So, it's tribalistic because you say it is, not because it actually "is".
I think he made a very good point, any exlucsion, by your definition, is "tribalistic". This is a false statement. I don't let strangers into my home, so I guess I am "tribalistic"? :whiste:
So, if a business excludes certain behavior, like work-place romances, that's tribalistic? To me, it just sounds like you're parroting the same unoriginald arguments against religion people have been making for decades. Tribalism is tribalism -- you can't double-talk and say: "this form of tribalism isn't as bad as theirs so that's more acceptable".
That's like saying: "Radical Islam is worse than Radical Christianity because Christians use legislation instead of suicide vests"....no, radical behavior is radical behavior.
To have a decent conversation, you have to remove your anit-religious biases and this is cleary not the case with your extremely narrow defintion of tribalism.
Sure, I am inclined to agree with you with certain religious groups, but saying religion is tribal (which includes all of them) is like saying sports are violent because football and boxing is.
This is simply a fallacy, and one often trotted out.