Implying that historical inequalities in someway excuse a crime is a concept that angers me for a couple reasons. First, most of us are taught from childhood that two wrongs don't make a right, a concept I hold in high regard. as I mentioned before, these historical inequalities are a blight on our history, but excusing crimes committed contrary to their cultural standard will in no way atone for the blight. Second, the alleged victims of Solo took no part in the historical inequality. They were not subject of righteous revenge, but innocent victims. If you agree with my arguments, the points that the Coates chose to argue are totally irrelevant. The stereotype of the aggressive male does not change the fact that Hope Solo and Ray Rice are comparable. Both are professional athletes, and both are violent criminals. Their gender has no effect on their guilt.
Next comes a happier subject (for the most part). "The State of Women's Athletics, 40 Years After Title IX," buy Maya Dusenbery and Jaeah Lee demonstrates the unintended positive effect that a law meant to concern the workforce had on the fields of both female and coed athletics. Because of the patriarchal standards mentioned recently, sports were taboo for females until this anti discrimination law was passed. After title IX was passed, the participation of females in athletic programs skyrocketed, with just one in twenty seven females participating in high school sports when the law was introduced in 1972, to two in five currently. While this is an amazing trend, there is still a gap to close. None of the major professional sports (MLB, NFL, NHL) include any females in their teams, despite the comperable talent and performance occasionally exhibited. In addition, female sports still receive a fraction of the funding and support of their male counterparts. There is obviously still a stereotype at play here, and it is preventing females with skills equal to, or even greater than their male counterparts from entering the level of professional play they are qualified for.
Though I have focused exclusively on gender stereotypes and their negative effects up until now, I believe the general nature of the argument made in Paul Bloom's TED Talk is not only valid, but very important. Stereotypes are a product of evolution and personal experience. They are an important tool we use constantly to survive, whether we realize it or not. Categorizing a dog that raises it's hackles as a dog we should not pet is a useful example. This is a stereotype, as we expect a dog acting in this manner to be prone to violence, which it statistically is.
Don't Want! |
The Problem comes when we overreact and fail to apply reason to the situation. The dog may have no intention of inflicting harm in any situation, and is merely afraid; the dog may intend to react violently if attacked itself, but will change it's attitude completely when treated with compassion; or the dog may intend to react violently regardless.
Oh okay. Want. |