I guess that we had different kinds of educations.Bhaalspawn said:Maybe it's just because I live in Canada, where you leave your door unlocked when you go to work and come home to find your house totally untouched. It's not being naive, it's just exasperation.hazabaza1 said:Yes, because:Bhaalspawn said:Hell, when I was a kid, I didn't even know there was a time where people of a different skin color were looked down on until my school decided to beat the idea into my head and call it "History."
Same thing with gender and orientation. If I hadn't had my school beating the idea into our heads as kids for the sake of History Class, we would have all grown up not knowing it had even existed at all.
A) Being ignorant of the mistakes of the past is totally the best way to do things
and B) We only learn things in school and can't get information from anywhere else.
Please. Stop being so fucking naive and realise that sexism and racism would still exist even if we weren't taught about it.
I'm all for educating children about the mistakes of our past, but my schools obsessed over them. Remembrance Day was a 2 month long speel about World War 1. Black History Month was brought in with fanfare but the teachers. And LGBT History month was spent... watching Degrassi... okay they dropped the ball on that one, but I digress.
Maybe we would benefit by toning down the obsession. When it comes to Racism and Sexism in today's society, we're not under attack by a thousand dragons. We're just being dive bombed by two Nazgul. You don't need a nuke to take them out.
Over here in England we spent a term each on the Nazis and the Suffragettes, with Martin Luther King being sprinkled into history and PSHE (Personal, social, health education) lessons so there was never a massive amount of obsession.
I still stand by saying that people can and will be racist and sexist no matter how they could be educated. Though, this may come from growing up in London for my early youth where anyone slightly brown was "paki".
Didn't even know Pakistan was a place until I was like, 13.