In that specific video clip, yes. And while Islam and criticism thereof is Harris' specific bugbear, Maher does not restrict his criticisms to over-sensitivity toward Islam. I'm not going to speak for him, so you'll have to peruse his videos and content.Channel72 wrote:Bill Maher and Sam Harris are making a specific point about how the Left reacts to radical Islam. They're not saying what you're saying - that the left is overall becoming too dismissive of racists or politically incorrect verbiage. I really don't think you can extend their point to cover a wider argument about overall political correctness gone awry.
I'm glad, particularly since I think it's a more serious issue than 'mere' censuring of bad words on college campuses and the like. But surely you must realize that both issues are inherently intertwined? What Harris says is interpreted as being highly offensive to many Muslims (hence Affleck's moral outrage), to the point where he was getting dragged through the mud because people were more concerned with the "offense" he was causing than what he was actually saying. Who decides what is offensive, the speaker or the listener? According to the Left, the listener gets to decide. So how do you differentiate between "good" offensive speech, like Harris talking about Islam, and "bad" offensive speech like Westboro Baptists saying "fags burn in hell"? I mean, that's obviously an extreme example and it seems clear in that particular instance, but I'm pretty concerned about this idea that only the listener gets to decide what is and is not offensive, and the rest of society must now abide by this decree.Furthermore, I agree with both of them to an extent regarding the specific issue of radical Islam. There's the perception (or at least, I have the perception) that American liberals at least, are more likely to be critical of radical Christianity, while sort of giving radical Islam somewhat of a pass by explicitly contextualizing the actions of extremists within the context of a wider Muslim world that isn't extremist. Harris's point is that the "wider Muslim world" actually is a bit more extreme than we're comfortable admitting. And I agree with him.
Yes.Simon_Jester wrote:To take another example, Channel72 is Jewish. Should he have to listen to people using "jew me down" as slang for the act of excessively greedy bargaining, regularly, and watch everyone else casually accept this as though it was normal, as though nobody had any problem with the idea of thinking of Jews primarily in terms of the stereotype as greedy moneylenders and penny-pinchers?
Call me an asshole, but yes, in a free society you do have to listen to things you don't like. I don't like kids these days calling things they think are stupid "autistic" - well, actually, I find it bizarre and amusing, and that's the key thing. I choose how I feel about words. That's my right. And if you want to be offended by people slinging around Jewish slurs, that is absolutely your right. But I'm not launching into a crusade to end the pejorative use of "autistic" in schools. As silly and stupid as using that word as a pejorative is, the notion of de facto banning it through social shaming, judgement, and political pressure on private companies is abhorrent to me.
Again, this is not a defense of assholes on a personal level. I believe people should try to be nice to one another and get along. It's a defense of assholes on a wider, socio-political level, because while individual assholes are annoying and unpleasant, the right to be an asshole is vital to our society in a larger sense.
On the contrary, it is exactly and perfectly demonstrative of this limit. It's not a nice word these days. It has few, if any, "legitimate" uses in American English. That's why it's so important to take a moment to think about effectively banning it. It is so "obviously" bad that no one except evil, bad bigots could possibly object to its effective censoring, right? After all, it exists only to insult a historically oppressed minority... so clearly the word should be removed from the lexicon?The bigger problem comes when we take this principle and crank it up to eleven by applying a massive complex of institutional hypersensitivity. There's clearly a limit, it is not healthy to try and remove every person and every word that might, conceivably, give offense or be harmful.
But complaining "why can't I say 'faggot' anymore" is NOT a good way to illustrate the existence of this limit.
I do not accept that. I do not accept this notion that we must "protect" this country's gays from ever having to hear something they might not like. It's fucking patronizing, for one thing. "Oh those poor gays, they're so fragile, we can't let them hear this word anymore." I realize gays have historically gotten a raw deal, and I'm not contesting that - but policing a word strikes me as the most bizarre, unproductive and even insulting thing one could do to rectify historical injustices against gays. And I'm sure there are gays who are quite happy - understandably so! - to jump on the dogpile of anyone who says "faggot" these days, but they have no more business dictating what I or anyone else can or cannot say than I have any business dictating who they can or cannot fuck.
And again, because I feel the Shitpost Squadron rearing up in preparation, I feel compelled to point out that that this is just an example. Replace "faggot" with "nigger" "kike" "cunt" or "autist" and the argument is the same.
It's directed at the part of the Left who was cheering Ben Affleck in the video above, the part of the Left who the OP's article is talking about, and anyone in general on the Left who thinks that whether or not you say a word is more important than what you actually believe underneath a silly syllable or two. That's who it's aimed at, and if that's not you, then great.If this comment is directed at me or anyone who approaches the issue as I approach it, then I will vehemently deny your claim.
It's the exact same argument. It's the exact same mentality, even if being upset at racial slurs is a little more understandable on an emotional level (racial slurs being largely intended to cause emotional distress). But I would certainly hope that we're not arguing on emotion here, and I would also hope that we're not in the business of policing society based on the offended party's emotional response.Now see, this supports your position better.Never mind that science and liberals go hand-in-hand these days; that scientist wore a bad shirt! He must be punished for his evil shirt choice (that dirty misogynist!). It's ridiculous. It's unhealthy.
Because the argument "it's ridiculous to scream at someone about a shirt" is more reasonable than "it's ridiculous to scream at someone about racial slurs."
I agree to a point, and I'm not advocating that we adopt some reactionary view on culture. That we are talking about racism, sexism, homophobia, etc is good, and looking at the past decade in particular, I'd say it's been pretty successful. But the Left is starting to lose the fight on these issues, because too much of it is concerned with bad words, bad shirts, bad images, bad attitudes, and bad "sensitivity," as if the targets of discrimination aren't adults who can't possibly bear to hear something mean. We have gotten so worked up over little, trivial "grievances" that can be construed as offensive to some party or another that we're forgetting to engage our brains in discussion of these issues.The countervailing argument is... until very recently, almost no one was talking about certain issues. Like women being displayed in an oversexualized way. Or women being afraid of violent men who stalk them and threaten to attack them (which came up a lot in the Gamergate stuff).
Thirty years ago if you complained about all the bikini babes demeaning women and promoting an attitude of disrespect and objectification, you were going to get a "you are a humorless idiot and probably need to get laid" response. THAT is an opinion which can be censored TOO.
And to stop that opinion from being censored, you may need to uproot some weeds- some toxic arguments and attitudes which prevent us from actually having a serious conversation about whether we are indirectly hurting women or racial minorities or whoever by the way we set up our society.
That uprooting sentiment can get misdirected or be excessive (the shirt thing probably did get out of hand). But if we try to outright remove it we are likely to go back to a world where we have nominal "equality" for minorities, but where any serious discussion of actual equality for minorities is pooh-poohed into oblivion by most of the audience. Roughly where race and gender relations were in 1970, in other words.
(Out of time, got to run. Back later)