by hilzoy
I briefly considered driving down to DC to check out the protests at the DNC meeting, but thought better of it. But Eve Fairbanks was there:
“Howard Dean may hope that the “healing will begin today,” but two blocks away from the northwest Washington Marriott where the DNC’s Rules and Bylaws Committee is meeting right now to try to figure out Florida and Michigan, the Hillary protesters are occupying an utterly alternate (and healing-free) universe: a universe in which one of the big lawn rally’s speakers yells that the Democratic Party no longer is in the business of “promoting equality and fairness for all”; in which a Hillary supporter with two poodles shouts, “Howard Dean is a leftist freak!”; in which a man exhibits a sign that reads “At least slaves were counted as 3/5ths a Citizen” and shows Dean whipping handcuffed people; and in which Larry Sinclair, the Minnesota man who took to YouTube to allege that Barack Obama had oral sex with him in the back of a limousine in 1999, is one of the belles of the ball.
“They almost made me cry this morning when they told me to get out of there,” the blond Sinclair–who’s looking roly-poly and giddy in a blue-and-white striped shirt with a pack of Marlboros protruding from the breast pocket–says, referring to several nervous protest organizers who tried to evict him when he first showed up at the rally site early this morning carrying a box of “Obama’s DIRTY LITTLE SECRETS: Murder, Drugs, Gay Sex” fliers. Since then, though, he goes on, “I have been totally surprised by the reception I have received!”
He’s not kidding. Clusters of people in Hillary shirts ask to take their photo with him, one woman covered in Clinton buttons introduces him to Greta Van Susteren, and he estimates he has handed out 500 fliers. “You could improve your credibility if you downplayed the gay sex and focused on the drugs,” sagely advises one Hillary supporter with auburn hair and elegant makeup. But in this universe, Sinclair’s credibility doesn’t seem to be suffering too much. In fact, he’s treated nearly as well as he might be at a meeting of the Vast Right-wing Conspiracy. In the thirty minutes I stand with him, only one woman expresses disgust at his fliers and his willingness to chattily discourse on whether Obama is “good in bed.” (…)
It’s easy to sink into despair here. Standing and watching all these Democrats chat up Sinclair–who’s retained Montgomery Blair Sibley as his lawyer and says the Republican National Committee has also been in touch with him–makes me want to fall to my knees, rend my garments, and start insanely screaming, “Wake up! Wake up! You’ll hate a President John McCain!” But the rhetoric from the top has imparted its poison below, and the bitterest criticisms of Obama gain traction as they circulate through the virulently-pro-Hillary echo chamber. “Would you rather have a president who had an affair [Bill Clinton] or one who was a murderer [Obama]?” Jeannie, the Greensboro Democrat, asks a fellow in a floppy Tilley hat and Hillary buttons. “That’s a good point,” he replies.”
It was ugly when some Republicans seemed to seriously believe that the Clintons murdered Vince Foster and hung crack pipes from their Christmas trees. This is ugly in exactly the same way. And if I saw a story in which Obama supporters were acting like this, I’d say that was ugly too. Politics is worth being passionate about, but it’s not worth losing your mind over.
Still, there’s hope:
“Following instructions from Obama HQ, almost no Obama supporters have shown up to protest, amplifying the impression of the alternate Hillary universe. But around the edges, a few small signs of the other universe peek through, the one in which Barack Obama leads and most Democrats don’t suspect him of multiple felonies. Inside the Marriott’s gift shop, the sales clerk tells me that Democratic bumper stickers have been selling like crazy today. “Mostly Hillary?” I ask.
“Actually, mostly Obama,” she giggles.”
(Preemptive note: I am not saying that Clinton supporters in general have lost their minds; just that the particular Clinton supporters Fairbanks describes seem to have.)
It was ugly when some Republicans seemed to seriously believe that the Clintons murdered Vince Foster and hung crack pipes from their Christmas trees. This is ugly in exactly the same way.
Thanks hilzoy. Even handed as always. (Seriously, no snark implied.)
It was ugly when some Republicans seemed to seriously believe that the Clintons murdered Vince Foster and hung crack pipes from their Christmas trees. This is ugly in exactly the same way.
Thanks hilzoy. Even handed as always. (Seriously, no snark implied.)
It was ugly when some Republicans seemed to seriously believe that the Clintons murdered Vince Foster and hung crack pipes from their Christmas trees. This is ugly in exactly the same way.
Thanks hilzoy. Even handed as always. (Seriously, no snark implied.)
“Would you rather have a president who had an affair [Bill Clinton] or one who was a murderer [Obama]?”
I actually visit Larry Johnson’s House of Flying Saucers from time to time, and I don’t recall seeing this. Just who is Obama alleged to have murdered? Vince Foster? Amelia Earhart? Bambi’s mother?
Inquiring minds want to know.
“Would you rather have a president who had an affair [Bill Clinton] or one who was a murderer [Obama]?”
I actually visit Larry Johnson’s House of Flying Saucers from time to time, and I don’t recall seeing this. Just who is Obama alleged to have murdered? Vince Foster? Amelia Earhart? Bambi’s mother?
Inquiring minds want to know.
“Would you rather have a president who had an affair [Bill Clinton] or one who was a murderer [Obama]?”
I actually visit Larry Johnson’s House of Flying Saucers from time to time, and I don’t recall seeing this. Just who is Obama alleged to have murdered? Vince Foster? Amelia Earhart? Bambi’s mother?
Inquiring minds want to know.
that and the gay sex were both new to me. but geez, this may not be a “soft landing”.
but then again, terry mcauliffe could be dnc chair right now
that and the gay sex were both new to me. but geez, this may not be a “soft landing”.
but then again, terry mcauliffe could be dnc chair right now
that and the gay sex were both new to me. but geez, this may not be a “soft landing”.
but then again, terry mcauliffe could be dnc chair right now
Anyone willing to show up to protest a RBC meeting — especially if they live more than 50 miles away — is probably a little more passionate about politics than perhaps they should be.
I’ve been ignoring this, but if someone — ANYONE — says the following, that man has my vote and support for life:
“Regardless of what anyone now feels about the fairness or wisdom of the rules, or the punishments of the Florida and Michigan delegates, those were the rules decided upon before a single vote was cast. Those rules had the full support of every candidate still in the election today.
However unfair the outcome, changing the rules after the voting is complete is infintely less fair than sticking with the rules as agreed upon by all candidates.
Not a single person here would play a game in which the way points were awarded was subject to change after the game was finished. You would undoubtably call such “cheating”. So how is it that you have the gall to stand before us, asking to change the way delegates are alloted after voting is complete, and complain about unfairness?
Not one of you objected that the Michigan and Florida decisions were unfair when they were made. Not one of you objected that they were unfair when Florida and Michigan voted.
Had you spoken then, perhaps we could take your complaints seriously now.”.
You let me know. I won’t hold my breath.
Anyone willing to show up to protest a RBC meeting — especially if they live more than 50 miles away — is probably a little more passionate about politics than perhaps they should be.
