Unfortunately, checking several online dictionaries for the word "bigotry" they all seem to disagree with each other. So it's probable that many people participating this thread are thinking different things. Also unfortunately, some of the definitions I find are
vastly different from each other.
For example, according to wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bigotry"Bigotry is a state of mind where a person strongly and unfairly dislikes other people, ideas, etc"First problem with that is that if "unfairly" is part of the definition, then by definition bigotry is unfair. So by definition anyone who
fairly dislikes someone or something is not a bigot. Which introduces a complete mess with the question of "what qualifies as fair?" Second problem is that some definitions, like this one:
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/bigotry"stubborn and complete intolerance of any creed, belief, or opinion that differs from one's own."...doesn't agree with common use at all. For example, according to the above, a person who intensely hates Italians is not a bigot, because Italian are not a creed, belief or opinions. And while I think that definition more closely matches older "popular" usages of the word, it's probably not what anyone in this thread actually means.
So for clarity, I'm going to provide my own definition that I
think is reasonably close to what most of us here probably mean:
bigotry
"dislike for a group of persons"That might not be the best definition in the world, but given this from the OP:
American who freely admits to having bigoted thoughts towards some groups
That's what we're actually talking about, right?