You think there's a civil way to talk to the person robbing or raping you?
And that if they remind you that you ought to be civil to them, they are fully justified to do so, and you, as a proponent of civility, should oblige? — baker
Well, certainly that's what he means by "I think of civility as akin to table manners" you gibbering, drooling, fatuous, miserable, pompous, self-righteous, preening, inane cretin. What else would he mean? — Ciceronianus the White
I hold a relativistic outlook, and I see my positions as being products of my psychology, personality, experiences, education, culture and so on. — Judaka
I don't agree with why they say civility is no longer appropriate. — Judaka
Couple this with the fact that 'civility' is always the privilege of those who are not affected by issues - or at least are comfortable with them - it basically puts the ball in their court and keeps it there. — StreetlightX
I am rarely interested in coming to a conclusion on somebody else's intelligence or goodness. — Judaka
Couple this with the fact that 'civility' is always the privilege of those who are not affected by issues - or at least are comfortable with them - it basically puts the ball in their court and keeps it there. — StreetlightX
In the article, incivility is firstly defined as anger, as an act of outrage. https://socialtextjournal.org/eleven-theses-on-civility/The way I read the op, the incivility that is in contention is a product of the discourse being advocated , which takes subjectivity to be a product of sociallly constituted dynamics — Joshs
Translation: it pisses people off when their good intentions are being attacked and condemned on the basis of accusations of agendas of hegemony , privilege, domination and bias that is supposedly hidden and implicit in the idea of individualistic civility. — Joshs
In the article, incivility is firstly defined as anger, as an act of outrage. https://socialtextjournal.org/eleven-theses-on-civility/
"Incivility is anger directed at unjust civil ordering. — Number2018
Translation: it pisses people off when their good intentions are being attacked and condemned on the basis of accusations of agendas of hegemony , privilege, domination and bias that is supposedly hidden and implicit in the idea of individualistic civility. — Joshs
Calls for civility seek to evade our calls for change. The accusation of incivility is a technique of depoliticization aimed at undoing collectivity. We do not need to debate civility; we need to clarify, expand, and intensify our demands.
I'd like some more examples from mainstream political discourse. — Tom Storm
What I see from the radical left is an urgency and importance that creates impatience and frustration and that's where the anger and incivility come from. There are civil ways of conveying radical leftist ideas and quite a few posters on this forum demonstrate it. — Judaka
Whether they like it or not, they need the support of those people to get what they want — T Clark
they need to show some respect. — T Clark
No, they need their compliance. Until black lives do actually matter as much as white lives, there is no civility because civility is a mutual relation. — unenlightened
You cannot show respect to someone who shows you no respect; it is meaningless. Not civility, but mere servility. — unenlightened
For better or worse, that's not how it works, — T Clark
It doesn't work at all. But look perhaps at the women's suffrage movement as another example. — unenlightened
I'm not crazy about head-butting with people who disagree on profound cultural matters. You get a headache and people tend to increase in their vehemence, almost as a defensive strategy. — Tom Storm
It's always the squeaky wheel that gets some grease. — unenlightened
Clearly you don't see the foolishness of white society demanding respect from the movement demanding basic equal treatment for black folks. If only they were like us, everything would be alright. — unenlightened
Until black lives do actually matter as much as white lives, there is no civility because civility is a mutual relation. — unenlightened
Martin Luther King was a pretty squeaky wheel. [gratuitously provocative] I also don't remember that the suffragettes burned down any buildings[/gratuitously provocative]. — T Clark
I agree, and that's why I didn't say anything about inclinations.My inclination is to be civil to you even though you are making a straw man argument, because I am just a sweet little wimp at heart, but it is my duty to resist your bullshit.If we only act civilly to those to whom we're inclined already to so act, then it's no longer an obligation — Isaac
They certainly smashed a few windows.I also don't remember that the suffragettes burned down any buildings[/gratuitously provocative]. — T Clark
Obviously, if it was helpful, it wouldn't be overly confrontational. But again, notice that the issue is the confrontational abuse of the other side. When you don't have the vote, you don't have justice, you don't have freedom, and those that have it are complaining that YOU are uncivil, that is manipulative bullshit in action. The incivility, confrontation and abuse starts with the oppressive society, not with those who resist it.it isn't helpful to be overly confrontational or abusive, — Tom Storm
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