I’ve been ignoring this, but if someone — ANYONE — says the following, that man has my vote and support for life:
“Regardless of what anyone now feels about the fairness or wisdom of the rules, or the punishments of the Florida and Michigan delegates, those were the rules decided upon before a single vote was cast. Those rules had the full support of every candidate still in the election today.
However unfair the outcome, changing the rules after the voting is complete is infintely less fair than sticking with the rules as agreed upon by all candidates.
Not a single person here would play a game in which the way points were awarded was subject to change after the game was finished. You would undoubtably call such “cheating”. So how is it that you have the gall to stand before us, asking to change the way delegates are alloted after voting is complete, and complain about unfairness?
Not one of you objected that the Michigan and Florida decisions were unfair when they were made. Not one of you objected that they were unfair when Florida and Michigan voted.
Had you spoken then, perhaps we could take your complaints seriously now.”.
You let me know. I won’t hold my breath.
Anyone willing to show up to protest a RBC meeting — especially if they live more than 50 miles away — is probably a little more passionate about politics than perhaps they should be.
I’ve been ignoring this, but if someone — ANYONE — says the following, that man has my vote and support for life:
“Regardless of what anyone now feels about the fairness or wisdom of the rules, or the punishments of the Florida and Michigan delegates, those were the rules decided upon before a single vote was cast. Those rules had the full support of every candidate still in the election today.
However unfair the outcome, changing the rules after the voting is complete is infintely less fair than sticking with the rules as agreed upon by all candidates.
Not a single person here would play a game in which the way points were awarded was subject to change after the game was finished. You would undoubtably call such “cheating”. So how is it that you have the gall to stand before us, asking to change the way delegates are alloted after voting is complete, and complain about unfairness?
Not one of you objected that the Michigan and Florida decisions were unfair when they were made. Not one of you objected that they were unfair when Florida and Michigan voted.
Had you spoken then, perhaps we could take your complaints seriously now.”.
You let me know. I won’t hold my breath.
I am not saying that Clinton supporters in general have lost their minds
then i’ll say it.
look at the exit polls. when 80% of Clinton supporters say they won’t support Obama if he wins the nomination, they’re either Republicans or kool-aid-chugging cultists
I am not saying that Clinton supporters in general have lost their minds
then i’ll say it.
look at the exit polls. when 80% of Clinton supporters say they won’t support Obama if he wins the nomination, they’re either Republicans or kool-aid-chugging cultists
I am not saying that Clinton supporters in general have lost their minds
then i’ll say it.
look at the exit polls. when 80% of Clinton supporters say they won’t support Obama if he wins the nomination, they’re either Republicans or kool-aid-chugging cultists
Cleek, that’s not entirely fair; remember how many anti-McCain Republicans said they wouldn’t support McCain in the general? And yet, most of them have fallen (albeit grudgingly) into line. I think most of the Clintonites will do the same.
Cleek, that’s not entirely fair; remember how many anti-McCain Republicans said they wouldn’t support McCain in the general? And yet, most of them have fallen (albeit grudgingly) into line. I think most of the Clintonites will do the same.
Cleek, that’s not entirely fair; remember how many anti-McCain Republicans said they wouldn’t support McCain in the general? And yet, most of them have fallen (albeit grudgingly) into line. I think most of the Clintonites will do the same.
I think most of the Clintonites will do the same.
for the country’s sake, i hope so.
personally, i can’t see it happening. they really, truly, exist in a different mental universe from the rest of us.
I think most of the Clintonites will do the same.
for the country’s sake, i hope so.
personally, i can’t see it happening. they really, truly, exist in a different mental universe from the rest of us.
I think most of the Clintonites will do the same.
for the country’s sake, i hope so.
personally, i can’t see it happening. they really, truly, exist in a different mental universe from the rest of us.
Rupert Murdoch, the American Spectator, and Roger Stone:
Hillary supporters.
I can’t remember which side of the looking glass I’m on anymore.
Rupert Murdoch, the American Spectator, and Roger Stone:
Hillary supporters.
I can’t remember which side of the looking glass I’m on anymore.
Rupert Murdoch, the American Spectator, and Roger Stone:
Hillary supporters.
I can’t remember which side of the looking glass I’m on anymore.
I’ve been ignoring this, but if someone — ANYONE — says the following, that man has my vote and support for life
Actually, just before the lunch break, Donna Brazile said almost exactly that — including the word “cheating.”
I’ve been ignoring this, but if someone — ANYONE — says the following, that man has my vote and support for life
Actually, just before the lunch break, Donna Brazile said almost exactly that — including the word “cheating.”
I’ve been ignoring this, but if someone — ANYONE — says the following, that man has my vote and support for life
Actually, just before the lunch break, Donna Brazile said almost exactly that — including the word “cheating.”
Actually, just before the lunch break, Donna Brazile said almost exactly that — including the word “cheating.”
Good on her. I suspect that’s why the commentators at Talk Left loathe her so much.
Actually, just before the lunch break, Donna Brazile said almost exactly that — including the word “cheating.”
Good on her. I suspect that’s why the commentators at Talk Left loathe her so much.
Actually, just before the lunch break, Donna Brazile said almost exactly that — including the word “cheating.”
Good on her. I suspect that’s why the commentators at Talk Left loathe her so much.
I suspect that’s why the commentators at Talk Left loathe her so much.
As does Avedon Carol at The Sideshow. (BTW, she’s claiming that Nevada and two other states which were encouraged by the DNC to go early are exactly like MI and FL. Blech.) She’s too smart and too well-informed to not know what’s going on, which leads to some ugly conclusions.
I suspect that’s why the commentators at Talk Left loathe her so much.
As does Avedon Carol at The Sideshow. (BTW, she’s claiming that Nevada and two other states which were encouraged by the DNC to go early are exactly like MI and FL. Blech.) She’s too smart and too well-informed to not know what’s going on, which leads to some ugly conclusions.
I suspect that’s why the commentators at Talk Left loathe her so much.
As does Avedon Carol at The Sideshow. (BTW, she’s claiming that Nevada and two other states which were encouraged by the DNC to go early are exactly like MI and FL. Blech.) She’s too smart and too well-informed to not know what’s going on, which leads to some ugly conclusions.
Unless any of these people spent the last twenty years sitting in the pew of a church spewing racial animostity I will give them more credit than anyone who supports Obama.
Unless any of these people spent the last twenty years sitting in the pew of a church spewing racial animostity I will give them more credit than anyone who supports Obama.
Unless any of these people spent the last twenty years sitting in the pew of a church spewing racial animostity I will give them more credit than anyone who supports Obama.
mgk wrote: ” And yet, most of them have fallen (albeit grudgingly) into line. ”
But that’s what Republicans *do*. They live to fall in line.
Democrats are a herd of cats at the best of times.
mgk wrote: ” And yet, most of them have fallen (albeit grudgingly) into line. ”
But that’s what Republicans *do*. They live to fall in line.
