Genocide: Human Nature And Stereotypes

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To begin, human nature is claimed as a set of characteristics given to all humans, it is therefore declared essentially historical to the extent of being unchangeable. However, human development is something that is true to an individual and unique to solely himself through their decisions. It is in our human nature to be vulnerable to imperfection, such as nefarious actions. The philosophy of existentialism states that we are the creators of our own nature. Therefore, with our nature consisting of doing wrong to others, our nature allows for us to draw conjectures of why we do such horrific actions, even to the extent of the most dreadful injustices.
Moving on, many often make the mistake of creating stereotypes, those ones generally being extreme. Native Americans were either seen as being harmonious people by how they lived with nature or being uncivilized because of their unappreciated uniqueness.
The positive stereotype of them refers to them as being people of peace with no true worries. As a European once said:
They live in a golden age, and do not surround their properties with ditches, walls, or hedges. They live in open gardens, without laws or books, without judges, and they …show more content…

Raphael Lemkin, a lawyer that is said to have created the term “genocide”, as being a strategy, saying it is the mass murder of ethnic or national groups, past or present. Moreover, it derives from latin “genos”and “cide” which together exactly mean the killing or murder of an entire tribe or people. Article II and III of the United Nation 's Genocide Convention states that genocide consists of the actions or intents of killing members of a group, causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group, deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part, imposing measures intended to prevent births within a group, and forcibly transferring children of the group to another