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qwlauren35

(6,145 posts)
Sun Oct 18, 2020, 11:59 PM Oct 2020

How to Meet People Different From You

https://www.yesmagazine.org/social-justice/2020/10/13/meet-new-people-diversify-friends/?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=YESDaily_20201014&utm_content=YESDaily_20201014%20CID_ef5aa90bfbe59233d17860beac8ee429&utm_source=CM&utm_term=Read%20the%20full%20story&fbclid=IwAR2W3BrGgiWd4YPIeXgvi48XO1PdL4zLPfuMmI_yw4yCuFjLataoUzCVBoo

An analysis of more than 1,000 wedding photos demonstrated that Whites, in particular, are unlikely to have Black friends who are close enough to serve as their bridesmaids and groomsmen. A 2016 study showed that White Americans’ social networks are 91% White; Black Americans’ friends and acquaintances are 83% Black. Americans also tend to spend time mostly with people of similar religious persuasions and political orientations. And our neighborhoods are increasingly homogenous.


The benefits, though, are huge—not just for us individually, but for the U.S. as a whole. In fact, getting to know people who are different from ourselves is perhaps the biggest thing we can do to reduce some of the prejudice, discrimination, and hate that’s become so common around the country, both in person and on social media.

That’s not hyperbole.

In 2016, Gallup researchers found that support for President Trump (then candidate Trump) was clearly associated with living in White, segregated neighborhoods. “The racial and ethnic isolation of Whites at the ZIP code level is one of the strongest predictors of Trump support,” their report read. The people most likely to agree with Trump’s statements calling undocumented immigrants “animals” and Black Lives Matter protesters “looters,” “thugs,” and “other forms of lowlife and scum” are the ones with the least exposure to racial and ethnic minorities.


Logically, the converse would seem to be true as well: that more mixing between different types of people is the key to reducing bigotry and bias. That we can chip away at the racism and other prejudices that lie in our own hearts, whether or not we’re aware of them, by engaging with people who are different from us. And that we can rally around policies that might not affect us personally if we know people who might benefit.

And it is. In 1954, sociologist Gordon Allport first presented the “contact hypothesis,” which posits that interactions between people from different groups promotes greater understanding and better relations between them. That finding has remained constant over time.



the effect increases with intimacy. “What we see is that deep, close contact across group lines, like friendships or meaningful relationships, tends to be stronger in changing how we feel toward other groups,” says Tropp.

So simply mixing with different kinds of people—passing one another in the aisles at Target, for example, or sitting near each other on public transit—is good; interacting with them, like at a meeting or across the counter of a business establishment, is better. Best of all, of course, is a close friendship, the kind where you socialize in one another’s homes, call each other when you’re down, or borrow money when you’re broke.


But getting there is the tricky part.

According to author and psychologist Deborah Plummer, Americans have become increasingly siloed in the 15 years between her 2004 book about cross-racial friendships and her most recent one, Some of My Friends Are…

She believes much of that is the product of technology and our ability to customize what we consume, from shopping and entertainment to news and ideas. And because our environments have become even more limited during this pandemic, the effect has likely deepened over the past year. “So our worlds, even though they become much larger in some ways, are smaller in the sense that I can create my own bubble,” says Plummer.

As a result, we may simply have fewer places where we intersect with people unlike ourselves. Even the internet, in all its vastness, further constricts that bubble in that we seek out others who look, act, and believe like we do, and information that supports and affirms our ideologies. So no matter how open we are to other perspectives, no matter how much self-examination we’ve done to examine our own biases or “check our privilege,” if we’re still putting ourselves in group think spaces, we’re missing one of the biggest vehicles for transformation.

So how do you change that?

“It’s about intentionality,” says Hope Kelaher, author of Here to Make Friends: How to Make Friends as an Adult. “You can start with things that you’re interested in, but also things you’re curious about. You want to have a diverse realm of interests: The more diverse they are, the more likely you are to accumulate diverse people as friends.”

