Those data say things completely different from what you said — Jabberwock
Ukraine was not worse than Russia since 1991 — Jabberwock
its civic freedoms, while still quite imperfect, were on the higher level than Russia's at least since 2000, — Jabberwock
If that is so, then so would be the difference of .38 between Ukraine in 2015 and now - but the whole point of using that datapoint was to show 'evidence' for the remarkable growth that Ukraine has made in a few years? — Jabberwock
a handpicked data point — Jabberwock
the score from 2020 for Russia is not that relevant either, given the changes that have occurred since. I could give you a long list of those, but I will not. Do you know why? — Jabberwock
Yes, I know those bits in blue, those are the exact links I have used to get the data I have so nicely presented. — Jabberwock
Ukraine score in 2015: 6.34 — Jabberwock
Not if the expected likely consequences are worse than if you did not take that action. — Jabberwock
we should compare options and their consequences — Jabberwock
We should abandon the discussion of consequences based on a single metric, like the body count, and consider the overall consequences. — Jabberwock
if people believed that oppression is better than risk of death, like you do, then there would be no armed rebellions at all. As you are unable to delineate the boundaries of concessions, we can assume that in all provided cases of liberation wars and revolutions you would argue for leaving the oppression as the better option (because your only metrics is the death count). — Jabberwock
tell me when the armed fight with oppression would be preferable. — Jabberwock
If you want to discuss the consequences, let us do that. — Jabberwock
But wait a minute... You wrote: 'An example might be the Human Freedom Index which had Ukraine ranking 134 in 2014, below Russia at 119'. But the very source you have provided says something else: Ukraine 114 (score 6.57), Russia 123 (score 6.24).
Did you really think I would not look at the data? — Jabberwock
Mapping, modelling, denoting, depicting, describing, representing, referring? What is it that is mapped, modeled, denoted, depicted, described, represented or referred to if not what is commonly experienced? — Janus
to show that I just have to show culture as a viable and more plausible theory — schopenhauer1
I think you've equivocated between inheriting an identity and being subject to its systemic vectors of oppression when you count as it. If you look like a duck, people will treat you like a duck. — fdrake
There were so few non-overlapping elements in the public conception of things, anyway. Those instabilities were going to implode as soon as anyone shone light on them. I think it's a good thing this is happening. — fdrake
Aye. I think if this was a choice on the ballot, I would take it. More categories, more protective laws, more tailorable specificity.
I imagine you believe the same of masculinity, it's not an "all or nothing" thing? It's instead a big wibbly wobbly ball of manny-mascy stuff? — fdrake
No, 'greater than zero' is not enough — Jabberwock
If you had a plan that would provide us with global peace without any violence, but the chance of success was 1%, and the 99% was that the world would be plunged into tyranny, then nobody would pursue that course of action, even though the goal was so lofty. — Jabberwock
in this case it is a distinction without a difference. Neither Ukraine was authoritarian a few years ago, nor did it undergo any fast processes over the last few years. — Jabberwock
No, I am arguing that you have failed to provide an argument that your proposed course of action would likely bring the result of avoiding war. — Jabberwock
No, because it failed to provide any positive results — Jabberwock
Oh, so the alternative is now thousands of deaths or decades of oppression. Think of the children, you said? If so, then it is even more understandable why Ukrainians would prefer the former. — Jabberwock
If the country's electoral process is erratic, but not fully dominated by the regime, if the country has democractic judicial oversight (Ukrainian courts were instrumental both in the Kuchma case and Yushchenko revote), well established tradition of grassroot movements (at least since the Orange Revolution), local governments which are not hand picked by the central authority, press that enjoys more freedom, that is. It might help if the opposition politicians are not routinely murdered or jailed, journalists murdered or beaten up.