Democrats are a herd of cats at the best of times.
mgk wrote: ” And yet, most of them have fallen (albeit grudgingly) into line. ”
But that’s what Republicans *do*. They live to fall in line.
Democrats are a herd of cats at the best of times.
Rupert Murdoch, the American Spectator, and Roger Stone:
Hillary supporters.
I can’t remember which side of the looking glass I’m on anymore.
Follow the white rabbit.
Rupert Murdoch, the American Spectator, and Roger Stone:
Hillary supporters.
I can’t remember which side of the looking glass I’m on anymore.
Follow the white rabbit.
Rupert Murdoch, the American Spectator, and Roger Stone:
Hillary supporters.
I can’t remember which side of the looking glass I’m on anymore.
Follow the white rabbit.
I kinda get the impression that this is just the Clinton campaign’s strategy for the general, only by happenstance it’s being engaged against Obama, who turned out to be the barrier to her getting elected.
“But wait, Senator! The K-763X Protest Bomb is meant to be deployed against the Republican forces in November!”
“That plan was overtaken by events, Major. We need it now, against the real threat! Go!”
It’s like they’ve been cultivating this fantasy scenario since 2000, and can’t help enacting it, even though the ‘enemy’ is in their own party.
It almost makes a kind of crazy sense that way.
I kinda get the impression that this is just the Clinton campaign’s strategy for the general, only by happenstance it’s being engaged against Obama, who turned out to be the barrier to her getting elected.
“But wait, Senator! The K-763X Protest Bomb is meant to be deployed against the Republican forces in November!”
“That plan was overtaken by events, Major. We need it now, against the real threat! Go!”
It’s like they’ve been cultivating this fantasy scenario since 2000, and can’t help enacting it, even though the ‘enemy’ is in their own party.
It almost makes a kind of crazy sense that way.
I kinda get the impression that this is just the Clinton campaign’s strategy for the general, only by happenstance it’s being engaged against Obama, who turned out to be the barrier to her getting elected.
“But wait, Senator! The K-763X Protest Bomb is meant to be deployed against the Republican forces in November!”
“That plan was overtaken by events, Major. We need it now, against the real threat! Go!”
It’s like they’ve been cultivating this fantasy scenario since 2000, and can’t help enacting it, even though the ‘enemy’ is in their own party.
It almost makes a kind of crazy sense that way.
@ calling all toasters:
Apparently, according to this Larry Sinclair character, Barack Obama is supposed to have connived in the murder of a couple of gay guys in order to cover up his (gay) affair with Mr. Sinclair a few years ago in Chicago.
The credibility of said allegations I leave up to you to judge…
@ calling all toasters:
Apparently, according to this Larry Sinclair character, Barack Obama is supposed to have connived in the murder of a couple of gay guys in order to cover up his (gay) affair with Mr. Sinclair a few years ago in Chicago.
The credibility of said allegations I leave up to you to judge…
@ calling all toasters:
Apparently, according to this Larry Sinclair character, Barack Obama is supposed to have connived in the murder of a couple of gay guys in order to cover up his (gay) affair with Mr. Sinclair a few years ago in Chicago.
The credibility of said allegations I leave up to you to judge…
From the apparent tone of the protest, it’d be kind of fun to walk up to them, carrying a cross and a container of accelerant, and see how many are game for a cross burning, and how long it took for someone in authority to shut it down.
From the apparent tone of the protest, it’d be kind of fun to walk up to them, carrying a cross and a container of accelerant, and see how many are game for a cross burning, and how long it took for someone in authority to shut it down.
From the apparent tone of the protest, it’d be kind of fun to walk up to them, carrying a cross and a container of accelerant, and see how many are game for a cross burning, and how long it took for someone in authority to shut it down.
Even the people at WorldNutDaily have disavowed Sinclair, and he’s failed a lie detector test.
‘Nuff said — except for the fact that the Hillary people didn’t invite him to leave, but instead wanted their picture taken with him.
Even the people at WorldNutDaily have disavowed Sinclair, and he’s failed a lie detector test.
‘Nuff said — except for the fact that the Hillary people didn’t invite him to leave, but instead wanted their picture taken with him.
Even the people at WorldNutDaily have disavowed Sinclair, and he’s failed a lie detector test.
‘Nuff said — except for the fact that the Hillary people didn’t invite him to leave, but instead wanted their picture taken with him.
Jay C: thanks. I was wondering about that, but didn’t have the heart to look it up.
About Clinton supporters: sheesh, people, it’s possible to support her because you think she’s the best candidate without becoming Larry J. I’m sure lots of people do. Those people, who don’t believe Obama is a murderer etc., etc., deserve the same kind of respect we’d want if our candidate was losing.
Jay C: thanks. I was wondering about that, but didn’t have the heart to look it up.
About Clinton supporters: sheesh, people, it’s possible to support her because you think she’s the best candidate without becoming Larry J. I’m sure lots of people do. Those people, who don’t believe Obama is a murderer etc., etc., deserve the same kind of respect we’d want if our candidate was losing.
Jay C: thanks. I was wondering about that, but didn’t have the heart to look it up.
About Clinton supporters: sheesh, people, it’s possible to support her because you think she’s the best candidate without becoming Larry J. I’m sure lots of people do. Those people, who don’t believe Obama is a murderer etc., etc., deserve the same kind of respect we’d want if our candidate was losing.
” Those people, who don’t believe Obama is a murderer etc., etc., deserve the same kind of respect we’d want if our candidate was losing.”
Sure. But, you know, squeaky wheels etc.
” Those people, who don’t believe Obama is a murderer etc., etc., deserve the same kind of respect we’d want if our candidate was losing.”
Sure. But, you know, squeaky wheels etc.
” Those people, who don’t believe Obama is a murderer etc., etc., deserve the same kind of respect we’d want if our candidate was losing.”
Sure. But, you know, squeaky wheels etc.
Folks willing to turn out to protest a committee meeting (many of whom don’t actually appear to be from Michigan or Florida, strangely) are probably a weird and fringe group to begin with.
But where I Hillary Clinton, and I noticed that my protestors were not only talking glowingly of joining up with McCain, but queuing up to get their pictures taken with a man who is accusing Obama of murder, and of plotting murder….
Well, I’d probably rethink the political decisions that got me to where that became the public face of my cause.
And then I’d go out there, with a megaphone, and say:
“I APPRECIATE THE SHOW OF SUPPORT. HOWEVER, I CAN’T HELP BUT NOTICE SOME OF YOU ARE INSANE. ESPECIALLY THAT GUY OVER THERE. YEAH. THE “OBAMA IS GOING TO KILL ME GUY”. I THINK HE PROBABLY NEEDS A THERAPIST AND SERIOUS MEDICATION. REALLY, I DON’T THINK I WANT TO BE THE CANDIDATE RUNNING ON THE INSANE DEMOGRAPHIC. SO I’M QUITTING. VOTE OBAMA. UNLESS YOU HAD YOUR PICTURE TAKING WITH CRAZY MCCRAZY-PERSON OVER THERE. I’M ASKING YOU NOT TO VOTE”.
