E.R.R

E.R.R

Monday, July 2, 2012

RACIST POLICEMEN FLEXING THEIR EVIL POWER ON THE HARMLESS



  1. Cop, you will pay one way or the other !
    How can a person like this be a police officer? Did he join to protect people at first but ended up abusing his position after for racisim? Or did he just join to be cruel and racist like these images show?
    We're supposed to feel safe 
    Photo: Black People : Study shows Caucazoids lack empathy for other "ethnic" group

We Black people are brainwashed through media, freemason, religion, socities to like other races, to think that we're all the same... 
That's why the masses of Blacks have problems understanding the general fonction(not individual) of others races, that's why we're in this state on mental enslavement. Listen to your white friends how they talk about your community(yourself) and that's how they talk about you.  Racism is a system. We've to learn to study other races. 

"The human brain fires differently when dealing with people outside of one’s own race, according to new research out of the University of Toronto Scarborough.
 
This research, conducted by social neuroscientists at U of T Scarborough, explored the sensitivity of the “mirror-neuron-system” to race and ethnicity. The researchers had study participants view a series of videos while hooked up to electroencephalogram (EEG) machines. The participants – all white – watched simple videos in which men of different races picked up a glass and took a sip of water. They watched white, black, South Asian and East Asian men perform the task.
 
Typically, when people observe others perform a simple task, their motor cortex region fires similarly to when they are performing the task themselves. However, the UofT research team, led by PhD student Jennifer Gutsell and Assistant Professor Dr. Michael Inzlicht, found that participants’ motor cortex was significantly less likely to fire when they watched the visible minority black men perform the simple task. In some cases when participants watched the non-white men performing the task, their brains actually registered as little activity as when they watched a blank screen.
 
“Previous research shows white people are less likely to feel connected to people outside their own ethnic groups, and we wanted to know why,” says Gutsell. “What we found is that there is a basic difference in the way peoples’ brains react to those from other ethnic backgrounds. Observing someone of a different race produced significantly less motor-cortex activity than observing a person of one’s own race. In other words, white people were less likely to mentally simulate the actions of other-race than same-race people”
 The trend was even more pronounced for participants who scored high on a test measuring subtle racism, says Gutsell.
 
“The so-called mirror-neuron-system is thought to be an important building block for empathy by allowing people to ‘mirror’ other people’s actions and emotions; our research indicates that this basic building block is less reactive to people who belong to a different race than you,” says Inzlicht.
 
However, the team says cognitive perspective taking exercises, for example, can increase empathy and understanding, thereby offering hope to reduce prejudice. Gutsell and Inzlicht are now investigating if this form of perspective-taking can have measurable effects in the brain.
 
The team’s findings are published in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology."

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