Do you ever doubt that you may be wrong?The sad thing is that prejudice isn't heriditary, but it is taught at a vey early age by the parents. So, one could say that about the posters who are prejudiced, that it's not their fault. They've been socialised into that psyche from a very early age in their family upbringing.
I'm glad that you lefties admit this, because indoctrinating the young with lefty clap trap is all part of your plan. Catch them young, ideally dressing it up as education, you can prevent then from thinking for themselves and forming their own opinions and natural conclusions. Because, 9 times out of ten, the conclusions will inevitably be what the 'lefty who know what's best for us' brigade won't want or like. The tyranny of multiculturalism can be implanted into young malleable minds, so that they almost celebrate the fact that their country has been given away and trashed for ever. They can also be primed to shout down anyone who dares question this with the 'R' word. Perish the thought that their parents may know better, because their parents will know how things were, and what has been lost.
As for being prejudiced, it's just natural human nature to be discerning about invasions of your territory, especially by less advanced, more aggressive and culturally inferior peoples. You lefty, diversity-peddlers dress this up by lying that it brings advantages to the host population. However, you can never say convincingly what these 'advantages' actually are. You just try to close the arguments down with the same tired, predictable words.
I have and always continue to re-assess my beliefs.
I was reading a book a little while ago. A book of fiction (C J Sansom's new one: Lamentation), but sometimes fiction writers come out with some superb observations.
Allow me to reproduce the passage here:
"I have been prey to doubt all my life," he said seriously. "For a time, as once I told you, I doubted God's existence. But I believed that if faith and doubt battle together within a human soul, that soul becomes the stronger and more honest for it."
"Perhaps. Though I have far more doubt than faith these days." I hesitated. "You know, I have always considered that people who were unshakeable in their faith, on either side, to be the most dangerous sort of men. But just recently I wonder whether that is wrong, and rather it is those , like some of the highest at court - Wriothesley, or Rich - who shift from one side to the other to further their ambitions, who are truly the worst men.'
Perhaps you'd do well to welcome some doubt in your own views occasionally.
Of course we all doubt ourselves from time to time. It's part of the human condition, and contemplation is probably at it's highest as we enter the Christmas period. Reflection helps to prioritise thoughts and plan ahead for future challenges.
However, I only have to pick up a newspaper, or turn on the news to see that all doubts are unwarranted. The evidence of the multiple, self-inflicted calamities here and abroad are there for anyone to see. Only those with alternative agendas would deny them, either through guilt at being complicit, or some kind of self loathing.