They damage those around them, ↪baker. — Banno
I don't think something like justification applies to circumstances with such complex origins. I think the word applies to actions or beliefs so making such a state of affairs would not be justified, but the existence of the state of affairs is not the sort of thing that the word 'justified' meaningfully applies to.
I'd rather minimise such disparities. — Isaac
Some people really are able to think and live in cutthroat terms, though. They don't have humanist sensitivities. For them, it's perfectly normal that species, including humans become extinct -- nothing to make a fuss about. They can be quite careless about their own death as well.Laughable if it wasn't so sad that people really think like this.
/.../
Yeah, another kid who thinks he has it all figured out because he's discovered some Ayn Rand or Thomas Sowell — Xtrix
I'd prefer to give real examples, but it's not suitable in this case.Who says they are happy? — Tom Storm
Why is psychopathy classified under mental illness, when it helps people to be successful in their careers and life in general?Why what? — Tom Storm
Oh, come on. Just look at that smug satisfaction! That self-confident contempt! If that isn't happiness (for adults), then what is??!Who says they are happy?
Psychopathy is more often known these days as antisocial personality disorder, I am fairly certain that people only present like this if they have experienced abuse of some kind. It's a post trauma state. — Tom Storm
Do you think there'd still be such a need to facilitate social change if we actually addressed disparities in education, resources, opportunity and wealth? — Isaac
That's true. Also genuine change in these areas requires hard work and $ and not just symbols. — Tom Storm
When you said "people who would oppose a progressive cause" I thought only of conservatives of the right-wing variety. And they are certainly not disenfranchized.I would have thought in numbers too numerous to count. Many uneducated working people who have been victims of structural changes to the economy and manufacturing, who now don't have jobs and whose towns are dying and who are being asked by the cultural Left (people they see as urban elites) to hold certain views on society and identity politics. Many of them have left Labor style politics precisely because they feel disenfranchised by what they see as stifling political correctness. As one such person said to me a couple of weeks ago, "We need jobs and housing, not gender neutral pronouns." — Tom Storm
So the question remains; how best to facilitate cultural change, whilst recognising the disparities in education, resources, opportunity and wealth.
I could not follow the argument much further. — NOS4A2
Fairy tales.You need to, very civilly, call your attorney and, probably, your own engineer. And the town engineer and building inspector. — T Clark
Obviously, if it was helpful, it wouldn't be overly confrontational. But again, notice that the issue is the confrontational abuse of the other side. When you don't have the vote, you don't have justice, you don't have freedom, and those that have it are complaining that YOU are uncivil, that is manipulative bullshit in action. The incivility, confrontation and abuse starts with the oppressive society, not with those who resist it. — unenlightened
I'm certain they don't feel disenfranchized. what a strange idea. Do you know (of) anyone who opposes a "progressive cause" who feels disenfranchized?The point is that in talking to people who would oppose a progressive cause, let's say trans rights, it isn't helpful to be overly confrontational or abusive, as the goal is to incrementally build support not further disenfranchise the naysayers. — Tom Storm
Then riddle me this:The point of civility as a duty is to act that way even when initially disinclined to do so. Far from being redundant, it only matters when you feel someone has broken that mutual social relation and you no longer feel inclined to treat them civilly as a consequence, then you fall back on your duty to do so despite such an initial disinclination. — Isaac
Can anyone think of other cases where being a kind of thing at all is conflated with being a good example of that kind of thing? — Pfhorrest
... Thoughts? — JohnLocke
Exposure to alternate accents leads to understanding and acceptance. — Banno
I don't know if accent is really that important. I've never seen it as particularly important myself. — Apollodorus
The dogs bark, the caravan moves on…. — Wayfarer
There is also a cultural factor in this.People generally don’t get close enough to one another and perhaps mix too quickly in large crowds and social groups for there to be any effectiveness of such chemical messages. — Benj96
Actually, I think people like him have it really good in life. So often, ignorance in fact is bliss.Just some kid doing his impression of Ayn Rand. I don’t see much point in continuing. — Xtrix
Where?Fossil fuels protect people from heat waves. — Kasperanza
They are indefinite quantifiers. They seem to arise because the level of precision they express suffices for certain purposes.Why do you think this vagueness of the predicates such as a "heap" or a "hole" arise in language? — Shawn
That’s because you’re completely ignorant about this topic. If you continue to choose not to take 10 minutes to read about it, please stop trolling this thread. — Xtrix
Climate is not weather, but it disrupts the weather. We’re seeing it happen before our eyes. The pattern is obvious, provided we can read a graph. — Xtrix
The upshot is that in the modern age, polarising available narratives might be just too easy and so not really apply the pressure they used to. It's just too easy to find a group to join these days so little pressure to join one slightly outside of your comfort zone. so we need more real-life social groups rather than virtual ones as they are less flexible, and so more able to pull in the direction of social change. Can't see it happening though... — Isaac
I think you're discounting the psychological effects that very visible movements have. — Echarmion
I think of civility as akin to table manners. — tim wood
Of course.Oddly enough, if that attitude is prevalent enough, it creates a self-fulfilling prophecy. — Xtrix
Follow this to the pdf. Worth the read. — tim wood
If corporations knew they could never be held liable for it, then moving past the propaganda into collective reality might be attainable. — Cheshire
People who are opposed to fossil fuels, are against a cheap, reliable, and powerful source of energy. — Kasperanza
No, you just use empty filler phrases.I don't fear equivocation. — NOS4A2
Again, with all the words! Accomplishing things!It says more about you than it does about me.
It always struck me as patronizing.however I'd like to know a few tidbits of wisdom you guys have gleaned out of the story. — theUnexaminedMind
I shook hands with a man who shook hands with a man who knew Oscar Wilde. — Tom Storm
