Perpetuating Prejudice
Perpetuating Prejudice by
Jennifer Chamberlain
Prejudice: a preconceived opinion that is not based on reason or actual
experience.
"prejudice against people
from different backgrounds"
Bigotry: intolerance toward those
who hold different opinions from oneself.
"The difficulties of combating prejudice
and bigotry"
Racist: a person who shows or feels discrimination or prejudice
against people of other races, or who believes that a particular race is
superior to another.
"the comments have led to her being
called a racist"
Sexist: characterized by or showing prejudice,
stereotyping, or discrimination, typically against women, on the basis of sex.
Discrimination:
the unjust or prejudicial treatment of
different categories of people or things, especially on the grounds of race,
age, or sex
There have been many protests recently in cities
around the United States. Most of these are in response to a brutal and
unnecessary killing of an African American man by a police officer during his
arrest for a crime.
The rally call of “Black Lives Matter” has been
promulgated by the many outraged citizens of all races who know that this
killing was horrendous and believe that it was a direct result of the man being
‘black’. It may have been. It may not
have been. We will never truly know what was in the mind of the police officer
at that particular time and place.
Racism, discrimination, sexism, and bigotry are types
of prejudice against an entire group of people for their differences and often
based on the actions of some.
During these protests, there was a photograph on
Facebook of an adult, identified as the parent, and a young child holding signs
that said: “‘F’ Police” and they didn’t just use the letter. The child in the
photo appeared to be six or seven years of age. There were other signs using
the ‘F’ word aimed at specific people and groups.
It is not known if these protesters were relatives or
friends of the man who was killed or if they were just angry because of the
inhumanity of the situation. Their anger may have been completely justified. They
were protesting prejudice, bigotry, and racism. And yet, they were perpetuating
prejudice against a group, the police, based on the actions of some.
The parent was teaching the child that it is ok to
judge and hate an entire group of people based on experience with a few, or no
actual experience at all.
That same week, a local woman was yelled at while in
her car, that she had ‘white privilege’. This woman was completely taken aback.
As a child, her family was not well off.
She joined the military to try to make something of her life and now, as
a middle-aged woman with physical problems, she cleaned other people’s houses
for a living. The young men who were yelling at her were prejudiced. They
judged her by the color of her skin.
Prejudice, bigotry, racism, sexism, and discrimination
are not limited to just one race, one sex, one color, one chosen career, one
age, or one anything. When two people are vying for a job and one is chosen,
not because they are the best, but because of one of the above listed ‘isms’,
that is wrong. That is perpetuating prejudice.
Humankind will never overcome prejudice by
substituting another type in its place. Parental responsibility, community, and
government responsibility is to teach each generation that labeling any person
or group of people because they are different from us, hold different opinions,
are different races, religion, or sex, is unacceptable.
Each of us should be evaluated based on our own
actions and our own lives. We cannot say that all police are bad because we
have had or been told about bad experiences with some. We cannot say that all
white people have privilege just because some of them do. We cannot stereotype a
group of people based on anything about an individual or even several
individuals. We must stop tagging entire groups, races, sexes, or religions as
ignorant, bad drivers, thugs, terrorists, gangsters, or deplorable.
If we truly want prejudice, bigotry, racism, sexism,
and discrimination to go away, we must decide how we feel, related to only the
actions or beliefs of the individual, not the group. And we must not blame what
happens to us, on our membership in a group, and start taking responsibility
for our actions. Only then will we all be one people.
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