But Russia does not have any of that. — Jabberwock
Rule of law
Security and safety
Movement
Religion
Association, assembly, and civil society
Expression and information
Relationships
Size of government
Legal system and property rights
Sound money
Freedom to trade internationally
Regulation — https://www.cato.org/human-freedom-index/2021
No, they are not, you have specifically excluded 'human freedom measures' from 'facts' - 'measures of autocracy and democracy are not objective'. — Jabberwock
It's not about possibility and necessity. It's about "more likely". — neomac
Easy. The 'desired effects' are freedom for Ukrainians with fewer than a hundred thousand dead. Your proposal has zero chance of achieving that, so mine only has to have greater than zero. Are you arguing that mine also has zero, that Russia cannot shake off tyranny? — Isaac
you are supposed to argue that what the course of action you propose is likely to provide the desired effects. — Jabberwock
If we are tracking transition from autocracy to democracy — Jabberwock
you have to argue that your proposed course of action is likely to achieve that goal. — Jabberwock
The former, because the chance of achieving the latter is low — Jabberwock
the predicted outcomes offset the probabilities, but only to a small degree. — Jabberwock
I understand that you are desperate to show that all perspectives are equal, but the simple truth is they are not. — Jabberwock
Your story is invalid because it does not cohere with the generally accepted view of historical processes. — Jabberwock
Do experts believe that quick and peaceful revolution in Russia leading to its democractization is likely? — Jabberwock
so far we have nothing to compare, because you have failed to present the argument — Jabberwock
I think that's true, but I'm not sure it's relevant from the perspective of what counts as a woman. — fdrake
There'd need to be an argument that past oppression experiences which are typical for women to experience are necessary for being a woman. Effectively this would exclude anyone trans. If it's treated as a theory of social identity as well as a legal classification. — fdrake
Isn't this against the point you made earlier? About the definitions of an oppressed minority should not depend solely upon the oppressor? Did I misread? — fdrake
Though I imagine we're having the frames discussion you highlighted at the end of your post. — fdrake
Perhaps a decent angle to come at this from, giving charity to the "cancel culture brigade" is that the frame separations are also politically charged, perhaps precisely because it's difficult to tell when the frames have switched. — fdrake
there'd be nothing stopping the a code from having trans misogyny guidelines which enable some of the same legal protections. — fdrake
It's a pretty fine line between an organisation allowing someone into a space because legally biological sex lets them preclude it vs not allowing someone into a space under that same law because they're not seen as who they are. You see what I mean? — fdrake
I doubt it makes sense treat its vectors as independent. Since we already stipulated that there are plenty of times trans women will be the recipient of acts which would be called misogynist acts if they were directed toward a cis woman. That articulation necessitates an underlying construct - gender. — fdrake
I did not present my views based on one instance. I have quoted many events from the history that support the view I propose. — Jabberwock
Unlike you. — Jabberwock
It was you yourself that proposed democracy indices as a measure of democracy. — Jabberwock
Till now you have flatly refused to do that. — Jabberwock
You demand from your government that it takes a specific course of action instead of the course of action it is taking. To argue for that you have to present an argument that the specific course of action you propose is more likely to have the preferred result than the course taken by them. — Jabberwock
all I have to do is support an argument that war is more likely to produce the preferred results than other courses of action — Jabberwock
I have already explained which historical events support my argument that peaceful revolution in Russia at this time is unlikely. — Jabberwock
I argue against it, because it is an invalid one, for which I gave my reasons. — Jabberwock
Saying 'Oh, I can argue that Ukraine's transition was fast and recent, because I can interpret the facts that way!' has the exact same weight as 'Oh, I can argue that the Moon landing did not happen because I can interpret the facts that way!' — Jabberwock
we have a reason to believe that the taken course of action is likely to produce the effects we expect (as you wrote yourself, it is a perfectly valid story). On the other hand, we have no reason whatsoever to believe that the course of action you propose is likely to produce the desired effects, beside your claim that your interpretation of events (which you refuse to share) tells you so. — Jabberwock
that Ukraine in recent years went from autocracy to democracy quickly and by way of popular protests - that is also an ahistorical claim — Jabberwock
While I can see the utility of it for the law, there was also some utility in leaving some points as it was. — fdrake
I'm sure you see the distinction between recognising an act of misogyny in the workplace and operationalising/defining terms in the law. — fdrake
this appears quite distinct from studying "toxic" masculinity as a category of social style/personal identities, since identity of that sort is largely autonomous from the legal codes surrounding it. — fdrake
functionally it wouldn't matter what the psychological type is if it results in misogyny either way. — Moliere
I have to admit that I have seen no reasonable evidence in this thread of any poster being terminally stupid, uncaring or insane. — unenlightened
do continue to engage with [them] — unenlightened
you use these sorts of epithets on a regular basis in an attempt to undermine people — unenlightened
the inconsistency I see in your posting: you are very free with these negative labels, but there is no good reason ever to address them to your interlocutors on the boards, rather you should point them out to the mods so that they can be remove the people we don't want to waste time talking to and the sensible fair-minded decent people can discuss freely. — unenlightened
What argument?The rest of us call it ad hominem fallacy. — unenlightened
Reasoning will never make a Man correct an ill Opinion, which by Reasoning he never acquired — Jonathan Swift
But you sure like calling them out, o fair-minded one! — unenlightened
The argument here is not all people's opinions are equal. Of course they're not. It's an argument about what we ought take as reasonable grounds to take an opinion seriously. — Isaac
Or racist xenophobes. — unenlightened
I have the impression that you are trying to paint Jabberwock as a bigot, which seems the sort of thing you deplore about woke cancel culture. — wonderer1
