I'm simply commenting on the dynamics and the politics of the debate. I haven't said anything about God or evil-doers, this is a thread about 'political correctness', and you can't deny that in this matter, 'political correctness' is a huge factor.
Read the link about Brendan Eich - he was fired as the head of Mozilla Corporation, which he had helped found, because it was discovered that he donated to Proposition 8 some years previously. That is an example of what I mean by 'ostracism'. Under anti-discrimination laws, many people will be required and obliged to support same-sex marriage, whether they want to or not; if they try not to support it, by, for example, not providing services to same-sex weddings, they will be subjected to legal action and even vilification — Wayfarer
It seems to me [Eich] was fired directly for ruthless business reasons and only indirectly for supporting proposition 8 — Baden
Being against homosexual rights is a loser in the marketplace of ideas and is therefore a loser in the marketplace proper. — Baden
Really?So canning the plebiscite and passing the law by an act of Parliament is tantamount to 'outlawing debate' — Wayfarer
How many anti-(gay-marriage) campaigners have been arrested so far this year in Australia for expressing their views?
Yes, indeed the OP is unclear on this point. The first sentence complains about excessive political correctness, and the video from Joe Rogan is a complaint against people who perpetrate such excesses. Nobody can reasonably deny that there are such people.conservatives* tend to use the term PC exclusively as a pejorative i.e. they allow for no distinction between PC and excessive PC — Baden
What do you mean? That supporing Proposition 8 was bad for business, so he had to be fired? — Wayfarer
Oh, I get it. So when I shop, I should know the position of the company I'm buying from on gay marriage. Maybe we could have a sticker, like they do for kilojoules, or heart safety? You know, a little rainbow flag with a thumbs up. 'Gay friendly', like dolphin-safe tuna. — Wayfarer
If supporting proposition 8 had been good for business, he wouldn't have been. — Baden
Yes that's a civil code - I was talking about political correctness. The two are different. The civil code should be there - political correctness shouldn't be a means of artificially legislating something.Well, if it causes you not to insult and belittle others because of your beliefs, that is all that can be expected from a civil code, and at least it will mean that outwardly, you are at least civil. — Wayfarer
Yes do you think we should go around playing God huh?Which is what you argue God does to evil doers, and is thus the most just way to handle them, wouldn't you then be saying by implication? It's their fault after all. You're really good at it being different when it's you. — Wosret
So, does it follow from that, that what is 'good for business' is, therefore, morally sound? — Wayfarer
I was talking about political correctness. The two are different. The civil code should be there - political correctness shouldn't be a means of artificially legislating something. — Agostino
And what you seem to neglect is that there is a difference between people's attitudes changing over time, and us or anyone else engineering such a change over time. My claim in this case is that we cannot engineer it. Now, the more important point is that while some attitudes do change, the core of people's morality remains the same - regardless of geographical position or time period. Take sexual morality - pretty much identical in Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism, Hinduism, and Taoism, even though these religions arose in vastly different places, in vastly different circumstances. All condemn adultery, promiscuity, homosexuality, etc. You ignore the fact that some attitudes are perennial - nothing you will do will ever change this.Societies differ not only across nations but over time in terms of people's attitudes. Not only is that self-evident, it has been empirically demonstrated. What you seem to be doing here is taking the obvious truth that some people cannot be made to change their attitudes over short periods of time, and trying to derive the obvious falsity that there is no possibility of development in social attitudes. — Baden
Good so then you think it's good that we institute a mechanism which will only aid the power hungry?I'm not claiming political correctness will rid us of the power hungry. — Baden
A law can be questioned - that's why ultimately there is nothing wrong with it. Political correctness is self-righteous and self-justifying - it cannot be questioned, hence why there is something wrong with it.What I took you to be saying, was that efforts to legislate how one should behave with regards to others, will fail to affect what you really think about them. But the attempt by the polity to legislate what one ought or ought not to think is the origin of 'political correctness'. Political correctness is, after all, the expression of opinions which it is assumed that no right-thinking person ought to hold. So it kind of an assumed consensus. — Wayfarer
Right. So my view is that Eich's sacking was an egregious example of the ostracism of a competent businessman, for holding a politically incorrect view regarding a sensitive topic. You might not agree, but at least I am being clear about it. — Wayfarer
Good so then you think it's good that we institute a mechanism which will only aid the power hungry? — Agustino
Dead right. Which is exactly the same as what the conservatives want to do. So we are in honourable opposition to one another in the marketplace of ideas, and the one that can wield rhetoric the most effectively will win. I hope it's my side, and I expect you hope it's yours.these progressives ..... - all they want to do really is impose their values on society — Agustino
This too is true. I care a great deal about some conservatives, despite my disagreeing with them. Some of them are friends, some are family, and I love them. So it's certainly true that I could care less than I currently do about them.they can care less about the religious folks, — Agustino
But regardless of how you were raised or your ability to withstand that kind of treatment, you are on average better off as a minority having more of this capital redistributed in your favour, and political correctness is definitely an element in that equation. That doesn't mean we are not free to say what we think, what it means is that there is a penalty for saying things that are reflective of a less equal distribution of social power. In other words, your reward for stigmatizing or denigrating others is to experience the same sort of thing yourself. — Baden
Why isn't being defined as a "minority" offensive? I would be offended at being defined as a minority which then implies that I need this redistribution of resources. It belittles me and makes me feel more inferior. — Harry Hindu
The fact is everyone has been turned down by a job, has been called a name and has been on the receiving end of racism and sexism — Harry Hindu
There is also the fact that not all "minorities" are offended by this kind of speech. Only some are - and this difference needs to be accounted for - not discredited - if you actually want to get at the truth of why people are offended. — Harry Hindu
because it will be a massive waste of public money... — AndrewK
I have already indicated that I am aware that some in the pro-(gay-marriage) movement say that, and that I disagree with them. If making such nasty accusations were an instance of PC, I would say that it's an instance of excessive PC. But I'm inclined to think that in that case it's more primal than PC - just a hatred of the enemy (in this case the Christians) and a refusal to see their humanity.After all, anyone who opposes it is, or must be, 'anti-gay', i.e. homophobic. — Wayfarer
No thanks. Brendan O'Neill is in my William Lane Craig category. In the past I read plenty of what he wrote because he was clearly intelligent and I wanted to understand the views of somebody that was intelligent but had a different view from me. But after a while I realised that the intelligence was simply directed towards trying to ram his prejudices down other people's throats, so I decided to waste no more time on any of his (Craig's or O'Neill's) outpourings. Why would I spend time reading such a thing when I've not yet read Breakfast at Tiffany's?some salient commentary on the same by Brendan O'Neill — Wayfarer
The question we were discussing was whether the opposition to a plebiscite was based on the desire to suppress or avoid a public debate on the issue - not whether a plebiscite is a good idea. — Wayfarer
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.