SciFi Chick wrote:How is this okay?
code monkey wrote:SciFi Chick wrote:How is this okay?
who said that it was? her statement was denounced by the president of her university. what would you have happen?
Rommie wrote:Short answer is you’d be amazed at how little a university can do once someone has tenure beyond what they did. Especially if this is a first offense.
Cyborg Girl wrote:@SFC
Freedom of speech, yo. If Jordan Peterson can publicly hate on a bunch of marginalized groups and still teach at U of Toronto, and that's totally okay, then this public display of misandry is also okay. The men in her classes can go ahead and be offended, right?
You can't have your cake and eat it too.
Cyborg Girl wrote:Your post above is so densely Not Even Wrong I'm not even sure where to start. But I think it's telling that, of all the bullshit Peterson is pushing, you assume in this case I'm talking specifically about him being a douchebag about pronouns. And more telling that you assume I want white men wiped out a la Valerie Solanas. And still more telling that, for all this alarmism and assumption, you think I'm the one who is out of touch with reality.
Cyborg Girl wrote:@SFC
Freedom of speech, yo. If Jordan Peterson can publicly hate on a bunch of marginalized groups and still teach at U of Toronto, and that's totally okay, then this public display of misandry is also okay. The men in her classes can go ahead and be offended, right?
You can't have your cake and eat it too.
squ1d wrote:Noice SFC.
Please don't run away Cybergirl.
I'm (mostly) left of centre politically. Sometimes I think what you're writing is dumb. But on many issues I'm a lot nearer you than SFC.
Surely the world is doomed if we give up confronting each other and retreat into our safe spaces.
I believe the disconnection between left and right, caused by smugness and echo chambers, is what has allowed bad things like President Trump and Brexit to exist.
I remember arguing about all sorts of dumb shit on here when I was at University. I think it was good preparation for admitting I was wrong about various things as I slowly learned to ply my trade. 17ish years later I think it made me a better person. Excuse my tangent, that's probably just a squ1d thing, but if there is one thing that this place hasn't achieved, and social media has, it is tailored algorithms ensuring a collection of non-intersecting echo chambers. A really shitty Venn diagram.
Let's all relentlessly try to convince each other that we're retarded instead.
squ1d wrote:Like, semi respectfully I mean.
I'm really not a natural at this role.
squ1d wrote:Well that being said, I'll have a crack at expressing why I think you have drifted rightwards.
When an event like the confirmation of Kavanaugh has occurred, you seem more interested in reactions of "people from the left" than the significance of the event itself. So take this Christine Fair person. As inappropriate as her comments may be, and as shit as a person she may be, she is currently convinced a rapist has been admitted to the supreme court. You are not, but imagine that you were for a second. She is obviously experiencing an intense emotional reaction. Now that may not excuse her behaviour, but to me it puts her story to the level of a footnote at best.
The real issue for me is what does it mean for Kavanaugh to be confirmed? Not so for you. You are jumping on this non-story, I think because of this perceived sense of injustice between the treatment of "right" and "left". Correct me if I'm wrong.
squ1d wrote:You bring up the Clintons with a regularity that I find baffling. Usually at the expense of actually talking about the problem at hand. Infact, I'd say overall, you seem more interested attacking people on the left for being hypocritical than whatever is currently happening.
I don't know if I told this story before, but I may have. I used to be fairly centre-right in my views. I had (and still have) a friend who was (and is) EXTREMELY cognisant of Australian political movements and machinations. We'd often have arguments about political news items, whether it be about a new policy announcement, or a media beat-up on a particular politician. It finally reached a point where when discussing the NDIS, he rattled off a list of upcoming bills and asked me my opinion about them. Fact was, I had no idea what they were. Fact was, I didn't follow the actual source material of politics here whatsoever. I think I debated as best as I could, which wasn't very well, and later went home. After stewing for a while, I decided I was going to do better, be less ignorant. For a year I read the news incessantly, and most importantly, watched every single session of Question Time in parliament. As noted in Hansard. What I learnt in that year permanently changed my vote from swinging to left.
Why? I realised that my personal values: Fairness, equality, giving people a fair go, the importance of education for all, the importance of healthcare for all, etc, etc, were quite simply values of the left.
Tangent: To use something posted by someone here earlier on Facebook, there was another part to the story which made this History less narrative-like. It happened to be the year Tony Abbott subverted QT by calling for a suspension of standing orders just about every session, so he could spend 15 minutes calling Julia Gillard a mole, unrebutted. He is an enormous cunt.
Conservatives have values too. To quote the DEFINER OF ALL TRUTH (WIKIPEDIA): "Conservatism is a political and social philosophy promoting traditional social institutions in the context of culture and civilization." There are many forms, but in a nutshell, their values do fuck all for me. And those values have opposed every human rights advance ever, because that advance was not "The Way Things Were(tm)". After a period of time, a new normal is integrated into society and the goalposts shift, but by then we've all forgotten the viewpoints of 5 minutes ago.
To me, being a centrist used to be a virtue. Now I just view it as confused indecision.
I look forward to your spirited riposte.
SciFiChick wrote:See, I tend to think that tug of war is necessary. It's not always the best thing to jump into the new new thing, and it's definitely not always a good idea to reject it. The sexual revolution has not done us any favors, as an example.
SciFiFisher wrote:SciFiChick wrote:See, I tend to think that tug of war is necessary. It's not always the best thing to jump into the new new thing, and it's definitely not always a good idea to reject it. The sexual revolution has not done us any favors, as an example.
I really thought it did. For example, it took until 1995 before the last state finally made it a crime to rape your wife. And made it possible for her to actually file charges against her husband. I see that as a direct result of the "sexual revolution". Without acknowledging that women had the right to determine their own sexuality and the right to say no they may have not had the right to say no to sex within the marriage for a lot longer. As it was they had the right to vote a lot longer than they had the right to say no.
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