I'm not sure if you're being tautological here. Maybe it's not possible to eliminate group mentality completely, but it's certainly possible to have it to varying degrees, and it's possible to have it to a moderate level or an excessive level. There's nothing hypocritical about engaging in a behaviour in a small and in your view harmless way (especially if it's a behaviour that cannot be helped) and criticising other people for doing it to a much greater (and possibly harmful) extent. For instance, it's possible to drink in moderation and still criticise those that get completely smashed every night.
Well, I had to repeat to further clarity, as the assumption that it may not apply to someone was not true. Anyway, it's also possible to get smashed every night and remain unconvinced by others that you have a problem... and then get hostile when others suggest you have a problem, and never even admit to yourself that you may have a problem. Now, if everyone drinks and may not be immediately conscious of how drunk they are, is the real sin to drink too heavily or refuse the possibility that you may be drinking too heavily?
It's not really the varying degree of influence this group mentality may or may not have on you so much as whether or not you are conscious of it or acknowledge it's influence. No one likes to admit their reasoning faculties are imperfect. It's completely unavoidable, but this is the real "sin" of it, is denying it. This is what I find unacceptable, and what really truly annoys me.
So... yes, they may engage in "the same behaviour", but that doesn't mean they do it to the same degree as the people they're criticising.
Now you're being identifiably defensive of an abstract social identity. I can make a number of assumptions about you and your theological stances, but a I will just clarify again: the severity is not the sin. That is completely irrelevant to my claims and does not lessen the severity of the mistake. It's the fact I can't convince them it applies to them. Just as my original post concluded: "I still, to this day, have yet to convince [that one] may be prone to the same behavioral tendencies."
I'm going to make a minor prediction that you will spot the flimsy nature of my claim, as really an opinion is at heart of what is or is not the "wrong" behavior. If you do not agree that not acknowledging it is the worse sin, I have to ask,
why do you resist a mere opinion such? Were you pre-disposed to oppose it? Did your subconscious set up your conclusions before you reached them?
EDIT: I just realized you were the one you retorted with "What if they refused it because it doesn't apply to them."
Were there subconscious reasons that you immediately responded with the idea that you are exempt?
Anyway, forget my whole argument and if you even object and just think of the implications of it. They drive me mad. I really don't care to argue it much, just so much as illustrate to someone what's been eating me on the topic. Terrifying isn't it?
Even right now just by being annoyed by this in others, classifying them, scrutinizing them, being pre-disposed to dis-liking them, even the conclusions about you I jump to, etc; I am in part being influenced by it myself.
I'm not really sure what you mean by "bitch fights" ... it seems to belittle the role of argument and debate in science.
Argument and debate in science often NEVER work like they ideally should. Have you ever tried to publish something controversial, or challenge an accepted belief? Yeah, you're supposed to encounter serious scrutiny and resistance in the name of scientific inquiry, but it's FAR FAR more than what you would encounter if people were robots and reaches to encompass ridiculous sociological effects. Genuine
spite even. People are people, they form these social circles around beliefs, and they engage in behavior similar to what politicians and priests will do in their fields. I find it extremely petty, hence the belittling terminology.