DBTrek wrote:[ "No! YOU'RE A MISOGYNIST!!!"
Evergreen:
DBTrek wrote:[ "No! YOU'RE A MISOGYNIST!!!"
It's working! Can't you tell? The internet isn't filled with stories about, "evil White male at Google," it's all about "Google has been captured by the SJWs."DBTrek wrote:No, it's actually you advocating for accepting their narrative and then, in some inexplicable fashion, using it against them.Martin Hash wrote:The Left has made Identity Politics their weapon of choice, and deny it's use by the rest of us. That's the narrative DB is willing to accept in the name of cooperation, "Why can't we all just get along?"
Apparently, in your mind, when the SJW's appear with their knives out for the google engineer and screaming "He's a misogynist!" - the brilliant Hash plan is to scream back "No! YOU'RE A MISOGYNIST!!!"
Right on.
Good luck with all that.
DBTrek wrote:
How do you engage them on subjects/accusations like "White Privilege" without, by default, conceding the entire battleground to the realm of SJW-speak? If you acknowledge or lend legitimacy to their vocabulary/definitions, you've already accepted argumentative constraints that will see to your defeat. 2
I mean, give me an example.
Defend the Google memo guy against explicit charges of misogyny, sexism, and biological supremacy *without* accepting the limitations and implied "truths" that are attached to those terms.
If you start off with "It's not misogynist BECAUSE . . ."
The counter will be "It IS misogynist BECAUSE . . ."
. . . and now you're arguing Misogyny.
Guess who's going to win that one.
To me it seems better to ignore their traps and start the battle on more favorable terms. Something like "Let's talk about respectful, thoughtful. free expression, and whether it is preferable to a shared set of ideals strictly enforced through threats of termination." 1
It validates their beliefs by putting the focus on their bullshit definitions. Does a lion concern himself with the opinions of sheep? No. So if you're on defense, parrying charges of misogyny/racism/privilege, then you obviously believe the SJW's have struck a blow and need to be refuted. If, instead, you ignore their screeching and point out that the situation at hand is actually a matter of free expression, then the fools have to come on to *your* turf to debate.BjornP wrote:Using their own vocabulary and definitions in order to undermine their fundamental beliefs, I don't see how that validates their beliefs. Using terms that they relate to demonstrates willingness to engage, intellectual bravery, and respect. Now, we can agree that they may not warrant much respect for their ideas, but strip away their idiot beliefs and they are individuals who simply choose wrong, thought wrong. As individual human beings, and fellow citizens, showing them an ounce of respect and learning to use their own words to prove them wrong, could make you more persuasive. If not among them, then among those who listen, read or watch your exchange...
Anyone can be fired for any reason or no reason, it's called an Employee and Will Clause.DBTrek wrote:I don't know about that, I have no problem with folks being offended by whatever harebrained thing they decide to be offended by. The problem is when they can leverage what personally offends them into punitive action against others, as we saw at Google.The Conservative wrote:He's gone a little off the deep end again, but let us be real here... those women who don't like men holding doors for them as a sign of respect and being a gentleman deserve to take a long walk off a short pier with cement shoes on.DBTrek wrote:Dude, learn to crawl. THEN talk to me about standing.
The fact that the engineer's memo offended people isn't a problem.
The fact that the offended people can terminate his job and send a warning shot to anyone who isn't on the same ideological page as them is the problem.
I see it as a "tyranny of the weak" vs freedom of expression issue, not men vs. women.
In fact, any cursory examination of the story will reveal that men and women are aligned on both sides of the argument, so trying to cast it as a gender war is, by default, a bold declaration that one does not actually understand what has transpired.
You assume the lion is so above it all in power and prestige that it should not concern itself with the opinions of sheep. Well, then why would the lion care about being seen as a sheep, if it knows it's a lion?DBTrek wrote:
It validates their beliefs by putting the focus on their bullshit definitions. Does a lion concern himself with the opinions of sheep? No. So if you're on defense, parrying charges of misogyny/racism/privilege, then you obviously believe the SJW's have struck a blow and need to be refuted. If, instead, you ignore their screeching and point out that the situation at hand is actually a matter of free expression, then the fools have to come on to *your* turf to debate.
Suppose th eSJW's are smart enough not to come to your turf (they're not). In this case you have one side screaming invectives and labeling people, and the other side laying out relatable arguments for why our shared values as Americans are preferable to sliding down the path to totalitarianism.
Win/win.
Fight on your terms, or allow your parallel narrative to stand against their jacked-up accusations.
The only way you lose is if you honestly believe identity politics and screaming invective is more convincing to the masses than appealing to their core values. If that's the case, then the war is already over, and donning the mask of your enemy doesn't make you a winner, it simply makes you a better un-American than the previous version.
We agree, we just have different approaches.BjornP wrote:If the SJW's are Americans, and your (hopefully true) assumption of all Americans having shared values is true, then making your hope for a more mutually tolerant America understood, and sympathetic-sounding to as many segments of US society as possible, seems like the thing to do.