Welcome back to my blog... for the last time. In my last reading, it got me thinking a lot about how society was and how it is discrimination of all kinds. It raised the question: Is society actually improving on how people treat others who are different? Based off of that question, I plan to respond with an answer. In today's society, the treatment of others who are visually or physically different from us is improving compared to how it was in the 1600s to 1970s. Even if these changes may be slow...very slow... and take time for people to adjust to, they are occurring. This can be seen with the black community, disabled people, and the LGBTQ+ community. For the black community, treatment has obviously improved compared to how it was in the past. They have gone from being enslaved by white Americans to "separate but equal" to gaining civil rights to complete freedom and little prejudice. A...
Hello everyone. In this short reading, something that continued to occur was prejudice and killings and somewhat genocide. It occurred to me that throughout this section one idea constantly crossed my mind: history will repeat itself until humanity can learn from their mistakes. It made me think of the quote “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it” from George Santayana, a Spanish philosopher. Throughout Aronson’s whole book, you can see history repeating itself. The most prominent example is the hatred and prejudice towards Jews. In the early chapters, Aronson talks about how in Roman society Jews were thought of as evil or people needed to be purged. This belief seemed to die down as time continued and Judaism became popular. However, in the 1940s the Holocaust occurred. Adolf Hitler killed millions of Jews, spreading his hatred for them. As many history books claim that many were appalled by the mass kil...