Of course, if I was Hillary Clinton I’d have probably had a post Super Tuesday plan and would never have hired Mark Penn, and so would probably be deciding who to select as my VP and keeping Bill out of the loop.
Also, I’d have boobs.
Folks willing to turn out to protest a committee meeting (many of whom don’t actually appear to be from Michigan or Florida, strangely) are probably a weird and fringe group to begin with.
But where I Hillary Clinton, and I noticed that my protestors were not only talking glowingly of joining up with McCain, but queuing up to get their pictures taken with a man who is accusing Obama of murder, and of plotting murder….
Well, I’d probably rethink the political decisions that got me to where that became the public face of my cause.
And then I’d go out there, with a megaphone, and say:
“I APPRECIATE THE SHOW OF SUPPORT. HOWEVER, I CAN’T HELP BUT NOTICE SOME OF YOU ARE INSANE. ESPECIALLY THAT GUY OVER THERE. YEAH. THE “OBAMA IS GOING TO KILL ME GUY”. I THINK HE PROBABLY NEEDS A THERAPIST AND SERIOUS MEDICATION. REALLY, I DON’T THINK I WANT TO BE THE CANDIDATE RUNNING ON THE INSANE DEMOGRAPHIC. SO I’M QUITTING. VOTE OBAMA. UNLESS YOU HAD YOUR PICTURE TAKING WITH CRAZY MCCRAZY-PERSON OVER THERE. I’M ASKING YOU NOT TO VOTE”.
Of course, if I was Hillary Clinton I’d have probably had a post Super Tuesday plan and would never have hired Mark Penn, and so would probably be deciding who to select as my VP and keeping Bill out of the loop.
Also, I’d have boobs.
Folks willing to turn out to protest a committee meeting (many of whom don’t actually appear to be from Michigan or Florida, strangely) are probably a weird and fringe group to begin with.
But where I Hillary Clinton, and I noticed that my protestors were not only talking glowingly of joining up with McCain, but queuing up to get their pictures taken with a man who is accusing Obama of murder, and of plotting murder….
Well, I’d probably rethink the political decisions that got me to where that became the public face of my cause.
And then I’d go out there, with a megaphone, and say:
“I APPRECIATE THE SHOW OF SUPPORT. HOWEVER, I CAN’T HELP BUT NOTICE SOME OF YOU ARE INSANE. ESPECIALLY THAT GUY OVER THERE. YEAH. THE “OBAMA IS GOING TO KILL ME GUY”. I THINK HE PROBABLY NEEDS A THERAPIST AND SERIOUS MEDICATION. REALLY, I DON’T THINK I WANT TO BE THE CANDIDATE RUNNING ON THE INSANE DEMOGRAPHIC. SO I’M QUITTING. VOTE OBAMA. UNLESS YOU HAD YOUR PICTURE TAKING WITH CRAZY MCCRAZY-PERSON OVER THERE. I’M ASKING YOU NOT TO VOTE”.
Of course, if I was Hillary Clinton I’d have probably had a post Super Tuesday plan and would never have hired Mark Penn, and so would probably be deciding who to select as my VP and keeping Bill out of the loop.
Also, I’d have boobs.
” Those people, who don’t believe Obama is a murderer etc., etc., deserve the same kind of respect we’d want if our candidate was losing.”
don’t see many of them around anywhere. but hopefully, those people are simply underrepresented on the web.
” Those people, who don’t believe Obama is a murderer etc., etc., deserve the same kind of respect we’d want if our candidate was losing.”
don’t see many of them around anywhere. but hopefully, those people are simply underrepresented on the web.
” Those people, who don’t believe Obama is a murderer etc., etc., deserve the same kind of respect we’d want if our candidate was losing.”
don’t see many of them around anywhere. but hopefully, those people are simply underrepresented on the web.
Cleek, a lot of Clinton’s supporters aren’t computer literate, and I don’t mean that as an insult. I’ve heard them conversing at my barber shop and some of the little shops in my neighborhood, for instance. And of those who are online, a lot of them are no more interested in profoundly pointless exchange of hatefestery than, say, Hilzoy, and simply keep quiet because if they speak up, the odds are good that someone will dump on them for the faults of the jerks. It’s a very familiar social dynamic, nothing new.
Cleek, a lot of Clinton’s supporters aren’t computer literate, and I don’t mean that as an insult. I’ve heard them conversing at my barber shop and some of the little shops in my neighborhood, for instance. And of those who are online, a lot of them are no more interested in profoundly pointless exchange of hatefestery than, say, Hilzoy, and simply keep quiet because if they speak up, the odds are good that someone will dump on them for the faults of the jerks. It’s a very familiar social dynamic, nothing new.
Cleek, a lot of Clinton’s supporters aren’t computer literate, and I don’t mean that as an insult. I’ve heard them conversing at my barber shop and some of the little shops in my neighborhood, for instance. And of those who are online, a lot of them are no more interested in profoundly pointless exchange of hatefestery than, say, Hilzoy, and simply keep quiet because if they speak up, the odds are good that someone will dump on them for the faults of the jerks. It’s a very familiar social dynamic, nothing new.
in which a Hillary supporter with two poodles shouts, “Howard Dean is a leftist freak!”; in which a man exhibits a sign that reads “At least slaves were counted as 3/5ths a Citizen” and shows Dean whipping handcuffed people; and in which Larry Sinclair, the Minnesota man who took to YouTube to allege that Barack Obama had oral sex with him in the back of a limousine in 1999, is one of the belles of the ball.
Why was I not informed that scientists have found a way to clone Lanny Davis?
It’s really been amazing to see the absurdity of some of the Clinton die-hards. The vanity of it all has been something to behold.
in which a Hillary supporter with two poodles shouts, “Howard Dean is a leftist freak!”; in which a man exhibits a sign that reads “At least slaves were counted as 3/5ths a Citizen” and shows Dean whipping handcuffed people; and in which Larry Sinclair, the Minnesota man who took to YouTube to allege that Barack Obama had oral sex with him in the back of a limousine in 1999, is one of the belles of the ball.
Why was I not informed that scientists have found a way to clone Lanny Davis?
It’s really been amazing to see the absurdity of some of the Clinton die-hards. The vanity of it all has been something to behold.
in which a Hillary supporter with two poodles shouts, “Howard Dean is a leftist freak!”; in which a man exhibits a sign that reads “At least slaves were counted as 3/5ths a Citizen” and shows Dean whipping handcuffed people; and in which Larry Sinclair, the Minnesota man who took to YouTube to allege that Barack Obama had oral sex with him in the back of a limousine in 1999, is one of the belles of the ball.
Why was I not informed that scientists have found a way to clone Lanny Davis?
It’s really been amazing to see the absurdity of some of the Clinton die-hards. The vanity of it all has been something to behold.
Cleek: View a lot of Hillary Clinton’s on-line supporters as the “email forwarding, don’t know what Snopes.com is” type.
I’ve got a highly conservative second-cousin that keeps forwarding me GOP emails, and I can assure you it’s like an almost invisible but massive self-reinforcing circle.
