
The vote is the most powerful instrument ever devised by man for…destroying the terrible walls which imprison men because they are different from other men. – President Lyndon Johnson

We all want to think that we make key decisions based on Love. If this is so, why do the polls on voter’s preferences in the presidential race reflect otherwise?
News surveys are clear. The white female in this year’s race wins women’s votes. The mixed-race male candidate (perhaps we are all "mixed-race" and of the same soul) wins minority votes. The white male wins white male voters.
Obviously, there are many exceptions (including me.) But, why are so many of our choices based on data that go only skin deep? Why do so many find comfort with people who look generally like us and feel discomfort with those who don’t? It’s a challenge every caregiver must face…
If we are healthy, do we automatically feel a kinship with other
healthy people and a sense of superiority over those who are sick? If a nurse is Asian-American, does she feel any hidden disdain toward a patient that is European-American? I say "hidden" because people always deny bias when asked. In seven years as an active trial attorney I knew that any prospective juror questioned on voir dire would claim complete objectivity even if they had already concluded the black or Hispanic defendant sitting before them was guilty.
In fact, I experienced this phenomenon. After a jury trial I prosecuted successfully in the early 1970s, I asked the discharged jurors, post trial, what the key factor was in their decision. One juror immediately piped up: "I knew that guy was guilty the minute I saw him." This same juror had, of course, promised the court that he would be completely objective.
Bias is a challenge for all of us. We know what Love asks of us. As humans we often fail the test. Perhaps our chances of passing it increase if we can face, with completely honesty, the prejudices that live within us. In so doing, maybe we can begin to shake off the poisonous subtext of our prejudice. Perhaps we may rise above skin deep decisions and recognize that, as Maya Angelou says so eloquently, "Love costs all we are/and will ever be/ but it is only love/which sets us free." \
What are your prejudices. How do you overcome them?
-Erie Chapman
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