It could be becoming needed even, specially for men in really low ranges (160cm and under). Their lives are already difficult enough.
Laws don't change people's minds. "Social justice" campaigns are not the "solution" to heightism. Height increase surgeries and procedures are.
Laws discouraging and punishing "racism", especially against blacks, have been in effect for decades now. Here's how effective those have been:
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2017/0...55114.fullQuote:
PNAS 2017; published ahead of print September 12, 2017[/u], https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1706255114
ABSTRACT
This study investigates change over time in the level of hiring discrimination in US labor markets. We perform a meta-analysis of every available field experiment of hiring discrimination against African Americans or Latinos (n = 28). Together, these studies represent 55,842 applications submitted for 26,326 positions. We focus on trends since 1989 (n = 24 studies), when field experiments became more common and improved methodologically. Since 1989, whites receive on average 36% more callbacks than African Americans, and 24% more callbacks than Latinos. We observe no change in the level of hiring discrimination against African Americans over the past 25 years, although we find modest evidence of a decline in discrimination against Latinos. Accounting for applicant education, applicant gender, study method, occupational groups, and local labor market conditions does little to alter this result. Contrary to claims of declining discrimination in American society, our estimates suggest that levels of discrimination remain largely unchanged, at least at the point of hire.
https://theblog.okcupid.com/how-your-rac...c68771b99ehttps://theblog.okcupid.com/race-and-att...7dcbb4f060https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4843483/Racial bias in pain assessment and treatment recommendations, and false beliefs about biological differences between blacks and whites
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Apr 19; 113(16): 4296–4301.
Extant research has shown that, relative to white patients, black patients are less likely to be given pain medications and, if given pain medications, they receive lower quantities . For example, in a retrospective study, Todd et al. (10) found that black patients were significantly less likely than white patients to receive analgesics for extremity fractures in the emergency room (57% vs. 74%), despite having similar self-reports of pain. This disparity in pain treatment is true even among young children. For instance, a study of nearly one million children diagnosed with appendicitis revealed that, relative to white patients, black patients were less likely to receive any pain medication for moderate pain and were less likely to receive opioids—the appropriate treatment—for severe pain (6).
In other words, 200 years after the end of slavery, and almost 100 since the end of Jim Crow laws and the institution of such "social justice" policies as affirmative action, desegregation, etc, people are still as racist as ever. The only thing "social justice campaigns" has changed is that it's made it politically incorrect to be an outspoken racist. Even then, there are plenty of racially-oriented tribalist groups like Black Lives Matter and the Alt-Right/White Nationalists that are gaining massive amounts of traction.
In sum, both studies and cursory observations of real-life phenomena show that people are still as racist as ever on the inside. Know why?
It's because laws don't change people. It doesn't change what they believe, what they feel, what they desire. It only inhibits them from pursuing or expressing those things
in public for fear of legal repercussions.
Nature is harsh. Our preferences are not evil in nature, but they may manifest themselves that way. "Bad" traits tend to get weeded out slowly. However, those could be anything from short height in men to "ugly" facial aesthetics in both genders. And an unfruitful, lived human life is needed for that effect.
Arguments from subjective morality are petulant and self-righteous. Let's not get into that. "Good" and "evil" without a VALID foundation (i.e.
not your own beliefs or social consensus) are just labels with no meaning or value whatsoever.
Don't know what you mean by the last part of your post. If you're suggesting that "bad" (i.e. unattractive, physically undesirable) traits are bred out because of "personality" traits again, then you're simply wrong. They get bred out because they're physically undesirable. Height is a sxxually dimorphic feature. Humans are a sxxually dimorphic species.
However, more and more we transition into societies where that selection based on looks has become unimportant, and that irrelevance will only keep increasing in the future. That's why I agree laws, or at the very least instructions like those, wouldn't be silly (if jobs don't ever end up running out, anyway). Silly would be helping to make life even harder for intelligent, but short height people.
?
Just when I think I've managed to get through to you a bit...
The above are 3 Google Trends searches for phrases related to looks (particularly, to improving your looks).
Does it look like looks have been getting "less relevant" over the past few years?Get real.
Lookism and heightism are at all-time highs in 2018, and it's only going to get worse as time goes on, not better. Why would it get better? What's your reasoning for making this absurd claim?
Seriously, are you kidding me? Human society has
NEVER been more fixated on physical appearance than it is today. Take a look at the studies above to see proof - and that's just for race. The short statured male community is sparsely populated because of how rare short stature is, but the androgenic alopecia (a much more common ailment for men) has never been more popular than it is today; research into a cure for it would not be so abundant if looks were "irrelevant" in today's society.
Heightism isn't going to "end". This ridiculous, pie-in-the-sky fantasy needs to end. It isn't going to happen. The solution to height discrimination isn't more "social justice" garbage. It's safe, affordable, accessible procedures for height increase that don't carry the same risks and drawbacks (destruction of athletic ability, long convalescence period requiring time off work, etc).
By the way, Android, don't you think our reading of all these reports on heightism can't also come back to influence us? You know what they say: stare long enough into the abyss, and the abyss stares back at you.
"They" don't say this. Friedrich Nietzsche did. And you're misinterpreting the quote.
What most people do is attributing some problems to their height, when in reality it wasn't related to their height.
[citation needed]
Seriously, do you know "most people" on earth, or even "most people" who are short? Do you have any evidence of this, or is it just your own opinion?
However, I feel like these could help one become a heightist. You know how a lot of short women only marry taller men? If height is such a drawback in society, it becomes increasingly harder in my mind to justify marrying a shorter woman. Which I'm sure is what many women think of short men, even the very good short men.
I don't think any women anywhere are going to be devastated to find out a short man finds it "increasingly harder" to "justify marrying" her, considering the overwhelming majority of women wouldn't want anything to do sxxually/romantically with a short man to begin with.
A short man interested in marriage who turns down
any woman willing to actually get married to him is like a beggar refusing to eat a plate of home-cooked food because it wasn't made by a 5 Michelin-star chef.
At what point do you take a step back?
In your case, I hope it's soon, because the only thing you're doing with your irrational rhetoric is misleading people into trying to look for solutions to heightism in the wrong place ("activism"/SJW ideologies).