Persecution
Persecution as it is used below is persistent harrassment, abuse, degradation etc. heaped upon an individual or group by a different group based upon perceived differences.
With the exception of Monotheistic Religious Persecution, persecution normally arises from an over-generalization of the distinction between the parties of a conflict. The intrinsic motivation is primarily that conflict arises because of beliefs and desires which are not directly discernable aspects of a person; when such beliefs or desires are themselves believed to correspond to easily visible distinctions, the easily visible distinctions are substituted. Generally it is a majority group persecuting a minority group since the reverse is usually impractical (but see South Africa), however majority groups often inspire resentment and where they are locally a minority they may find themselves persecuted (see Harlem, New York[?]).
While the conflict involved is usually violent armed conflict such as war, there are prominent examples where persecution arose from sustained economic advantage or reproductive excess (i.e. the threat of reversing the minority status). However such persecution often develops into armed conflict, erasing the distinction.
Opportunistic Persecution: it often happens that an orator will take advantage of an existing current of resentment (suspicion of advantage) to publicly identify a group with some trend as a means of enhancing his own political power by mobilizing his group to persecution. Often this is a direct invocation of Fallacy of First Order Control. This opportunism can also be applied in reverse, where a minority orator provokes persecution in order to unify a minority movement.
|
|