NancyLebovitz comments on Financial incentives don't get rid of bias? Prize for best answer. - Less Wrong
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Comments (124)
I've never heard of significant prejudice against people with wide feet, though it's possible that they represent a somewhat neglected market.
I was very angry at your pity party comment. I don't come to Less Wrong to be trolled. I probably should have either not replied to you or waited until I'd calmed down before I replied. (Downvoting your comment seemed too petty, and I'm not one of the people who did it.)
Instead, I deliberately ignored some of what you said.
I was attempting to deal with my own emotional state, and had no idea you'd react so strongly. It's possible that something similar might be true of your post.
I apologize; I didn't recognize that my comment was over the top. My comment probably wasn't relevant in light of the article, either.
I also admit that you are right about the issue carrying emotional weight for me; I get a bit impatient at repeatedly hearing about the latest poor/pitiful group du jour, who inevitably has it even better than me.
Let me clarify. Although people with wide feet may not suffer much direct prejudice, they nonetheless suffer effective prejudice indirectly because it hurts my ability to signal via e.g. choice of shoes, as I pointed out in my earlier comment.