So opinions are only acceptable if they don't hurt other peoples feelings? Isn't that a little tyrannical and completely subjective?Snotnarok said:I'm pretty sure I did, but I'll simplify for you since you can't seem to make sense of it.Lazier Than Thou said:You didn't address the core issue. Why is one opinion acceptable, but another opinion isn't acceptable? Why should people tolerate opinion X and not opinion Y? Moreover, why should people be socially allowed to physically attack a person based on opinion X, but not on opinion Y?Snotnarok said:Because a black person is the same as a white guy it's just a difference in skin color, it's a fact. You can judge all you want but there's no proof saying there's any difference besides some physical differences. You can think that a black guy/gal isn't as attractive, but to say a wavelength of light is the same as a human being is stupid, humans have self awareness and intelligence, light waves DO NOT.Lazier Than Thou said:They're both opinions, aren't they? What makes one more objectionable than the other?Snotnarok said:Because colors are differences in light and black people are human beings with darker skin and a mind unlike a shade of light. There's a bit of a difference, just a bit. By a bit I mean it's bloody different.Lazier Than Thou said:How can one opinion be considered right/wrong but not another? Why would I be wrong for saying that black people are inferior to white people, but not for saying that the color blue is inferior to the color red?SharPhoe said:Because opinions, as they are, usually can't be considered right or wrong. But saying something like that is just, without a doubt, unequivocally wrong.
Go ahead and say that kinda stuff outloud, I may not be so judgmental, I'd shrug it off as idiotic rants but someone else will certainly stomp your face in.
The color red- a color wave length
A black man- a living breathing person who has every right to live freely as you do
There's a BIG difference in judging there seeing how one is a person who has a mind of his own and light doesn't have a mind at all.
Here's something more simple for you
Walking up to a video game console and saying it sucks isn't going to get anyones feelings hurt because it's an object with no emotions or mind of it's own, saying a man sucks because he was born with different skin is called offending a person with a MIND, HEART, and SOUL, and is segregating against an entire people who were born this way. You cannot hurt the device in any form because it doesn't have the makings TO feel, though the person DOES.
I'm really hoping this makes sense to you because this is beyond the point of breaking it down for you. If you can't tell the difference between hurting a persons feelings and yelling sounds at an object with no ability to hear/comprehend/feel then you should be talking to a doctor![]()
Whahaha!lenin_117 said:Since racism is making a round on the forums, I figure I may as well throw this in. When people say they are open minded and don't try to force their opinions on others, this usually doesn't include racism. If you went to work (or whatever your daily grind is) tomorrow and said openly that you hate black people and think they should be made into slaves, there wouldn't be a lot of people who would respond with "While I disagree with your opinion I respect it as your belief". Why is this not included?
But how?Cheeze_Pavilion said:I disagree. I believe there is an objective right and wrong of some sort.Finnboghi said:What?Cheeze_Pavilion said:That's not the difference between right and wrong, though. That's a description of why certain people hold beliefs to be right and wrong. Big difference.
That's completely the difference between right and wrong.
They're only abstract concepts which can be applied to a given action or belief.
Or a direction.
The difference between right and wrong is your opinion.
You can only have an opinion of you hold a belief about a given event or concept.
And I really don't follow your logic here...samaritan.squirrel said:Think of it as getting a ban or a probation here.Finnboghi said:So wait, why do the coworkers get more rights?samaritan.squirrel said:You're entitled to that opinion, sure. Freedom of speech.
And the co-workers are entitled to call you every derogatory name in their repertoire and get you fired.
Freedom of speech is nice like that. Allows you to spot the idiots who you don't want to be around.
Of course they can say whatever they want about you.
But why are they allowed to get you fired?
What did they do that gives them the right to physically harm you (yes, I consider getting fired to be physical - money is necessary for physical sustenance)?
Is it because they're PC?
If you act unpleasantly, you have every right to get booted.
People don't like gross idiocy, especially when it disrupts their work.
By doing that you removed the normative component; you're no longer talking about what should be but what is. Are you saying that any claim of 'should be' can be evaluated as true or false based on what in fact is the case?Cheeze_Pavilion said:I think you're kinda missing my point, but let me say this--you can turn "black people...should be made into slaves" into a statement of fact just by rearranging the words into "black people do not possess the same freedoms as other people."Lazier Than Thou said:The problem is that "Hitler made me happy" isn't an opinion it's a statement of fact. It has no bearing on if he's right or wrong.
I disagree. When you consider the ridiculously large amount of people you'd be dealing with, saying something like "white people are inferior to black people" can be seen as subjective if for no other reason than if you were somehow able to test the vast population to provide accurate data, the sheer number of different arenas from which to compile would be an insurmountable task. An example would be if white people showed higher aptitude for math, while black people showed a higher aptitude for reasoning skills. How would these two completely different subjects be compared to one another? Would the ability to do math be equal to the ability to reason? What about in the areas of athletics? What if black people are better at running, but white people are better at jumping? Not only that, but how do these traits compare with their scholastic counterparts?Morti said:@The "skin tone" vs "favourite colour" argument.
