Dominance

Picture from University of Illinoi,
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In the Animal Kingdom, we sadly and unquestionably belong to, there is a continuous primitive fight for dominance. Since an early age, a few times without the intention, most of us primitives noticed some signs of weakness on third parties that fed our almost irresistible impulse to dominate them.

Once we have been conscious of that, the most primitives of us have encouraged their descendants to, now strategically, dominate the others on purpose. This poisons the so-called society we are supposedly forming since it will obviously push partially-civilized individuals to regress some time-consuming hard-to-get evolutionary progresses and give in to our primitive instincts, embracing them till the day of our death. Thus, it is our duty, more or less civilized individuals, to be strong enough to allow our primitive instincts to help us defeat the rotten apples without being dominated by such primitive instincts; and go back to our as civilized as possible state once the primitive threat has vanished. It is naively romantic to think a powerful dominant primitive individual to learn by the admirable example of the civilized, at least while considering her weak.

There is no doubt on the guiltiness of the powerful when not self-governing herself and abusing that power over weaker ones, but we must also recognize we are also rewarding such behavior when turning ourselves and our children into preys, individuals unwilling to face unfairness; motivated by the fear rather than civilized intelligence; individuals fearing others with enough power to harm us, that our only relief is to abuse the ones weaker than us.

Without falling into the trap of the falsehood, and then ending expressing things we do not really feel or believe, mature balanced adults can make use of traditional social customary to assist unbalanced adults to understand we are neither a threat, nor a prey for them; to give them one place in the so-called society and to stimulate them to do the same with others, so we procure an environment free of unworthy preys and unworthy abusers, for all of us sake.

- Lennarth Anaya

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