People Are Not Their Governments - the danger of stereotypes and dehumanization episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 17, 2026 · 16 MIN

People Are Not Their Governments - the danger of stereotypes and dehumanization

from Auto Ethnographer with John Stech · host John Stech

Fifty episodes in, and the conversation that matters most is still the simplest one: people are not their governments. Nations are not monoliths.Thank you to every guest who shared their story, every listener who kept showing up, and to my wife, Bernie, whose support made this channel possible from the very beginning.Episode 50 of The Auto Ethnographer returns to the idea that drives everything here. In a media environment that routinely collapses entire cultures into headlines and soundbites, it is worth slowing down to ask what we lose when we do that. We lose individual human beings. We lose nuance. And we lose the kind of truth that genuine cross-cultural understanding depends on.Through two personal stories, including a candid exchange with a Russian friend named Oleg and a sidewalk dinner with a Vietnamese family in Hanoi, this episode examines the psychology behind cultural stereotyping, the role media and physical distance play in flattening human complexity, and the universal human values that connect people across borders, regardless of the governments that claim to represent them.Most expats and global professionals already sense this. When you sit at someone's kitchen table in a foreign country, politics fades quickly. What remains is shared humanity: parents who want their children to thrive, elders who want peace, young people who want opportunity. These are not Western values. They are not tied to any religion, ideology, or passport. They are human values.This episode is for expats living and working abroad, third culture kids, global professionals, and anyone who believes that lived cross-cultural experience reveals truths that headlines simply cannot. If intercultural communication, cultural intelligence, and understanding the world beyond your own borders matter to you, this conversation belongs on your list.Governments act. People live. The more we hold onto that distinction, the harder it becomes to hate, and the easier it becomes to hope.🌐 The Auto Ethnographer homepage: https://www.auto-ethnographer.com/✈️ Your Ticket Abroad — Moving Overseas Course: https://www.auto-ethnographer.com/your-ticket-abroad-course💼 The Auto Ethnographer on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-auto-ethnographer

Fifty episodes in, and the conversation that matters most is still the simplest one: people are not their governments. Nations are not monoliths. Thank you to every guest who shared their story, every listener who kept showing up, and to my wife, Bernie, whose support made this channel possible from the very beginning. Episode 50 of The Auto Ethnographer returns to the idea that drives everything here. In a media environment that routinely collapses entire cultures into headlines and soundbites, it is worth slowing down to ask what we lose when we do that. We lose individual human beings. We lose nuance. And we lose the kind of truth that genuine cross-cultural understanding depends on. Through two personal stories, including a candid exchange with a Russian friend named Oleg and a sidewalk dinner with a Vietnamese family in Hanoi, this episode examines the psychology behind cultural stereotyping, the role media and physical distance play in flattening human complexity, and the universal human values that connect people across borders, regardless of the governments that claim to represent them. Most expats and global professionals already sense this. When you sit at someone's kitchen table in a foreign country, politics fades quickly. What remains is shared humanity: parents who want their children to thrive, elders who want peace, young people who want opportunity. These are not Western values. They are not tied to any religion, ideology, or passport. They are human values. This episode is for expats living and working abroad, third culture kids, global professionals, and anyone who believes that lived cross-cultural experience reveals truths that headlines simply cannot. If intercultural communication, cultural intelligence, and understanding the world beyond your own borders matter to you, this conversation belongs on your list. Governments act. People live. The more we hold onto that distinction, the harder it becomes to hate, and the easier it becomes to hope. 🌐 The Auto Ethnographer homepage: https://www.auto-ethnographer.com/ ✈️ Your Ticket Abroad — Moving Overseas Course: https://www.auto-ethnographer.com/your-ticket-abroad-course 💼 The Auto Ethnographer on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-auto-ethnographer

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People Are Not Their Governments - the danger of stereotypes and dehumanization

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This episode was published on April 17, 2026.

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Fifty episodes in, and the conversation that matters most is still the simplest one: people are not their governments. Nations are not monoliths.Thank you to every guest who shared their story, every listener who kept showing up, and to my wife,...

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