Archaeopteryx
Wanderer
Now there is a typical leftist attitude if there ever was one: the only way anyone could possibly disagree with such ideological brilliance is to be a bigot. At least you all think alike and draw the same predictably absurd conclusions. I suppose my shark bigotry makes me a bit of a speciescist or a sharkophobe too. But of course there is a difference between a shark and a muslim. A shark has fins. Truth be told, I sometimes fear a muslim might swim up and bite me while splashing about in the lake, so I try to stay near to shore.
Now here is a typical strawman if there ever was one. I did not say that to disagree with me or my 'ideological brilliance' is to be a bigot. I said that if one wants to maintain the analogy, one would have to draw equivalences between sharks and Muslims (a comparison that you seem to have no qualms making - if I've interpreted the above text correctly), and to make such a comparison has strong undertones of bigotry.
If my fear reaction is instinctual, then it is not blameworthy. So if my primitive instinctual reaction to muslim males boarding my flight is instinctual, then you have to give me a pass. Especially since you would then feel exactly the same emotion as I.
That is true. You can't be blamed for a primitive instinctual reaction of that type. You can, however, fight it rationally. Unless you wish to argue that you are completely a slave to your 'gut feelings'. As I pointed out earlier, people can be primed to show signs of implicit racism. They can, however, fight this primitive reaction post hoc with justifications against such responses.
But I would first have to know that the shark is a danger to me. I dont have an instinctual knowledge that a shark is a danger to me, but one based upon knowledge. Add to that the knowledge that a given area is rife with such creatures and that attacks upon humans have occurred is what makes the fear of going into that particular stretch of beach rational. I dont need to have actually been bitten to be wary.
Many people don't have any real knowledge about or experience with spiders (i.e. which types are dangerous and so on), yet they still fear them on the basis of instinct. What you are doing here in the case of the shark is a post hoc rationalisation of a rather primitive response. As you yourself said, you 'don't need to have actually been bitten to be wary.' What makes you wary when approached by a shark? Your instincts.
The human brain is a remarkable tool for reason. However, rational deliberation takes time, and in nature time can be the difference between life and death. If you are to survive, you need to respond to tangible threats rapidly. Deliberation is too slow. By the time you rationally think about that 'moving shadow in the water', and rule out all other possibilities, it would already be upon you. By the time you assess whether it is a threat or not, by measuring the size of its teeth, its jaw-line, and observing its attack moves... well, you get the picture. That's why your 'gut feeling' as soon as you see that dark shadow approach is 'Danger, Will Robertson'.
Of course it applies, I am a bigot dont you know. I just so happens I see muslims all the time, yet I dont fear them. Why do you think that is? Yet if I saw a couple of muslim males board my plane, I would feel uneasy. Why do you think that is? Am I only a bigot on airplanes? Is there something about high altitudes that inspires racism? Or is it just maybe the fact that radical muslims have had a fascination with hijackings that goes back decades and are now into blowing them out of the sky or using them as guided missiles to slam into buildings filled with civilians? As I said earlier, if only the bad muslims would wear signs, we wouldnt have anything to worry about.
This doesn't justify why you don't feel 'uneasy' around anyone else in the same sense. The claim 'if only the bad people would wear signs' doesn't just apply to Muslims, lordbt... it applies to everyone! Serial killers have been known to blend into the fabric of normal society. Does that mean you are uneasy around everyone because... afterall... they don't wear signs either. Singling out Muslims and saying 'I feel uneasy because the bad ones aren't tagged' is no more helpful than saying 'I feel uneasy because bad people (in general) don't wear signs.'
Because muslims are the only ones attempting to blow planes out of the sky.
Really now? The only ones... Fascinating.
If that was something that 80 year old white women started doing, I might worry if one sat down in the seat next to me.
Yes, you might get a primitive fear reaction. I don't deny this.
If vending machines start boarding planes and blowing themselves up, I'll start worrying about them too. As for the quite man on the corner being a potential threat, well, he is. Which is why we teach our children not to talk to strangers. We do this not because all strangers are bad, but because some of them are, and there is no way to tell the difference. Kinda like muslims.
Then you concede the irrelevancy of your position. The fact that you can't tell 'friendly' from 'unfriendly' Muslims apart is also true for... everyone else! It seems futile then to use it as an argument for fearing Muslims when it is, at once, an argument for fearing anyone. If non-Muslims started wearing tags that said 'good' and 'bad' or 'threat' and 'non-threat', and Muslims were the only group left untagged, then you'd have an argument for saying 'These Muslims... I can't tell the good ones from the bad ones!' But as it stands... that is true of all persons in general. What is happening here is that you are the one assigning tags, and you have automatically given Muslims on planes the 'threat' tag and given everyone else a free pass even though the argument you are using doesn't support that conclusion.
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