I find that the right believes more is at stake and will make allies with even the rottenest knaves if their goals align enough, whereas the left will merely excommunicate you and ruin your life for disagreeing a little. — ToothyMaw
I do not believe that is an accurate representation of either side. The right says - proclaims, shouts, pounds, screams, buys expensive advertising and mobilizes ruthless propaganda campaigns to convince its supporters - that these are the issues at stake, while the leadership not only knows that to be false, but blatantly breaks every one of the rules and damages every one of the institutions they're campaigning to 'protect.' As for excommunicating those who disagree with the core leadership -- How do you think they became as locked in step as they have in the last 20 years? What happened to the moderate conservatives? And Liz Cheney? — Vera Mont
Is not making alliances, or giving concessions of principle to the "rottenest knaves" really a weakness in a political party? — Vera Mont
It's very difficult to treat your enemies absolutely fairly and to apply the golden rule towards them every time, regardless of how atrocious and nasty their actions have been. — universeness
To forgive them totally for all the actions they performed which resulted in friends and fellows that had their lives severely damaged or totally destroyed. — universeness
I think it's incredible when people can be so forgiving towards the nefarious rich and to right wing extremists, but I also understand those who cannot be so forgiving — universeness
And I maintain that the right, at least in the US, has a greater desire to preserve the institutions we have in place. — ToothyMaw
Yes, I would call the support of armed insurrection 'rule breaking to a degree'. But I was referring to your specific examples of abortion racial equality, on the right-wing rhetoric is so egregiously mismatched with the actual behaviour of its leadership.So many republicans had no desire to see Trump become president, yet the Republican party has supported him through all of his idiocies, falling into step with a clear megalomaniac as easily as you might join a friend for coffee. You might view this as rule breaking, and it is to a certain degree, — ToothyMaw
That is less an example of defending institutions than of deliberately misrepresenting the position of the other party. A tactic not unusual to the right. Was anarchism advocated or even mentioned by the left? Whence did that term enter the discussion of police funding? Why is anarchism never an issue when de-funding public services that don't carry guns?Take for example the fact that many on the right pushed back against what they thought was the literal defunding of police departments, because of their (correct) intuition that anarchism doesn't really work. — ToothyMaw
Some people have certainly expressed rigid views on forums. But I am unaware of any Democrat having been ostracized by the party, or left unsopported in mid-campaign for expressed a nuanced view on anything.No, but try to adopt a nuanced view on race, attempt to discuss it with candor, and see how quickly you get declared a bigot or a white privilege denier. — ToothyMaw
It does now. They drummed out dissenters large and small, starting back in the Nixon years, with further purges under Reagan and Bush II.but it [supporting the disastrous Trump] also demonstrates that the right tends to come together despite small, or large, differences in views. — ToothyMaw
Yeah, and the right doesn't seem to care what you do at all so long as you toe the line. — ToothyMaw
If the citizens of the US, be they left or right, actually cared about our government not ruining lives, they would have voted out the neoliberals and fascists for the many atrocities committed against people in other countries. Selling weapons to Saudi-Arabia so they can blow up brown people halfway across the world? No noise. — ToothyMaw
Honestly, I have little forgiveness for them myself, but I at least try to understand, some of the time, why they do what they do. — ToothyMaw
Some of the institutions. The ones that serve their agenda. Like heavily militarized police forces to keep the mob from protesting economic and political disparity and the privatization of everything from drinking water to highways. — Vera Mont
Yes, I would call the support of armed insurrection 'rule breaking to a degree'. But I was referring to your specific examples of abortion racial equality, on the right-wing rhetoric is so egregiously mismatched with the actual behaviour of its leadership. — Vera Mont
That is less an example of defending institutions than of deliberately misrepresenting the position of the other party. A tactic not unusual to the right. Was anarchism advocated or even mentioned by the left? Whence did that term enter the discussion of police funding? Why is anarchism never an issue when de-funding public services that don't carry guns? — Vera Mont
Some people have certainly expressed rigid views on forums. But I am unaware of any Democrat having been ostracized by the party, or left unsopported in mid-campaign for expressed a nuanced view on anything. — Vera Mont
It does now. They drummed out dissenters large and small, starting back in the Nixon years, with further purges under Reagan and Bush II. — Vera Mont
