There isn’t 100% support anymore for everything Israel does? — Mikie
So suddenly the sky is falling and “Western civilization” is under attack. — Mikie
Yes, now that you bring it up, quite true. Somehow was taking this for granted before as the way things ought to be. Especially on a philosophy forum. But I guess it is something significant enough to be worthy of mention. — javra
As for the connection topic, I'm OK at this point with agreeing to disagree on the matter. — javra
My biggest fear now is that humanity and the earth will be decimated by the attempts to "solve" global-warming/climate-change. — Agree-to-Disagree
Do you by chance uphold there being a "necessary disconnection" between the actions of state sponsored officials within a democracy and the general sentiment of the average person within said democracy? — javra
I added that part about death due to what I’ve heard on the news regarding police killings. — javra
One could say that, in a sense, spite really is a major contributor. — Echarmion
But I don't blame you really, you are only a pawn in their game.
— unenlightened
Oh, the irony, it burns. — Agree-to-Disagree
Does one get any rest from spite, despite a respite from spite? I mean, spite and then re-spite? Can we de-spite somebody, the way one de-worms a dog? — BC
With all that said, I'm by no means one to deem Western civilization oppressive! I find it to be quite the contrary. Racism can be found in individuals everywhere (like in many a Buddhist, of all people, in Myanmar toward the Rohingya people). But, to my knowledge, only in the West was the affirmation of "liberty, equality, fraternity" made explicit with ambitions to create states that more perfectly embody this ideal. — javra
I greatly doubt that most of the “black lives matter” people in the USA gained their perspectives from writings, or even from the media; and I instead firmly believe that most have had shitty experiences due to racism on repeated occasions (with the untimely death of loved ones here included). — javra
Overall, most homicides in the United States are intraracial, and the rates of white-on-white and Black-on-Black killings are similar, both long term and in individual years.
Between 1980-2008, the U.S. Department of Justice found that 84% of white victims were killed by white offenders and 93% of Black victims were killed by Black offenders.
In 2018, the Federal Bureau of Investigation reported that 81% of white victims were killed by white offenders, and 89% of Black victims were killed by Black offenders.
In 2017, the FBI reported almost identical figures — 80% of white victims were killed by white offenders, and 88% of Black victims were killed by Black offenders. — USA today
This as just one example of what I have in mind. (The politics of any given moment does not constitute a civilization ... ah, but I've already written more than I initially wanted to, so I'll cut this short.) — javra
You may have forgotten the "anti-" part, as in "anti-racist"? — javra
All one needs to do is look out the window a bit to see that racism of all stripes and flavors is alive and well in Western society. — javra
...Racism falls flatly into category (B) — javra
Whereas anti-murder intents are, again currently in our society, so well established that they are nearly as superfluous as the intents to breathe. I don’t respect my neighbor on account of him not having murdered anyone yet—just as I don’t respect him for breathing as he goes about his daily life. — javra
Can’t think of what would constitute acceptable racism, though, this among those in category (A). — javra
If I may: — javra
To be fair, there are also C) those who don’t give a defecation either way, going with the flow of whatever is so long as they’re sufficiently fed and such. But these utterly neutral humans don’t effect any significant influence upon what type of societal environment they live in. — javra
Now if the largest mutual funds like BlackRock or Vanguard make diversity or climate change important, it will be important. — ssu
Where in the USA are these woke lefties tearing down and destroying anything? — mcdoodle
it looks like in the USA that the right-wing Republicans are trying to tear down and destroy. [...] — mcdoodle
forever disrupting, continually avoidiing commitment, never wanting to pass any motion because they are so busy signalling to the world how right they are?
