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- {e You can't trust those Wisians.
-
- {cBy Clarence Page (Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for the Chicage Tribune)
-
- {aI ({fPrrak, not Page of course{a) {ecopied {athis article from a {fnewspaper{a, because
- I think it deals with a {crather delicate {asubject, especially in these days
- where fascism is on the rise again, or at least on the news. Whoops, didn't
- mean to sound so dim. {eLet's just look at the good things around us. {aHurray.
-
-
- {aMaybe the old song, "{fEverybody needs somebody to love,{a" was wrong. A lot of
- us also need somebody to not love, too.
- The {ctruth {aof that statement is revealed in a clever little survey recently
- made public by its sponsors, the American Jewish Committee, that offers a
- rare and revealing window into the twisted world of the prejudiced.
-
- Conducted by the {cGeneral Social Survey{a, a project of the {eNational Science{a
- Foundation, the survey asked a scientific sampling of Americans what they
- thought about a list of ethnic groups, a list that included a little-known
- group called "{fWisians-Americans.{a"
-
- {eWisians {aare little known because they {cdon't exist{a. The only smaller ethnic
- group, joked one of the researchers, is leprechauns. The use of non-existent
- groups is an {fopinion collector's {atrick dating back at least to the {c1940{as as a
- way to determine how many of the people who are giving answers are really
- {dpaying attention {aor are just trying to {ecompliant{a.
-
- {aAs it turned out, {d39 {apercent of the {d3,000 {apeople {csurveyed {agave the
- non-existent Wisians a rating and - guess what? - it turned out to be one of
- the lowest ratings of any groups in the survey, a decimal average of {f4.12 {aon a
- social scale of 1 to 9.
-
- {aIt's a good thing {cWisians {adon't exist or they wouldn't get asked out much,
- except perhaps by other {eWisians{a.
-
- {aTom W. Smith, author of the report, figures the respondents who got fooled
- "must have figured the {eWisians {amust be some obscure little, {cforeign-sounding{a
- group that can't be doing all that well, so they were ranked near the bottom."
- Right. Besides, you know those {eWisians{a. Give 'em an inch and, the next thing
- you know, they're going to move into your {cneighbourhood{a, put their kids in
- your schools, marry your daughter and before you know it, there go your
- property values.
-
- {aBias against non-existent {cminorities {amay pose a serious exception to what I
- call the "{fPage principle of Prejudice,{a" which says that {cprejudice {ais largely a
- matter of presence.
-
- {aI first came up with this theory while visiting an Army buddy in rural {fSouth
- Dakota {amore than twenty years ago, when I was certain that my mere arrival in
- the state {csingle-handedly {araised its {cAfrican-American {apopulation by a good
- twenty or {etwenty-five percent {aand that I might find myself leaving much faster
- than I came.
-
- {aAs it turned out, I was treated so well by my friend's {crelatives {aand {cneighbours{a,
- that, for a few {ffleeting {amoments, at least, I thought I had stumbled across a
- racial utopia.
-
- {aIt is only when the {ccommon purpose {ahas passed that the {evarious {agroups begin to
- turn on each other.
-
- {aSo there may be hope. {eNon-Wisians {amight yet be able to work with the {cWisians{a.
- if only those {dWisians {adidn't all look alike.
-