That means broadening where you go and what you do. If you have a hobby in which most of the participants are the same age or economic status, could you expand your interests slightly? For example, if you love modern dance but the community is homogenous, consider trying other forms of dance, such as tap or hip-hop, that tend to attract a wider variety of people.

Or frequent minority-owned businesses or institutions, like libraries or locally owned bookstores, in other parts of town; aside from meeting people there, you may see advertisements for lectures, meetings or other events at which the public is welcome. Charities, nonprofits, and social justice groups are often looking for assistance and tend to attract volunteers from a range of backgrounds. Or if you’re religious, seek out a spiritual community that makes diversity a priority.

Commitment is key.
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How to Meet People Different From You (Original Post) qwlauren35 Oct 2020 OP
I have always loved getting to know people from other cultures. Maraya1969 Oct 2020 #1
i live where i live so my kids wouldnt grow up like i did. mopinko Oct 2020 #2
One possible answer qwlauren35 Oct 2020 #3
fear of finding out mopinko Oct 2020 #4
Hmmm... qwlauren35 Oct 2020 #6
I was six when my dad got stationed in Morocco. panader0 Oct 2020 #5

Maraya1969

(22,474 posts)
1. I have always loved getting to know people from other cultures.
Mon Oct 19, 2020, 12:49 AM
Oct 2020

When, as a kid we moved to central Jersey for my dad's job. He was from a rural farm in Canada and my mom was from a rural farm in WV. So when I met the Jewish families around us I was fascinated. I loved the bagels and whitefish and lox spreads and learning about how different they were from us.

I've only been to a black gospel church once but it was great! I suggest anyone who is Christian to go. It is so uplifting.

mopinko

(70,070 posts)
2. i live where i live so my kids wouldnt grow up like i did.
Mon Oct 19, 2020, 01:11 AM
Oct 2020

i lived on the rich side of a blue collar town. it was once 2 towns. the workers in one, management in the other.
we werent rich, but i didnt grow up w any hate of any kind. i found the place boring af, tho. visiting my aunts and uncles in the city was one of the best things about my childhood.

i moved to chicago at 27. my family was from there, and the hood i first moved to was worse than my hometown.
the place i live now is one of the most diverse zip codes in the country. it is a regular microcosm of the world. the local grade school, where my kids went, had 30 languages spoken in the homes of the other kids.
lots of gay ppl, too. and some freaks of most flavors.

my kids are citizens of the world. they grew up not even seeing color. like literally, they once pointed to a white girl and asked if i thought it was a kid from the hood who had a white mom and a nigerian dad.

there is a store or bodega here you can get anything from anywhere. heck, there are panaderias from almost every state in mexico.

i have no idea why ppl would want to live somewhere lily white.

qwlauren35

(6,145 posts)
3. One possible answer
Mon Oct 19, 2020, 09:54 AM
Oct 2020
i have no idea why ppl would want to live somewhere lily white.


Fear of the unknown.

mopinko

(70,070 posts)
4. fear of finding out
Mon Oct 19, 2020, 10:08 AM
Oct 2020

that being white doesnt make them any better than anyone else.
that's all they have.

panader0

(25,816 posts)
5. I was six when my dad got stationed in Morocco.
Mon Oct 19, 2020, 10:20 AM
Oct 2020

I saw a very different culture--I saw kids my age herding camels and smoking cigarettes.
Every break from school, my mom would fly me and my brother to Europe (space available) and I got to see
many wonderful things, so different from the US.
Later, when he was stationed in Hawaii, we traveled to Hong Kong, Thailand, Taiwan, Vietnam (just before the
shit) and more. Travel and exposure to different cultures is a very good thing, very eye-opening and educational.
I have traveled quite a bit in Mexico, Belize and a bit in Costa Rica. I love the Hispanic culture. If I hit the lottery,
I will travel again. (And build a children's clinic on the border.)

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