In other words, there seems to be a hierarchy of accountability in societies based on factors such as wealth, class, culture, etc. that feeds into larger issues surrounding how agency is treated. — schopenhauer1
I want to talk about agency and how it manifests in society. — schopenhauer1
-schopenhauer1In other words, there seems to be a hierarchy of accountability in societies based on factors such as wealth, class, culture, etc. that feeds into larger issues surrounding how agency is treated
A conservative is more likely to credit individuals with agency: they are well off because they earned it -- they were enterprising, clever, thrifty, etc. The poor are badly off because they are slovenly, lazy, stupid, and wastrels. Liberals, on the other hand, are more likely to attribute their good fortune to beneficial environments, and to explain poverty by attributing to the poor harmful environments. — BC
This leads to a series of cause and effects in which the area devolves into your described setting. Rather than remove the standards, the community in this situation should be helping the individual meet the standard. Granted, not every community can take on those responsibilities and may need help from outside area, but the effort should be made to ensure the standards to prevent such situations. — Spencer Thurgood
The "minimum threshold" would be something akin to the idea that "if I or my property is liable to harm somebody, or cause significant damage or distress to others, I should avoid such scenarios".
"Supererogatory standard" would be ones that aren't about harm but might be considered nice to have by some people. You make some aesthetic improvement to your property or something. While it makes the neighborhood look better, that is very dependent on income and time. These are things that have less to do with common courtesy to fellow man, and more to do with lifestyle and preference (aka live and let live).
Shouldn't all people try to live by the "minimum threshold" and find ways to meet it? To not hold the "ghetto" areas to the minimum threshold is to actually perpetuate a self-fulfilling prophecy. In fact, it is "othering" a significant segment of society to the point that they have no more agency than an animal or an inanimate object. Going back to the roaming dog, if you get bit by that dog, it would be odd to think of this as akin to a shark attack (wrong place, wrong time, just the universe and crazy natural processes). But some people might input this upon that scenario. Rather, someone wasn't just negligent (not a one time thing), but continually let their dog just roam around without a care. No attempt to keep them inside their property. That is an agent not meeting the minimum threshold. They don't need the newest fence, dog collar, lawn, doghouse for this, just enough to keep their furry friend protected and not a possible cause of tragedy. But this can be extended to a great number of things including the volume at which you play music, the time you play the loud music, not allowing yourself to litter obscenely or break glass bottles on sidewalks when done drinking, not parking your vehicle ON the sidewalk preventing people from walking, etc. Again, these aren't unobtainable for 99% of people. In fact, they are small actions and behaviors that have real effects on the surroundings. — schopenhauer1
The "minimum threshold" would be something akin to the idea that "if I or my property is liable to harm somebody, or cause significant damage or distress to others, I should avoid such scenarios".
"Supererogatory standard" would be ones that aren't about harm but might be considered nice to have by some people. You make some aesthetic improvement to your property or something. While it makes the neighborhood look better, that is very dependent on income and time. These are things that have less to do with common courtesy to fellow man, and more to do with lifestyle and preference (aka live and let live) — schopenhauer1
Going above and beyond would be the collar, the tag, the fenced yard etc. as these are likely dependent on the persons ability to procure those items. In the "ghetto" for instance, the owner of the dog might not have the ability to fence their yard because they do not have a yard to fence. The same could possibly apply to the other items. — Spencer Thurgood
And naturally of ownership and staus in the community. For starters, people behave differently to things and propertty if they a) own it, b) if they rent it or c) if it’s public property. Or if it’s not their property, do they know whose property it is.In other words, there seems to be a hierarchy of accountability in societies based on factors such as wealth, class, culture, etc. that feeds into larger issues surrounding how agency is treated. — schopenhauer1
And naturally of ownership and staus in the community. For starters, people behave differently to things and propertty if they a) own it, b) if they rent it or c) if it’s public property. Or if it’s not their property, do they know whose property it is. — ssu
Then come crucial things like do you feel part of the community or is the ”community” just rich assholes who hate you. — ssu
The "minimum threshold" would be something akin to the idea that "if I or my property is liable to harm somebody, or cause significant damage or distress to others, I should avoid such scenarios".
"Supererogatory standard" would be ones that aren't about harm but might be considered nice to have by some people. You make some aesthetic improvement to your property or something. While it makes the neighborhood look better, that is very dependent on income and time. These are things that have less to do with common courtesy to fellow man, and more to do with lifestyle and preference (aka live and let live).
Shouldn't all people try to live by the "minimum threshold" and find ways to meet it? To not hold the "ghetto" areas to the minimum threshold is to actually perpetuate a self-fulfilling prophecy. In fact, it is "othering" a significant segment of society to the point that they have no more agency than an animal or an inanimate object. Going back to the roaming dog, if you get bit by that dog, it would be odd to think of this as akin to a shark attack (wrong place, wrong time, just the universe and crazy natural processes). But some people might input this upon that scenario. Rather, someone wasn't just negligent (not a one time thing), but continually let their dog just roam around without a care. No attempt to keep them inside their property. That is an agent not meeting the minimum threshold. They don't need the newest fence, dog collar, lawn, doghouse for this, just enough to keep their furry friend protected and not a possible cause of tragedy. But this can be extended to a great number of things including the volume at which you play music, the time you play the loud music, not allowing yourself to litter obscenely or break glass bottles on sidewalks when done drinking, not parking your vehicle ON the sidewalk preventing people from walking, etc. Again, these aren't unobtainable for 99% of people. In fact, they are small actions and behaviors that have real effects on the surroundings. — schopenhauer1
Correct. If you can't keep the dog properly protected and contained, then that is not meeting the threshold. — schopenhauer1
Personally, I would argue that the need to contain the dog would be dependent on the situation. For instance, if your animal has a history of aggression and you want to keep the animal, it could be argued that keeping the animal contained is necessary to prevent the dog from harming others.