Ideally protestors would not even come into conflict with said pseudo-military police departments. — ToothyMaw
Killer Mike summed it up when he said that the people need to make a difference with their votes; it is paramount to first build up your house and make it strong to effect lasting change - even if you, understandably, want to see shit burn. — ToothyMaw
That's correct! All entrenched power is quick to defend itself from reform. The more lopsided the disparity between haves and have-nots, the more violently the haves respond to any challenge to their entrenched power.My point was that the right is quick to act on perceived threats to the current order - far more so than the left. — ToothyMaw
By whom? The entire left as a political entity with the power to destroy your life, or by some anonymous poster on an internet forum? It's quite a long way down the scale of harms from being eaten.I have been accused of being racist, or a useful idiot for racists, for mentioning black-on-black violence, — ToothyMaw
Am I a racist if I think black on black crime is worth accounting for when discussing race issues? — ToothyMaw
I don't use the terms "racist" or "racism." I don't think they're useful. But... if you and I were having a discussion about race, and if the first thing you brought up was black on black crime; or the second, or the third, or the fourth, or the fifth; that would tell me something significant about whether I can trust your judgement on racial issues. — T Clark
Interesting word choice! Would you like to reconsider it? — Agent Smith
I wasn't referring to protesters. I was referring to the institutions and constitutional rights that the right actually protects. They only seem to support thos institutions that carry guns. Not the public school system, not the right to protest, not fair and free elections, Air Force, yes; APHIS, no; BOP yes, BLA, no; CIA, yes; CDC no; DHS, yes, HHS; EC yes, EPA, no. ...
And I really don't want to get into the details of who initiates conflict between police and protesters in a non-ideal world. — Vera Mont
Sounds nice. I'm sure it sounds especially nostalgic to the many thousands of people disenfranchised by Republican state voting legislation and systematic voter intimidation. I wouldn't be astonished if some people were irate about being prevented from voting and then told: It's all your fault for not voting. — Vera Mont
That's correct! All entrenched power is quick to defend itself from reform. The more lopsided the disparity between haves and have-nots, the more violently the haves respond to any challenge to their entrenched power. — Vera Mont
By whom? The entire left as a political entity with the power to destroy your life, or by some anonymous poster on an internet forum? It's quite a long way down the scale of harms from being eaten. — Vera Mont
If voting is not sufficient then what would you advocate for? — ToothyMaw
This is one of the major issues the Domocrats are trying so hard to remedy, against such strenuous opposition from Republicans. You are aware that a faction even wants to rewrite the constitution, to take more rights away from citizens?many thousands of people disenfranchised by Republican state voting legislation and systematic voter intimidation. — Vera Mont
More on who eats whom:Duvall opposed legislation that would have added South Dakota to 19 other states calling for a gathering known as a convention of states, following a plan mapped out by a conservative group that wants to change parts of the United States’ foundational document. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/gop-spends-big-in-state-level-effort-to-change-u-s-constitution....
The campaign against Duvall was part of a more than $600,000 push in at least five states earlier this year by the group, Convention of States Action, and its affiliates in Republican primaries to elect sympathetic lawmakers who could add more states to its column. Much of the money comes from groups that do not have to disclose their donors, masking the identity of who is funding the push to change the Constitution.
A major overhaul is somewhat overdue. What I would advocate for, were I a US citizen, is major reform of the electoral system. It had some serious flaws at the outset that were not effectively addressed by amendments. And the interpretation of those amendments is within the domain of an increasingly political judiciary. And the problem of states' rights, which has been causing cracks and breaches in the union from its inception, has grown into great yawning fissures. Then, there is systemic ethnic discrimination, inequality of access, disparity of influence, the ubiquitous influence of money in all matters political and legal, the lobbies, the vested interest blocs, the corruption, the hostilities and the incredibly poor information available to the voting public.what would you advocate for? Some sort of upheaval? — ToothyMaw
Completely understandable. I don't much like being upbraided, reprimanded and labelled, either. It happens a lot; has been happening for 20 years, and it still annoys me.But it annoyed me. — ToothyMaw
okay, it is pretty much always a diversion from challenges to power, I totally admit that. Sorry for downplaying it. — ToothyMaw
I don't use the terms "racist" or "racism."
