We are always taught racism. Take children for example, the younger ones just want somebody to play with, skin color does not matter. It is only after the parents or caretakers get to them that they become the racists they are later.
Actually, interestingly enough during the Confederacy in the US white slaves/indentured servants were actually treated worse than the African slaves.Zaik said:Sudenak said:Racism exists because of age-old religious, political, and economical needs. It's hard to stomach enslaving blacks unless you strip away their humanity. Once you consider them as stupid beasts, then it's easier to handle what you are doing. Racism towards them bloomed from a desire to enslave them.
That's just one example.
There's no biological inclination towards racism. There's just societal needs, followed by teaching from bigoted parents.
Oddly, whites were enslaved by whites for quite a while before anyone realized they could go buy slaves from tribes in Africa by trading guns and such and turn a much better profit.
They weren't involuntary or for life, but beyond that all bets were off. You could bring subjective nonsense into it like "they were treated better", but you don't really know that unless you witnessed it yourself.
Basically this. Well summed up. You even hit on social conflict theories. Although I would add that not all racist ideals are something learned in childhood. One modern example is someone who is taken in by racist organizations either because they simply offer people a place to stay or they may have met friends that they've gotten close to who are racists.NinjaDeathSlap said:As with almost all 'nature or nurture' questions, it is both.
Our brains are programmed from our early tribal days to seek protection amongst people that we can identify with, and reject out of fear those we cannot.
This is cultivated into 'Racism' when combined with ill-informed and bigoted ideals pressed upon us in our childhoods.
You can add environmental factors into this as well. For example: increase in immigration = more competition for jobs = higher unemployment = resentment.
Habity hobidy what? How does religion have anything to do with racism?Blaster395 said:Most of existing discrimination has been built up by thousands of years of religion.
It's a bit of both. Mostly nurture, though.Zaik said:Always wondered that. I mean, we all know that everyone is a little racist by default, otherwise racist jokes would never be funny, but I'm more talking about the hardcore racists who live this stuff.
And if it is something you're born with, can you really hold them responsible for it? I mean, It's not like they could help it if they were genetically designed to be excessively racist.
You say that like your experience is going to be positive and not reinforce the stereotypes and what everyone was telling you.Jedisolo75 said:Both. Racism is to a large extent stupidity, which is nature. However, it is also a lot of ignorance, which is just the lack of experience. If you are raised by racists, you will be racist until you you have experiences that teach you how stupid it is. That is nurture.
Of Course, if you are stupid, you will ignore your experiences and stick to your "the blacks are all evil, except for my buddy of course, he's one of the good ones." That's where assholes who say things like "I don't hate black people, just the ones who act like niggers" come from.
So, it's both. Although there is no doubt that it is much more nurture, than nature.
Mister Awesome said:I think racism is generally caused by minorities being so damned inferior.