preferring your 'own' over others is one thing. that's a matter of familiarity or *taste*, if you will.
believing that your *own* is superior based on stereotypes & what is taught from childhood is another matter.
children need to be taught to hate those that don't look like them. it doesn't come naturally.
That's not so, multiple studies have shown babies are "racist" themselves. And I am not aware of any works produced debunking those studies.
show some credible AMA studies to back that up.
Why does it have to be from any specific association? This is one study done by the University of Toronto:
https://www.google.com/amp/s/nypost...baby-is-a-little-bit-racist-science-says/amp/
then give me the study--- one study? ---- from the toronto university. NOT the NY post saying it happened & NOT from the daily mail. any UNIVERSITY professor who throw your 'citations' out the friggin' window.
next.
Lmao...
Here you go:
Media Room & Blue Book – University of Toronto
"
MEDIA ROOM
MEDIA RELEASES
Infants show racial bias toward members of own race and against those of other races
April 11, 2017
Racial bias begins earlier than previously thought, new insights into cause
Toronto, ON – Two studies by researchers at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE) at the University of Toronto and their collaborators from the US, UK, France and China, show that six- to nine-month-old infants demonstrate racial bias in favour of members of their own race and racial bias against those of other races.
In the first study
, “Older but not younger infants associate own-race faces with happy music and other-race faces with sad music”, published in Developmental Science, results showed that after six months of age, infants begin to associate own-race faces with happy music and other-race faces with sad music.
In the second study,
“Infants rely more on gaze cues from own-race than other-race adults for learning under uncertainty”, published in Child Development, researchers found that six-to eight-month-old infants were more inclined to learn information from an adult of his or her own race than from an adult of a different race.
(In both studies, infants less than six months of age were not found to show such biases).
Racial bias begins at younger age, without experience with other-race individuals
“The findings of these studies are significant for many reasons,” said Dr. Kang Lee, professor at OISE’s Jackman Institute of Child Study, a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair and lead author of the studies. “The results show that race-based bias already exists around the second half of a child’s first year. This challenges the popular view that race-based bias first emerges only during the preschool years.”
Hear Dr. Lee discuss the research results.
Researchers say these findings are also important because they offer a new perspective on the cause of race-based bias.
"