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  1. Protests are one way people speak up on behalf of a specific group. FG Trade/E+ via Getty Images. Discrimination. Racism. Violence. Prejudice. Bias. Xenophobia. Hate crimes.

  2. What hate is. The U.S. Department of Justice defines hate as “bias against people or groups with specific characteristics that are defined by the law.”. These characteristics can include a person’s race, religion, gender, sexual orientation, disability and national origin. One way to think about hate is as a pyramid.

  3. The Merriam-Webster dictionary describes the word “hate” as an “intense hostility and aversion usually deriving from fear, anger, or sense of injury.”. All over the world, researchers like ...

  4. Because the degree to which people may take offence varies, or may be the result of unjustified prejudice, Feinberg suggests that several factors need to be taken into account when applying the offence principle, including: the extent, duration and social value of the speech, the ease with which it can be avoided, the motives of the speaker, the number of people offended, the intensity of the ...

  5. Suzanne Harrington: Why people, high on hate, blame desperate people in tents for the housing crisis. IN FOCUS: Eurovision. Immigration. Israel-Hamas War.

  6. Publication history. Created by writer Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko, Jameson first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man issue #1 (March 1963). Stan Lee stated in an interview on Talk of the Nation that he modeled J. Jonah Jameson as a much grumpier version of himself. Later Spider-Man writers Tom DeFalco and Gerry Conway agreed that J. Jonah Jameson was as close as Lee ever came to a self ...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Anti-ZionismAnti-Zionism - Wikipedia

    Early Jewish anti-Zionism. Formal anti-Zionism arose in the late 19th century as a response to Theodor Herzl's proposal in The Jewish State (1896) to create an independent country in Palestine for Jews subject to persecution in the "civilized nations" of Europe, but even before Herzl, the idea of Zionism – of Jews as constituting a nation rather than a people constituted by their religion ...