Don't you feel that rests on an assumption that one chooses what one believes? If so, do you think that assumption is defensible? — andrewk
In view of this, what I see as, inalienable right that consenting adults have to do whatever they jointly consent to I cannot see any moral judgement being passed on such activities as rationally warranted, and as being anything other than an expression of simple prejudice, and hence bigoted. — John
Baden - there's a very low bar for homophobia, which you immediately classify with racism. It illustrates the point - agreement or ostracism, there is no space for dissent. — Wayfarer
But they can't command me to agree. So if my 'not agreeing' amounts to 'bigotry', then so be it. — Wayfarer
Not being allowed to call folks homophobes, racists, misogynists and bigots would be political correctness gone mental health issue. — unenlightened
The point of "public institutions" is above all "live and let live". — Πετροκότσυφας
But you aren't allowed to call certain people these things, and if you do, in several countries in the West, you risk being accused of hate-crime. — tom
What countries? — unenlightened
In UK you stand a good chance of being accused of a hate-crime if you draw a certain character, or point out that a certain religion teaches homophobia, paedophilia, or bigotry. — tom
Show me a legal case, or admit that your complaint is simply that folks call you names when you call them names. — unenlightened
Wikipedia definition of political correctnessthe avoidance, often considered as taken to extremes, of forms of expression or action that are perceived to exclude, marginalize, or insult groups of people who are socially disadvantaged or discriminated against.
I'm not about to trawl through the huge increase of Islamophobic crimes that have occurred recently, particularly since the explosion in them surrounding Brexit, but certain notable crimes serve as a good example. Several people in UK have been arrested and sentenced for burning the Quran. Nobody has been arrested for treating the Bible in the same way. In fact, it is only ever non-Muslims who are prosecuted for burning a Quran, because under British law, Muslims are allowed to do that, because Muslims are allowed to burn the Quran under Sharia. — tom
the avoidance, often considered as taken to extremes, of forms of expression or action that are perceived to exclude, marginalize, or insult groups of people who are socially disadvantaged or discriminated against.
Wikipedia definition of political correctness — Cavacava
I'm not about to take your word for any of this, particularly as it is incoherent. — unenlightened
And you are pretty close to theatrical bigotry yourself in defending this behaviour. — unenlightened
It is nevertheless interesting that in UK, it is illegal to burn a Quran if you are non-Muslim, but *legal* to burn a Quran if you *are* Muslim. — tom
"Several staff described their nervousness about identifying the ethnic origins of perpetrators for fear of being thought racist; others remembered clear direction from their managers not to do so."
"Those who had involvement in CSE were acutely aware of these issues and recalled a general nervousness in the earlier years about discussing them, for fear of being thought racist." — report
Where did I defend any such behaviour? — tom
Well if you did not mean to defend it, then I fail to see why you brought it into the discussion. — unenlightened
Note how Tom has distorted every single thing he quoted from the paper; — Πετροκότσυφας
In Rotherham, the majority of known perpetrators were of Pakistani heritage including the five men convicted in 2010
This of course leaves the door wide open. If you happen to express the view that the worship of a paedophile is alien to Western civilisation, you may well find yourself numbering among the hate-crime statistics. — tom
Oh, one more time you don't address the point made. That is to say, your distortion of the paper you posted. Since now I'm not even sure if you've read it, here's another passage... — Πετροκότσυφας
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