Cleek: View a lot of Hillary Clinton’s on-line supporters as the “email forwarding, don’t know what Snopes.com is” type.
I’ve got a highly conservative second-cousin that keeps forwarding me GOP emails, and I can assure you it’s like an almost invisible but massive self-reinforcing circle.
Cleek: View a lot of Hillary Clinton’s on-line supporters as the “email forwarding, don’t know what Snopes.com is” type.
I’ve got a highly conservative second-cousin that keeps forwarding me GOP emails, and I can assure you it’s like an almost invisible but massive self-reinforcing circle.
Hi, Bruce! I’m a Clinton supporter. I used to write operating systems for multiprocessor computers but for the past few years I’ve been developing access control (network security) technology. I’ve got a patent granted and more applications in process, and I’ve chaired working groups in several networking standards bodies. I’ve had RFCs published, papers published in refereed journals, chaired a few conferences and been on the program committee for a bunch more. I’d like to point out that you forgot to add that Clinton voters are low-information racist rubes.
Thanks!
Hi, Bruce! I’m a Clinton supporter. I used to write operating systems for multiprocessor computers but for the past few years I’ve been developing access control (network security) technology. I’ve got a patent granted and more applications in process, and I’ve chaired working groups in several networking standards bodies. I’ve had RFCs published, papers published in refereed journals, chaired a few conferences and been on the program committee for a bunch more. I’d like to point out that you forgot to add that Clinton voters are low-information racist rubes.
Thanks!
Hi, Bruce! I’m a Clinton supporter. I used to write operating systems for multiprocessor computers but for the past few years I’ve been developing access control (network security) technology. I’ve got a patent granted and more applications in process, and I’ve chaired working groups in several networking standards bodies. I’ve had RFCs published, papers published in refereed journals, chaired a few conferences and been on the program committee for a bunch more. I’d like to point out that you forgot to add that Clinton voters are low-information racist rubes.
Thanks!
Melinda, is it insanely offensive to note that Clinton’s supporters are general older than Obama’s? In the context of Bruce saying that they’re largely, you know, not insane people who think that Obama is a gay leftist murderer?
Melinda, is it insanely offensive to note that Clinton’s supporters are general older than Obama’s? In the context of Bruce saying that they’re largely, you know, not insane people who think that Obama is a gay leftist murderer?
Melinda, is it insanely offensive to note that Clinton’s supporters are general older than Obama’s? In the context of Bruce saying that they’re largely, you know, not insane people who think that Obama is a gay leftist murderer?
I’ve got a patent granted and more applications in process, and I’ve chaired working groups in several networking standards bodies.
Elitist!
I’ve got a patent granted and more applications in process, and I’ve chaired working groups in several networking standards bodies.
Elitist!
I’ve got a patent granted and more applications in process, and I’ve chaired working groups in several networking standards bodies.
Elitist!
Melinda wrote: ” I’d like to point out that you forgot to add that Clinton voters are low-information racist rubes.”
You may not be, but many of them are.
Sorry, but them’s the breaks. Take a good look at your co-supporters, and think hard about whether you enjoy being associated with them.
Melinda wrote: ” I’d like to point out that you forgot to add that Clinton voters are low-information racist rubes.”
You may not be, but many of them are.
Sorry, but them’s the breaks. Take a good look at your co-supporters, and think hard about whether you enjoy being associated with them.
Melinda wrote: ” I’d like to point out that you forgot to add that Clinton voters are low-information racist rubes.”
You may not be, but many of them are.
Sorry, but them’s the breaks. Take a good look at your co-supporters, and think hard about whether you enjoy being associated with them.
Sorry, but them’s the breaks. Take a good look at your co-supporters, and think hard about whether you enjoy being associated with them.
I really don’t care about them. I think Clinton’s supporting sounder policies. It’s not a club. That, by the way, is a pretty good example of the association logical fallacy.
I’m looking forward to voting for Obama. I think he’s weaker on policy than Clinton but that doesn’t mean I don’t like him or even substantially disagree with him. But so many of his supporters are so incredibly alienating — insulting, sexist, offensive, and cheap — and sometimes it’s a little difficult to separate them from their candidate. But I do, and you might think about doing the same for Clinton.
Sorry, but them’s the breaks. Take a good look at your co-supporters, and think hard about whether you enjoy being associated with them.
I really don’t care about them. I think Clinton’s supporting sounder policies. It’s not a club. That, by the way, is a pretty good example of the association logical fallacy.
I’m looking forward to voting for Obama. I think he’s weaker on policy than Clinton but that doesn’t mean I don’t like him or even substantially disagree with him. But so many of his supporters are so incredibly alienating — insulting, sexist, offensive, and cheap — and sometimes it’s a little difficult to separate them from their candidate. But I do, and you might think about doing the same for Clinton.
Sorry, but them’s the breaks. Take a good look at your co-supporters, and think hard about whether you enjoy being associated with them.
I really don’t care about them. I think Clinton’s supporting sounder policies. It’s not a club. That, by the way, is a pretty good example of the association logical fallacy.
I’m looking forward to voting for Obama. I think he’s weaker on policy than Clinton but that doesn’t mean I don’t like him or even substantially disagree with him. But so many of his supporters are so incredibly alienating — insulting, sexist, offensive, and cheap — and sometimes it’s a little difficult to separate them from their candidate. But I do, and you might think about doing the same for Clinton.
Melinda, you’ll notice that I didn’t say anything about Clinton supporters being low-information voters, or rubes. I said that I’ve seen many Clinton supporters in working-class environments, and implied – and here state explicitly – that I’ve heard a fair number of them mention about not using computers much or at all. You wouldn’t know this without searching out my posting history here and elsewhere, but it’s not uncommon for me to rant about the blogosphere’s cultural blind spots, including the temptation to treat computer literacy as a mark of virtue. It’s not a mistake I make very often – I think that a lot of people who simply pay attention to the world around them, including their own experience, are likely smarter and certainly wiser than a lot of information junkies, and in the early months of the primary, before her policy stances and campaign practices alienated me so thoroughly, I spent a fair amount of time explaining why I thought people supporting Clinton often had good reasons for it. I do so occasionally still, though my heart’s not in it anymore.
Melinda, you’ll notice that I didn’t say anything about Clinton supporters being low-information voters, or rubes. I said that I’ve seen many Clinton supporters in working-class environments, and implied – and here state explicitly – that I’ve heard a fair number of them mention about not using computers much or at all. You wouldn’t know this without searching out my posting history here and elsewhere, but it’s not uncommon for me to rant about the blogosphere’s cultural blind spots, including the temptation to treat computer literacy as a mark of virtue. It’s not a mistake I make very often – I think that a lot of people who simply pay attention to the world around them, including their own experience, are likely smarter and certainly wiser than a lot of information junkies, and in the early months of the primary, before her policy stances and campaign practices alienated me so thoroughly, I spent a fair amount of time explaining why I thought people supporting Clinton often had good reasons for it. I do so occasionally still, though my heart’s not in it anymore.
