No. I was saying how you need to understand the world through systems rather than the result of individual behavior first. The humanization will come as a result of this switch. It's up to you to understand what your vision of others means for your vision of the world and how this vision can impact our society.
Because what can be said for "bad" people, can also be switch to talk about "good" people. Allowing your vision to see the systems instead of individuals first will make you understand how to create systems to perpetuate the good and make a real change
.. Instead of simply being surprised when someone do something horrible and doing nothing more than calling them monsters.
Being able to do bad thing if necessary because of biases or evolutionnary urge to survive is completely different as being inherently violent or bad.
We are neither. We can do bad, we can do good. Basing a political discussion based on the notion that we are necessarily or inherently violent is a dangerous slip that can lead toward horrible systems. Our focus should be on systems. It's important.
The only way I know how to simplify this concept to the maximum is this:
As individual, the rotation influence our individual path. We can break out of the circle only partly but the circle (the system) will continue. If you want to talk about violence it's this way :
Violence, in our societies, CAN be the momentum and the rotating direction of this group.
It's a social phenomenon conditioned by the material condition of the group (
the system, the number of individuals, the rotation, the momentum, the strenght of each bonds etc.)
Understanding this is fundamental to understand politics.