Jesus Christ, of course they can be! And it's on the individual to look at where he or she draws the line with direct action. Yet what I do not accept is political violence in countries that are basically justice states. Here, now. Not France of 1940-1944.I'm saying forget the "politics" for a moment and ask yourself could an antifa member be seriously ethically engaged? Is that possible? — Baden
You seem not to know the term justice state, oikeusvaltio in Finnish. The proper definition would be perhaps Rechtsstaat, where the power of the state is limited in order to protect citizens from the arbitrary exercise of authority. The citizens share legally based civil liberties and can use the courts. So hence my referral not only a state to be a democracy, but a justice state also.What about violence between "justice" states? — Baden
What's your position on that? Ok, for massive military campaigns but not for neutralizing fascist bullies on the streets? Or no? — Baden
You're asking far too much...My claim is that you don't have a coherent ethical position on violence. Show me I'm wrong. — Baden
So saying that political violence isn't OK means... that I find it more objectionable than selling arms to Saudi Arabia???You'd have to be suffering from some degree of mental illness (at least I didn't say 'you'd have to be bonkers'!) to argue that kicking a few fascist arses (shock/horror!) is more morally objectionable to, random example, selling arms to Saudi Arabia to bomb Yemeni civilians (business as usual...). — Baden
I think that's an absurd reading because those opposing Shaprio know exactly what they want in the situation: a lack of platform for Shaprio/a society which doesn't treat his accounts of society and ethics as respectful. — TheWillowOfDarkness
In the wide sense, these people aren't revolutionaries either. In the sense you are using, they are trying to work with/within the current structure of power to alter one specific aspect of culture. They are, in the usual sense of the dichotomy, just reformists. — TheWillowOfDarkness
You misunderstand my use of "don't treat it respectful."
I don't mean in the sense of people just being there opposing someone. I mean that society takes the values and ideas in question not to be worthy of consideration as a direction for society. Like how the liberal treats any opposition to "free speech." Or how we treat totalitarianism. Or how we might treat someone saying the Earth was flat, in the context of describing the shape of the world.
It's not a world in which everyone is supposedly given their worldview by some kind of edit, just the basic recognition some ideas are unethical and false, not even worth consider in an account of society or as a possible course of action — TheWillowOfDarkness
Do we have to consider actually being an Islamic Extremist understand why it's unethical and we want our society to avoid it?
We don't have to consider actually following an idea or holding a value to understand its not worth considering.
All the time, we recognise these instances. We teach it to people too. How is a 17 year old supposed to learn? They recognise/we teach them about fascism and how it's not worthwhile. We don't need to respect fascism and its values as a legitimate option to so this. — TheWillowOfDarkness
How is the average 17 year old supposed to learn why Fascism isn't worth considering if they're not allowed to even consider it? — VagabondSpectre
Quote one line where I alleged or stated that 'anything other than speech amounts to violence'. — VagabondSpectre
So you're arguing that because moneyed interests are supporting Shapiro, and because ideological merit has nothing to do with politics or democracy these days, the use of intimidation, force, and violence to silence him is well justified? — VagabondSpectre
Bandying words at dinner parties is more productive than vaguely preaching fool-hearty revolution from an armchair. — VagabondSpectre
but we embrace the use of force at the expense of the use of sensible political theory, — VagabondSpectre
The same way the 17 year old learns that pedophilia and murder are 'not worth considering'. Or would you like to have a nice civil discussion about those too? — StreetlightX
Also, since you asked, here's a random sampling of the fake dichotomy between speech and violence that worms its way all through your engagements with me: — StreetlightX
People don't go following something just because it's banned or suppressed. — TheWillowOfDarkness
You're juxtaposing Shapiro's conservative beliefs with murder and pedophilia? — VagabondSpectre
You say that you're not advocating for violence, but when I advocate for non-violence you attack me as part of the problem (because how dare I whine about the left when lives are on the line!). — VagabondSpectre
this thread is awful — Maw
A complete waste of time, space and energy... :roll:
Perhaps participants might want to consider that there are more important issues to be considered: global warming, resource depletion, environmental destruction and pollution and accelerated extinction of flora and fauna and exponentially increasing economic complexity and instability.
What a fucking wank! — Janus
Your question was about fascism, not Shapiro. And it remains a stupid fucking question — StreetlightX
I attacked the liberal grounds that you put forward as an argument for non-violence, and not your advocacy of non-violence simpliciter. — StreetlightX
Yes it's offensive and emotionally neglectful to have a public debate about things like genetic racial differences, but by refusing to have it altogether we're giving racist pundits the room they need to float their bull-shit/pseudoscience — VagabondSpectre
this thread is awful
The only way to answer it is to gather data about how information spreads (harvest all opinion pieces, youtube comments, tweets etc. about lobster daddy, Shapooro, Spencer, all comments related to them, model an 'information space' using graph theory, use linguistics to make distinctions between different kinds of memes, sentiments etc., track the spread of ideas between nodes). Only then can one have a clear picture of the circumstances which allow dangerous ideas to spread. — alieninstinct
I don't know, I think the notion of freedom of speech is pretty clear cut. Basically, hate speech is rightly disallowed. I guess the problem is that people can't agree on precisely what constitutes hate speech, or how overtly hateful it must to be to qualify as hate speech. — Janus
'm on the fence as to deplatforming but mostly because I worry about what it does to political engagement in general. If we shame people to stay quiet about beliefs they hold, there's exactly 0 chance of them changing their minds — Benkei
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