It sounds like you've never turned on Fox News. Alt-Right reality is now a caricature of itself. Turn on Fox and see - the simulacrum. — ZzzoneiroCosm
It's only a simple question if you have no concern at all for persons with gender dysphoria (et al) trying to make sense of their complicated feelings.
In short, if you're a fucking asshole - it's a simple question. — ZzzoneiroCosm
It's cute when Lauren Boebert (American Republican representative) says that no one's gonna make her get the Fauci Ouchie, and there's plently more like her in office. — praxis
Yet antinatalists LITERALLY don't do anything to ANYONE. Pushing a view versus pushing a whole life onto someone else. Let's see which one profoundly affects someone ELSE more. — schopenhauer1
Again, I've only heard of anti-vax protests. I haven't heard of vax protests or riots. — praxis
Vaccination is another one of those great examples where people seem to show radical intolerance for dissent - mass formation at work. — Tzeentch
Is your inner thought police making you understate the facts? Internal blockages of this nature are not healthy. — praxis
You got all of that from a single question asked by a hypothetical stranger? — Tzeentch
Bear in mind that antivaxers died for their views, in many cases. That’s commitment, or perhaps paranoia. I recall Desmet mentioning paranoia, don’t you? — praxis
Another thing Desmet describes is that this phenomenon of mass formation and totalitarianism (other than classical dictatorships, for example) come from inside the population itself, in other words, we're on a path towards radicalism because people have become more radical, and not only are they fully aware of the dangers, they wish for them, for example censorship, because it protects their radical views. We're in this situation because people want to be in this situation. — Tzeentch
Well one of those people is an activist whose hobby it is to go after people and the other a person trying to navigate the treacherous waters the activist has created. — DingoJones
I wouldnt agree that its “”fragile delusional lunatic”, at least not just on one side of this debate. Sadly most people on both sides of any given debate in the US operate in this fragile deluded state. There are two opinions for most people stateside these days, your opinion and the opinion of your sworn enemies.
There is a complex answer to how that happened, but its the way it is. — DingoJones
When did the idea that people are obligated to discuss religion and politics to every troll become the rule. — Hanover
They are “hypothetical”, it is a very real social concern. There are, right now, people waiting, searching, for anyone to “speak their mind” in the wrong way so they can met out social justice. You answer someone in the street today, maybe you end up jobless tomorrow cuz some self important douche appointed themselves the arbiter of opinions. Then they will say something along the lines “ freedom of speech doesnt mean freedom from consequences” or something equally as blind and dumb.
You are right though, it is an act of cowardice. — DingoJones
It’s amazing how a simple question can strike such reticence and confusion. They likely understand that an answer that runs afoul of certain ideologies could end in forms of ostracism or even assault. It’s the captive mind. — NOS4A2
Is there an intent in this piece of yours? Can you explain it? Would you want to explain it? — Fine Doubter
My comment was that refraining from discussing one's position isn't equivalent to internally suppressing one's position. Whether that behavior is cowardly or prudent has no bearing on my comment. — Hanover
Another thing: one can say a woman is a fine mind — Fine Doubter