1. Putin's rule has been practically unchallenged by peaceful protests for twenty years.
2. The events of the Ukrainian war have weakened Putin's regime. — Jabberwock
With the scenario of law, and in taking into consideration the wider system of patriarchy, I'd say that trans individuals are targeted by patriarchy as much as women. — Moliere
Consider the same scenario where a trans woman is skipped over promotion because our misogynist believes the woman is a confused man. — Moliere
You expect me to apologize that facts confirm my arguments and not yours? — Jabberwock
I would say that a bloody, unsuccessful war, with more than 100k dead and collapsing economy COULD be that impulse — Jabberwock
Putin's grip on power seems to be slipping — Jabberwock
tyrannies have a strange habits of being quite resistant to change. — Jabberwock
The first option - 'fighting to free all Russia' is so unlikely that it is absurd - overthrow of the Communism took 50 years and happened mostly due to economic failure of the Soviet system. Tell me, how successful is the West in overthrowing the regime in Belarus? Not very, I would say? Why think that in Russia the result would be different? — Jabberwock
before the region is turned into a police state, as those are not that easy to overthrow as you believe them to be. — Jabberwock
all autocratic regimes oppose resistance and they often last quite long — Jabberwock
Source? — fdrake
The Gender Recognition Act 2004 provides that the gender of a person with a Gender Recognition Certificate (GRC) becomes the acquired gender ‘for all purposes’ and recognised as their legal sex, broadly equivalent to the way sex recorded at birth is recognised in law for other people. This concept of ‘legal sex’ has been confirmed by the courts in their interpretation of the meaning of the protected characteristic of sex in the EqA. The EHRC has consistently understood this to be the position in the law as it currently stands and we have based our guidance and interventions until now on that understanding. However, this raises questions in legal interpretation and in practice. Notwithstanding the existence of statutory exceptions permitting different treatment of trans people where justified, and our guidance to explain the law, it has not been straightforward for service providers and employers to apply the law, including in areas such as sport and health services.
we have come to the view that if ‘sex’ is defined as biological sex for the purposes of EqA, this would bring greater legal clarity
There is a clear need to move the public debate on these issues to a more informed and constructive basis. This would be welcomed by the many who do not take the polarised positions currently driving public debate.
The criteria by which people socially count as women can be quite different from those which correctly count women as women in accordance with a robust theory of identity. In that respect, what matters for being a recipient of misogynist acts isn't "being a woman" (in accordance with a robust theory of identity) it's "counting as one" for practical purposes. — fdrake
Yes, I would rather help Ukrainians, possibly because I know more Ukrainians than Yemeni. — Jabberwock
People don't identify as misogynists, so that'd be problematic! — Moliere
If we were talking structural problems, like patriarchy, then it'd make sense to talk about a social determination -- but at the level of identity I don't think it makes sense to say that's a social determination. Or, at least, it's not the same — Moliere
Also I'm not sure that an identity is a trait as much as it's a manner of expressing traits. "Tall" is a trait that's relative to the group, being between such and such heights on average is a range of traits associated with some group, and expected behaviors are one step away from traits. But the manner of expression is what differs. — Moliere
I've been saying resentment too, which isn't the exact same as hatred. — Moliere
So it's a way of displaying one's manliness, or expressing one's manhood, or being a man that results in the hatred — Moliere
"Woman", to the misogynist, probably has a collection of traits associated with it but I wouldn't be too keen on accepting the Type as the misogynist sees it either...
...it's the misogynist that's doing the identifying...