Melinda, you’ll notice that I didn’t say anything about Clinton supporters being low-information voters, or rubes. I said that I’ve seen many Clinton supporters in working-class environments, and implied – and here state explicitly – that I’ve heard a fair number of them mention about not using computers much or at all. You wouldn’t know this without searching out my posting history here and elsewhere, but it’s not uncommon for me to rant about the blogosphere’s cultural blind spots, including the temptation to treat computer literacy as a mark of virtue. It’s not a mistake I make very often – I think that a lot of people who simply pay attention to the world around them, including their own experience, are likely smarter and certainly wiser than a lot of information junkies, and in the early months of the primary, before her policy stances and campaign practices alienated me so thoroughly, I spent a fair amount of time explaining why I thought people supporting Clinton often had good reasons for it. I do so occasionally still, though my heart’s not in it anymore.
Sure, Jon H, and I’d like to point out that some Obama supporters are elitist sexist douches.
You may not be, but many of them are.
Sorry, but them’s the breaks. Take a good look at your co-supporters, and think hard about whether you enjoy being associated with them.
Sure, Jon H, and I’d like to point out that some Obama supporters are elitist sexist douches.
You may not be, but many of them are.
Sorry, but them’s the breaks. Take a good look at your co-supporters, and think hard about whether you enjoy being associated with them.
Sure, Jon H, and I’d like to point out that some Obama supporters are elitist sexist douches.
You may not be, but many of them are.
Sorry, but them’s the breaks. Take a good look at your co-supporters, and think hard about whether you enjoy being associated with them.
Can we just stipulate that any large group of people, like Clinton supporters, Obama supporters, and McCain supporters, will have some jerks among their number?
If so, can we then decide both that it would be not just nuts, but actually impossible, to vote for the candidate without nutty supporters?
And also that comity requires making sure that we distinguish the nutty from the non-nutty ones, across the board?
Here’s hoping…
Can we just stipulate that any large group of people, like Clinton supporters, Obama supporters, and McCain supporters, will have some jerks among their number?
If so, can we then decide both that it would be not just nuts, but actually impossible, to vote for the candidate without nutty supporters?
And also that comity requires making sure that we distinguish the nutty from the non-nutty ones, across the board?
Here’s hoping…
Can we just stipulate that any large group of people, like Clinton supporters, Obama supporters, and McCain supporters, will have some jerks among their number?
If so, can we then decide both that it would be not just nuts, but actually impossible, to vote for the candidate without nutty supporters?
And also that comity requires making sure that we distinguish the nutty from the non-nutty ones, across the board?
Here’s hoping…
“Sure, Jon H, and I’d like to point out that some Obama supporters are elitist sexist douches.”
I wonder how you separate sexism from simple dislike of Hillary which she has earned through her behavior.
Often, it might be expressed in sexist ways, but the animus is not because she’s a woman.
“and think hard about whether you enjoy being associated with them.”
We’ve behaved vastly better than the nutjobs among the Clinton supporters.
“Sure, Jon H, and I’d like to point out that some Obama supporters are elitist sexist douches.”
I wonder how you separate sexism from simple dislike of Hillary which she has earned through her behavior.
Often, it might be expressed in sexist ways, but the animus is not because she’s a woman.
“and think hard about whether you enjoy being associated with them.”
We’ve behaved vastly better than the nutjobs among the Clinton supporters.
“Sure, Jon H, and I’d like to point out that some Obama supporters are elitist sexist douches.”
I wonder how you separate sexism from simple dislike of Hillary which she has earned through her behavior.
Often, it might be expressed in sexist ways, but the animus is not because she’s a woman.
“and think hard about whether you enjoy being associated with them.”
We’ve behaved vastly better than the nutjobs among the Clinton supporters.
Bruce, I know plenty of middle-income and higher people who don’t use computers. I also know plenty of working class people (farmers, people in the trades) who do. Really, be careful about this kind of stuff.
Bruce, I know plenty of middle-income and higher people who don’t use computers. I also know plenty of working class people (farmers, people in the trades) who do. Really, be careful about this kind of stuff.
Bruce, I know plenty of middle-income and higher people who don’t use computers. I also know plenty of working class people (farmers, people in the trades) who do. Really, be careful about this kind of stuff.
Melinda wrote: ” I think Clinton’s supporting sounder policies. ”
But does she really support them? She once said she supported stripping MI and FL of delegates.
Melinda wrote: ” I think Clinton’s supporting sounder policies. ”
But does she really support them? She once said she supported stripping MI and FL of delegates.
Melinda wrote: ” I think Clinton’s supporting sounder policies. ”
But does she really support them? She once said she supported stripping MI and FL of delegates.
Melinda, are you noticing what I’m actually writing? I’m talking about what I hear people saying in my immediate vicinity, and describing the circumstances. I have seen people saying the things it looks to me like you’re reacting to, but I’m not them.
Melinda, are you noticing what I’m actually writing? I’m talking about what I hear people saying in my immediate vicinity, and describing the circumstances. I have seen people saying the things it looks to me like you’re reacting to, but I’m not them.
Melinda, are you noticing what I’m actually writing? I’m talking about what I hear people saying in my immediate vicinity, and describing the circumstances. I have seen people saying the things it looks to me like you’re reacting to, but I’m not them.
Well, Jon H, sexism is a pervasive problem in our society, as is racism. When a person uses sexist language to insult a person it does make sense to imagine that sexism may in fact be a factor in this person’s thinking. Similarly, when insults a person using racial insults, it just might indicate that that person just might harbor some racists thoughts. I’m just putting the idea out there. Sounds far out, I guess, but I think it just might be worth thinking about.
As for a qualitative comparison of Obama and Clinton supporters, I submit to you that you might be just a wee bit biased. I personally have no favorite for the Democratic nomination, and I have been disappointed by both sides. I have seen insane bitterness from both sides distract us from the real fight. I hope the bitterness will fade in the end, but that depends on the actions of the winners, as well as those of the losers.
Well, Jon H, sexism is a pervasive problem in our society, as is racism. When a person uses sexist language to insult a person it does make sense to imagine that sexism may in fact be a factor in this person’s thinking. Similarly, when insults a person using racial insults, it just might indicate that that person just might harbor some racists thoughts. I’m just putting the idea out there. Sounds far out, I guess, but I think it just might be worth thinking about.
As for a qualitative comparison of Obama and Clinton supporters, I submit to you that you might be just a wee bit biased. I personally have no favorite for the Democratic nomination, and I have been disappointed by both sides. I have seen insane bitterness from both sides distract us from the real fight. I hope the bitterness will fade in the end, but that depends on the actions of the winners, as well as those of the losers.
Well, Jon H, sexism is a pervasive problem in our society, as is racism. When a person uses sexist language to insult a person it does make sense to imagine that sexism may in fact be a factor in this person’s thinking. Similarly, when insults a person using racial insults, it just might indicate that that person just might harbor some racists thoughts. I’m just putting the idea out there. Sounds far out, I guess, but I think it just might be worth thinking about.
