It is clear that attitudes like these affirm the still existent social differences in today’s society and aggravate the isolation of the human beings from each other.įrom my point of view there is no sense in suppressing this problem. The question comes up if people who see themselves as a part of the mainstream prejudge unconsciously or if they are aware of what they do. Catchwords like injustice and prejudice come to the fore. People who are talking about these themes seem to forget that normally big-typed catchwords like brotherliness and charity lose their important meaning. It is pretty easy to shift the blame to others but have we ever asked ourselves if the leper has been looking for a job for years but that there is nobody who wants to employ him or if the Puerto-Rican children are playing in the street just because they do not have enough room to play in their small low cost housing? Be it the leper in the battered rooming-house who does not feel like working and who lives at the tax payers’ costs or the terrible Puerto-Rican family who is so noisy all the time with all its children playing in the street. The world we live in is called a multi-cultural society with enough living space for everyone but to me it seems that there are humans who do not have a place in this living space - humans who do not fit in our society. Although we live in the 21st century and might suppose that we have learnt our lessons about tolerance, war, peace and social conflicts big social differences between human beings still exist.