Paprika wrote:
DanieltheDragon wrote:
[
Replying to post 1 by Paprika]
Obviously, they do matter. But the doctrines of Diversity and Multiculturalism once swallowed are difficult to remove.
Are you trying to suggest societies should be less diverse, less multicultural?
Not only that; I also claim that societies tend towards a large degree of homogenity: the number of ethnic cleansings in history should make that rather clear.
The implication by necessity is that cultures should be monotethnic and nationalistic. Which is hugely problematic.As recent history suggests. I.e. WW I-II , Holocost, Cold War, and whatever ills to society.
Hardly. For one, the reason the Archduke was assassinated by Serbian nationalists was because Serbs wanted freedom from the multinational and multiethnic Austro-Hungarian Empire. And the other World War and the Holocaust was largely promoted by the Nazis precisely on premises such as 'Jews are evil'. So one major cause of the both world wars was precisely too much diversity within nations.
There's two ways to look at this; the way you've articulated above being one of them. The other is to focus on the conditions that gave/give rise to ethnic cleansing and the world wars -- the lack of tolerance for diversity and differences.
Without nationalism (and it's uncle tribalism), there would be no impulse to ethnically cleanse anything.
We aren't 'there' yet as a species to cope in a mostly positive way with multiculturalism, and the evidence for that is history -- the Holocaust and world wars, besides the uncountable smaller events arising from instinctive human tribalism/nationalism. Multiculturalism is a goal, though, and a necessary one until we find exoplanets to colonize. We have to share, and it's best to face that reality rather than fantasize. That applies to both strong proponents for multiculturalism and strong proponents of nationalism.
If both 'sides' of this debate are willing to listen to the concerns of the other with the principle of charity in mind, we can 'ease' ourselves gradually, minimizing the inevitable problems. I agree with Paprika and Any Port in a Storm. They are both picking up on important facts. What I don't agree with is dismissing hope that somehow we can all learn how to tolerate each other. Heck, ya just might learn something new.