In general I sympathize with that principle. Let's test it. Imagine a progressive professor who starts referring to all of her students as 'she.' Would you have a right to complain?
I would prefer to stick with the language the way it is. So men as addressed as a "he", women as "she". — M777
Yes. Free speech goes both ways. But one should never seek to censor her. — NOS4A2
Hmm... not sure how did you come to such conclusion. — M777
Stalin/Chavez/PolPot/Mao/kimjonun, — M777
I think that if my name is Michael but my professor insists on calling me Mary then the university has the right to discipline her and compel her to call me by my name. — Michael
When I was a student I had to refer to my teachers as "sir" and "miss". We weren't allowed to call them by their first names. The school system sure is oppressive. — Michael
I think you are joking, but this is maybe a tricky issue. It's hard if not impossible to get by without linguistic norms (like those gendered terms of respect you mentioned). — igjugarjuk
Which is why I said "[o]r maybe trying to label me as being any one thing is futile. Better to just address the individual views I hold rather than fit me into a specific box." — Michael
Yes, and trying to prevent things like the resurgence of Nazism is an inevitable interference. — Michael
Liberalism is a philosophy that starts from a premise that political authority and law must be justified. If citizens are obliged to exercise self-restraint, and especially if they are obliged to defer to someone else’s authority, there must be a reason why. Restrictions on liberty must be justified.
I'm not trying to fit you in a box. — Tzeentch
Even if you genuinely believe that, your choice of censorship and ostracization are extremely poor ones, and haven't done anything to stop it over the course of nearly a century. — Tzeentch
This description leaves the philosophical fundation of liberalism unaddressed; why must power be kept in check and constantly demanded to account for its actions? — Tzeentch
I was referring to the exchange where you referred to my views as being hypocritical. — Michael
Well, there hasn't been another Hitler so maybe it has stopped it. We might not have stamped out Nazi ideology entirely but by censoring and ostracising those who promote it we're making a good effort to push it mostly into the fringe, which is a good thing. — Michael
But such an assumption doesn't then mean that there's never a good reason to restrict freedom. — Michael
This is a better account of liberalism than your account that somehow entails that liberals must support unrestricted freedoms. — Michael
But all this is mostly irrelevant. The simple, everyday fact is that "liberal" is the term adopted by those people who support things like interracial and same-sex marriage, transgender rights, legalisation, welfare, universal healthcare, etc. Rather than splitting hairs over the meaning of the term "liberal", why not actually address the merits of the specific policies they either support or oppose? — Michael
The idea that people should be free only if it suits one's opinions is certainly a hypocritical idea. — Tzeentch
Yet at the same time a liberal must recognize there are certain rights, such as the right to freedom of speech, that are fundamental, a human right and shouldn't be infringed upon. — Tzeentch
I never claimed as much. — Tzeentch
Because as I argued before, the term "liberal" was hijacked by unsavory individuals who in fact aren't liberal at all - much the opposite. They behave like little tyrants that believe their view is best and that it should be imposed on every one else through government force. They're the antithesis to liberalism. — Tzeentch
Well I never expressed that idea so I don't understand the relevance of this comment. — Michael
They don't have to. — Michael
Sorry, unrestricted freedom of speech. — Michael
don't know what you mean by "imposing a view on everyone else through government force" ... — Michael
You did.
Didn't you want to lobby against people who have neonazi thoughts in their head to get them fired from their jobs? — Tzeentch
And before you come with caricatures about yelling fire in a theatre: freedom of speech is about being able to express one's genuinely held beliefs in a civil manner. — Tzeentch
When you say "I believe xyz" in relation to a political opinion, what you're saying is "I want my government to force people to act more in accordance to xyz". — Tzeentch
That's actually even worse, since it implies the law isn't enough to exact the type of revenge you're after. — Tzeentch
There's a meaningful difference between "people who promote Nazi ideology should be fired" and "people who disagree with me should be fired". — Michael
Expressing one's beliefs in a "civil manner" is about more than just tone but also about content. — Michael
Telling my boss calmly and with a smile that I think he's a "fucking nigger" doesn't make me civil, ... — Michael
So what exact examples do you have in mind? — Michael
Because boycotting some business and posting condemnations on Twitter because their CEO is a racist (which is the sort of thing that happens nowadays) isn't the same as wanting the government to force people to behave a certain way. — Michael
What are nazis other than individuals whose views you strongly disagree with? — Tzeentch
Why would purposefully insulting someone be considered a civil way to express one's beliefs? — Tzeentch
No, in a sense it's way worse, because you're going out of your way to try and exact revenge and punishment upon people for behaviors that are perfectly legal, even enshrined as fundamental rights in the constitution and human rights legislation.
I think that's morally reprehensible. — Tzeentch
If you say "we have the right to say what we like" should I interpret that as "we have the right to do whatever I believe we should be able to do?" — Michael
So why would someone saying "transgender men aren't men" be considered a civil way of expressing one's belief when it purposefully insults transgender men? — Michael
So you're saying that I shouldn't lobby a business to convince them to fire their employee for being a racist? That my free speech is morally reprehensible? I don't quite understand how you balance this apparent contradiction in your position. — Michael
Yes, I was joking. Mocking those who believe in unrestricted free speech. As if students having to call their teachers "sir" or MPs in the UK having to refer to their colleagues as "the Right Honourable" or people having to wait their turn to speak at a town hall is some tyrannical attack on human rights. — Michael
I'm not sure what you're getting at. — Tzeentch
Because it's not an insult, regardless of how one may interpret it. — Tzeentch
I guess for transgenderism specifically it's a shame their stake in reality is so closely related to their identity, to the point of which any discussion about that reality becomes an insult to them. — Tzeentch
People may use their freedom to do things I find morally reprehensible.
And I'm fine with that, assuming it doesn't infringe upon the freedoms of others or break the law.
That's the essence of liberalism you see. — Tzeentch
I'm a liberal with respect to the market economy if I oppose regulations. — Michael
Killing Nazis is a good. There is nothing controversial about this. — Streetlight
In the US, this is a conservative position. Liberals are pro-regulation. — ZzzoneiroCosm
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