As for a qualitative comparison of Obama and Clinton supporters, I submit to you that you might be just a wee bit biased. I personally have no favorite for the Democratic nomination, and I have been disappointed by both sides. I have seen insane bitterness from both sides distract us from the real fight. I hope the bitterness will fade in the end, but that depends on the actions of the winners, as well as those of the losers.
But so many of his supporters are so incredibly alienating — insulting, sexist, offensive, and cheap — and sometimes it’s a little difficult to separate them from their candidate. But I do, and you might think about doing the same for Clinton.
I might if she wasn’t so insulting, sexist (“I deserve to win just because I’m a woman, dammit!”), offensive and cheap. She is the embodyment of her supporters.
====================
sexism is a pervasive problem in our society
Therefore, HRC deserves to win, By Any Means Necessary. That, my friend, is sexist twaddle.
=====================
As for a qualitative comparison of Obama and Clinton supporters, I submit to you that you might be just a wee bit biased.
Observe the behaviour of the Clinton supporters and the Obama supporters over the past day. Would you care for a side-by-side comparison?
===================
Melinda and Allienne, Clinton is a liar and a cheat. There’s no two ways around that. Why on earth would you support someone like that. Not just because “sexism is a pervasive problem in our society”, I hope.
But so many of his supporters are so incredibly alienating — insulting, sexist, offensive, and cheap — and sometimes it’s a little difficult to separate them from their candidate. But I do, and you might think about doing the same for Clinton.
I might if she wasn’t so insulting, sexist (“I deserve to win just because I’m a woman, dammit!”), offensive and cheap. She is the embodyment of her supporters.
====================
sexism is a pervasive problem in our society
Therefore, HRC deserves to win, By Any Means Necessary. That, my friend, is sexist twaddle.
=====================
As for a qualitative comparison of Obama and Clinton supporters, I submit to you that you might be just a wee bit biased.
Observe the behaviour of the Clinton supporters and the Obama supporters over the past day. Would you care for a side-by-side comparison?
===================
Melinda and Allienne, Clinton is a liar and a cheat. There’s no two ways around that. Why on earth would you support someone like that. Not just because “sexism is a pervasive problem in our society”, I hope.
But so many of his supporters are so incredibly alienating — insulting, sexist, offensive, and cheap — and sometimes it’s a little difficult to separate them from their candidate. But I do, and you might think about doing the same for Clinton.
I might if she wasn’t so insulting, sexist (“I deserve to win just because I’m a woman, dammit!”), offensive and cheap. She is the embodyment of her supporters.
====================
sexism is a pervasive problem in our society
Therefore, HRC deserves to win, By Any Means Necessary. That, my friend, is sexist twaddle.
=====================
As for a qualitative comparison of Obama and Clinton supporters, I submit to you that you might be just a wee bit biased.
Observe the behaviour of the Clinton supporters and the Obama supporters over the past day. Would you care for a side-by-side comparison?
===================
Melinda and Allienne, Clinton is a liar and a cheat. There’s no two ways around that. Why on earth would you support someone like that. Not just because “sexism is a pervasive problem in our society”, I hope.
Jeff, I want you to look over your last post, and reflect. Do you really believe your argument is accurate and fair? If so, I hold you up as an example of an insane Obama supporter. If not, then I forgive you.
Jeff, I want you to look over your last post, and reflect. Do you really believe your argument is accurate and fair? If so, I hold you up as an example of an insane Obama supporter. If not, then I forgive you.
Jeff, I want you to look over your last post, and reflect. Do you really believe your argument is accurate and fair? If so, I hold you up as an example of an insane Obama supporter. If not, then I forgive you.
Then argue that. PLEASE.
Then argue that. PLEASE.
Then argue that. PLEASE.
That’s getting personal and against site policies.
I’d feel better if you could support your argument better.
That’s getting personal and against site policies.
I’d feel better if you could support your argument better.
That’s getting personal and against site policies.
I’d feel better if you could support your argument better.
I’m not, to be honest, at all sure that there is an argument in favor of Clinton’s other policies that would override her continued support of the occupation of Iraq and her thoroughly incompetent, loyalty-favoring, competence-ignoring, contingency-ignoring style of management. I say this in a spirit of fairness; I sometimes ask others what it would take to persuade them of this or that, or if in fact they’re not really open to persuasion, and I hold myself to the same standard. But I’m also not sure I’m not open to such an argument. Keeping in mind that I’m willing to explain why I think individual mandates are actually a step backward in health care, I would be interested in hearing what it is about Clinton’s stances on administrative secrecy, torture, the environment, disability issues, and the like (to grab some important to me) that make her superior to Obama. I may have missed the obvious – it wouldn’t be the first time.
I’m not, to be honest, at all sure that there is an argument in favor of Clinton’s other policies that would override her continued support of the occupation of Iraq and her thoroughly incompetent, loyalty-favoring, competence-ignoring, contingency-ignoring style of management. I say this in a spirit of fairness; I sometimes ask others what it would take to persuade them of this or that, or if in fact they’re not really open to persuasion, and I hold myself to the same standard. But I’m also not sure I’m not open to such an argument. Keeping in mind that I’m willing to explain why I think individual mandates are actually a step backward in health care, I would be interested in hearing what it is about Clinton’s stances on administrative secrecy, torture, the environment, disability issues, and the like (to grab some important to me) that make her superior to Obama. I may have missed the obvious – it wouldn’t be the first time.
I’m not, to be honest, at all sure that there is an argument in favor of Clinton’s other policies that would override her continued support of the occupation of Iraq and her thoroughly incompetent, loyalty-favoring, competence-ignoring, contingency-ignoring style of management. I say this in a spirit of fairness; I sometimes ask others what it would take to persuade them of this or that, or if in fact they’re not really open to persuasion, and I hold myself to the same standard. But I’m also not sure I’m not open to such an argument. Keeping in mind that I’m willing to explain why I think individual mandates are actually a step backward in health care, I would be interested in hearing what it is about Clinton’s stances on administrative secrecy, torture, the environment, disability issues, and the like (to grab some important to me) that make her superior to Obama. I may have missed the obvious – it wouldn’t be the first time.
I disagree. The specific argument I was responding to was the idea that Obama’s nutjobs aren’t as bad as Clinton’s nutjobs. I believe that Jeff’s argument showed that he hadn’t even read my post, and that to him it is reasonable to take sentences out of context, and then add things I didn’t say in quotes. I would call this kind of unhinged dishonesty insane, but okay, let’s just call it unhinged bitterness.
I disagree. The specific argument I was responding to was the idea that Obama’s nutjobs aren’t as bad as Clinton’s nutjobs. I believe that Jeff’s argument showed that he hadn’t even read my post, and that to him it is reasonable to take sentences out of context, and then add things I didn’t say in quotes. I would call this kind of unhinged dishonesty insane, but okay, let’s just call it unhinged bitterness.
