AmadeusD
So we might accept that others live lives quite divergent from our own, on the condition that they do not obligate us to do as they do. Acceptance of divergent lives does not imply agreement or obligation. This maintains moral consistency: one can uphold their own values while ethically recognising the legitimacy of other ways of living. — Banno
AmadeusD
Leontiskos
Yes, but only semantically. In practice, they don't come to different places in the context of the thread. In the context, I think tolerance relies on acceptance. Which may simply be an error in the way the public does things. — AmadeusD
A core problem on the left is actually an equivocation where they want "tolerance" to mean "acceptance." Once one recognizes that tolerance does not mean acceptance, and that tolerance implies dislike or aversion, much of the muddle coming from the left dries up. — Leontiskos
That said, I see the right wing doing more tolerance without acceptance than the left, for whatever that's worth. It seem the left can't tolerate that which they cannot accept, on some level. — AmadeusD
AmadeusD
Questioner
I would say that the right is more tolerant and the left is more empathetic. — Leontiskos
The left is also more disagreeable (e.g. murdering people for speech with which they disagree) — Leontiskos
The reason the left sees themselves as more tolerant or accepting is because they are very careful about what things are under consideration when those words are used. Something as simple as litigiousness would bear out the fact that the left is less tolerant. — Leontiskos
Bob Ross
Bob Ross
I keep seeing "right winger" as "right whinger".
Racism, we don't accept, but tolerate
Bob Ross
When some people get into politics too far, they start to think 'their side' is more intelligent, empathic, and generally superior than the other. This leads to intolerance. You start getting more narrow minded and thoughts like, "The right are full of bigots" or "The left are full of morons". In reality, it is YOU becoming a moron. Ego is one of the greatest destroyers of an intelligent and open mind.
I talk to everyone. I've spoken to racists, homophobes, sexists, genderists, and people who think the other side should all just die. I've spoken with sexual reprobates, socially inept people, arrogant demeaning people, wealthy, middle class, and poor people. — Philosophim
Bob Ross
I’m don't know if there are moral facts or if morality is grounded in anything beyond emotional responses, perhaps emotivism is correct, of which, presumably, there are more and less defensible versions. — Tom Storm
Bob Ross
So we have the supposed paradox of tolerance; that the left, in advocating "tolerance", is hypocritical in not tolerating the right - in not tolerating intolerance. — Banno
Bob Ross
Is tolerance always a virtue? — Questioner
Tom Storm
Then, why should anyone care about what you think is moral or immoral if it is just your emotions speaking? — Bob Ross
Banno
Leontiskos
I assume you are referring to the American "left" and right"? — Questioner
Can you provide examples of this? It seems an unfounded statement. — Questioner
This does beg a discussion of the parameters of tolerance. Are all things equally worthy of tolerance? Is tolerance always a virtue? Is intolerance always a vice? — Questioner
Once one sets out what they mean by "intolerance" and what counts as "more intolerant," the question becomes answerable. For example, if we take "intolerant of X" to mean "does not allow X," and we measure relative intolerance quantitatively, then we merely need to count up the different things that each group is intolerant of. Of course a quantitative analysis will probably be insufficient, but you get the idea. — Leontiskos
Questioner
I was referring to the example of the murder of Charlie Kirk. Another recent case was the murder of Brian Thompson. — Leontiskos
The reason the left sees themselves as more tolerant or accepting is because they are very careful about what things are under consideration when those words are used. Something as simple as litigiousness would bear out the fact that the left is less tolerant. — Leontiskos
Leontiskos
if you look at the whole picture, we should also include Melissa and Mark Hortman. — Questioner
And statistics actually show — Questioner
Could it not be that the left is indeed more tolerant of difference? — Questioner
Also - in what context are you using "litigiousness"? — Questioner
Questioner
Was there widespread support for the murderer of the Hortman's from the right? — Leontiskos
Heck we even had a TPF mod implicitly supporting the murder of Charlie Kirk. — Leontiskos
I wouldn't accept the ADL as a reliable source. — Leontiskos
What are you criteria for intolerance? — Leontiskos
I am just thinking about the general quantity of lawsuits emerging from each side. — Leontiskos
AmadeusD
They just mostly ignored it. — Questioner
unimportant
They are not telling anyone how to live their lives. Only the right wing does that. They have the more rigid ideology, which expects everyone to conform to their beliefs. Any dissent from that is seen as moral failure. — Questioner
AmadeusD
Leontiskos
In my experience, having lived in both camps at various times, the issue comes from what people mean when when they talk about intolerance. I would argue the right side of the aisle uses a more traditional meaning of the word, putting up with things they may not like because they have to, while the left seems to want tolerance to mean acceptance and celebration, which is not the same thing. — MrLiminal
I would add that the reason for this is imo is likely because the left has been quietly winning most of the cultural battles for some time now, and is no longer used to having to tolerate dissent to the degree the right has in recent years. I suspect 50 years ago things were very different. — MrLiminal
You're now allowed to be openly racist to white people, publicly, even in parliaments and senates - no issue. That is a problem. We shouldn't - tolerate - it. — AmadeusD
For about 100 years liberal (meaning politically liberal rather than conceptually "classic liberal") policies have been needed (this, purely in my view) — AmadeusD
True, and I also think the left has been more proactive in pursuing cultural influence. A lot of the ideologies of the left are oriented to such a thing in a way that the right has not been. — Leontiskos
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