2020-07-06 ------------------------------------------------------------------ When you land into a foreign country, with different language and culture, you have to adjust your expectations and actions. If it is your first time out of your own culture, it may seem confusing but it actually is quite straightforward when you get used to it: You have to pull in the normal web of social mapping and simplify yourself, in a way. You have to drop the abstract layer. You focus on the general signs of goodwill. You smile more, you start to bow unconsciously and keep your arms closer to your body. At least this is what I have observed in people who don't assume too many things about the other culture. For some, it takes a longer time and there are others who seem not to get it. This simplification of actions is very useful since it focuses on signs that can be interpreted by all humans. There is also a more abstract, mental side of this: You start focusing on common human experience, like fondness towards children, for example. So, even if you don't talk the same language with someone, you can still share in basic human nature. This seems so obvious as not worth pointing out. But, there is a strange thing afoot in the memescape. People seem to be interested in denying this common ground of being. I am sure part of it is legitimate focus on problems of one particular group or another, but another side of it seems to be actually attacking the idea of empathy itself. The way it is done is to use flawed logic to paint a group into a corner: "If you are not saying what we are saying, you have to be outside our sphere of empathy". Obviously this could not happen (like this) if you didn't have a common language. You would have to physically do something to make people jugde you. What good can we expect to come from dividing people in this manner? Personally I find even the concept of political parties suspect, being a tool to divide and categorize people. Obviously, in the USA it is taken to a ridiculous level with the two-party rule, but even in a democracy with several more parties, it still seems to me like the concept of groups fighting for power is a wrong metaphor for government. As a side note, the political system is probably the area where the inclusion of women is most urgent. Reason for this is because the traditional female governance of villages as opposed to the male governance of hunting parties seems to be superior metaphor for governance of countries and cities, while the male way is better for projects and military style "get shit done" work gangs. These gangs are being introduced in the wrong setting when they become polical parties. In startup land there is this term "disruptive" which is seen as positive. I have been very suspicious of this term for some time, mostly because the way to disrupt is often to hack together something barely functional and use this as a prototype to collect more resources. Often these resources do not end up in a better product. I think the disruption of empathy is something similar. When you have (by magic of rhetorics) taken away the option for me to evoke basic human experience as a bridge to other people, you have not taken away my empathy for these people yet, but you have painted me as a person who can only have more surface level reactions to others. This appearance will start affecting the experienced reality as well, stifling the interaction. In fact, taking away the foundation creates a false foundation where we are not one humanity anymore. We are groups competing against each other. It was a side note, but now I see it turning into something else: Rejecting our common humanity, you have gone back to patriarchy, ironically. You have rejected the global village which would be led by more inclusive female vision and instead you have turned to the hunting or war metaphor of patriarchy. Disruption is quite opposite to inclusivity. There are psychos in high positions who are greedy to get higher. They will ride any wave you give them. They are willing to distrupt human decency, honesty, trust, honor, and every last one of the values that have kept humanity in some sort of precarious balance. They want to shake the status quo only enough to make room for themselves to climb the ladder, but who knows how big a hit we can endure? When I go to another country, I realize that the people see me as a member of a different group. Depending on the country the people may have negative or positive attitudes towards the group of people they see me as a part of. But as soon as I interact with them, the attitude towards my group fades and the basic attribute governing the tone of the interaction is respect. When strangers meet there is a foundational level of respect for another human individual. But this respect can (and often is) covered and hidden by inter-group expectations. I find it is extremely hard to talk one-on-one and not give an amount of respect to the other person. But when two groups meet, the respect does not bubble up by itself. People have been isolated for months. They go out to groups who share their views. Then they return to isolation. What is the value of social cohesion provided by our random meeting of strangers and people of different backgrounds during a regular pre-isolation work day? ------------------------------------------------------------------