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Wars of Jew-hatred
Wars of Jew-hatred
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Wars caused by hatred
Three years ago, a crime occurred on a rural road in the United States of Texas, in which a black man named James Byrd was brutally murdered.
James Todd was walking home from a party when John William King and two of his friends took him to the outskirts of town and beat him until he was unconscious. They tied his legs to a rope and tied it to the back of a truck. Byrd was hit by a car at high speed and crashed into a ditch, cutting his body in two. The pathologist testified at the trial that “Byrd appeared to be alive until the last moment of his death.” When the court gave King the opportunity to address the family of the deceased, King smiled and muttered some inaudible words.
The root of that crime is hatred.
Fear and disgust turned into hatred. When that hatred turned into physical violence, King became the hunter and Bod became the prey.
Some white people hate black people.
Some white people hate Asians with dark skin.
Some white people and some black people hate Jews. Arabs hate Jews. Straight men hate lesbians. Some men hate women.
Hate is just an emotion, but when it is not controlled by the mind, it can lead to physical violence. This is how hate crimes occur.
What role has hatred played in creating enough hate crime to be included as a new category of offense in the United States' criminal law?
In 1985, there were 11 hate crimes nationwide. In 1990, there were over a thousand hate crimes. In the first six months of 1999, there were over 7,000 hate crimes.
Hate crimes are not limited to the United States. They occur in all parts of the world, in varying degrees and at varying levels. Just as there are different types of hate, religious hate, gender hate, and racial hatred, the consequences of hate are also varied. Crime, violence, and mass murder.
The killings of blacks by the Triple Alliance in the United States in 1866 were racial hatred. Hitler's actions in the brutal murder of 6 million Jews were racial hatred. The massacres of hundreds of thousands of Hutu and Tutsi in central Africa were also racial hatred.
Hate crimes committed by groups are more frightening than hate crimes committed by individuals. When hate is committed by groups, it turns into war.
The hatred of the perpetrators is terrible. The hatred of the survivors of the victims is just. After the Holocaust, which was a great massacre, what other feeling could the Jews have had but hatred for the Germans? If the victims can overcome their hatred, that is a very noble state of mind. If they cannot overcome their hatred, they are not as culpable as the perpetrators. Therefore, the hatred of the Serbs for the Kosovars can never be equal to the hatred of the Kosovars for the Serbs.
Only by analyzing and understanding hate crimes can we combat them. Therefore, let's examine the nature of hate.
Many hates are common and complex. There are different types of love. There is hate that comes from fear. There is hate that comes from hurt. There is hate that expresses power. There is hate that comes from powerlessness. That kind of hatred leads to revenge. There is hate that comes from resentment. There is hate that used to be love. There is hate that hates others. There is hate that reminds us of ourselves. There is hate of the oppressor. There is hate of the oppressed. There is hate that burns slowly. There is hate that explodes. There is hate that never ignites.
There are new words that have been coined to describe hatred: racism, antisemitism, sexism, etc.
Psychotherapist Elisabeth Young Bruehl, in her book The Anatomy of Prejudices, distinguishes three types of hate: Obsessive Hate, Hysterical Hate, and Narcissistic Hate.
Hate is a kind of hatred of the Nazis and hatred of the Hutu. Passionate hatred is more complicated.
These haters don't want the hated thing to disappear. They want to oppress and conquer it all the time. It's a kind of love hate. I don't know if you can say it's a kind of hate that gives vent to repressed sexual desires. Hatred of women falls into this category. Self-hatred is also found in misogyny and misogyny. How to overcome hatred is a difficult question to answer. How to eliminate the root causes of hatred. As long as there are people, as long as there are differences in race and gender, as long as there are differences in religion, hatred will exist.
Governments can suppress violent crime. But how can governments suppress hate in a free society? The line between hate and prejudice is blurred. The line between prejudice and opinion, and between opinion and hate, is also blurred. So trying to build a formal political firewall is a risky gamble.
In other words, crime can be stopped. Hate cannot be stopped. So how can hate crime be stopped? It can only be stopped by a state of mind that transcends hate. To transcend hate, one must be able to tolerate that hate. How difficult is that? There are two types of tolerance. One is tolerance and the other is tolerance. Tolerance is the ability to eliminate hate. Tolerance is the ability to tolerate hatred and live with it. In terms of human culture and society, it seems more natural for all human beings to live in the second type.
If both sides allow hatred to be hatred and practice tolerance at the same time, there will be no oppressive hatred. There will be no revengeful hatred. If people follow the rules of not hating a Jew for being a Jew, not hating an Arab for being an Arab, not hating a Muslim for being a Muslim, not hating a Christian for being a Christian, and not hating a black person for being a black person, then hate crimes will decrease.
Is it possible to successfully sue someone who has suffered a loss of respect? Is it fair? Therefore, he will demand that society or the person who caused the original injury pay something. Goril sags:coposaq 6023203 odcosAn Eye For An Eye on
But sadly, the radical law of An Eye For An Eye affects more innocent relatives than it does the perpetrators. All those who were massacred did not suffer because of their own crimes. They suffered because of someone, a group, from their own race, from their friends, from their extended family.
What does it mean to kill someone to avenge the death of another? Is it over? Can we say it's over?
Even if you are satisfied with your own side, you are not satisfied with his side. Because every victim was never the original perpetrator. They are only bystanders.
No matter how many people die on whose side, the dead are humans. As long as humans die, no human can win.
There are so many wars in the world that are caused by hatred. Religious wars, ethnic wars, wars between oppressors and revolutionaries, wars fought for whatever reason. If the fires of hatred spread to all countries, the entire world would be destroyed.
No god or goddess will stop this war.
The war will only end when the actors stop.
Ref; - What's So Bad About Hate? by Andrew Sullivan
(Eleven News Vol:1/No:1, 11-11-2001)
