But not moral. — schopenhauer1
Just like preaching against procreating —> species extinction (auto-genocide). — 180 Proof
You seem to be arguing that because I disagree with Nazism then when I claim that someone should be fired for being a Nazi then I am claiming that someone should be fired because I disagree with them. — Michael
I don't understand this. Gender identity is an identity, and so the reality of their gender is their identity. — Michael
And this is where we disagree. I don't think liberalism requires that morally reprehensible speech be tolerated. As I alluded to before, one can be a liberal in one area but not another. I'm a liberal with respect to marriage if I support interracial and same-sex marriage. I'm a liberal with respect to drugs if I support drug legalisation. I'm a liberal with respect to the market economy if I oppose regulations. I don't see a problem with someone referring to themselves as a liberal if they are a liberal in many areas, even if they're not a liberal in one or two others. — Michael
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
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
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
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
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
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.

No, I want acceptable things to be allowed and unacceptable things to be disallowed. That principle likely drives every political position: liberal, conservative, authoritarian, anti-authoritarian, etc. — Michael
I might believe that interracial and same-sex marriage should be allowed, that transgender people should be able to use the bathroom of their choice, that some drugs like marijuana should be legal to buy, and that we should lobby companies to fire their employees for being neo-Nazis. Am I liberal/anti-authoritarian because of the first few views, or am I a conservative or authoritarian because of the last view? — Michael
And it caved in. So at least it needs some way of strengthening to come back to the mainstream and stay there. — M777
How so? — Michael
Isn't a healthy state of affairs if people are afraid to be racist, for example, or do you envision the ideal state where you can go up to someone, spout your racism, and expect appreciation for your openness? — Hanover
They are not internally blocking or hindering their own thought. They are reacting in a socially appropriate way to a situation that that might lead to conflict and trying to decide the best way to handle it. They have been asked a question that is polarizing and divisive and they don't know who their audience is or how their answer might be used for or against them. — Hanover
Slavoj Žižek seems to have a better grasp of it, in my inexpert opinion. — praxis
It's a scary term though, ... — praxis
Again, I've only heard of anti-vax protests. I haven't heard of vax protests or riots. — praxis
It concerns the spread of serious diseases like polio, smallpox, and the like, and you don't expect people to be up in arms about it??? — praxis
Anyway, getting back to Desmet's totalitarianism, if the country is divided over something like COVID then how can the state be considered to be in complete control, or even directing the narrative? — praxis
That's not very unusual for any discussion around here, actually. — praxis
With freedom comes responsibility. I'm fond of saying that. — praxis
Just as long as you never have contact with other humans. — Jackson
Should probably note that it's no surprise that this question - which is not even the OPs question but just another bit of culture-war trash picked up from elsewhere - asks 'what is a woman?' rather than 'what is a man?' - because this kind of stuff is always just paper-thin misogyny pretending to be just-asking-questions - AKA JAQing off. It's women and their gender who must be policed and shunted into whatever little boxes these people have in mind. Largely because they only want to fuck and fantasize about the Right Kind of Women, so men can be whatever (so long as they keep it to themselves!). These people are afraid - terrified - that their fantasies and hard-ons will be misdirected. And that would be ggaaaaayyyy which is icky. — Streetlight
I might argue that such desires for totalitarianism might come out of one's weakness. — M777
What do you think might happen to the west? — M777
reeeeeeeeeeeeeeee — Streetlight
The fragility is overwhelming. — Streetlight
