But it's not hard to empathize with anyone who suffers an injustice, or a hurt. We share a common human experience that should inform us sufficiently, once we identify with the object of our consideration.I would say it's darn near impossible to know what something feels like that you have never experienced.
I'd say you don't have to be crucified to appreciate the Passion, or morbid to consider it and its impact. And you don't have to be a victim of a particular crime to empathize with those who are, or walk about chastising yourself to appreciate injustice.I don't know why anyone would even spend their time trying to imagine themselves in some morbid situation. That seems like a very unintelligent thing to do, not to mention unhealthy. One can tell when another is hurting without having to experience the same hurt.
Would you say that to a rape victim? Of course not. Well, you shouldn't feel callous about any injustice, especially one that works to your (and my) advantage.So. It's history. Happened in a lot of places a lot of times with atrocities that exceed what happened in America.
Most blacks? All? It's mostly not the case, so I don't see the value of it as an issue to take anywhere. Just as most of us aren't the descendants of the Kings of England.It has been suggested and believed by many blacks that they are descendants of the Egyptian monarchies of old.
I'm not beginning to argue that it's reasonable for you to carry guilt about something you didn't do. That's not remotely what this is about. It's about injustice and how we address and recognize it, both in the root and in the ongoing. And that's not something from ancient Egypt, thousands of years gone. There are millions of Americans who lived during segregation and before this country really BEGAN to address the fundamental racial inequity that was in much of the country a thing seated in law.Have you been telling them that they should be ashamed of what their ancestors did and live in guilt over it for the rest of their lives?
And the impact of that is current, as are some ills.
I don't have to feel the least guilt to feel empathy. I don't have to believe myself a perpetrator of injustice to recognize injustice. And if anyone thinks that the Voting Rights Act ended the problem and inequities of race in this country they're profoundly mistaken. If they don't believe that it did then it's time to join in the conversation about ending habits and practices and attitudes that don't serve a just end or nation.It's just stupid to try and lay a guilt trip on today"s generation for something their ancestors did.
Geography doesn't factor. It's about addressing a present evil and continuing to diminish its impact within our compact.May not be where you are coming from.
You didn't answer the questions, but I'd love to hear you support that with something I've said. I'd be a great judge. I don't have to think the kid that doesn't take first, second, or third sucks to be a good judge. In fact, I'd say someone who did think that way would stink on ice as a judge of anything meaningful.You would make a poor judge of a competition.