Like I mentioned, Americans are troubled at risk assessment. They tend to put risk in events that are too relevant or too common and dramaticize uncommon or irrelevant events. In our minds are heuristics. This term is used to describe our brains making shortcut guesses in solving problems. The fact of the matter is heuristics depend on the information that is already stored in our memories. …show more content…
Backtrack into 9/11 when the twin towers fell due to oncoming airplanes piloted by people of muslim religion.
From that very moment and onwards to today, people of muslim descent, people who wear turbans and long robings, people who slightly resemble cultures similar to that in the Middle Eastern countries are assumed to be dangerous and casted as outsiders, right here in America. We try to travel to these Middle Eastern countries, surely without a doubt, we are not welcome and casted as outsiders whom none of the persons would acquaint themselves. This is everybody's trend that was set in motion by dramatic events installed in our
brains.
Many Americans become vulnerable when a stranger interacts with them and advertently, strangers become vulnerable just the same. I’d say this rarity -- speaking on behalf of the American population -- of vulnerability co-c. So for example, when a neighbor walks out the front door the same time as you do and there’s that slight visual interaction, the emotions within become susceptible once that interaction becomes apparent. Come to think of it, before you realize you let your guard down, that neighbor has said, “Hello, how are you today?” There is the fear factor of what this stranger’s intentions are after the first “Hello”. However, the risk we take isn’t costly
some facts: Americans fear strangers because for a fact, strangers have repeatedly ruined it for the vast majority of socialites. (Catfish stories, stranger meet-up’s that lead to danger,
Next door neighbors are OUR strangers, teachers are OUR strangers, and animals are OUR strangers.