Actually, I think the piracy debate and the abortion debate are VERY similar to each other in that regard, as they both involve two sides screaming at each other about ideas of basic human rights, and believe that their concept of "objective morality" must be obvious to everyone.anthony87 said:Just pray that someone doesn't mention abortion, we'd be dealing with the fallout for days.tippy2k2 said:This is why this thread will not end well (not your opinion specifically FelixG but because you're going to get people commenting on "touchy" subjects that others will not agree with). I guarantee that a group of people will drown out the original intent on this thread to argue about a hot-button topic by page 2.FelixG said:"Piracy is theft." is always worth a good chuckle. Because at some level I expect the person to be smart enough to differentiate between personal copyright infringement (Civil), professional copyright infringement (Crime), and theft (Crime).
For example: I have to believe that people who pirate KNOW that they are doing something wrong but don't care because their self-gain is more important than the wrongness that they are doing. I believe that piracy is theft but people call it "copyright infringement" because that makes it better somehow in their mind.
See! Pandemonium already! Just wait until someone waltz in with a "All religion is followed by sheeples" comment![]()
Wait....I just said "abortion"...OH SHI-
Abortion is to "Thou shalt not kill", what is piracy to "Thou shalt not steal". The conservative apologists of both establisments are using hyperbole to claim that a given action (abortion, birth control/ copyright infringement) is EXACTLY THE SAME as the parallel heinous sin (murdering babies/taking away property from others). So they both first assume that the other side fully supposts the heinous sin, and THEN claims that they must be lying, or deluding themselves to think that that is moral. ("You can't be seriously supporting child murder"/"you simply can't defend theft").
Meanwhile, the progressive sides are convinced that their opponents are just parroting old arbitarily made up dogma for the sake of protecting the status quo, and the only real concern is freedom ("freedom to your body"/"information wants to be free"), so their opponents are AGAINST FREEDOM.
Neither of these stances are consistent, but I think most of them actually believe in all of it. It's a kind of cognitive dissonance.
If you try to bring these claims to their logical extremes, most of these ideologues simply can't answer:
"If abortion is murder, do you think that all the 50 million abortions done in the USA in the past decades should be persecuted as child murder cases? If aborting damaged incest babies is still OK, then do you think that murdering disabled children is OK?"
To the copyright apologists, ask this:
"If an IP is literally an artist's property, that can be taken away from them, then that means that Fair Use should be just as illegal as taking your car for a joyride, right? As long as no tangible financial harm is caused, shouldn't all owners have the same protection?"
(for the other sides, invert it, with 3rd trimester abortions, and zero artist control over content)
Maybe some of the extremists will answer yes, but most of them will just ignore it, so they all keep their ridiculous hyperboles instead of addmitting that they are really just arguing about drawing a formal line on a subjective issue. (exactly HOW MUCH rights women and fetuses, or artists and audiences, should have).