How the "can't" is effectively enforced — Terrapin Station
Jobs/careers lost, ostracization, black listing, etc. — Terrapin Station
Extreme PC is relatively rare, in my experience, and I can't understand why anyone would be offended with social justice, unless they are in some sense feeling threatened by the rising fortunes of women and minorities. I have no problem with a charter of rights. I don't think people should be fired from their jobs because they lapse into assholeness from time to time however. And the evidence shows the right is more dangerous than the extreme PC front. Has Antifa shot anyone yet? — Izat So
Again these odd deductions: that if people think PC culture has gone too far / might go too far, they obviously (your words), obviously are feeling threatened by the rising fortunes of women and minorities.Extreme PC is relatively rare, in my experience, and I can't understand why anyone would be offended with social justice, unless they are in some sense feeling threatened by the rising fortunes of women and minorities. — Izat So
Jobs/careers lost, ostracization, black listing, etc. — Terrapin Station
If it were just speech I'd be fine with it. But it's not just speech. It's other sorts of actions. — Terrapin Station
But these actions are just decisions these people make as part of their freedom of action. It's not as if they follow a government mandate. — Echarmion
The issue is controlling other people. That can easily happen outside of a governmental context. It's not as if it's okay to control people as long as it's not the government doing it officially. — Terrapin Station
But in order for it to be "enforcement" the people doing it must be doing it to actually "enforce" something. — Echarmion
Which doesn't have to be governmental. It can just refer to control.
It's definitely a reaction to speech. That doesn't make it not control. — Terrapin Station
So we should overthrow the capitalist system in favor of anarchy (in the sense of "no gods, no masters, no employers”)? — Echarmion
the thread was called: "The "thing" about Political Correctness", not "Reason why right-wing terrorism is rising". — ssu
It seems to me that those concerned with the potential negative effects of Political Correctness to the extreme, such as Jordan Peterson and various pundits, ought to be far, far more concerned with a rise in rightwing extremism, and their unwitting contributions toward it in the broader public. — Izat So
it's not about leftists imposing PC culture and more about culture, in general, not dealing well with controversy. A problem that's fairly evident on many levels and not limited to PC — Echarmion
People want free speech without concequences, apparently. — StreetlightX
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