Human beings are (rational) animals — gurugeorge
The breakdown of the Black family and the atomization of the Black middle class in the 1960s, and the connection of that breakdown to crime is well documented — gurugeorge
[My bolding]And you know what the concrete outcome of all this was? PFFT. Zilch. Zero. Nada. The war lasted another 5 years, unabated. It is as safe to criticize SJWs now as it was to criticize hippie faggot peaceniks in 1970, because there was very little of importance that hinged on their efforts. — Bitter Crank
I disparage social justice advocates now no more than I disparage peace efforts 50 years ago. But let's be clear: Neither peace advocates nor social justice advocates ever got anywhere close to getting their hands on the levers of social and economic policy. Those levers are never left unattended or unguarded and they are well protected behind locked thick-steel doors.
The benefits of social justice advocacy and peace activism flow primarily to the activists, to the benefactors--not to the beneficiaries. Why? Because the act of protesting is good for the protestor. Literally. It's a healthy exercise in every sense of the word. It just happens to be totally ineffective as a method of getting at those policy levers. — Bitter Crank
it assumes that caring about social justice, whether through talking about it and the ways in which to secure it, and/or securing it through direct action, is somehow meaningless... — Maw
Not true. It did not continue "unabated". Here are the numbers for the last years of the war. I — Baden
Which sarcastic one-liner just underlines my point. — Baden
Yeah dude, totally not racist, sexist, transphobic... — Maw
Like most people of all races, blacks have authored some of their own problems. — Bitter Crank
It's fascinating to me that people use the term 'Social Justice Warrior' as a derogatory appellation, because it assumes that caring about social justice, whether through talking about it and the ways in which to secure it, and/or securing it through direct action, is somehow meaningless, or misplaced, as if obtaining social justice was impossible or futile or unnecessary etc., when, historically (and presently), that stance is wrong and misguided. — Maw
You realize saying that sort of thing makes you a "racist" and a "Nazi," right? — gurugeorge
"...we are divisible into sub-species by means of both plain observation and more recondite scientific investigations (into relative genetic closeness or distance). For humans, there are 3 broad and about 7 or 9 more refined sub-species, or "races,"
...It turns out that of the three main races, Asians tend to be the least promiscuous, Blacks the most, with Whites inbetween." — gurugeorge
pseudosicentific nonsense — Baden
In the second place, "social justice" is an Orwellian oxymoron. "Social justice," like many other Left-wing buzzwords, actually reverses the meaning of a commonly-understood term - IOW, it means, precisely injustice. — gurugeorge
And you wonder why we laugh. — gurugeorge
I think that some of those concerns are or may be noble and valid, but not as matters of any kind of justice. — gurugeorge
They're not "Right," most of them are ex-Leftists who have become classical liberals (e.g. David Rubin), and some of them still consider themselves on the Left (e.g. Bret Weinstein)- but of course I understand that everyone to the right of Mao is now a "Nazi" these days :) That was a name given to them by a journalist, but it's amusing so they ran with it. — gurugeorge
the results from systemic oppression, or structural imbalances — Maw
Further, the term "Classical Liberal" is erroneously considered to be a branch of political philosophy under which, (per Rubin) John Locke, Adam Smith, and JS Mill, Jefferson, et. al. in the pitiful attempt to give it an air of intellectualism. — Maw
There's nothing "amusing" about the name, it's just cringingly stupid. — Maw
Curiously my post to which you're responding hasn't appeared, but what the hey. — gurugeorge
To be honest, both the left and right have a habit of trying to rebrand themselves, find again their roots and try to sell their ideology to a new generation that is totally ignorant of the past."Classical Liberalism" is merely a re-brand for those of a libertarian-conservative persuasion, who don't want to use their terms because of the toxicity often associated with them. — Maw
But that's what's yet to be demonstrated. If you simply pre-judge that every observed inequality of outcome is the result of "systemic oppression or structural imbalances," then all you've got is a pseudo-science, because you're denying empirically obvious and evident differences in endowment for the sake of a fantasy idea of what human beings are like.
IOW, you are effectively starting with the unexamined assumption that people have equal potential, therefore any observed difference in outcome must be the result of "systemic oppression or structural imbalances." — gurugeorge
Those thinkers did represent a "branch of political philosophy" - it used to be called "liberalism" until the term was hijacked by more socialist-influenced liberals (people who would have been called "social democrats" in Europe) who pushed the liberal faction in the US further to the Left in the course of the 20th century, so Friedrich Hayek (I believe it was, in the 1960s) coined the term "classical liberal" to denote the older form of liberalism. The term has been used that way among conservatives and libertarians since then, but it wasn't invented by them as some sort of grand cover-up plan, far less by the IDW people. — gurugeorge
Hey, blame the journo who invented it in an attempt to mock/smear them — gurugeorge
To be honest, both the left and right have a habit of trying to rebrand themselves, find again their roots and try to sell their ideology to a new generation that is totally ignorant of the past. — ssu
You are simply more interested in pseudo-science which suggests that these inequalities are the result of inherent genetic dispositions of gender and ethnicity. — Maw
Your whole spiel about "equal potential" and that the Left wants "equal outcome" is a tired strawman that I would expect from a high school student. — Maw
My point is is that there is no 'umbrella' term with which to fit these diverse set of thinkers. — Maw
As I've pointed out twice in this conversation, both things are possible: inequalities as a result of systemic imbalances and oppression, and inequalities as a result of different natural endowments. You are the one who's ignoring an important factor, I'm acknowledging both. — gurugeorge
Well then it should be easy for you to knock down then, shouldn't it? — gurugeorge
Yes there is, they were called "liberals" - and as I said, Hayek used the term "classical liberal" to distinguish that older strain of liberalism from the social democracy that had come to be called "liberalism" in the US — gurugeorge
Just who has the most immoral positions naturally depends on one's political views.Seems to occur more on the Right, who just re-package immoral positions for a modern age. — Maw
And as I pointed out previously, the Left is interested in socially-made injustices. — Maw
the lines between socially constructed inequalities and inequalities that are the result of "natural endowment" are blurred for you — Maw
It's simple: even given complete equal opportunity, the Left doesn't assume that outcomes will be equal, or that potentials are equal. — Maw
it's mistaken to apply any umbrella term to a diverse range of thinkers that spans over 100 years. — Maw
My argument is that it's an unexamined assumption - it's not something you proclaim, because it's obviously so stupid. But it's the logically necessary premise on which your house of cards must be built, otherwise you'd be bothered by the question of which unequal outcomes you observe are the result of differences in natural endowment, and which are the result of oppressive human action (and therefore a matter for justice to sort out) - because obviously you wouldn't want to accuse people of oppression if they're not actually guilty of it, right? — gurugeorge
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