
I don’t need to love those close to me more. That’s the point. — Possibility
What is the point of hate? — Fruitless
Well where do you expect to go with hate? Otherwise it's an unreasonable burden on your shoulders you have to deal with. What is the point of hate? — Fruitless
if you do not love those close to you mare than others, you do not know how to love. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
If you had to save either your child or an acquaintance from fire, (lets say), who would you choose? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
All our biases are in us to protect us, be they love biases or hate biases. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
The organism is reacting to outside stimuli. And then in some cases it is helpful to be mobilized by powerful emotions. One need not necessarily act on them, but to be mobilized and sometimes expressive without violence, given that we are social mammals, is often necessary. And then of course sometimes we need to defend ourselves physically. — Coben
This is not a question of love. It’s the same as asking me which of my two children I would choose in the same situation, and then trying to tell me that choice has anything to do with love. — Possibility
You can do better than that!!! — uncanni
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