The problem there is that you're comparing two diferent types of opinion there.
"Black people are inferior to white." Can be tested to be proved right or wrong. This means that you can provide a cohesive argument to backup your opinion or to invalidate it.
But unless the OP comes in and actually weighs in on the matter, THAT'S AN OPINION!Cheeze_Pavilion said:In the context of the OP, it's special--whether rare/unique or not--because I think the reaction of people to racism assumes that the person has thought the opinion through.Lazier Than Thou said:My experience with people talking about different topics leads me to believe it's not that special. It certainly isn't unique and it damn sure ain't rare.
What's inconsistent?Well, not really. As long as sentence structure and terminology is *consistent* things are okay--and that's the problem here.Like I said before, sentence structure matters. Terminology matters.
This is why we have dictionaries, so people don't have to have opinions on words!However you want to regard them, people are using the word 'opinion' in a broader sense than you. None of what you said is relevant to what the OP is saying (I think)--they are using the word 'opinion' in the sense you do not.However, my problem isn't so much with semantics as it is with the basic underlying thought process brought out by the vocabulary.
Opinions, no matter how flagrantly aggravating it might be, cannot be regarded as wrong.
Very well said.Cheeze_Pavilion said:I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with you--I'm more pointing out where you and other people may differ.Finnboghi said:...I'm seeing less and less how we disagree on this matter.
Right, but not every 'harm' is unfair. You could say I discriminate against men--I'm a heterosexual male. I harm them by rejecting their sexual advances.Regardless of whether being fired is considered physical harm, or some other non-desrcript form of harm, it is still harm.
My point is not what kind of harm is being inflicted - it's that harm is being inflicted.
You need to link up the harm with the *right* to be free from that kind of harm.
Well that's the question: does having that 'right' merely mean no one can stop you from expressing it, or does it mean no one can create a negative consequence for you for expressing that opinion.If we were to tone it waaaaaaaaaaay down and take two coworkers who prefer dogs and cats, the distinction becomes clearer;
If I say I prefer cats, and my coworker prefers dogs, and he gets me fired for preferring cats, then he has violated my right to free speech, and has harmed me.
If we were to bring it back to the current level, the distinction is there;
If I say caucasians are better, and my coworker says asians are better, and I get fired for thinking white people are superior, then my right to express my belief has been violated once again.
That's because fascism of various stripes has been shown to lead to the deaths of millions of people. Like it all you want, it's been "proven" that fascism leads to death on a massive scale.Dazza5897922 said:It's not just with rascism.
For example I support fascism but if I ever mention it (on the internet not in real life) I get people calling me a nazi or rascist or whatever, so intolorance doesn't just cover rascist issues.
Regardless of your beliefs, you can't announce that you disrepsect people and then expect respect from others for your disrespectfulness. It's paradoxical.lenin_117 said:Since racism is making a round on the forums, I figure I may as well throw this in. When people say they are open minded and don't try to force their opinions on others, this usually doesn't include racism. If you went to work (or whatever your daily grind is) tomorrow and said openly that you hate black people and think they should be made into slaves, there wouldn't be a lot of people who would respond with "While I disagree with your opinion I respect it as your belief". Why is this not included?
Ownership is a matter of social convention, though; you're sneaking a normative term right back in, just like using the words "is right to do" or "is wrong to do" as if the 'is' makes such phrases describe matters of fact.Cheeze_Pavilion said:No, the normative component is still there--the racist isn't talking about "what is"--the racist is arguing that the "what is" should change (repeal of 13th Am., etc.) to line up with the normative claim about the rights of black people as they are, not as they are currently recognized to be.Seanchaidh said:By doing that you removed the normative component; you're no longer talking about what should be but what is. Are you saying that any claim of 'should be' can be evaluated as true or false based on what in fact is the case?Cheeze_Pavilion said:I think you're kinda missing my point, but let me say this--you can turn "black people...should be made into slaves" into a statement of fact just by rearranging the words into "black people do not possess the same freedoms as other people."Lazier Than Thou said:The problem is that "Hitler made me happy" isn't an opinion it's a statement of fact. It has no bearing on if he's right or wrong.
What I'm saying is any claim of 'should be' can be tied to some sort of normative statement where the "are" doesn't describe how the world is, but rather, describes some essential nature of the things in the world which the world doesn't recognize and act in accordance with.
For example, think of how "people shouldn't steal" can be tied to the statement "people continue to own their property even when they cannot stop people from taking it"