I had several occasions when I was young to have the
Lifeboat/Fallout Shelter Game forced upon me. At least once there was a variant
where more information was revealed about the people after each round. Or perhaps it was that we were all given
slightly different information about each.
Yes, I think it was the latter.
So the black drug addict turned out to be a medical student who had
become secretly addicted to pain medication after being injured as an army
nurse in Vietnam. The old rabbi, upon
further review, turned out to be a psychologist with an artificial leg. The
purpose, or one main purpose of the exercise, was to show you where your
prejudices were, and start a conversation about what bigots we all are just
under the skin. (There is a medical
school teaching technique which does something similar, adding in a symptom, or
environmental factor, or lab result one at a time to see if it changes the
diagnostic impression. I don't know if
they still do that.)
It was good for humility, I suppose, and should have been
interesting in examining as a group what our cultural consensus of values
was. But it never worked out that
way. It always narrowed quickly to one
or two issues, and half the group could not refrain from getting bogged down in
whether the survivors were good breeding stock, or who was likely to try and be
a tyrant, on the basis of no real information.
Yet it did give me one thing that I have kept, and that is
an awareness that prejudice can be quite fluid. There's a recent social
psychology test you can take on line that measures your prejudices from
photographs of different races, ages, genders, and whether you hesitate to
associate them with good words versus bad words. Apparently everyone involuntarily
likes black people less than white people, even other black people. I think there were also some good things we
associated more often with females, some not.
Its advantage is that it all looks very science-y, because it gets in
behind what you say you believe to what you really
believe.
Except it doesn't really. Human beings have an initial
response to a stimulus and immediately overrule it all the time. When we
resettled a Laotian family in 1980, it accidentally worked out great because we
got him a factory assembly job in Suncook - and those folks were tickled that
he spoke French. Would it have been more of a problem if he didn't? Probably.
But not definitely. People find
things.
There is something morally unattractive about confessing
that you have mild versions of sins in order to blast those you believe are
more intensely afflicted. Earnest young
Christian writers (males more than females, perhaps) wring their hands over
discovering materialism* and pride - even in themselves. In this they demonstrate that they totally
get it, and understand, and aren't really judging at all, clearing the battle space for denunciation. Double bonus
points - you get to demonstrate after how many mattresses you can still detect this pea. Prejudice is another big-ticket
item. We all have prejudices that we don't want to admit. Even I have a cute anecdote that I shake my
head ruefully at in feigned humility before condemning all you racist bastards.
Being part of the system and all that.
*especially at Christmas.
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