I was wondering when someone would mistake what I am saying as "master-race talk". Because this is really not what I mean, I don't care what your skin/hair colour is and nor should anyone.
We all have equal rights and opportunities but we are not all equal.
I get that.
I meant this: you used the example of race/gender to indicate physical differences can be genetic and that we aren't born equal. Are you also implying that these same categories influence intelligence or ability? If so, you are about one step away from saying "equality legislation is unnecessary because blacks/asians/whites are destined to underachieve from birth". My point is that inequality of ability is not something you can predict, and therefore legislation and the culture of equality is there to promote opportunity for everyone, which is what you are agreeing is a good thing. no one is saying we should all BE equal. I just balk at the idea of a predetermined inequality based on genetics.
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I was agreeing with him, and actually your points about meritocracy.
I don't know what the solution is though sadlyNot everyone is equal, and whilst some will strive to be better, some will just float along as they are, some will just let themselves be the lowest common denominator. It's just the way we are as humans. Ergo, we will never be identical - there will always be the alphas, betas and epsilons of society.
I was asking about the legislation you felt was wasted on slackers or idiots. I know what you meant, but the reason I asked was because I wanted to point out that it's virtually impossible to target the people that deserve the extra support to achieve what they're capable of, so you often have to throw those pearls before swine.
The sad reality is that if people are born into a group of people who are poor, who are treated differently because of their social status or skin colour, and live in a culture that developed in those conditions, they're going to become the kind of people we say "deserve it" when bad things happen to them, if only because they become that to fit in with their peer group. Only the very few exceptions make it out of that with what we'd consider a good attitude and work ethic. What I'm getting at with this is that the people we think are slackers might have turned out differently if they had been born into a reasonably well-off middle class family and had gained the social capital that society rewards. So we don't know who was born lazy/stupid, who became lazy/stupid, and who is smart and driven.
Like you, I have no idea what the solution is, but I think there might not be one. We are born to fight for resources, so as you say there are always going to be the alpha, beta and epsilon. The issue is that it isn't happening on a personal level, it's happening to huge numbers of people who don't get the chance to decide which they are going to be.