Hillary Clinton: To err is human, to empathize is superhuman
Like anyone who is trying to understand how normal people get drawn into a life of hate and violence, I went for a canoe ride.
Shannon Foley is a former white supremacist who now works to deprogram and rehabilitate people leaving hate groups. Shannon took my daughter, Chelsea, and me canoeing near her home in Athens, Ga. It wasnt lost on me as we paddled along that we werent far from the site of the last documented mass lynching in America, Moores Ford Bridge, where a mob of 20 armed White men shot and killed two Black couples in 1946. One of the women killed was seven months pregnant. To this day, no one has been held accountable for their murders.
Back in the 1990s, from the time she was 15 until she was 20, Shannon was active in the violent white supremacy movement. She attended Ku Klux Klan rallies, tagged public property with swastikas, assaulted people of color, tear-gassed an LGBTQ nightclub and underwent paramilitary training to prepare for the race war her neo-Nazi leaders promised was imminent. Her comrades were white supremacists like the fanatics who years later carried torches through Charlottesville chanting Jews will not replace us! and like many of the insurrectionists who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Then, remarkably, she managed to get herself out and change her life. Now, Shannon helps people escape violent extremism. Shes seen how the dangerous, hateful movement has metastasized. The rise of social media allowed white power leaders to more easily reach and radicalize thousands of recruits. Hate-fueled memes and videos circulate online, evading detection in the dark corners of the internet with coded hashtags and innuendo. Things only got worse when Donald Trump publicly and proudly fanned the flames of racial resentment from the campaign trail and then the White House, emboldening white supremacists to emerge from the shadows.
https://wapo.st/3TFmQyF
cyclonefence
(4,873 posts)It's basic human--humanity, if you will--and a normal person grows up knowing and learning how to empathize. A sociopath cannot empathize, and that is not normal.
Normal people--everyday, *normal* people--empathize. If you can't empathize, you are not normal. Simple as that.
Learning to empathize at a late age is wonderful, but it is not superhuman.