I spent five years in a Catholic Monastery forty years ago, although I have never been religious for a single day. — Joe Mello
How does a person "stop being a big baby" and how does a person "grow the ability to listen to opposing views without fear that we'll slide into a holocaust if you let other people have their say"?
Have you worked out an actual didactic program for this? Can you present it here? — baker
Can't help thinking there's something a little Marcusean here (alluded to earlier) about the reality of worker's demands being all too uncouth for a certain class of left-wing pundit.
Is rescuing a tormented trans art student safer than empowering a grubby factory trade union member?
Is installing a (privileged) black female supreme court judge safer than giving black female banana growers a fair price for their product?
Is getting equal pay (by way of increase, of course!) for female entertainers less dangerous than just taxing the fuck out of them to pay for such luxuries as rice and water for those less charming in an evening dress?
Are the beneficiaries of old-school socialism just too frightening for the newly elevated chattering classes, they need someone tamer, more like them, to help. Someone they are less complicit themselves in the oppression of. — Isaac
I've no sympathy at all for those who threaten her, but I've no sympathy for her either, she's a billionaire, she'll manage. — Isaac
If this is true, then perhaps many transsexuals can be seen as gay men and women who want their bodies to ‘match’ their brain wiring.
— Joshs
Yes, if that is the most rationally consistent way to go about it. — Garrett Travers
You have probably seen Kinsey's and other people's stats on bisexual behavior. — Bitter Crank
It's like if you have a friend who goes ballistic every time you put a cup down without a coaster, you just become immune to it; you're going to take little notice next time he explodes even if, this time, its over something really important. — Isaac
I believe that , as Freud said, in the most general sense we are all bisexual in that we all have the capability to learn to enjoy sexual relations with both biological males and females. — Joshs
It’s interesting and perhaps revealing that your description of gender mentions only who one is sexually attracted to, and nothing about what I would consider to be a more central aspect of gender for many in the gay community , which has to do with a global perceptual-affective style, of which sexual attraction is merely one small aspect. For those who dont grasp this , it is incoherent to talk about gayness outside of sexual attraction, and I think that is part of the problem. — Joshs
JK Rowling...well, I'd probably try to avoid being seated next to her at a dinner party....but that's about it. — Isaac
What 'upset me' if you want to put it that way, is that you thought it reasonable, on a debating platform, to dismiss frank's contribution with a dismissive (and, it transpires, disingenuous) "hard to take seriously" rather than any kind of charitable inclusion of those concerns in the discussion. — Isaac
If you seriously thought that there wasn't any evidence for the claims in the letter (an already fairly absurd position given the general academic standing in which some of the signatories are held), — Isaac
at the very least we might have expected a "...really! Are you sure those things happened", not an assumption that they probably didn't — Isaac
You lamented the lack of examples, examples were given. Is there something else you're missing? — Isaac
Neither your agreement nor your disagreement were the point. The point was entirely that you designated people's serious concerns as "hard to take seriously" on the grounds of a lack of specificity that two minutes of internet research could have settled for you. — Isaac
A public objection is just words, and they do not necessarily lead to this or that action. — NOS4A2
So first the letter's not to be taken seriously because there's no examples; then it's not to be taken seriously because the examples are one's where you'd agree with the cancellations... — Isaac
By bigoted I mean that one is intolerant of another because of his views, which do not manifest beyond the victimless expressions of thought and speech. There are actions we should not tolerate, however, and censorship is one of them. — NOS4A2
I know I would consider multiple ways of living horrible and grotesque, but morally wrong? Probably not. — Jake Hen
There is nothing self-regulating about this kind of ostracism and bigotry, even if they have found less violent means of doing it than in the past. Wherever heretical speech and thoughts are censored, it is nonetheless premised on the base motives found in inquisitions and witch-burning. — NOS4A2
Cancel culture was regnant in McCarthyism and Anti-communism, I would say. — NOS4A2
Editors are fired for running controversial pieces
https://www.forbes.com/sites/nicholasreimann/2020/06/07/new-york-times-opinion-editor-out-after-publishing-controversial-tom-cotton-piece/ — Isaac
books are withdrawn for alleged inauthenticity
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/mar/07/dr-seuss-books-product-recall-cancel-culture — Isaac
professors are investigated for quoting works of literature in class
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/aug/15/white-professor-investigated-quoting-james-baldwin-use-of-n-word-laurie-sheck — Isaac
researcher is fired for circulating a peer-reviewed academic study
https://www.vox.com/2020/7/29/21340308/david-shor-omar-wasow-speech — Isaac
less than five minutes on Google. — Isaac
Editors are fired for running controversial pieces; books are withdrawn for alleged inauthenticity; journalists are barred from writing on certain topics; professors are investigated for quoting works of literature in class; a researcher is fired for circulating a peer-reviewed academic study
White people were given advantages because they were white. — Pinprick
It doesn't say, and I'm not sure that 'somewhat disabled' is quantifiable. But my feeling is that 'most' folks who manage to achieve a mental diagnosis of any sort are probably somewhat disabled. — unenlightened
1 in 4 people will experience a mental health problem of some kind each year in England .
1 in 6 people report experiencing a common mental health problem (like anxiety and depression) in any given week in England.
1 in 4 people will experience a mental health problem of some kind each year in England .
1 in 6 people report experiencing a common mental health problem (like anxiety and depression) in any given week in England.
The thing which I find puts me off this site and another one I use is that it often seems to be the most inflammatory statements which get a lot of responses. — Jack Cummins
Florian Ruths has researched this area for 10 years, as clinical lead for mindfulness-based therapy in the South London and Maudsley NHS foundation trust. He believes it is possible to teach yourself mindfulness through apps, books or online guides. “For most people, I think if you’re not suffering from any clinical issues, or illness, or from stress to a degree that you’re somewhat disabled, it’s fine,” he says.
reality is often harsh, cold, and in ever so many ways, unpleasant. — Bitter Crank
Can any of you provide a stronger argument for how someone could be Buddhist and Christian at the same time? — tryhard
I believe there is an objective reality, but one important aspect of reality is that humans are delusional. My theory is that everybody is deluded to varying degrees. It is a question of "how much" and "about what". Delusions and illusions are the human stock-in-trade. — Bitter Crank
I have known several transsexuals well...
...
Is transsexualism a delusion? Yes. — Bitter Crank
