Sunday, February 05, 2006

New Yorker: "What pit bulls can teach us about profiling"

This is a fascinating and sometimes hair-raising article which includes an intelligent discussion of profiling. The author is Malcolm Gladwell. A small sample:
Then which are the pit bulls that get into trouble? “The ones that the legislation is geared toward have aggressive tendencies that are either bred in by the breeder, trained in by the trainer, or reinforced in by the owner,” Herkstroeter says. A mean pit bull is a dog that has been turned mean, by selective breeding, by being cross-bred with a bigger, human-aggressive breed like German shepherds or Rottweilers, or by being conditioned in such a way that it begins to express hostility to human beings. A pit bull is dangerous to people, then, not to the extent that it expresses its essential pit bullness but to the extent that it deviates from it. A pit-bull ban is a generalization about a generalization about a trait that is not, in fact, general. That’s a category problem.
Does this article offer a good critique of the argument for profiling? What do you think?

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