— T Clark
I think it is okay to use those terms as long as one understands the weight behind them. — ToothyMaw
It really is difficult to discuss American politics and societies (all of them, north to south pole) without some mention of race, racism, the theory and practice of discrimination based on one's continent of genetic origin. It has played such a significant - often decisive - part in the formation of our present nations, it's simply unavoidable. And when we don't talk about it, we still keep running up against it in the dark. Better, I think to discuss than not - but it's hard to do without acrimony. — Vera Mont
I have had a variety of roommates, and honestly it seems to me that all of the best and worst qualities are equally dispersed across racial and ethnic lines, — ToothyMaw
I'm not sure how much empathy is required if you begin with accurate and relevant statistics. What percent of the entire population is what racial designation? (I use designation distinctly, rather than origin or makeup, because the DNA is inextricably mixed)Even though people of color commit more crimes in general, I think people with empathy realize that there are extenuating circumstances and screeching at them about their culture accomplishes nothing. — ToothyMaw
I'm not sure how much empathy is required if you begin with accurate and relevant statistics. — Vera Mont
You can believe as you please. I asked about exact numbers - and they're not as easy to find or correlate as 'popular wisdom'. I'm saying the statistics that are readily available from law enforcement agencies do not accurately reflect the proportional rate of criminal activity among all ethnic groups. That it would take a much deeper and wider research to discover the actual proportions.I totally acknowledge that the justice system is severely flawed, but I have trouble believing that there are such confounding factors that people of color don't genuinely commit more crimes. — ToothyMaw
I mentioned a few factors. All law enforcement disproportionately targets minorities and the poor. So do prosecutors, because they have political campaigns to look good in. People identified as Black make up 13.6% of the overall population, but 19% of the poor; while Hispanics are 19% of the population and 24% of the poor.I mean, if you can provide a little bit of evidence that there are confounding factors that make it merely appear that people of color commit more crime, I'm totally open to amending my position. — ToothyMaw
The empathy factors in in people understanding that people of color who live in low-income, high crime areas cannot merely pull themselves up by their bootstraps - and neither could they in the person of color's shoes. — ToothyMaw
No, but try to adopt a nuanced view on race, attempt to discuss it with candor, and see how quickly you get declared a bigot or a white privilege denier. — ToothyMaw
you have brought forth the terrible injustices that white folks have to put up with. So where do we go from there? — unenlightened
I mean, if you can provide a little bit of evidence that there are confounding factors that make it merely appear that people of color commit more crime, I'm totally open to amending my position. — ToothyMaw
Ok, let's try. I'll start with a personal anecdote. My daughter aged 4 was a highly articulate, outgoing confident child able to engage children and adults in conversation and eager to relate to friends and strangers alike. She was thus very keen to go to school. But within a couple of weeks of starting school, she started to demand that her (white) father take and collect her, rather than her mixed race mother, and then, one evening, she cutoff all her long frizzy hair and hid it under the bed. — unenlightened
South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott gave a deeply personal speech on the Senate floor in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday about the "deep divide" between communities and law enforcement.
While many law enforcement officers do good, he said, some do not. "I've experienced it myself." Scott revealed that he has been stopped seven times in the course of one year as an elected official. "Was I speeding sometimes? Sure. But the vast majority of the time I was pulled over for driving a new car in the wrong neighborhood or something else just as trivial."
He described several encounters with police, including one where he was stopped because the officer suspected his car was stolen. He described a similar incident that happened to his brother, a command sergeant major in the U.S. Army. And he told the story of a staffer who was "pulled over so many times here in D.C. for absolutely no reason other than driving a nice car." The staffer eventually traded in his Chrysler for a "more obscure form of transportation" because "he was tired of being targeted."
"I do not know many African-American men who do not have a very similar story to tell no matter their profession. No matter their income, no matter their disposition in life," he said.
He asked his Senate colleagues to "imagine the frustration, the irritation, the sense of a loss of dignity that accompanies each of those stops."
Scott also described walking into an office building on Capitol Hill and having an officer ask him to show his ID even though he wore a Senate pin.
While he is thankful he has not faced bodily harm, he said, "there is absolutely nothing more frustrating, more damaging to your soul than when you know you're following the rules and being treated like you are not."
"We must find a way to fill these cracks in the very foundation of our country," he said.
The senator ended with a plea to his colleagues to "recognize that just because you do not feel the pain, the anguish of another, does not mean it does not exist." — NPR
Now where I personally would like to draw a hard line is at the point where anyone whomsoever tries to make a comparison between this kind of experience, and being called a white privilege denier. And that is why this conversation becomes difficult. We are supposed to be having candid discussion about race, but even before it has begun, you have brought forth the terrible injustices that white folks have to put up with. So where do we go from there? — unenlightened
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