My big issue with this hypersensitivity epidemic is that I think we've lost a true sense of what we should be sensitive about. There are things I'm sure we could all agree on that require our sensitivity. Here's a couple of examples - discussions of child abuse with people that have been abused, movie or video game selection when hanging out with friends who have seen combat in Iraq or Afghanistan, listening to a girl relate a story about how she was raped. These things require us to be sensitive to the people around us, and most of us probably are. But when people become hypersensitive I think the lines between truly sensitive topics and people's personal preferences become blurred.
This post is inspired by the Muslim community center being built 2 blocks from ground zero in New York City. The debate is raging with some people saying Muslims should have just as much right to build there as anyone else, and some saying it is a provocation meant to celebrate the September 11th murders.
It may be that the people building this place truly just want to have a nice community center for everyone to enjoy, and they absolutely have a right to build it wherever they want. My question, is building it right there being sensitive to the people who lost family and friends in the attacks? Couldn't it be built in another part of the city and serve the same purpose?
1 comment:
I do not think the Muslim Community Center can be built any where else because the purpose of the center is political and to humiliate America.
I feel the hypersensitivity and the
lack of sensitivity are the results of
selfishness and the caring about others falling to an all time low.
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