Question:

What would an anthropologist ask about racial discrimination?

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  1. As we are all descended from Noah and his three sons and their wives, there can be no different races as such. Only different descendants, so, our line can be any one of four, Noah, Ham Shep & Jephath,  the environment took care of our looks.


  2. So to further this as an original independent invention because the topic is obviously not new,

    The anthropologist would have to decide and determine what strategies, the distinct ethnic-affiliated  person needs to know, or do, when presented with other ethnicities that cause them internalized suffering. This means that there would be easy do-it-yourself solutions for the individual to use.

    The uningaged anthropologist would have to ask emically:



    What is it most like, to experience this internalized suffering directly inspired by the subject outside/problematic ethnicity, and what can be immediately done for or by the subject ethnicity that experiences the internalizations to alliviate the internalized/acculturated symptoms they experience, that also can be a universal solution  or foundation to a solution for other ethnicities that experience this internalization.

  3. A good anthropologist must be astounded that a lack of understanding can create such a divisive world community. His question might be; don't humans understand that they had a common ancestor.

  4. To understand racial discrimination, an anthropologist would want to learn what practices are involved and the beliefs behind them.  Who is defined as the 'other'?  Why are they believed inferior?  What about them is inferior/what should they not be able to do and why?  What evidence do the discriminators have to support their theories or why do they belief these theories are rational/logical?

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