I don't really relate to "exclusionary" social politics.
MOST people seem to me to be pretty okay, trying to do their best for their families, their children, their employers, and their communities and also seem to want to do what's right if they can figure out what that is. Most people seem helpful and in situations we have seen where tragedy strikes, there are many who "step up" and we have seen this all over the world.
I think there is a % of people who do not fit that description, but I think they are in a minority.
I just have no desire to make my world smaller by keeping people "at bay" or assuming that most people are bad, lazy, greedy, or all kinds of other things.
For the most part, every day life seems to go along in a relatively civilized and friendly manner. I am friends with politicans (all sides) , bikers, animal rescuers, corporate workers, party people, embalmers, carpenters, farmers, homesteaders, musicians, vapers, smokers, athiests, uber-religious people, store clerks, gay people, straight people, restaurant workers, physicists, professors, writers, artists, weavers................they are all individuals. I let them show me who they are
and usually it's pretty *okay*.
It's a big planet, in some ways a small planet, and we all have to live together. Best to look for what we have in common?
As for the happiness philosophy, I never saw happiness as a "goal". Seems more like an "outcome", and then, not a steady always-on one at that, although contentment seems possible.