If the dog does not have that history of aggression though, containing the animal might be viewed as going above the required threshold and so not be enforceable.
As you said, the devil, and I might add the fun, is in the details. — Spencer Thurgood
However, dogs are unpredictable when faced with various situations and assumptions shouldn't be made. — schopenhauer1
It could therefore, be reasonably argued that things like containing the animal go above and beyond that threshold depending on the owner's ability and personal decision regarding their property. — Spencer Thurgood
It’s another of the myriad problems with collectivist thinking. So-and-so is from this group, or this tax-bracket, or this identity, therefor we need to judge him accordingly. — NOS4A2
his is venturing into picayunish/pedantic territory — schopenhauer1
I am not sure what you mean by "picayunish/pedantic territory". — Spencer Thurgood
Supererogatory standard — schopenhauer1
If you are living in a ghetto part of town, near concrete structures of varying dinginess and decay, near known addicted and homeless populations (not families looking for temporary relief, but more chronic homeless), etc. if you walk by a house and the dog is off leash, no tags, and it starts barking and biting at you or other dogs, it's just "that's the way it is". The owner of said dog is said to have no agency. He/she is poor, it's his culture, etc. So while not being "good", the "person" is not bad, it is more causal, and less agential. The rich man with the poor decisions deserves the wrath, and the person living in the "poor" neighborhood is just doing what he does. It's "part of the conditions".
Is there muddled thinking here? Is there self-fulfilling thinking? Is it right to think this way even (the different standards)? Are parts of cities some intangible force obfuscated by class and cultures or is it individuals making decisions based on bad information? Or do they have bad information? For example, how ubiquitious in a Westernized country is it to know that dogs can bite people and or get mistreteated if left off the leash and allowed to just roam a neighborhood? Is it unreasonable to hold parts of the same metro area (suburbs plus inner city) to the same standards as others when it comes to these ideas? Or are the cultures too far apart for individual decision making to be a factor? Is this somehow inadvertantly classist or worse, in terms of who we deem able to be accountable? — schopenhauer1
Does being "considerate" to your neighbors transcend class? Can you have two families from the same culture and class in a "ghetto", one that doesn't have cars parked in the front lawn, dogs biting people, and music blasting into the night, and one that does? When is it just "the way it is" versus, "that person is being a nuisance and is harmful"? When does behavior ever transcend class or background? — schopenhauer1
The "minimum threshold" would be something akin to the idea that "if I or my property is liable to harm somebody, or cause significant damage or distress to others, I should avoid such scenarios". — schopenhauer1
Some standards can be applied to anyone, without respect to their wealth or poverty, residence in a $1,000,00 - $5,000,000 per home suburb, or stinking ghetto. — BC
Neither gilded suburbanites nor ghetto dwellers should engage in drive-by shootings, frivolous lawsuits, DIY justice, bribery of private school personnel, rape, public drug use, failure to recycle their empty fine wine bottles, or public drunkenness. That dog? keep it on a leash or inside a fenced yard. Throwing beer bottles into the street? Not acceptable anywhere. — BC
it seems like people do maintain a minimum level of acceptable behavior -- or even aimed for more than that -- because even in a ghetto, people have to interact in an orderly manner to accomplish their goals -- whether that goal is drug dealing, fencing catalytic converters, getting children to school, or scrounging for food, — BC
Do people in gilded suburbs maintain a minimum standard of behavior or better? Or, are they as likely to be inconsiderate, noisy, bad neighbors, and so on? I have little contact with gilded suburbanites, but from what I have read, they are as likely to behave badly as anybody else, but will maintain a veneer of nice behavior. If they are going to shoot you, they probably won't call you a motherfucking bitch first. Or, maybe they like ghetto slang -- I wouldn't know. — BC
The neighborhood I live in ranges from stable working class to professional working class, with more upscale people living along the Mississippi River. About 10,000 people live in this neighborhood. Most of the housing is modest single family bungalows with small yards. It's a solid Democratic area. Most people maintain their property reasonably well. Off-leash dogs are a rarity. More objectionable is people not picking up their dog's shit. Driving too fast on residential streets is a problem. Lots of people display "20 is plenty" signs -- drive at 20 mph on most residential streets (it's the law). I'd say there is a consensus about what is minimum acceptable behavior here. — BC
The kind of behavior one sees in 'ghetto' areas -- like noisier, messier partying involving large numbers of people would not be considered acceptable around here. A large party is possible, but quiet, neat, and orderly, please. — BC
Indeed, the problems come down to various levels of tolerance for discomfort caused by other people. — schopenhauer1
There are unfortunately plenty of people who don't mind roaming dogs biting them and do look at it as if it's just a part of being in a neighborhood. — schopenhauer1
other words, there seems to be a hierarchy of accountability in societies based on factors such as wealth, class, culture, etc. that feeds into larger issues surrounding how agency is treated. — schopenhauer1
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