As described before, micro-aggression can be a form of verbal discrimination (among other appearances. However, not all micro-aggression is verbal discrimination and likewise, not all verbal discrimination should be considered a micro-aggression. Hate speech is another example of verbal discrimination, previously defined in the Erasmus+-project Arguments Against Aggression as:
‘’Hate speech is violence that is spread through language, word and images, both online and offline. Hate speech targets entire groups that are excluded with hatred in ‘real-life’ and on the internet. Hate speech insults, threatens and despises people because of their origin, faith, gender or sexual orientation. On social networks, hate speech creates a hostile climate that can also trigger acts of violence in real life.’’
Then the project goes on to identify several criteria for Hate Speech. They state that identification of statements as being Hate Speech is difficult, because this type of language does not necessarily appear directly as hatred or emotions. Hate Speech can also be hidden in statements that at first glance seem normal or rational. The concept of Hate Speech encompasses a multiplicity of situations: