I think I made the mistake of using 'mention' when 'praise' would be a more appropriate term. My ptoblem was chiefly with people (like Flagg) who seemed to be claiming that charitable actions by the police aren't praiseworthy,, as though this was just what we routinely expect everyone to do all the time.Thanas wrote:That does not follow.Simon_Jester wrote:If good things are not worthy of mention, then they are not good in the first place, they are morally neutral.
Whether things are newsworthy or worthy of mention does not have a bearing on their moral value. Me sending money to Amnesty international is not newsworthy or worthy of mention, but it does have a moral value - it helps the fight against tyranny of all kinds.
On the other hand, if I were a billionaire and would donate millions to Amnesty, it would be newsworthy and still have the same moral value.
Likewise, the US sending ships out on patrol is in itself newsworthy, but doesn't have a specific moral value attached to it.
Which is absurdly unrealistic; it's NOT what everyone does all the time.
To quote the skit:Actually, if you would care to look it up, he was talking about the things one is expected to do. And I do expect people to do good if it is not too much of their strain on resources.Resisting the urge to hit someone is morally neutral. Paying one's rent on time is morally neutral. Not going to jail is morally neutral. Which, if you actually know anything about the Chris Rock skit you just quoted, is the class of thing he was talking about.
"_____s always want credit for some shit they supposed to do. A _____ will brag about some shit a normal man just does. A _____ will say some shit like, "I take care of my kids." You're supposed to, you dumb motherfucker! What kind of ignorant shit is that? "I ain't never been to jail!" What do you want, a cookie?! You're not supposed to go to jail, you low-expectation-having motherfucker!"
The point is, this is about people who (stereotpyically) brag about things "a normal man just does."
But a normal man does NOT just routinely take their time off to deliver meals to impoverished children. That is not what people normally do with their spare time. Granted that lots of people do it occasionally, but it's well outside the bounds of what we can say we have a right to expect.
"Works laboriously for charity" is not anywhere close to the same order of 'this is what you're SUPPOSED TO DO, you low-expectation-having motherfucker!' territory as "doesn't end up in jail."
And it's very disingenuous of you to say so.
You are confusing "expected" with "normal". The two words do not mean the same. For example, I would expect a marriage to hold despite divorce being a normal thing. Maybe I am too much of an idealist, but I don't think doing good is so exceptional it needs to be mentioned in the news.We cannot argue, at least not with any intellectual integrity at all, that delivering meals to the homeless is a normative thing that we "expect" every person to do routinely. Because people DON'T DO THAT. Not all of them, not all the time.
When we routinely have generalizations about how the police are killers, thugs, or criminals passing with minimal comment...Which is a great strawman nobody in this thread has ever put forward.Nor, logically, can you argue "the police are overwhelmingly evil." Which AMT rather explicitly spelled out is the point of his argument.
I think the thesis "the police are overwhelmingly evil" needs refutation, even if you personally aren't coming out and claiming it.
One thing I'm not sure you've ever quite understood is that, as part of presenting a larger idea, a person may feel the need to refute or address certain topics. Even if they aren't things you said. It's like, to prove theorem A I need theorem B... so I go and prove theorem B.
Getting upset about how I'm strawmanning because you never claimed theorem B is false... frankly, it's just a stupid waste of our time.
I don't know, I think we can make an argument for 'restore faith in humanity' threads and 'all these people we dump on frequently are capable of basic human decency' threads.What now? You cannot claim with any intellectual honesty that the viewpoint that all police are assholes and monsters is in any way or form the universally accepted viewpoint in N&P. At worst, you got people overreacting to news like Eric Garner.the basic claim, which is that not all police are assholes and monsters, is valid and still stands.And yet it is not treated as worth having threads in N&P about that, which suggests that it is universally accepted on N&P.Right, nobody is arguing against that.
And when those claims are made they can be dealt with in the threads those claims are made. We do not need a REMINDER: POLICE ARE HUMAN BEINGS for that.Except that there are people who do not accept this fact, and see nothing wrong with blanket condemnations of all police, with going so far as to advocate treating them like an occupying army.
Because we seem to keep refighting the same battles over and over, and the bile levels keep increasing.
So... because it shares the starting structure of this argument class you're thinking of, it must logically have the same conclusion?Terralthra wrote:You might try scrolling. "It's not all police, it's just a few here and there, most police are good people" is a classic "few bad apples" argument.
I mean, suppose you're familiar with 'syllogisms' that work like:
"Nothing is better than eternal happiness."
"A ham sandwich is better than nothing."
"Therefore, a ham sandwich is better than eternal happiness."
This is clearly absurd and stupid. But you cannot take your experience with fallacious arguments like this and assume that just because some other new argument begins with "nothing is better than eternal happiness, it must logically turn into one of those fallacious grammar-trick arguments.