Nice. So what's your problem with that? — ssu
So why then the ferocious attempt to link terrorism and political correctness? What's the link? So the basic argument is that the topic is somehow wrong, because ...there's right-wing terrorism. — ssu
Germany has four times as many guns per 100 people than the UK (20+ compared to 5 per 100), yet homicide rats in the UK are 44% greater. — I like sushi
The cultures are inherently different. — I like sushi
The mantras of ‘making it in America’ or ‘the land of hopes and dreams’ perhaps plays into people feeling falls harder than they should and abandonment when they see such inclusivity preached? — I like sushi
And your comment above just adds to my point that here you do have to put into context the present with a historical comparison. — ssu
He just made peace with freaking North Korea — fishfry
The rise of the far right is due to the extreme left enabling them. — I like sushi
is when people are prosecuted for what they say and/or others are told they cannot listen to what others say (or severely inhibited from doing so). — I like sushi
I never actually/literally said PC enables the far right and didn’t imply it either. — I like sushi
The rise of the far right is due to the extreme left enabling them. — I like sushi
If you don’t know what PC is then we’re wasting our time here. — I like sushi
I’ve no idea what you’re implying after that about non-white fascist movements — I like sushi
It’s just common sense. If people are pushing hard left ideas and they are disliked then there will be push back — I like sushi
The rise of the far right is due to the extreme left enabling them. — I like sushi
Is this an reasonable account, do you think, of the issues with Political Correctness? — Izat So
If all you know is Orange Man Bad you just can't even think. — fishfry
I get it. Orange Man Bad — fishfry
Orange Man Bad. Not conducive to thought. — fishfry
Is everyone so consumed with hate against the Terrible Orange Man — fishfry
Orange Man Bad, ok. Now try to have ANOTHER thought as well. — fishfry
OK, you don't get my point in this issue. — ssu
That he later goes to talk to the media and goes on talk shows can be seen as a quite logical. After all, he hasn't his earlier job anymore. And there aren't so many professor level people interviewed in the US media. Hence among the filmstars, comedians and other celebrities your run-of-the-mill college professor here isn't so bad. — ssu
And Bret Weinstein has explained this. He thought that it is quite different for a 'Day of Absence' being celebrated by African-Americans being absent (as a boycott mimicking past passive resistance) and to ask white people to stay away. I think that there is an obvious difference in the nuance. And I guess that in any way such a day would and should be optional anyway in either way 'celebrated', hopefully, so that this is a non-issue here. What is the false premiss or lying that refer to I don't know. — ssu
Because I just wanted to note that what you described as only a few persons involved was obviously far more, simple as that. — ssu
So just what was he lying about? — ssu
I wouldn't say that 80 students being sanctioned and suspended (after over 100 incident reports) is just a few people. — ssu
And Bret Weinstein and his wife Heather Heying receiving a $450,000 settlement and $50,000 in legal fees from the college tells something. — ssu
White men have largely been running things. But this seems like a crude simplification to me. And most white men aren't rich and aren't connected to power. Lemme guess, if we get rid of the white men in power, then the rich POC and women in power will sprinkle the poor with cash and reduce carbon emissions, since blackness and femaleness are magically good, just as whiteness + maleness is magically bad. I don't think so. — pomophobe
Milo, Bannon, and Spencer don't get much play on CableTV, but they still have large online followings, and their influence is still able to spread through the unregulated new media — VagabondSpectre
We could ban them from every existing platform, but as long as they have an extant following, they could simply create platforms of their own (we would also have to ban all of their followers from very platform). I'm saying it's not practical to disallow their speech on whatever platforms they manage to get invited to, instead it is far more practical to counter their rhetoric directly when and where arises — VagabondSpectre
Shapiro does represent a very large ideological demographic in America, so unless you want to get rid of political-pluralism altogether — VagabondSpectre
Speech that leads to violence is the kind of speech that we want to censor, but where do we draw the line? In my opinion, if someone calls for, condones, or advocates for violence against a specific individual or group, then we should be able to prosecute them for hate speech, but legislating that in practice is a tricky affair. — VagabondSpectre
I think we may be running aground on our final vocabularies, and I'm not sure you have the story straight, especially since you didn't mention Weinstein — pomophobe
Shapiro's rhetoric does persuade people, in which case we must try to counter his persuasive power with persuasion of our own, a large part of which entails addressing the underlying substance of his claims and beliefs. (Given he is persuading people, censorship or no, clearly de-platforming alone isn't the answer for the left) — VagabondSpectre
Violence is not speech — VagabondSpectre
But if whites become a smaller part of the population and lose political power, they'll have a precedent for thinking racially. — pomophobe
That's pretty weak. — pomophobe
It doesn't keep me up night, but it moves the needle a little bit at the voting booth — pomophobe
So do you distance yourself at all from any PC stuff? I ask sincerely. — pomophobe
his views must still be challenged. — VagabondSpectre
protestors should not use extortionate physical force and disruption to make it happen, nor should they use force to disrupt the event should they not get their way. — VagabondSpectre