...So from my perspective the object of the misogynist's hatred is partly a fantasy. — Moliere
a toxic masculinity is an identity which results in misogyny. — Moliere
resentment of women as a type of person seems to get closer to the psychological type, but functionally it wouldn't matter what the psychological type is if it results in misogyny either way. — Moliere
What government are you assuming to be Jabberwock's? — wonderer1
so that no one cares which side of the border they're on — Isaac
Is this related to the "border/country free world" thing from earlier in the thread? — jorndoe
The bottom line still is, people have risked their lives for freedom throughout the history. — Jabberwock
I have explained why I think that option is very unlikely. — Jabberwock
Ukraine lost its independence in 1921 and gained it again in 1991. How is this an example of 'simple' or 'faster'? — Jabberwock
You had no problems of presenting demands and likelihood of their fulfillment when you have described the hypothetical peace negotiations, but now you have no data. — Jabberwock
The people threw that shackle off after 50 years when the USSR was economically collapsing and could not intervene, like it did in 1968 in Czechoslovakia or almost did in 1980 in Poland. So yes, the people did it, but the situation was quite favorable. — Jabberwock
I see, you donated. But if you sold all your possessions, leaving just the bare minimum, you would save even more Yemenis. That would be THE MOST HUMANITARIAN OPTION, would it be not? Yemenis give up their lives so that we can have smartphones, computers, and watch Netflix, that does not bother you that much? Somehow you do not feel obliged to relinquish all your comforts and do not demand that from all the people you know? Only Ukrainians should give up their freedom? — Jabberwock
You would prefer to force Ukrainians to go under Russian occupation and then somehow help them in other ways. Does that misrepresent your views in any way? — Jabberwock
As long as you have a smartphone, leave the Yemeni out of this. — Jabberwock
I am advocating that Ukrainians be able to decide in matters most related to them, exactly as I wrote. I would be extremely happy if Russian conscripts could decide for themselves, however, the West has little means to enable that choice. In the case of Ukrainians, we can. — Jabberwock
There is no reason to limit the examples to invasion of one country by another, given that Ukraine does not and never planned to invade Russia. Why bring it up then? — Jabberwock
It is you who suggests that overthrowing Russian regime by peaceful methods would be somewhat trivial — Jabberwock
Forever, no, for a very long time, yes. At least as long as in Belarus, possibly as long as in the USSR. Why think it would be faster? — Jabberwock
Putin wanted to take over the country and he did not — Jabberwock
Unless you answer straight which Russian demands would need to be rejected, even under the threat of force, I am justified to assume that you would give up the whole Ukraine. If that misrepresents your view, give a straight answer: where is the limit. — Jabberwock
Russia is actively thwarting all attempts of democratizing of former republics, if it can, and it is quite open about it to discourage others — Jabberwock
I have donated to several Ukrainian funds. But you do demand that Ukrainians give up their freedom to alleviate the hunger crisis, right? — Jabberwock
Ukrainians can choose their future only if they have outside help. Without that help, their future is decided by Russia. You want to deprive them of that help — Jabberwock
People who are most affected by the consequences of certain actions should have the most say about choices concerning those actions. — Jabberwock
it is not the most humanitarian option ... What you fail to understand is that there are some things that people are willing to risk their lives for or even knowingly die for. — Jabberwock
None of the oppressive regimes were overthrown by military action? Hmm, let me think: the American Revolution, the Haitian Revolution, the Greek War, the Irish War, the Indonesian War, the Algerian War, the Russian Civil War, the Afghanistan War. Funny how many of them have 'war' in the name? And remind me, was the Hitler's regime overthrown by a popular protest? Because I do vaguely remember some foreign soldiers were involved... Mussolini? Rings a bell? Did Saddam Hussein resign after peaceful protests? Gaddafi? Sorry, I do not have all day. — Jabberwock
tyrannies have a strange habits of being quite resistant to change. It could be due to their tendencies to crush any opposition with brutal force, I guess. — Jabberwock
The first option - 'fighting to free all Russia' is so unlikely that it is absurd — Jabberwock
how successful is the West in overthrowing the regime in Belarus? Not very, I would say? — Jabberwock
Giving up the whole Ukraine (because that is the option you really propose) — Jabberwock
most likely mean condemning them to the yoke of tyranny for many decades to come. — Jabberwock
Please describe what exactly did you do to help in the world hunger crisis. It must have been a lot, if you demand that Ukrainians give up their freedom to alleviate it, right? — Jabberwock
Oh, so Ukrainians have no right to decide the future of their children, but you have the right to decide the future of Ukrainians. Right. — Jabberwock
Well, you feel you have the right to decide the fate of Ukrainians, because of the war, and disagreed that it is their decision to make, even though they are most affected by it. Why? — Jabberwock
What is the matter in question? — Jabberwock
You seem to have a naive conviction that giving in to demands of a bully at the slightest show of his force will stop him exactly where he is. — Jabberwock
what in Ukraine you would NOT give under the threat of war? — Jabberwock
Oh, I have a quite good idea what negotiations are. Negotiations were involved in the Budapest Memorandum, quite a lot of them. Oops. And what about Minsk 1? Oh, how they negotiated, the guarantees they gave! Ouch. Wait, there was also Minsk 2! They negotiated there as well, so all the resolutions must have been fina and dutifully observed by both sides, right? Right? — Jabberwock
The issue is, that you propose to give Russia anything to avoid war. — Jabberwock
We have every reason to think that Russia would thwart every effort to establish a full democracy in a country of its influence. — Jabberwock
Are you seriously suggesting that Yemenis are as much affected by the war as Ukrainians? — Jabberwock
Are you seriously suggesting YOU are as much affected by the war as Ukrainians? — Jabberwock
Because it is right to let them choose the path they want to take. — Jabberwock
when we do not support them, then we are exactly 'offering Russia elements' that have very much to do with Ukraine, not with us. — Jabberwock
We let Russia decide Ukraine's fate, just because it is stronger. — Jabberwock