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The (Relative) Ease of Dehumanization
The (Relative) Ease of Dehumanization

Yahoo

time28-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

The (Relative) Ease of Dehumanization

Getty Images A recent Michigan Advance article, 'Michigan leaders call attention to the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous people,' painted a poignant picture of the lack of attention scores of missing indigenous people have been given by the criminal justice system and society in general (nearly 4,200 missing persons cases have gone unsolved, nationwide). Obviously, this isn't a purely Michigan problem. Disregarding people, specifically women of native origin, that have gone missing is a worldwide issue, from the reservations of Arizona to the Outback in Australia, including Michigan, the majority tends to turn a blind eye to classes of people that the society, writ large, does not view as worthy of concern. We see this over and over again, but not only in the world of law enforcement. It is a general practice to put time and effort into finding missing women, regardless of race or gender or profession, but the importance that the voting public puts on those victims is directly related to the amount of budget applied to those cases. There is a stark contrast when a member of the majority, say a Gabby Petito, goes missing. Large scale investigations are well-funded and equipped with manpower and there is an endless stream of media coverage. What if Gabby Petito was a Navajo woman? Would there be the same urgency? Or what if Gabby Petito were a sex worker? Homeless? This is an extreme example, of course, but the relative ease of dehumanization (the act of relegating a group of people socially as 'less than human' by a majority of society) is something that isn't solely in the world of extreme examples. Every day we dehumanize groups of people for any number of reasons. When we do that, it is easy to disregard them. It is also easy to harm them because, in a social appraisal, they aren't really people, right? The phenomenon is not limited to the world of crime and investigation. We can simply look to the Michigan House GOP's attempt to legislate trans athlete participation as a way of providing safety for (italics are my emphasis) real girl athletes. This means that the existence of real girls is threatened by the existence of unreal girls in an obvious act of dehumanization. It is like using the term 'illegal alien' as opposed to undocumented person. In both of these instances, the danger to the 'non-human' subjects of this type of rhetoric is apparent. State Rep. Matt Koleszar (D-Plymouth), in opposition to the bill, noted 'Make no mistake, this legislation and the rhetoric that surrounds it could get somebody killed.' The words of the bill matter. It is immaterial that the Governor is unlikely to sign such a bill if it even made it to her desk, the damage is done in the nomenclature. The speed at which this can happen is stunning. We learned a great deal from Philip Zimbardo's Stanford Prison Experiment in 1971. The ethical concerns of the experiment helped lead to the creation of institutional review boards to police psychological ethics. In the experiment, Zimbardo collected twenty-four male college students with some assigned to be prisoner and some assigned to be guards. The prisoners were subjected to real arrest procedures and placed in cells while the guards were given uniforms and authority over the prisoners. The experiment was scheduled to last two weeks but was terminated after six days. The prisoners became increasingly sadistic towards the prisoners while the prisoners effectively became submissive and bought into their own dehumanization. At its core, the experiment showed the power of situational forces on behavior and just how quick and easy we can react to the label a person wears. In this case, it was guard (power) or prisoner (less than human). The real shock is at the speed this can happen. Now, as we expand this, think of what one hundred years of systemic dehumanization can do to a society? How do you feel about prisoners, for example. Not individuals, but that group. How do you feel about police officers? Again, not individuals, but the group. As Zimbardo showed us, sometimes all it takes is a uniform for us to label a group as 'pigs' or 'animals' and treat them accordingly. We don't escape this in our faith systems, either. The dangers of using dehumanizing language in terms of antisemitic, anti-Muslim, anti-Christian, or any other faith of choice does nothing more than put either metaphorical, or in the case of most world conflicts at this point, literal crosshairs on the subject of the dehumanizing language. The innocent human beings being killed in both Palestine and Israel at this point in history, depending on which side your political rhetoric lands on, are either victims or 'deserved it.' This is the same process we use to pay little attention to missing sex workers or indigenous women and the same process a group of college students used to treat their classmates like animals in 1971. Beverly Eileen Mitchell takes a deep, and disturbing look, at the process in terms of dehumanizing language being components of White supremacy and antisemitism in her 2009 book Plantations and Death Camps: Religion, Ideology, and Human Dignity from Minneapolis Fortress Press. She writes, 'The absence of empathetic imagination—the inability to see members of the 'pariah' group as being like oneself—is the psychological foundation for participation in dehumanizing a fellow human being'. This is where we have to assess our own participation in dehumanization. Those tiny, innocuous moments in our daily discussions can be harmful and carry with it the danger of relegating a group of human beings as pariah. The same way many of us bristle at the thought of being called 'Libtards,' for example, as we are categorized into a fundamentally flawed person unworthy of consideration and potential violence is equally as dangerous as considering a group of people 'MAGAts,' equitably categorizing the obverse of a political rhetoric as also fundamentally flawed and unworthy of consideration and potential violence. It is that ease that we must be aware of. How we discuss other groups of people have direct consequences on how those people are treated. Be careful, because words matter. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Koleszar announces run for Michigan Senate
Koleszar announces run for Michigan Senate

