zlacker

[parent] [thread] 13 comments
1. beej71+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-09-11 02:08:21
I don't want to live in a place where people are killed for expressing opinions I consider highly offensive and damaging.
replies(2): >>croes+dj >>native+NQ4
2. croes+dj[view] [source] 2025-09-11 05:20:44
>>beej71+(OP)
How much damage is ok?
replies(3): >>jalape+fm >>beej71+Rp2 >>j-krie+Mv2
◧◩
3. jalape+fm[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-09-11 05:49:20
>>croes+dj
[flagged]
replies(1): >>lifefo+KL
◧◩◪
4. lifefo+KL[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-09-11 10:14:30
>>jalape+fm
Winning through "reason" seems kind of naive given today's social landscape. Are our politics broken because the facts simply aren't known? The misinformation-firehose/attention-economy/propaganda-machines are simply too powerful to be countered by merely being correct.

I'm not saying murdering everyone is the right alternative, but if you think trying to balance political power by "winning debates" or something seems reasonable, that ship has long sailed.

replies(1): >>api+tO
◧◩◪◨
5. api+tO[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-09-11 10:45:23
>>lifefo+KL
I think this is overblown. Most people do have reasons for what they believe.

I know everyone hates it when people “both sides” things these days, but one thing I do see both sides having in common is a refusal to honestly engage with and comprehend the other position. This doesn’t mean agreeing. It means understanding what someone believes and how they might have gotten there.

Where the echo chambers and other things that you mention do come in is in reinforcing that dynamic, in reinforcing each side seeing only a straw man version of the other.

replies(1): >>rateli+ud2
◧◩◪◨⬒
6. rateli+ud2[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-09-11 19:43:11
>>api+tO
>Most people do have reasons for what they believe.

You're equivocating between reasons as in causes and reason as in rationality.

◧◩
7. beej71+Rp2[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-09-11 21:12:51
>>croes+dj
> How much damage is ok?

To justify the vigilante killing? Some exceptional amount far beyond anything he could have possibly caused with his rhetoric.

If he had broken some law with his speech, the police could handle that.

◧◩
8. j-krie+Mv2[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-09-11 21:58:14
>>croes+dj
If words only can cause damage that wants you killing a guy you should seek help
replies(1): >>croes+MD2
◧◩◪
9. croes+MD2[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-09-11 23:08:54
>>j-krie+Mv2
So you deny that words can cause damage?

Charles Manson was convicted for murders he didn't do himself, so there is obviously a limit in how much damage you're allowed to do with words.

Many dictators didn't kill anyone themselves, they just talked others into it.

Or think of the Hamas leaders who talked their people into the actrocity of the October 7 attacks.

I just want to know where people draw the line.

BTW the whole MAGA thing is based on the assumption of damage that is caused by words. You know the whole LGBTQIA2S+, DEI and climate change stuff our kids get indoctrinated with by schools, universities and the liberal media.

replies(1): >>beej71+Qg4
◧◩◪◨
10. beej71+Qg4[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-09-12 15:36:15
>>croes+MD2
Words can and do cause a lot of damage, up to and including destroying a nation. But in the US, we're supposed to be tough enough and Constitution-loving enough to handle it.

But I wouldn't bet any money on us, given what I've seen in the last 10 years.

11. native+NQ4[view] [source] 2025-09-12 19:09:45
>>beej71+(OP)
You should move out of the US if you're here, since political violence is a cornerstone of this country since day 1. How people are acting like this is unique are really baffling to me.
replies(2): >>zahlma+oF5 >>holler+CF5
◧◩
12. zahlma+oF5[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-09-13 01:47:42
>>native+NQ4
> political violence is a cornerstone of this country since day 1

Violence against... tea?

replies(1): >>native+to6
◧◩
13. holler+CF5[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-09-13 01:51:38
>>native+NQ4
>political violence is a cornerstone of this country since day 1

The violence was tame compared to something like the French or Russian or Chinese Revolutions. For example, after the Continental Army and Minutemen surrounded the Brits at Saratoga (in New York State) in the first of the two great victories made by the American revolutionaries, the Brits were not killed or even made prisoners of war: many thousands of British soldiers were allowed to travel on foot through Massachusetts to Boston (which was firmly in the control of the Brits for the entire duration of the war) if they promised not to harass any Americans in their path and if they promised to stop participating in military action against the American colonies (i.e., to personally go back to England).

◧◩◪
14. native+to6[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-09-13 12:19:51
>>zahlma+oF5
Uh... do you know how/why this country was founded? Don't be obtuse.
[go to top]