Empathy [he/him]

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 28th, 2023

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  • If it were the US vs another democratic country, I would feel like that too.

    I’m particularly concerned with China (and Russia) because:

    • They are not a democratic country.
    • They do not have freedom of speech like most countries
    • As far as I perceive, they are generally enemies of well-intentioned countries.

    I might have a different perspective though. I’m a fairly recent US immigrant from Canada.

    Edit: I’d like to add, my tone may come across wrong over written text, I’m just trying to understand people’s overall perspective and whether mine is different, I’m not trying to argue and I’m not upset at you nor any of the commenters I’ve seen on similar posts.












  • I understand, I’m a white cis man and I used to feel this way sometimes when reading things like this, but my perspective has since changed.

    The way I see it, Beehaw is actively trying to be an inclusive space, as opposed to a lot of other online spaces which really aren’t so inclusive.

    My expectation would be that, naturally, POC, women, and lgbtq+ people would hang out more in inclusive spaces than non-inclusive ones, while non-minorities may be evenly spread of even favor non-inclusive spaces. Therefore, I would expect demographics of inclusive spaces to have an overall significantly smaller percentage of non-minorities.

    However, some of these numbers look relatively close to national demographics (at-least based on those I see on Wikipedia for the US), and may even have a smaller percentage of minorities than national average. I don’t know much about statistics and I’m not a mathematician, there’s probably all sorts of factors going into why those numbers are the way they are. Still, instinctively, those numbers look unfortunate to me, since they don’t reflect my expectations of a successfully inclusive community.

    I hope nobody feels left out.