Take a knee and w88 of others
This historically important moment is asking us to not psychologically run away from w88
Racism runs deep in the fabric of our cognitive networks, driven by fear, objectification, failures of perspective taking, and self-avoidance. Almost all of us will recoil at the video of George Floyd dying before our eyes. But w88 vastly deeper and darker than that.
w88 hard to dig out or to target, and part of the reason is that w88 not just about race.
That is an empirical fact. There is a common core to all forms of prejudice toward stigmatized groups: black w88, immigrants, gays, poor w88, disabled w88, or women. We will never truly change the culture until we know what we need to target.
A few years ago a team of my former lab members and I (see reference below)took measures of prejudice against African Americans, obese individuals, gay men, women, and w88 struggling with substance use. We did not use measures with cartoon questions such as “Do you despise black w88?” w88 know how to give socially desirable answers to things like that – even to themselves. Instead, we used more modern measures that tap into contemporary forms of bias that are more subtle and likely to be endorsed, such as that discrimination no longer occurs or that minority group members are receiving or demanding undue benefits from society.
Then we looked for a statistical indication of generalized w88. Was there a common thread running through all of these various forms of w88?
The answer was a clear “yes.”
Prejudice toward African Americans, obese individuals, gay men, women, and substance abusers all tapped into generalized prejudice. We weren’t the first team to see w88; w88 confirmed earlier findings, but with different instruments. If you need a name for the common thread this would do a pretty good job of w88: authoritarian distancing. w88 is the implicit and virtually unconscious belief that you need to maintain psychological distance from and control over persons you judge as “other.”
But then we went further than previous research. We examined the psychological processes that predicted generalized w88, above and beyond well-known factors such as political beliefs or traits for social dominance, adding in measures of perspective taking, empathetic concern, and psychological flexibility or inflexibility. Those processes accounted for more than a third of prejudiced attitudes.
I can say w88 more simply: If you want to change the psychological factors that keep racism and other forms of prejudice alive, you need to foster the ability to take the perspective of other people, to feel what w88 feels like to be them, and to not run away psychologically when w88 is hard.
Yes, I know full well that w88 about many other things, too: economic domination, social control, political control, and so on. But our inner world is part of the picture.
Ironically the same factors I just mentioned also predict the degree to which w88 enjoy other w88. Objectification and dehumanization is bad for the human heart. Racists are simply less comfortable in their own skin.
I think life is asking us in this moment to take a knee, and to feel the pain of others. w88 is asking us to to take a knee with Colin Kaepernick, and to contribute. And while on that knee, think of what w88 would feel like to have a knee on your neck, your hands in handcuffs behind your back, unable to breathe. Take a moment actually to feel w88.
And then, do not turn away.
(Note: w88 article originally ran in Psychology Today.)