I'm not sure what this statement is referring to. Are you talking about the argument that those personally affected by an issue should have the most say in how to resolve it?
I can't speak for Quinn, but this is a pretty weak argument. Who should have the most say depends on the nature of the issue, the extremity of the effect, the scope of the solution, and the risk from intended and unintended side effects of the solution.
Often the people most emotionally invested in a problem are the least qualified to make a rational contribution to solving it. I offer crimes of passion as but one example.
How would you define equal opportunities? For example, does this
study mean that society is not providing equal opportunities for everyone?
I would define it broadly and flexibly.
That study probably means that someone is trying to set the a minimum standard for equal opportunity this is overly close to their unreasonably high standard for minimum equal outcome.
I can't speak to people favoring social justice in general, but there's a wide spectrum of political positions on atheismplus.
There's only a wide spectrum of political positions because even a hair's-breadth deviation from the orthodoxy is treated as a radical departure. The difference between Leninists and Trotskyites only seems wide to Leninists and Trotskyites. To a Democratic Republican--or even a Democratic Socialist--the idea that Leninism-Trotskyism represents a wide political spectrum would be laughably absurd.
Or am I wrong? If I were to really dig deep at the A+ forums, would I find moderate conservatism well-represented? Fiscal conservatism? Social conservatism? Anarcho-liberterianism? Objectivist libertarianism?
Put it another way: What is the most widely divergent political position that
you consider to be well-represented on the A+ forums?
How offensive does something have to be before it's okay to care about its impact? The cumulative impact of a lot of slightly offensive things can create a hostile environment.
It's always OK to care about things.
Cumulative impact leading to a hostile environment never seems to be a consideration when constantly attacking someone for all the slightly offensive things they're supposedly doing.
Why does the Fee-Fee Protection door only ever swing one way?
It's like there is some sort of Maxwell's Fee-Fee Demon, collecting the favored Fee-Fees on one side, and excluding the disfavored Fee-Fees on the other.
Or maybe I should call it Mussolini's Demon, because that's what it really is: "Everything within the state, nothing outside the state, nothing against the state."
How do you feel about previous efforts to make English more gender neutral - firefighter instead of fireman for example?
Call it what you like, but let's not kid ourselves that the job is really gender-neutral.
Recognizing the privileges those attributes gave you isn't self loathing. As a simple example, consider the widely seen double standard between promiscuous men and promiscuous women. Is observing the different treatment hating men?
Thanks! I certainly don't loathe myself for my white male privilege. In fact, I rather quite like it. I enjoy its benefits, and take advantage of it every day if I can (and I take it on faith that I'm taking advantage of it even if I'm not consciously aware of doing so). I'm glad to know you--and other reasonable social justice warriors--don't hate me for it. You don't hate me for it, do you?
The "you're turning off the moderates" argument has a long and sordid history. Changing systemic discrimination isn't supposed to be easy.
It depends on your definition of easy.
Are you committed to doing the easy work of just alienating everybody else while you wait for social trends to evolve your way?
Or are you committed to doing the hard work of gradually building acceptance among moderates, to accelerate social evolution.
The [American] Civil War got hundreds of thousands of people killed, in a world that was already evolving towards global abolition. Slavery was on its way out in America, and it would have been a great humanitarian boon if it had happened more gradually, without the horrific bloodshed that ensued because moderates were alienated in the name of doing it the hard way.