Also, I think on many subjects we're way past let's talk about our "disagreements". Racism needs to stop. Employee exploitation just needs to stop. Talking shit about transgenders, gays, lesbians, transsexuals etc. just has to stop. Joking about disabled people has to stop. — Benkei
I honestly didn’t know that it would upset you — praxis
So Frank, I can’t help wondering how committed you are to ‘growing the psychological muscles necessary for listening to a view we don't like’. Imagine, if you’re willing, that Marjorie Taylor Greene submitted an Op-Ed piece to the New York Times on weekly basis, assuming she knows how to read and write. How often do you think they should publish her esteemed options (instead of something more substantive)? — praxis
Why should there be charity? Can you provide an argument for charity?
— baker
Because nobody's perfect. Errare humanum est. When YOU make a mistake, do you prefer it not when people show a little charity? Or do you prefer to be treated without mercy?
Judge not, least you be judged.
Another argument is that, without things like forgiveness and redemption, societies tend to accumulate hatred until people kill one another. — Olivier5
Without forgiveness and redemption, hatred will accumulate until people kill each other. — god must be atheist
Without judgment social structure would crumble. I do keep to the law, because I fear the punishment after breaking it. — god must be atheist
I think it's still the fear of punishment unfortunately, that does mostly the work for people and societies in general. — dimosthenis9
My mistake (and I seek forgiveness for it) that I hadn't indicated that. — god must be atheist
Small damages are forgiven, large ones are punished... that's how it should be, and generally speaking, that's how it is done in the society I live in. — god must be atheist
If M-Toe, or T-Bone J, or Pamela Lee Anderson says something, at least for five minutes the entire world will hold as much weight to it as to the words of Marcus Aurelius (the latter, a bit longer.) — god must be atheist
The problem with cancel culture: small and large "sins" or "crimes" are both treated in an unforgiving way. — god must be atheist
don't think somehow that forgiveness and redemption could be enforced. It is great to have it. My uncle has it — god must be atheist
Small damages are forgiven, large ones are punished... — god must be atheist
What 'upset me' if you want to put it that way, is that you thought it reasonable, on a debating platform, to dismiss frank's contribution with a dismissive (and, it transpires, disingenuous) "hard to take seriously" rather than any kind of charitable inclusion of those concerns in the discussion. — Isaac
If you seriously thought that there wasn't any evidence for the claims in the letter (an already fairly absurd position given the general academic standing in which some of the signatories are held), — Isaac
at the very least we might have expected a "...really! Are you sure those things happened", not an assumption that they probably didn't — Isaac
People ‘exaggerate’ when doing so benefits them in some way — praxis
Without judgment social structure would crumble. I do keep to the law, because I fear the punishment after breaking it. — god must be atheist
"This is the cost of talking to white people at all — the cost of your own life, as they suck you dry,” Dr. Khilanani said in the lecture, which drew widespread attention after Bari Weiss, a former writer and editor for the opinion department of The New York Times, posted an audio recording of it on Substack on Friday. “There are no good apples out there. White people make my blood boil.”
Dr. Khilanani added that around five years ago, “I took some actions.”
“I systematically white-ghosted most of my white friends, and I got rid of the couple white BIPOCs that snuck in my crew, too,” she said, using an acronym for Black and Indigenous people and people of color.
“I had fantasies of unloading a revolver into the head of any white person that got in my way, burying their body and wiping my bloody hands as I walked away relatively guiltless with a bounce in my step, like I did the world a favor,” she said, adding an expletive.
Later in the lecture, Dr. Khilanani, who said she is of Indian descent, described the futility of trying to talk directly to white people about race, calling it a “waste of our breath.”
"We are asking a demented, violent predator who thinks that they are a saint or a superhero to accept responsibility,” she said. “It ain’t going to happen. They have five holes in their brain.”
Cancel culture is a right wing lie that doesn't deserve the amount of air time it gets - it should be ignored especially now that it has been politicized. In fact, I think "cancel culture" is about public accountability. — Benkei
In fact, I think "cancel culture" is about public accountability. — Benkei
Racism needs to stop. — Benkei
Employee exploitation just needs to stop. — Benkei
Talking shit about transgenders, gays, lesbians, transsexuals etc. just has to stop. — Benkei
Joking about disabled people has to stop. — Benkei
People fought wars over justice to get it. Slavery was abolished thanks to violence. Segregation was ended by government force. Sometimes talking things over is just over. — Benkei
The fact societies are moving in that direction is because the wealth inequality, the abuse, the racism is getting to a point where common people no longer accept it. — Benkei
I don't even think that's really a left vs. right wing thing; that's just a lot of people trying to maintain the status quo because they cannot envisage anything better. — Benkei
I once heard an interesting hypothesis about scapegoating: People resort to scapegoating when their own adherence to the values they profess reaches a critical low where even they cannot deny it anymore. Instead of admitting it and deliberately changing their ways, they metaphorically cast their own sins onto someone else and this way free themselves of the burden of a guilty conscience. This way, they clear the slate and can start fresh.
— baker
Is an interesting perspective. So maybe I'm wrong about the unhelpfulness of such generalisation. — Isaac
Why should there be charity? Can you provide an argument for charity?
— baker
Because nobody's perfect. Errare humanum est. When YOU make a mistake, do you prefer it not when people show a little charity? Or do you prefer to be treated without mercy? — Olivier5
Judge not, least you be judged.
Another argument is that, without things like forgiveness and redemption, societies tend to accumulate hatred until people kill one another.
How does a person "stop being a big baby" and how does a person "grow the ability to listen to opposing views without fear that we'll slide into a holocaust if you let other people have their say"?
Have you worked out an actual didactic program for this? Can you present it here? — baker
What is different, in comparison to more traditional cultures, is that modern culture has lost all sense of perspective and measure, so anything and everything can be considered "unacceptable", or "acceptable", but one can never know in advance which. — baker
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