I just checked. unenlightened never used the words "race," "racist," or "racism" in his posts. — T Clark
… In a soldier's stance, I aimed my hand at the mongrel dogs who teach
Fearing not that I'd become my enemy in the instant that I preach
My existence led by confusion boats, mutiny from stern to bow
Ah, but I was so much older then, I'm younger than that now. — His Bobness
You pointed out the biggest fallacy of the other posts and of racial discussions in general, one that's hard to counter - Why did the original poster and the followers pick the statements of the most vulnerable people to criticize. — T Clark
And stating you are a Social Democrat as some sort of credential is smarmy. Thanks for the opportunity to use that word — T Clark
But the complaint is precisely that the evidence is dismissed without evidence to the contrary, and the evidence of testimony is discounted on one side and counted on the other. — unenlightened
Thanks unenlightened. I was siding with the OP, but I had missed this point — ZhouBoTong
I don't think you know what "smarmy", "fallacy", or "deride" even mean. — czahar
A fallacy is a failure in reasoning that renders an argument invalid. Appealing to ridicule, circular reasoning, and ad hominem attacks are examples of fallacies. Your example isn't. Saying that picking the statements of vulnerable people is not only fallacious, but "the biggest fallacy" (not even sure what it means for a fallacy to "the biggest"), makes about as much sense as saying the sound of toast is not only orange, but the most orange. — czahar
Furthermore, your entire post contributes nothing to this debate. It's really nothing more than the equivalent of hitting the Like button on Facebook (for unenlightened), and blowing raspberries at me. — czahar
I called it a fallacy in its normal English language usage. — T Clark
I was agreeing with Unenlightened and I backed up my agreement with arguments. — T Clark
Yes. This and your original post on this thread are exactly right. It's amazing to me that you are the only one who understands how it works. You pointed out the biggest fallacy of the other posts and of racial discussions in general, one that's hard to counter - Why did the original poster and the followers pick the statements of the most vulnerable people to criticize. It is a sign of their, of society's, lack of social and psychological awareness and moral courage.
Self-serving whining by the privileged against the whining of the vulnerable would be funny if it weren't so destructive. I appreciate your responses. — T Clark
As I said in my response to unenlightened's posts, and as he said, this whole discussion is wonderful, compelling evidence for exactly what the so called social justice warriors, whom you deride, are saying. Calling it ironic is inadequate. It's stomach-churning. And stating you are a Social Democrat as some sort of credential is smarmy. Thanks for the opportunity to use that word. — T Clark
Put both of these quotes in standard form -- i.e., premise 1, premise 2, premise N, conclusion -- and we'll test the soundness of these "arguments." — czahar
Premises:
The original poster and the followers picked the statements of the most vulnerable people to criticize.
This whole discussion provides for exactly what the so called social justice warriors are saying.
The fact that these arguments are wide-spread damages our society and makes it hard to treat all people fairly.
Conclusions
The fact that Czahar, his cohort, and much of the rest of society fail to see the corruptness of the framing of the question says much of what needs to be said about race. — T Clark
The George Pell case shows the issue neatly. A well protected established white male against childhood recollections.
The issue is not that lived experience is beyond criticism, but that it must not be simply dismissed out of hand. — Banno
You have to remember when encountering these people, no matter how long you decide to engage them for, that the issue is them and their failure to empathize not you.
That doesn't look valid at all. — czahar
Claims about the world -- whether it be about discrimination or harassment -- require evidence...
Yet those who appeal to lived experience completely ignore this well established and almost universally accepted fact. — czahar
His post is a criticism of a political movement, how in your mind is that an unstable foundation? My interpretation is that you're far more of a racially motivated person than OP, he doesn't appear to put a lot of stock into race and prefers for people to deal with the facts, I support this. Also, I said that unenlightened insinuated he is a racist, not that he directly called him one. He's willfully misrepresented OP's argument in many ways, you think it's wonderful, I don't, not going to bother having an argument about it. — Judaka
While it was necessary to confront your nonsense, I don't want to get into a debate with either of you so that's my role in this over. — Judaka
Sure, the "vulnerable people" and the "privileged" people have nothing to do with ethnicity. To say this while supporting someone who absolutely was bringing up race is no excuse, how poor of me to jump to conclusions. — Judaka
You pointed out the biggest fallacy of the other posts and of racial discussions in general, one that's hard to counter - Why did the original poster and the followers pick the statements of the most vulnerable people to criticize. It is a sign of their, of society's, lack of social and psychological awareness and moral courage. — T Clark
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