Very much so. There's a very strong belief that anything bad that happens to someone outside their circle, the "other" happened because they deserved it, for being too different. Especially religious conservatives. During the AIDS crisis, conservatives insisted that it only affected Gay people, and was therefore G-D's judgement on their "lifestyle". When it comes to charity for the poor, they're happy to help out someone in their circle, someone they know or who is otherwise close to them (friend of a friend) or a member in one of their groups (churches, fraternal organizations, etc.); but for the poor in the abstract, there's a feeling of "they're poor because they're lazy", especially when it comes to minorities.
That highlighted part has not been my experience. In some cases, yes, that does happen, people re-examine their beliefs; but more often than not, they entrench, double-down on those beliefs. That's why LGBTQ youths are many times more likely to be abused, or to become homeless, than heterosexual, cisgendered youths. Had I understood as a teen I was trans, and had come out to my parents, I have no doubt I would have been severely beaten, probably forced into some sort of religious "conversion therapy" program, and/or forcibly ejected from my home. That's a common experience for far too many LGBTQ teens.
Back when I was young, interracial marriage was still highly controversial in much of the US. I have several friends who were threatened by their parents for dating someone of the wrong ethnic heritage as teenagers, including one who was thrown out and disowned.
Conservatives are all too ready to turn that hostility onto their own children, if their children dare to violate social norms. There is something about the conservative mindset that also sets itself at odds with empathy, and often overrules it.