I Am The Scum
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2010
- Messages
- 5,796
Disagreeing with me is cancel culture
struggle sessionWP
Fair question. Once I see your answer to #377 I'll get to it.Why use words from the Mao regime.
Fair question. Once I see your answer to #377 I'll get to it.
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Have you seen the question from #377 yet?Ok, I tried.
Have you seen the question from #377 yet?
Evasion noted.What did you get for your 10th birthday? Lego or Barbie?
I'm rolling up a response that is addressing several of your posts here. You say this doesn't seem newsworthy, and that this lady has no injury, essentially implying that it's no big deal, she's fine.
Yet... in the "punching people on the tube" thread, you seemed to take the stance that a single loudmouthed jerk making nasty comments to a few people was both newsworthy and was threatening enough to justify the target of his bad behavior taking physical action against him.
It seems like you feel one guy yelling at three guys is sufficient threat for those three guys to physically assault him... but you simultaneously feel that dozens of people yelling directly into the face of one lone woman and blocking her in is... no big deal?
How do you reconcile those views?
Suburban Turkey & RedStapler: Do you approve of the behavior of the protesters toward the woman in the pink shirt? Why or why not?
Whereas getting heckled by a single drunk racist ******* is so major, it warrants violent retaliation.All that considered, it's important to remember that getting heckled by a protest crowd is a slight so minor, it's hardly worth mentioning.
I think you already know the answer.
I never claimed that the guy on the tube deserved to get domed for being loud. He deserved to get hit for trying to intimidate black passengers with white supremacy.
If these people had tried to make this woman feel inferior on the basis of race, I would feel fine with her defending herself with violence.
That didn't happen.
I think insisting on performative disavowals of white privilege is tedious and probably counterproductive. I generally agree with the sentiment "white silence is violence". We're a somewhat democratic society, and the cops brutalizing the public is at best the result of disinterest of the broad public in the routine violation of civil rights in poor and non-white communities. That being said, there are many more high priority targets deserving protester attention.
I think these protesters would be much better off causing a ruckus in front of the Mayor's mansion or the police chief's million dollar home rather than screwing with randos trying to eat a cafe.
All that considered, it's important to remember that getting heckled by a protest crowd is a slight so minor, it's hardly worth mentioning. This is a non-event. It's a desperate attempt by reactionaries to drum up animus towards reform movements.
It comes across as though you think that saying racist things is de-facto intimidation, regardless of whether there is physical intimidation involved... but that actual physical intimidation is not sufficient for self defense if there's not a racism element to it?
Given the behavior of the large crowd of people around her, would you be in support of her acting in self defense and punching any of the people around her?
Large crowd, physically intimidating a single person, blocking her in against a wall... not a big deal, it's heckling and just a minor slight.
One person saying very rude things to three people who have multiple ways to move away from him... massive problem that justifies "preemptive self-defense".
What do you mean by unacceptable? It was certainly quite rude. I don't see anything criminal here.
I don't either, at least not in the relevant jurisdiction. It remains perfectly legal to surround someone and shout abuse at them in D.C. and I'm looking fwd to more of that happening to elected officials rather than random civilians who've done nothing wrong.Of course you don't.
Of course you don't.
Is ST missing something? Do tell.