Sadly that actually ends up being the exception more often than not in my experienceF.J. Prefect, Esq wrote:'wow shit sorry, I didn't know and/or understand, I'll avoid that in future'Infinity Biscuit wrote:who cares if it's conscious and malicious
is that going to make effects any better?
or
'lol do I look like I give a shit how that makes you feel????'
Like so many people will do shitty stuff not out of malice but because they don't know better but when confronted on it they double down to try to lessen the perceived importance of what they did instead of admitting error and improving
and from what I can see this is obviously because they want to avoid the stigma of being labeled racist/etc. and prioritise that over the consequences of their actions
but like I feel that heavy focus on intent helps solidify that maybe? because it pushes the issue to more dealing with the person doing the actions rather than the actions themselves, and then also it gives people wiggle room where they can argue "oh I didn't mean it that way I'm not a bigot" in their defensiveness rather than just confronting that they did something harmful
but to boil it down to the specific context I was talking about, for someone who is only having a momentary encounter with someone, and who has to deal with a lot of shit in their life, I don't think it's very necessary for them to worry about whether or not the bigotry hurled their way has malice or not
Like, someone who's not affected by that bigotry, especially if they have more interaction with the harmful party, yeah then there's probably some responsibility there if you're taking it as a chance to push improvement on the person. but I don't think people who are the targets of bigotries ever have a personal responsibility to do that sort of thing
Bakustra, I was thinking about a few things you said... are you treating Kinsey as a philosopher or something? because for the most part she's not; she's someone who, regardless of how she has a moderately sized spotlight on her, is just talking about and dealing with her own life and the pressures on it rather than someone discussing the subject academically, and the two are very different experiences and you can't examine them the same way