Personal addresses must ever be nuanced when critical, therefore its better to address the group rather then a single user.
Racism Is Not a Disease
When a user states that racism is a mental illness, it reveals a simplistic worldview: black and white morality. I can say or do whatever I want because I am morally superior, and you cannot, because you are racist. You have an illness; I am blessed. The world is not black and white—it is an infinite shade of grey. But some things are fixed: racism is not a disease. Clinical definitions of mental illness involve measurable dysfunction or impairment in cognition or emotion. Prejudice, by contrast, is learned, socially reinforced, and politically mediated. It is not a dysfunction of the brain; it is a choice perpetuated by culture, history, and social incentives.
Racism is not a disease you catch or a virus you quarantine. It is an ideology enforced by fear, hatred, and political convenience. Pretending it is a mental illness is not scholarship—it is cowardice and self-righteousness masquerading as science. It allows those in power to shrug and the indifferent to look the other way, while generations suffer. Human cruelty, when trivialized, becomes easy to ignore. As one user put it, regarding the famine, Gazans “launched a Weight Watchers campaign.” The absurdity is breathtaking: human suffering reduced to punchline. In this worldview, self-blame is impossible, responsibility is optional, and cruelty is excusable. Social patterns, history, politics—poof—they vanish behind a veil of imaginary illness.
When rhetoric turns into decree—“Those who killed, raped, maimed, and played with human limbs are animals”—or when a user declares, “We will just kill them all from the skies,” these statements are racist and dehumanizing. They reduce entire populations to targets, erase individual humanity, and frame violence as not only justified but inevitable. Racism is neither a sickness nor a joke, it is a choice, and it’s clear that choices have been made.
Racism thrives not because people are “sick” but because they are taught to hate.
When I said racism is a mental illness, I did not mean it in a clinical or psychiatric sense. I meant that the way some people react to Israel / Jews, automatically blaming it regardless of who started what, what the facts are, or how events end, shows the same rigidity and irrationality that define pathological behavior.
This is not about political disagreement. It is about a reflexive hatred that ignores evidence and feeds on moral obsession. You can debate policies, governments, or leaders, but when every outcome is twisted to fit a single narrative that Israel is always guilty, that is not critical thinking. It is fixation.
Calling that mindset a mental illness was shorthand for something deeper: a social and moral pathology that confuses bias for virtue
This post was edited by Many_Names on Oct 15 2025 05:49am