Yahoo

time10-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Koleszar announces run for Michigan Senate

Rep. Matt Koleszar (D-Plymouth) discusses his legislation, HB 5803, that would reduce school district contributions toward teacher retirement and use the excess money to supplement classroom needs. June 25, 2024. Photo by Jon King. State Rep. Matt Koleszar (D-Plymouth Twp). announced Wednesday that he is running for state Senate. Koleszar is running in the 5th District, which was redrawn for the 2026 elections after the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan ruled in 2023 that the Michigan Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission violated the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution by drawing 13 state legislative boundaries predominantly on the basis of race. No incumbent senators reside within the new district boundaries, which encompass Canton, Garden City, Inkster, Plymouth, Plymouth Township and Westland, Koleszar's campaign said. Koleszar is a former teacher and was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives in 2019. He chaired the House Education Committee in 2023 and 2024 when Democrats held the majority. 'Teachers are some of the hardest working professionals I know, and every single day as an educator turned legislator, I have taken that work ethic to Lansing,' Koleszar said. Under Michigan's updated term-limit laws, Koleszar would be eligible to serve four more years in the Michigan Legislature – one full Senate term – once his current House term expires. Among the signature achievements cited by Koleszar was his sponsorship of the state's hands-free driving legislation, which was signed into law in 2023. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Voter registration amendment proposal splits state lawmakers
Voter registration amendment proposal splits state lawmakers

Yahoo

time12-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Voter registration amendment proposal splits state lawmakers

LANSING, Mich. (WLNS) — Republicans in the state House of Representatives have introduced a joint resolution proposing an amendment to the Michigan Constitution regarding elections—making registering to vote require not just identification, but proof of citizenship. This amendment would be put on the ballot in the next general election. This comes after a similar bill, the , was reintroduced in Congress. That bill would similarly require individuals to provide documentary proof of U.S. citizenship, prohibiting states from processing voter registration applications without it. Non-citizen voting is already illegal in Michigan—and carries criminal penalties—but would expand requirements for voter registration to verify citizenship. If your citizenship is not verified, you could only cast a provisional ballot with photo identification—which would not be counted unless your citizenship is verified within six days of the election. Democratic lawmakers held a press conference Tuesday denouncing the resolution as a 'fake solution to a fake problem,' pointing out that voters usually support measures that make it easier to vote. 'As Michigan state legislators, we should be working to honor the will of the people and protect every citizen's right to vote,' says Matt Koleszar (D-Plymouth). 'This legislation is a spit in the face to the will of Michigan voters.' Currently, to register to vote, you must provide proof of residency and, if registering in person, a photo ID, such as a driver's license or state ID card. If you do not have a photo ID, you can sign an swearing that you do not have one and then register to vote. However, the proposed amendment would require verification of U.S. citizenship to vote—either by presenting documents proving citizenship or having one's citizenship verified by the Secretary of State. However, the proposal itself does not specifically outline what counts as proof of citizenship. According to the , the following documents are generally accepted as proof of citizenship: Birth certificate U.S. Passport Certificate of Citizenship Naturalization Certificate The defines documentary proof of citizenship as the following: A form of identification compliant with REAL ID that indicates U.S. citizenship A valid U.S. passport An official military ID and service record showing place of birth as the U.S. A valid government photo ID showing place of birth as the U.S. A valid photo ID paired with: A birth certificate issued by a state, local, or tribal government An extract from a hospital's record of birth An adoption decree indicating place of birth as the U.S. A Consular Report of Birth Abroad A Naturalization Certificate A Certificate of Citizanship An American Indian Card with the classification 'KIC' At the conference, Democrats noted that not everyone has documents that could prove citizenship on hand—and it costs money to get them. Acquiring a copy of your birth certificate in the state of Michigan could cost you a $34 processing fee, $12 if you order it online, $12.50 if you do so with a credit card, and even $12 to expedite it. can have you out of anywhere from $30 to more than $160, depending on your situation. The resolution also outlines other potential changes to voter registration. You can read a copy of the resolution as it was introduced below. 2025-HIJR-B_186495Download Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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