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Thundrstorm said:I think Q is correct that a large contributing factor to prejudice is based on the idea that we (the collective "we" of humanity) see people who are not like us as OTHER. In this way, we do not relate to them, and can even dehumanize them. In my own experience as a URM, or half URM, or whatever you want to call me, I've encountered ignorance more than I've encountered hate. Thus, the best solution, as one poster commented on above, is to confront prejudice when we witness it and use it as an opportunity to educate others.
Agreed. I don't encounter racism on a daily basis rather I encounter ignorance. And I counter this ignorance by exposing my personhood. I also like your point about "other." I think different ethnic and racial groups tend to group other ethnic and racial groups into one big huge stereotypical monster instead of realizing that we are all more alike than we are dissimilar. It's just how white people say black people look the same and blacks say whites look alike or people saying Asians all look alike. This all stems from the ignorance of looking at these groups as one stereotypical monster instead of a group comprised of idiosyncratic individuals.