And this what we should really notice and stop here. There's no need for hysteria.What we probably don't want is hysteria on a crowded boat. — pomophobe
We do need to challenge his rhetoric (or at the very least question it), or he will likely continue to win followers. — VagabondSpectre
And some of us are keeping an eye on this.
https://www.chronicle.com/article/Sokal-Squared-Is-Huge/244714 — pomophobe
No need to challenge his views directly if he's not invited or discussed on a public, wide-reaching platform further amplifying his voice. No one owes Ben a conversation, any more than they owe me a conversation. He has his own website (funded by billionaire brothers, of course) so he's free to publish his views there (insofar as he is profitable). — Maw
I like this.It is for this reason I hold to radical inner change and destruction over such destruction manifested in society. — I like sushi
Non-destructive radical change only seems possible to me if the radical change is taken on in numerous individuals and spread as a paradigm change. To put such change into outward action directly seems foolhardy to me where a passive outward attitude holds dear what is existent whilst the active inner rebellion drip-feeds society and ushers in long lasting progressive change - be it at dire personal cost rather than some naive policy thrown out experimentally into the political sphere where the cost becomes the burden of the innocent bystander. — I like sushi
lol the whole sokal squared thing was a dud. — Maw
How absurd was it for such work to get an airing? It may sound silly to investigate the rates at which dog owners intervene in public humping incidents, but that doesn’t mean it’s a total waste of time (as psychologist Daniel Lakens pointed out on Twitter). If the findings had been real, they would have some value irrespective of the pablum that surrounds them in the paper’s introduction and discussion sections. — link
his views must still be challenged. — VagabondSpectre
protestors should not use extortionate physical force and disruption to make it happen, nor should they use force to disrupt the event should they not get their way. — VagabondSpectre
That's pretty weak. — pomophobe
It doesn't keep me up night, but it moves the needle a little bit at the voting booth — pomophobe
So do you distance yourself at all from any PC stuff? I ask sincerely. — pomophobe
Why? — Maw
but they have every right to protest the event — Maw
in particular against someone who thinks women shouldn't have reproductive rights, that Muslims are mostly religious extremists, etc. — Maw
If Ben Shapiro, who claimed that Left Jews are bad and undermine Judaism, came to my university, then why should I, a Left/Secular Jew, standby as a person who dehumanizes and delegitimizes me is offered a platform? — Maw
You cannot expect that when a person's views are essentially a protest against others, they are not challenged and confronted in turn by it. That's a consequence of free speech. — Maw
Why not protests - if one so wishes - and engagement - if one so wishes? Why not disinvitation and invitation? — StreetlightX
This is one of the reasons talking about 'free speech' as a general concept is so meaningless. Free speech where? In what context? With respect to which audience? In what medium? Among which institutional arrangements? Liberals would flatten these questions out, and bray out the tautology and speech is speech is speech. But it's not, not to anyone for whom politics is anything more than a mild-mannered salon conversation - which is to say, not to most people, everywhere. — StreetlightX
But if whites become a smaller part of the population and lose political power, they'll have a precedent for thinking racially. — pomophobe
Shapiro's rhetoric does persuade people, in which case we must try to counter his persuasive power with persuasion of our own, a large part of which entails addressing the underlying substance of his claims and beliefs. (Given he is persuading people, censorship or no, clearly de-platforming alone isn't the answer for the left) — VagabondSpectre
Violence is not speech — VagabondSpectre
This is nonsense. Richard Spencer, Steve Bannon, and Milo were deplatformed and have all but been removed from public conversation, save for Bannon when he's occasionally invited to speaking engagements. Deplatforming works, and just because Shapiro may be persuadable, doesn't mean he deserves to be heard. And it's not as if someone who says Muslims are bad, or doesn't understand transgenderism deserve to be heard. — Maw
No but speech can undoubtedly lead to violence. Shapiro is emblematic of that. — Maw
I think we may be running aground on our final vocabularies, and I'm not sure you have the story straight, especially since you didn't mention Weinstein — pomophobe
Milo, Bannon, and Spencer don't get much play on CableTV, but they still have large online followings, and their influence is still able to spread through the unregulated new media — VagabondSpectre
We could ban them from every existing platform, but as long as they have an extant following, they could simply create platforms of their own (we would also have to ban all of their followers from very platform). I'm saying it's not practical to disallow their speech on whatever platforms they manage to get invited to, instead it is far more practical to counter their rhetoric directly when and where arises — VagabondSpectre
Shapiro does represent a very large ideological demographic in America, so unless you want to get rid of political-pluralism altogether — VagabondSpectre
Speech that leads to violence is the kind of speech that we want to censor, but where do we draw the line? In my opinion, if someone calls for, condones, or advocates for violence against a specific individual or group, then we should be able to prosecute them for hate speech, but legislating that in practice is a tricky affair. — VagabondSpectre
Culture war and identitarian Leftists have not merely forgotten about economics and class. Their position is predicated on an outright rejection of the working class as a progressive political force, and on a concomitant fear and suspicion, namely that the average white Joe is always one Shapiro video away from signing up as a white supremacist. So this Left antipathy to free speech is not merely suicidal or naive, but is an expression of a class hostility. — jamalrob
Well, clearly deplatforming works against individuals, but not against the ideas they're vessels for... otherwise this conversation wouldn't be happening, and otherwise it wouldn't be barreling inexorably toward what you've said, which reads, quite literally as, " It was because of NAFTA, not the left, I want things to be different." Yes, so....Leaving aside the sheer fact the deplatforming works, despite the unemprirical meme that it doesn't, the point is to get us to a point at which the 'platforming' - or not - of Shapiros shouldn't even be an issue. I want to live in a society where Shapiros don't matter - not because he's 'deplatformed', but because even if he had all the platforming in the world, no one would care. — StreetlightX
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