A whole Phd thesis (and books) can be written about HATE - and the many dimensions of it. I'm not sure why you're still stuck in your 'black-and-white' interpretation of the complex emotion of hate.
Also, watchout for strawman arguments and assuming more than just what my comment mentions - as you seem to be going off on your own trajectory on the topic of hate and implying/alluding to things never mentioned by me.
Again, your thinking is still black-and-white (as you seem to be focusing on particular outcomes of particular emotions by particular people).
I'm not denying your arguments (or contesting your observations), I'm saying - emotions are too complex for simple categorizations like good/bad, healthy/unhealthy, etc. This applies to all emotions (not just hate).
A whole Phd thesis (and books) can be written about HATE - and the many dimensions of it. I'm not sure why you're still stuck in your 'black-and-white' interpretation of the complex emotion of hate.
Also, watchout for strawman arguments and assuming more than just what my comment mentions - as you seem to be going off on your own trajectory on the topic of hate and implying/alluding to things never mentioned by me.
Emotions are things shared by us all, they are not particular to one person. The pitfalls are the same for all of us.
It is healthier to be more outraged at what is done to the victims, than to hate the perps.
And the latter can so easily take over. It's a danger for us all, I am warning myself at the same time here. It's not just a message to you.
Again, your thinking is still black-and-white (as you seem to be focusing on particular outcomes of particular emotions by particular people).
I'm not denying your arguments (or contesting your observations), I'm saying - emotions are too complex for simple categorizations like good/bad, healthy/unhealthy, etc. This applies to all emotions (not just hate).