Study: Diversity + Proximity = War

Iceman

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November 21, 2013 by CH


A new study concludes that placing different groups of people in close contact results in conflict.


As reported in the American Journal of Community Psychology, Zachary Neal found that neighborhood integration and cohesion cannot co-exist.

“Is a better world possible? Unfortunately, these findings show it may not be possible to simultaneously create communities that are both fully integrated and fully cohesive,” Neal said. “In essence, when it comes to neighborhood desegregation and social cohesion, you can’t have your cake and eat it too.”

The reason has to do with how people form relationships. Neal said people usually develop relationships with others who are close rather than far away, and similar rather than different from themselves (be it through race, religion, social class, etc.).

Neal ran computer modeling of different fictional neighborhoods and, after millions of trials, consistently found the same thing: The more integrated a neighborhood is, the less socially cohesive it becomes, and vice versa.

“These trends are so strong, it’s unlikely policy can change it,” Neal said.


CH is long on record asserting, by way of a digestible axiom, that diversity + proximity = war. A few readers agreed; most either rejected the formulation outright, or panderingly mewled it was hyperbolic. But, as usual, CH has been proven right by ♥science♥. Not that the imprimatur of science was necessarily needed; friggin’ common sense and honing that increasingly rare ability to observe the real world with open eyes and pricked ears was enough to comprehend the limitations imposed on the malevolent utopians by intractable human nature.


Read Here: https://heartiste.wordpress.com/2013/11/21/study-diversity-proximity-war/
 
When I was on active duty, it was common to observe blacks to sitting with blacks and and whites sitting with whites, and so forth, during chow time. As the study says, people like to hang with those who have a common experience or background or culture. A guy who likes rock and roll isn't going to hang out with guys who listen to rap or guys who listen to country.

No war broke out between us. In fact, we were brothers. We prosecuted war on other countries, not between ourselves.
 
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