Modern technology has created a situation were there aren't the old limits to public speech, but also tech has created new methods for censorship, surveillance and propaganda. — ssu
Well that's fine. Suppression is censorship when it serves the common good. But I'd also dispute the "of the common good" since that could cast mere censorship as broader suppression when in the defense of minorities, for instance. — Kenosha Kid
Much hate speech is not clear and direct incitement: it is rabble-rousing against a particular person or subset of people. — Kenosha Kid
Another poster here recently pointed me in the direction of an anti-trans website dedicated to giving the impression that trans = criminal, and not caring too much for facts in its efforts. it's not outright calling for violence against the trans community, but it's certainly doing its utmost to generate that sort of hatred. — Kenosha Kid
Trump, who persecutes and vilifies anyone who disagrees with him while going out of his way to harm others with his free speech, is a hypocrite and a douchebag. — Kenosha Kid
Reciprocity is key. What you should and shouldn't say isn't an objective set of rules, it's consensual politics: I don't want my feelings hurt and I don't want to hurt yours. And it mostly works. The problem is the people who don't want their feelings hurt but want to hurt your feelings, and have an inconstant relationship with censorship as a result. — Kenosha Kid
On Sunday mornings in a neighborhood not too many miles from me, a fellow used to preach on a street corner in a housing development from an improvised stand. He's loud and objectionable and uses loudspeakers - but I live a town-and-a-half away. — tim wood
But whenever and wherever they want? I suspect there will never be a clear line, but in place of that reasonable lines. — tim wood
explain the reasoning behind your claim that death threats should obviously not be allowed — Pinprick
The nub of the issue is you need good people to speak but for that to happen you need to let bad people speak (free speech) and, conversely, if you don't want bad people to speak, you can't let good people speak as well (cenorship). — TheMadFool
Your feelings on the Westboro Baptist Church and its practices? And, "no matter how odious"? Speech can get pretty odious. — tim wood
who is to judge what incites - or who is to say the incited were not incited? — tim wood
There appears also to be a street standard, the "Coke upon Littleton of the fist." And that will vary depending on the street. — tim wood
I always thought if one only wanted to hear one's own opinions...find a mirror. — Book273
Everyone agrees that free speech should have some limits, the one which is pertinent here is the exception of violence and oppression. — Judaka
Trump talking about banning Muslims is a rich, white, powerful male using his free speech to oppress and disadvantage Muslim minorities. — Judaka
Postmodernism says that rather than our rationality being imperfect, it's a product of our race/gender/wealth and our rationality just reinforces convenient logic. — Judaka
For me, it is beyond comprehension that religion came first. It's just an organized, cultish way of trying to explain mystery. — James Riley
For me, it is beyond comprehension that religion came first. — James Riley
There is something in me that defaults to an assumption that someone is disagreeing with me when they respond to my posts. But search as I might, I don't think you are disagreeing with me. My post was really just saying religion did not come first and it does not have a monopoly on good. — James Riley
The idea that something is moral or immoral was indigenous to man — James Riley
I don't accept the premise of the OP. It is not only possible to conceive of morality without reference to religion, the religious who claim to be moral are merely pretending to the same moral values as the atheists and humanists. — James Riley
Religion, even if it arose simultaneously, was not the source of, nor did it precede morality. It just claimed it, as it always does. — James Riley
Religion is just copying morality, and is not the source of it. — James Riley
Religion, even if it arose simultaneously, was not the source of, nor did it precede morality. It just claimed it, as it always does. — James Riley
Or are we to ignore cultural and religious factors and focus on economic, educational, and political factors, exclusively? — Apollodorus
But I'm assuming that people believe that the commands given by God are moral, because they are given by God. He wouldn't command me to do something immoral, surely? I suppose it depends on which religion you have in mind. — Manuel
Now back to religion. God commands something, it is right because He says it is right. Why is it right? Because God says so. This seems to me to be equivalent of asking but what's wrong with I did and a police officer replying "it's the law". Yeah, fine. I don't think that's a good reason, much less an argument. — Manuel
What about culturally — Apollodorus
Sure. But it doesn't offer an explanation which isn't tautological as to why you should or should not do X, Y or Z. — Manuel
It may appear clear. Doesn't mean it is. — Manuel
Not that religion makes morality more clear. Just because a deity announces a moral principle to be valid does not make the moral principle itself more important or better stated. — Manuel
The (usually) atheists and humanists who claim to be able to be moral even though they are not religious nevertheless have many of the same moral values as the religious. — baker
Whence the idea that morality can be conceived of without reference to religion? — baker
Just out of curiosity, how would you define "critical race studies", "white privilege", "racial equality" and similar concepts because it looks like they tend to be interpreted differently by different people? — Apollodorus
All of that being said, I believe a society should, ideally, be able to be colorblind once equity is achieved.
