prejudice is bad because it is often harmful and no person deserves to be treated in such way.
Being prejudice is bad; you look at others wrong.
bad ones.
Prejudice is prejudice. Whatever form it touches you; it is equally as bad as whatever form it touches another person. Prejudice has no 'degrees' of medium, good, bad, terrible, or worse. At the same time, some prejudice can be ignored. For example: I'm one of Jehovah's Witnesses, the brunt of religious prejudice. We're constantly called a 'cult'. We're viewed as anti-Christian for not celebrating Christmas, birthdays; for not believing in the trinity; for not believing in eternal torment. But NONE of that prejudice bothers us. We hold our heads up, and just keep knocking on them doors.
he used it against the Jews to make them look bad
Because its a learned behavior that can go both ways.
Control freak
Prejudice is harmful because it leads to discrimination and unfair treatment of individuals or groups based on characteristics such as race, gender, or religion. It can perpetuate stereotypes, limit opportunities, and create divisions in society. Prejudice undermines diversity, equality, and social cohesion.
hell prejudice
consequences of prejudice
Since the 1995 Pride and Prejudice was a TV miniseries, it was not given are rating as a move, but my guess is that it would be rated PG, as the Jane Austen movies have been. It has no bad language, sexual conduct, or violence whatever. As to critical ratings, it is rated 100% by the critics at Rotten Tomatoes. The 2005 Pride and Prejudice movie was rated 85%.
Prejudice, or pre (before) judging, a specific gender would be like saying "just because she's a girl means that she can't play sports." When in fact this is not true because you have never seen her play sports, and even if she is bad, that does not mean every girl is a bad sports player.
The tenses of prejudice are past tense (prejudiced), present tense (prejudice), and future tense (will prejudice). Prejudice is an emotion or attitude formed prior to having adequate information, leading to a biased judgment.