It seems to me that “People in Group A are better than people in Group B” is often a piece of rhetoric used to make it harder for people from Group A and Group B to cooperate with each other. This is frequently to the benefit of a small subset of one or the other group.
In short: Who benefits from elevating this sort of hypothesis to consideration? Usually, not you.
It seems to me that “People in Group A are better than people in Group B” is often a piece of rhetoric used to make it harder for people from Group A and Group B to cooperate with each other. This is frequently to the benefit of a small subset of one or the other group.
In short: Who benefits from elevating this sort of hypothesis to consideration? Usually, not you.