The concept of race has its roots in Christian Nationalist views of "inferior" people
The concept of race has its roots in Christian Nationalist views of "inferior" people

The concept of race has its roots in Christian Nationalist views of "inferior" people - LGBTQ Nation

Article titles like these always feel like a bit of a stretch. I would think the concept of race would extend as far back as homo sapiens vs neanderthals.
Obviously race is also a part of Christianity, but if I remember correctly the most relevant thing Jesus said about race is that salvation wasn't just for the Jews and that God's love extended to everyone. Weird how far off track Christianity can get when used as a populist tool for oppression.
I mean… not really. Neanderthals were a distinct species and were far more genetically distinct than any modern human populations are from each other. There isn’t any scientifically valid definition of race that remotely resembles its use in common parlance. Certainly different cultures exist. But we don’t define race by culture exactly. Different physical traits exist as well, but they often overlap between different races, so they don’t completely define race either.
Race is an artificial amalgam of different concepts used to rank people hierarchically. It isn’t real in any physical sense, but only exists as an idea to justify stratifications on society.
The comment I'm replying to is not merely opinion, by the way; it's the widely shared consensus in modern biology and anthropology.
Neanderthals weren't a distinct species otherwise we couldn't have interbred with them.
Christianity doesn't follow Jesus; it follows Paul. The "Christ" part is marketing.
Too true! If you actually pay attention the later fan fiction (letters to the churches) doesn’t match up with what Jesus was recorded saying by Matt, Mark, Luke and John but especially John. But of course the people who claim to follow the Bible seem to rarely read and contemplate it.
It just struck me -
Ironically enough, in a way, these stories are essentially a retelling of Adam's fall from grace, just with some of the details changed.
The basic gist of the story is identical - humans were living in a state of grace right up until the moment that the evil [serpent/christian nationalists/etc.] corrupted them with [knowledge/racism/etc.].
Though I don't feel it myself, there must be some common gut level appeal to that whole idea.
(edited for clarity)
My own take is that the story of Adam is simply intended to teach us that self awareness means you are capable of acting against your own self interest; the greater your "knowledge", the greater your capacity for "sin". Whether as an individual or a community. But some sexist bigots managed to somehow make it a story about the evil nature of women instead, which is total bull.
So yeah, that's gonna be a very universal idea.
Yeah, that's a cool observation and it makes sense. There's an idea that there's really only one "story", which is the hero's journey. I think it might be a fundamental way of how people frame their experiences and observations.
Probably back to at least the cambrian explosion (which was caused by predators finally showing up.)
Even before predators, with everything being relatively peaceful, tribalism would still give evolutionary advantage; by ensuring your team got resources.
The concept of race definitely came from the concept of “other”, with our understanding of “other” expanding as we became increasingly social.
But it’s still there, under the surface. Which is why it’s so damn hard to stamp out…. And why the repukes are trying so damn hard to otherwise LGBTQ- it triggers tribalism and fear of the other and they don’t have anything else.
Why start so late? Matter and antimatter.