Taken to the extreme, an irrational fear of strangers or more broadly, a fear of those who are different. Taken in a more moderate way, a rational fear of those who are different in some significant way, such as race, ethnicity, culture,
politics, religion. Since
people live together in families and communities where blood ties and cultural similarities foster cooperation, those who are different undermine this social solidarity. The very presence of
people who are different in appearance or belief or language make the majority of
people in a community wary of those who do not share a common interest in preserving the dominant group.
This fear is justified since
people naturally view those who look, believe, and act in a similar manner as extensions of themselves. Since
people are naturally selfish, they will lend aid and befriend those whom they see as similar to themselves. Conversely, since
people are naturally selfish and seek to dominate others to enhance their own power, they will naturally first seek to dominate those who are different.
People who are different are more likely to be seen as objects rather than fellow humans.
When confronted with these threats to social cooperation based on viewing others as objects, it is rational to foster laws, social and economic policy, and attitudes that preserve
one's own kind in power. To do otherwise is to hand power over to those who will destroy
one's own way of life, culture, and political system.
Political power as well as cultural and social power are zero-sum games. When
one group gains in the same geographical region, other groups must lose.
Campus
Leftist: "Oh, those conservatives really show their xenophobia in opposing open immigration. That shows what closed minds they have and how paranoid they are. Of course, we had to shout down a
conservative speaker last night at the lecture series, and drive him off campus in order to promote
diversity and pluralism. We would never be prejudiced as those conservatives are."