Powers of Discrimination & SARS
March 31, 2003 at 10:40 pm | In yulelogStories | 1 CommentHere in Victoria British Columbia, our local paper, The Times-Colonist, included an article about SARS’s effect on one of the city’s private girls’ school. St. Margaret’s, which on March 31 ended a two-week spring break, is asking 18 of its students to wear surgical masks when they return to school. The girls in question are Asian and the school worries that they might have been in contact with SARS while visiting relatives in Hong Kong or Taiwan. Island-based Victoria, while slightly off the beaten superhighway of mainland Vancouver, is nonetheless home to a significant Asian population and a glorious, thriving Chinatown at its heart. What an interesting situation: how would you feel, as a 6- or 12-year old girl, one of 18 in a school of 434, about having to wear a surgical mask to class? How would you feel if all the other 17 girls had, as you do, black hair and almond-shaped eyes, while through the school halls the majority, freckled and blonde, continued unmasked? When the HIV virus began manifesting among the homosexual population of the west, it also seemed easy to pick out carriers or potential liabilities. Has it helped us to use our human powers of discrimination in this way? Not really. Have we helped less fortunate nations, particularly in Africa, where AIDS is exploding into such mega-dimensions as to worry even the CIA about the global instability that’s in store, to conquer this scourge? Nope. Could our powers of discrimination help us to see our way to preventing the further unfolding of this disaster? Perhaps. Death and disease do not discriminate. Eventually, we’re all going through the turnstile, regardless of race, financial status, orientation, gender. In the interim, we discriminate — that is: discern, think, differentiate — in myriad ways to protect ourselves. But we show the limits of our powers of discrimination when we end up cultivating just our little piece of turf. And while death does not discriminate, we have learned to do so in many ways, often negatively, and have translated this survival instinct into all areas of our lives and called it meaning. We use it in higher thinking, art, philosophy, religion, international finance, politics, relations with the local Chamber of Commerce, the sublime, the ridiculous, and in every situation where a cross-road presents itself. Our steps here make up our qualitative relationship to life. Discrimination is a thinking tool that can make your paths larger or smaller. Faced with SARS, who needs discrimination that’s fueled by fear and used to heighten racial profiling and prejudice?
It Worked!
March 28, 2003 at 11:57 am | In yulelogStories | Comments Off on It Worked!Welcome to your new weblog. This is the first post to prove that it worked. Click on the title of this item for tips on getting started with your new weblog.
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