Are you saying this isn't the case? — mcdoodle
Because people, institutions and companies want to be respected and respectful. — ssu
They hire a "diversity director", usually who works in the human resources. Guess who apply for that position? — ssu
Again, Americans don't like racists. — ssu
woke liberal — schopenhauer1
Perhaps it's simple easier to sell the idea that some cabal of leftist thinkers thought that after the collapse of Marxism-Leninism that the way into power would be through culture and education. Far more difficult would it be to tell that American institutions, both in education and in business, are so scared shitless about being called racist that they make overtures from adapting ideologies to simply parroting nonsense close to the left. All in the name of keeping good public relations. — ssu
I think a lot more realistic would be to assume that the left simply takes the issues that the next new generation of leftists take to heart and simply and feed them the older leftist thought. This is possible because of the political amnesia and ignorance of history. Leftist ideas and policies that have failed in the past suddenly appear to be new and fresh! And why not? People in their 30's or younger have not lived when there was a Soviet Union, when Marxism-Leninism was the official religion of the true staunch leftist. The left simply waits for the next batch of angry youth to take the streets, be they protesting the WTO, police brutality or whatever woke matter there is. — ssu
Tolerance of intolerance results in intolerance. Ergo, those who favor tolerance must be intolerant of (i.e., oppress) intolerance if tolerance is to be preserved. — javra
And so forth. To my mind, it’s a complex philosophical issue that can have widespread applications.
One can make of this what they will in terms of left vs. right arguments. But yes, this conundrum only affects those who like tolerance and dislike bigotry. Those who admit to being intolerant or else desire for bigotry (in their own favor of course) don’t have to address this paradox: How can one preserve tolerance in the absence of intolerance for intolerance?
All the same, civility, and a democratic civilization in general, is hard to come by in the absence of tolerance for other tolerant people who happen to be different than oneself. — javra
Being constantly forced to operate within this environment, do you think you might start to take your difference from their view as an affirmation of it? Your belief that they are wrong transforms in what it was meant to be all along: a belief – instilled by your enemy – that you are different from them under the lines they themselves have demarcated. — kudos
Haven't you seen similar villain narratives, where a social group hints that it wants your evil to legitimate their good? — kudos
It is an inability to understand the freedom of speech space. It does happen on both sides, but the Right never claimed to be completely for "tolerance". So, the contradiction happens more on the left. — schopenhauer1
the "Left" as opposed to "old-school liberal" tends to emphasize identity politics and political correctness over more universal agendas (usually more economics-focused, or perhaps celebrating various Western/Enlightenment-based notions developed in the 17th-19th centuries, or even being vaguely patriotic or pro (pick your Western country). If it at all focuses on the West, it is critical of the West (critical theory, and vaguely Marxist in origin). — schopenhauer1
Also, there are good practical and moral reasons to support the only decent country in that whole area. — RogueAI
How can you tell that their coincidence is not related to some common factor? Or maybe you are just defining these faults to be Leftism. — kudos
Furthermore, can the political dividing lines you are drawing not equally incite individuals to take on those roles knowingly in order to prove their difference from your side, as per some similar ethical idea they wish to abide by that belongs to the other's domain? — kudos
I think the right has similar divisions: there are the classic conservatives who do value both free trade and classic liberal values, and then there is the right wanting to fight the culture wars and to engage in the identity humbug. Just as you have have populists on both on the right and left. — ssu
It seems as if your concern is with an abstract idea of freedom, but it’s halfway to inappropriately becoming about politics. You’re defining a difference, ‘I do not believe this (set of notions), and there is a group who has this ethos.’ Then adding, ‘Therefore, if you subscribe to this ethos you are a part of this group.’ It is a logical fallacy that you are likely used to seeing used against you, as it is the ‘old way’ of doing business. Just be clear that this is business and not much more. — kudos
I mean, after all, who does not believe in collectivism and egalitarianism? — kudos
which does not help describe who you’re talking about or what the problem is. — kudos
(Only the West has to abide by rights but no one else even though everyone else was basically colonized, uses the technology of the west and are forced into the post-WW2 reality of “nation-states” rather than sprawling multi-ethnic empires or tribal units that proceeded it)? Isn’t it true you can’t have it both ways, you either have universal rights and liberal principles are a thing or they are not. — schopenhauer1
But doing this makes your argument about cultural power as opposed to knowledge or wisdom, and it is thus not really philosophy. — kudos
There is no power relation without the correlative constitution of a field of knowledge, nor any knowledge that does not presuppose and constitute at the same time power relations. — Foucault
One cannot help but wonder what kind of leverage the Israel lobby has for this to be the case. — Tzeentch
“What have the Romans ever done for us?” — I like sushi
Who are these leftists, and why is their devotion to one of four two-dimensional directions make them an enemy? — kudos
So which is it? It's either "law of the jungle and conquer", or universal rights exist. — schopenhauer1
Again, contradiction upon contradiction. — schopenhauer1