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The Bystander Effect of Empathy: How Moral Disengagement Silences Response
The heart reaches out, the conscience recoils. The result is the quiet gaze of the onlooker, the bystander’s posture. Seeing harm, feeling its weight, but remaining still. It is not lack of care that stops them, but fear of the moral work that true empathy would require.
Dick Gariepy
Nov 128 min read


The Floor of Dignity: Homelessness, Policy, and the Unjust Scales of Proportionality
Proportionality is why we instinctively feel it’s wrong to, say, banish someone from society just because they failed to pay a parking ticket or because they relapsed into addiction. There’s a deep human intuition that responses to wrongdoing or hardship should not destroy a person’s basic dignity and prospects. The law isn’t always so compassionate, but the ideal persists as a guiding light.
Dick Gariepy
Oct 121 min read


When Silence Harms: On Dignity, Recognition, and the Meaning of Support
The absence of support transformed my struggles into a solitary battle, one that I had to face without the understanding or compassion that
Dick Gariepy
Mar 2713 min read
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