— ToothyMaw
That would perhaps be a natural consequence of a level playing field. Xenophobia will not go away completely, of course, so vigilance is necessary, including concerning one's own prejudices. That's actually a good practice regardless of topic, to be aware of your blind spots and tendencies for bad reasoning. — Echarmion
Essentially the only way to correct for it is equality of outcome across the population groups, which is to say we should see similar distributions of income, wealth etc. — Echarmion
I think that people on the extreme end of "wokeness" believe - implicitly or explicitly - that oppression cannot really be overcome, hence their focus on drawing boundaries around groups. — Echarmion
I think what we're witnessing here is the end of Utopia. If you believe that no truly just society is possible, what remains is only to reinforce the borders - both the physical and the metaphorical ones. — Echarmion
In such a scenario, the oppressor and the oppressed can never truly integrate, and while their positions can change to the opposite sign, the fundamental dynamic cannot be overcome. Either the oppressed is cast out and shackled, or the oppressor must engage in a continuous process of, as you call it, self-flaggelation to atone for their continued but inescapable oppression. — Echarmion
For all of the sympathy that I have for Anarchist Black Cross and the prison abolition movement, I think that they ultimately have somewhat naive, if not somehow fanatical, ideas as it concerns abolition. — thewonder
One man's freedom of speech is another man's indoctrination of radicalism and fundamentalism. — unenlightened
You'd do a lot better looking at how schools are funded than trying to get rid of standardized tests, but I suppose they are low hanging fruit. Indeed, it's ironic since standardized tests are a great way to identify talented individuals who might be preforming well because they are in poor school enviornments, it's exactly the sort of thing you don't want to get rid of.
— Count Timothy von Icarus
So someone came to a wrong conclusion regarding the source of the problem. What's the relation with CRT here? No doubt many wrong things are said by proponents of CRT, but that doesn't necessarily tell me anything about the theoretical framework itself. — Echarmion
Dinesh D'Souza, William Lane Craig, and Dave Rubin. — ToothyMaw
If you've spent "decades thinking about this stuff" and this is all you have to show for it then...well, Jesus Christ. — Maw
God is not man's creation of God. You have to transcend the stories and get into the heart of the matter. The stories were written for another time. I am sure somebody could write contemporary stories that you would like better, but that's not the point. — synthesis
Perhaps, but man has demonstrated that he needs guidance. — synthesis
I like people, but get more than two of them together and its no so wonderful. Even if you believe that individuals can get it together, certainly groups cannot. — synthesis
the U.S. Constitution was written to work for a God-fearing people only. The Founders knew it would not work for those who believed they could figure it out on their own...and this has been known for a long, long time — synthesis
Look at human history. It's not the case. When God disappears, all Hell breaks loose. — synthesis
The beauty of it is that it does not matter whether God exists or not. If you believe in a power higher than yourself, this supplies a moral compass (higher than what man is capable of) to follow. Otherwise, man uses his intellect to cook-up all kinds of mischief. — synthesis
One of the reasons that religion is meaningful is that man needs something above himself to base his morality on. — synthesis
Believing in God doesn't make me happy or a better person. — Gregory
I think the practical problem with CRT and other such theories purporting to define or describe immensely complicated societies and their history (the theoretical problem with them is their absolutism) are the zealots who preach them and interpret them, and the zealots who oppose them. — Ciceronianus the White
it's a complex issue that straight forward conclusion can hide real factors. — ssu