Monday, May 14, 2018
Equality which acknowledges that we are different?
In a recent interview venerable British
actress Glenda Jackson asked the interesting question, how do you
create a society in which there is genuine equality which
acknowledges that we are different?
The word "society" suggests
people associated together for common ends, common interests, common
goals. But since "genuine" equality does not really exist,
and in reality different ethnic groups are genetically and culturally
distinctively different, this suggests that an ethnopluralism of
ethnostates is the best political way to create homogeneous societies in which there is an equality that acknowledges
that we are different. Trying to jam distinctly different ethnic
groups together in the same society obviously is not working well in
England or in the U.S. regardless of how much we are preached to
about equality. Violence increases.
Although she does seem to have courage,
I doubt Ms. Jackson would like this answer---too bad, she
could sell it better than I do.
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