I'm going to keep repeating this until it seeps into your head: Racism is premised on differences deemed signifiant and not difference simpliciter. The 'deeming' is not biological but social and political. — StreetlightX
If racism prevention is the goal, people could be encouraged to be aware of how they feel about differences. Give space to feeling uncomfortable.
Not realizing that the discomfort is coming from an aesthetic clash can feed scapegoating and other causes of racism. — frank
The video clearly reveals the basis of racism as based on phenotype (external, physical appearance) and then demonstrates that these physical differences don't have a counterpart in genotype based on which all races are more similar than different. — TheMadFool
Look, here's an analogous argument to the OP: "Without the sun, there would be no people. With no people, there would be no racism. Therefore, the sun is the root of racism".
Its that fucking stupid. — StreetlightX
You're actually so fucking stupid. Fuck. You think the Germans murdered the Jews because they didn't look like them? Based on 'phenotype'? Fuck you're an idiot. Just fuck off. — StreetlightX
It's not that stupid. — TheMadFool
Differences in phenotype - physical appearance - seems to be key to racism. — TheMadFool
Because the Nazi 'criteria' were not phenotypic you fucking retard. — StreetlightX
He was the most successful athlete at the Games and, as a black man, was credited with "single-handedly crushing Hitler's myth of Aryan supremacy", although he "wasn't invited to the White House to shake hands with the President, either" — Wikipedia
The meaning attached to race can contain non-phenotypic characteristics. Look to context. — frank
But if you want to continue to do so, I suggest the rest of us bow out now and just let you. — Baden
I'm looking for a cause for racism and it seems quite obvious doesn't it to look in the direction what an essentially discriminatory mindset, racism, points towards - differences and our capacity to perceive them. — TheMadFool
I get what you mean. It's not just a question of whether differences exist or not. It's also about whether people deem the difference to be, as you said, significant. I fully agree with this and fdrake's video post clearly demonstrates that race is an arbitrary concept with the caveat that it only looks like that based on genotype and not phenotype. The video clearly reveals the basis of racism as based on phenotype (external, physical appearance) and then demonstrates that these physical differences don't have a counterpart in genotype based on which all races are more similar than different. Clearly, racism is not a socio-political phenomenon as you claim: I've never heard a racist ask for social status or political affiliation before they start being racist. — TheMadFool
It looks like you're explaining things at the wrong level. Sure humans have legs, but they also have brains. Both of which were designed by natural selection. Some brains like to make their legs run, some don't. I'm guessing there are evolutionary advantages for those that like to run over those that don't. Joggers stay fit, non-joggers don't. Those that stay fit have a higher chance to pass their genes down to the next generation. Brains and their minds and how those brains establish preferences for other particular humans (kin selection), or for running over not running, are products of natural selection (evolutionary psychology).Necessary conditions aren't always explanatory. Legs don't explain why people like jogging and the ability to notice differences doesn't explain why racism exists. You're looking for an explanation at the wrong level. But if you want to continue to do so, I suggest the rest of us bow out now and just let you. — Baden
Differences in phenotype - physical appearance - seems to be key to racism. I maybe wrong but don't racists compare some races to monkeys and apes in order to show their superiority and the inferiority of the other races? I reckon that in the remote past, when we were still hunter-gatherers, monkeys and apes were tough competition; after all they are either more agile or physically stronger. :joke: — TheMadFool
And an essentially fitness-oriented mindset in one sense highlights our ability to move our body. But to look to biology to explain fitness fads would be to look in the wrong direction, right? Ok, that's my last effort on this anyway. — Baden
By the way it tends to be in developed countries with the smallest families that jogging is most popular and undeveloped ones with the largest ones that's it's least popular. So, there's another social pretzel for you to transform into an evolutionary donut — Baden
Of course. Although difference can also be attractive, as in viva la difference.
Racism therefore has to have causes other than difference and our ability to perceive difference. — frank
Not the biology, the social stuff. — fdrake
Social differences were race-based weren't they and race, as you agree, is all about, as you put it, observable differences — TheMadFool
Social stuff "looking at" bodies and bucketing them based on social principles - stereotyping, mythmaking, storytelling, politics... — fdrake
Yes. Looking at bodies. Phenotype. — TheMadFool
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