This article, at first glance, seems to be saying that racism is inborn. But then there is this:
For decades, it was assumed that children see race only when society points it out to them. However, child-development researchers have increasingly begun to question that presumption. They argue that children see racial differences as much as they see the difference between pink and blue—but we tell kids that “pink” means for girls and “blue” is for boys. “White” and “black” are mysteries we leave them to figure out on their own.
It takes remarkably little for children to develop in-group preferences. Vittrup’s mentor at the University of Texas, Rebecca Bigler, ran an experiment in three preschool classrooms, where 4- and 5-year-olds were lined up and given T shirts. Half the kids were randomly given blue T shirts, half red. The children wore the shirts for three weeks. During that time, the teachers never mentioned their colors and never grouped the kids by shirt color.
The kids didn’t segregate in their behavior. They played with each other freely at recess. But when asked which color team was better to belong to, or which team might win a race, they chose their own color. They believed they were smarter than the other color. “The Reds never showed hatred for Blues,” Bigler observed. “It was more like, ‘Blues are fine, but not as good as us.’ ” When Reds were asked how many Reds were nice, they’d answer, “All of us.” Asked how many Blues were nice, they’d answer, “Some.” Some of the Blues were mean, and some were dumb—but not the Reds.
Bigler’s experiment seems to show how children will use whatever you give them to create divisions—seeming to confirm that race becomes an issue only if we make it an issue.
It’s not race that children observe… but all differences. So much for the thesis.



![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a339/Franc28/valid-rss.png)
I don’t think you really need an experiment to show that racism isn’t innate. You just need simple common sense and a little bit of evolutionary psychology. Were people of differing races likely to meet in the early stages of human civilisation? No, so there would be no selection to act on this and create a preference for one’s own skin colour. Is there an evolutionary advantage to racism? No, because less racism means more trade and more success, so even if there was enough variation to allow for certain genes to select for racism, this variation would have been weeded out of the gene-pool because it was disadvantageous.
Hi Francois,
That was an interesting study.
I’m sorry about my long absence from our debate. I’ve been sick the last week or so and haven’t had much brain power. I’ll respond as soon as I can. Take care.