Don't talk to me please, your gimmick is tiresome.
I just don't have the fortitude to withstand another one of your sanctimonious lectures about how I'm apparently as bad as the people who make my life measurably worse off because I don't treat them with basic decorum.
You don't get to tell me anything, certainly not how to react to people who by their own posts have shown me that they are malicious and don't have minorities interests in mind.
If you seriously think me being more polite to people is in anyway going to stop bigots from wanting to either jump me and kick my head in or vote for a party that actively encourages discrimination against minorities then you don't have a clue and you need to stop talking as if you have any sort of valid point. Now.
There is no moral onus on me to be friendly or polite to those that enable discrimination against me and you need to get that into your brain and let it germinate.
Now this is GALL.
First line. My "gimmick" is tiresome, but your "gimmick," is somehow justified and unchallengeable.
Second line. However you want to phrase my excoriation of your conduct, your unnecessarily vicious tongue and slander make you no new, friend, and only enemies and you didn't actually need (such as turning me, who is sympathetic to the base elements of the struggle you go on about, on your conduct and reprehensible attitude personally).
Third line. I can tell you whatever I wish, as you certainly don't shy away from making your opinions about everyone here known. And your own empathy for the suffering other has come down to the level of being cold, callous, and dismissive when it takes the spotlight away from your own suffering.
Fourth line. No, there is no MORAL onus, but many (and not just me) will judge you by your attitude in ways that will end up being much more of an impediment to you than any help.
Conclusion. The world is a messed up and screwed place, and great injustice, corruption, unfairness, atrocities, and crimes are never punished abound. Each of us only has limited power to change or improve a small part of this. But, what we have the biggest power to improve and better is ourselves, within, and that is a good starting point to make a difference in the world around us.