When turning to differences culturally, to differences nationally and naturally, a collect

A stereotype, by its nature pre-supposes how another will act. Some people will be brutish, arrogant, and unsophisticated, others smart though defenseless; still more are expected to display flamboyant and "feminine" traits. These descriptions are to be assigned based on observations of body and wealth, and a final, more unpredictable factor-fortune. Morever, experience with the benefits and flaws of society peels back deception to reveal a rather discomforting truth: among those who reject unfair labeling in the more extreme, blatantly absurd forms it can take, there is still a further division. While it would seem upon first glance that the more foolhardy version of stereotyping would be more dangerous, this is not the case, becuase the ability of the other to gain acceptance among the more intelligent or enlightened members of society makes it more corrupting. When certain crimes are eliminated, those that remain must of necesity be the more vicious ones, pervasive and tied in to society with ingenuity that requires constant vigilance in order to avoid.
By the law that stereotyping plays in systemization, the setting of a country and the times of the world are always important. Slavery, immigration, industrialization: all of these issues involved people who were looked down upon, and the train of though that allowed for this assumed that certain groups of people had certain unchangeable dispositions. In the first of the three, for example, the African American (the term was not around at that point, of course) was looked upon as by his very nature a savage, perhaps educatable, but always lesser than the least respected white in the nation. This view was common, and illuminates what in those days was a fact, and what is in modern times still somewhat true; the people in power were the ones doing the judging. Throughout much of U.S. history this is understood to have been the white male, who was not above delagating even his own kind to lesser positions. Indeed, by this fact, the point made in the previous paragraph can perhaps be reiterated in a more explative way. Women, believed to be inferior for hundreds of years in Europe, also had to deal with the concept of their natural dispositions. Beyond blatant sexism, there was also the idea that women had the distinction of being by nature virtuous and weak willed, an idea that reformists eventually attacked. Descrimination against immigrants was a problem of a different vein. The more came to the U.S the more jobs they took, making it harder for natural born Americans becuase the newcomers could be given lesser wages. Therefore, an influx of massive amounts of people resulted; this led to more crime and depravity among those immgrants when they were forced to live in dangerously close proximity to one another, in overwhelming numbers. It was easy to understand how a soul could be damaged, but the issue was seized upon to make accusations that foreigners were violent and inferior.
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