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The Statistician's Lie: Generalization is OK
One of the greatest weaknesses of the human mind is its dependancy on generality. Without classifying people, places, events, and phenomena into a variety of different categories, it is difficult to understand the nature of our experiences. This dependency, vile as it may be, is inescapable, we must generalize and classify in order to place things in a frame of reference from which we can interpret them. However, when we allow these generalizations and classifications to affect our interaction with one another, we take on the risk of error. When this error impinges upon the freedom a fellow human, this generality has become unacceptable.
There are people, however, who believe these generalities are acceptable. The allure of the simplicity of the general rule blinds them from the fundamental fallaciousness of their reasoning. These are the same people who believed that blacks should not be allowed to vote since most of them lacked the education to fully understand the complex issues they were supposed to vote based upon. That generality has passed, and so has that attitude, but the fundamental misconceptions upon which it was based remain. The fact is, as soon as you start asking whether blacks should be allowed to vote, gays should be allowed to marry, children should be allowed to drink, and the elderly should be allowed to drive, you have already violated the Natural Rights of each of those individuals to be treated as an individual rather than as a member of some superficial category. A flawed human construct created by flawed human minds.
So long as these toxic ideas continue to poison our society, putrefy our culture, and contaminate our laws, the very thought of calling ourselves a "free" society can be considered nothing less than an act of lunacy.
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