BulletMagnet wrote:No, I asked what I asked. If it suits you, feel free to reduce the scope of the question to the single specific case I mentioned: just as an example, in your opinion, did the civil rights movement, on the whole, conform to seeking your aforementioned definitions of "civil" and "tolerant", and were its methods acceptable in your eyes? Has its legacy in fact embraced totalitarian facets? Whatever your answer, can you contrast it with a movement that you view in the opposite light? Most importantly, what available on-the-record facts can you cite to give any of those opinions weight?
It leaders murdered. Its goals bludgeoned into being via a proxy strongman (the state), true racism (affirmative action) more deep state sponsored division that ever before . . . . .
I take it that it was a rhetorical question?
Not proffering an alternative "movement" does not negate that fact that the civil rights movement was neither civil nor "right".
Fallacious argument is fallacious argument. But you are an intelligent guy, BulletMagnet. You know all of this already.
BulletMagnet wrote:When said opinion boils down to "anyone who considers themselves aligned with 'progressive' politics is a closet brownshirt", methinks you'd best be ready to offer more than "...well, that's just what I think" when anyone asks for clarification.
Perhaps it would have been helpful if you had stated that in your post, rather than just state that somethings are opinion and somethings are fact. You had not asked for, nor could I give "clarification" to your fact v opinion statement.
BulletMagnet wrote:As for "paranoia", in your response to my previous post you ask me three times whether I'm accusing you of racism; seriously, simmer down and read what I'm actually writing.
I asked you once. You inferred the rest. I did not write the word "paranoia". I wrote the word
pronoia, which referred to your opinion v fact statement as being merely subjective but when not recognised as such is, once again, "an example of the type of pronoia I mention in my previous post".
Let my offer the advice you give to me back to you; "read what I'm actually writing". Also, please do refrain from inferring and stating that I need to "simmer down". I am not heated, nor agitated. Just having a friendly discussion.
BulletMagnet wrote:A quick Google search tells me that the closest thing we have to a legal definition of "hate speech" is similar to the "fighting words" exception to the first amendment, i.e. it's intended to incite a riot or some such thing. If what was said can't be characterized as imminently threatening it's unlikely to hold up in court...though obviously court doesn't cover the reactions you might get from your fellow private citizens. On that note...
You are speaking of the U.S when you saw "we", not the world at large, I take it?
BulletMagnet wrote:Apparently you don't believe "progressives" share those same values, which is its own set of issues to hash out, but if you truly believe that a notable chunk of "SJWs" (or whatever term you'd use) pose such a grave and looming threat to free speech, what would you propose be done to remedy the situation?
(ignoring the "tone" implicit in "or whatever term you'd use", for a moment) I would perhaps propose that they, quite simply, stop.
BulletMagnet wrote:...it wasn't even a question.
Perhaps not. It was so left of field that I did not know
what it was.