I disagree. The specific argument I was responding to was the idea that Obama’s nutjobs aren’t as bad as Clinton’s nutjobs. I believe that Jeff’s argument showed that he hadn’t even read my post, and that to him it is reasonable to take sentences out of context, and then add things I didn’t say in quotes. I would call this kind of unhinged dishonesty insane, but okay, let’s just call it unhinged bitterness.
” I would call this kind of unhinged dishonesty insane, ”
You haven’t read the ravings and conspiracy theories at NoQuarter or HillaryIs44, have you?
That’s the standard for supporter insanity, I think.
” I would call this kind of unhinged dishonesty insane, ”
You haven’t read the ravings and conspiracy theories at NoQuarter or HillaryIs44, have you?
That’s the standard for supporter insanity, I think.
” I would call this kind of unhinged dishonesty insane, ”
You haven’t read the ravings and conspiracy theories at NoQuarter or HillaryIs44, have you?
That’s the standard for supporter insanity, I think.
My god, this is tiresome. Look, if you all want to believe that Obama supporters are inherently superior, fine. Enjoy it. Hate the other half of the Democratic party. Have fun.
For myself, I just will have to wait for the nomination process to end, and hope I can forget that so many of my allies really aren’t that different intellectually from my opponents. It is a disappointment, but as a non-Republican I am used to that.
My god, this is tiresome. Look, if you all want to believe that Obama supporters are inherently superior, fine. Enjoy it. Hate the other half of the Democratic party. Have fun.
For myself, I just will have to wait for the nomination process to end, and hope I can forget that so many of my allies really aren’t that different intellectually from my opponents. It is a disappointment, but as a non-Republican I am used to that.
My god, this is tiresome. Look, if you all want to believe that Obama supporters are inherently superior, fine. Enjoy it. Hate the other half of the Democratic party. Have fun.
For myself, I just will have to wait for the nomination process to end, and hope I can forget that so many of my allies really aren’t that different intellectually from my opponents. It is a disappointment, but as a non-Republican I am used to that.
Allienne and Melinda,
I know we’re all very agitated right now because of the sheer perpetuity of this primary, but I think the ObWi comment boards are a very welcoming place, and people who step out of lines are usually put in their place by Hilzoy.
So I really want to know. On what issues is Hillary better? Since her post-February populist reinvention she has advocated for both a pandering gas tax policy and
obliteration of Iran. How are these good policies?
Allienne and Melinda,
I know we’re all very agitated right now because of the sheer perpetuity of this primary, but I think the ObWi comment boards are a very welcoming place, and people who step out of lines are usually put in their place by Hilzoy.
So I really want to know. On what issues is Hillary better? Since her post-February populist reinvention she has advocated for both a pandering gas tax policy and
obliteration of Iran. How are these good policies?
Allienne and Melinda,
I know we’re all very agitated right now because of the sheer perpetuity of this primary, but I think the ObWi comment boards are a very welcoming place, and people who step out of lines are usually put in their place by Hilzoy.
So I really want to know. On what issues is Hillary better? Since her post-February populist reinvention she has advocated for both a pandering gas tax policy and
obliteration of Iran. How are these good policies?
Dishonest. Clinton didn’t “advocate” the obliteration of Iran. Again, I’m not a Clinton supporter. I am a truth supporter. I am a reality supporter. Why is it necessary to be dishonest? I just don’t get it.
Dishonest. Clinton didn’t “advocate” the obliteration of Iran. Again, I’m not a Clinton supporter. I am a truth supporter. I am a reality supporter. Why is it necessary to be dishonest? I just don’t get it.
Dishonest. Clinton didn’t “advocate” the obliteration of Iran. Again, I’m not a Clinton supporter. I am a truth supporter. I am a reality supporter. Why is it necessary to be dishonest? I just don’t get it.
Yes, it is. How about more issues oriented discussion? Please?
Yes, it is. How about more issues oriented discussion? Please?
Yes, it is. How about more issues oriented discussion? Please?
Consider everyone put in their place.
None of us has anything like exhaustive knowledge of “Clinton supporters”, “Obama supporters”, and their comparative loathesomeness. We just don’t. Moreover, it doesn’t really matter whose supporters are worse. At least, not for any important issue I can think of.
We might as well just acknowledge that in all likelihood, our own side has some utter nutjobs, and get on with dealing with everyone else in a spirit of good will.
Consider everyone put in their place.
None of us has anything like exhaustive knowledge of “Clinton supporters”, “Obama supporters”, and their comparative loathesomeness. We just don’t. Moreover, it doesn’t really matter whose supporters are worse. At least, not for any important issue I can think of.
We might as well just acknowledge that in all likelihood, our own side has some utter nutjobs, and get on with dealing with everyone else in a spirit of good will.
Consider everyone put in their place.
None of us has anything like exhaustive knowledge of “Clinton supporters”, “Obama supporters”, and their comparative loathesomeness. We just don’t. Moreover, it doesn’t really matter whose supporters are worse. At least, not for any important issue I can think of.
We might as well just acknowledge that in all likelihood, our own side has some utter nutjobs, and get on with dealing with everyone else in a spirit of good will.
I should have put a smiley after “put in their place”… I meant it in a smiley way.
I should have put a smiley after “put in their place”… I meant it in a smiley way.
I should have put a smiley after “put in their place”… I meant it in a smiley way.
hilzoy @ 9:43 is what I’m talking about.
one of the many reasons ObWi remains my favorite blog…
hilzoy @ 9:43 is what I’m talking about.
one of the many reasons ObWi remains my favorite blog…
hilzoy @ 9:43 is what I’m talking about.
one of the many reasons ObWi remains my favorite blog…
“When a person uses sexist language to insult a person it does make sense to imagine that sexism may in fact be a factor in this person’s thinking.”
Maybe. But since most Obama supporters seem to have no problem with Obama picking a woman who isn’t Hillary to be his VP, this seems like a flawed conclusion. And many Obama supporters wouldn’t even mind Clinton.
I give claims of sexism more credence if they refer to events that happened last year. By now, it’s pretty likely that it’s mostly motivated by Hillary behaving like an asshole for the last several months.
“When a person uses sexist language to insult a person it does make sense to imagine that sexism may in fact be a factor in this person’s thinking.”
Maybe. But since most Obama supporters seem to have no problem with Obama picking a woman who isn’t Hillary to be his VP, this seems like a flawed conclusion. And many Obama supporters wouldn’t even mind Clinton.
I give claims of sexism more credence if they refer to events that happened last year. By now, it’s pretty likely that it’s mostly motivated by Hillary behaving like an asshole for the last several months.
“When a person uses sexist language to insult a person it does make sense to imagine that sexism may in fact be a factor in this person’s thinking.”
Maybe. But since most Obama supporters seem to have no problem with Obama picking a woman who isn’t Hillary to be his VP, this seems like a flawed conclusion. And many Obama supporters wouldn’t even mind Clinton.
I give claims of sexism more credence if they refer to events that happened last year. By now, it’s pretty likely that it’s mostly motivated by Hillary behaving like an asshole for the last several months.
My last word on the topic, just to Jon H,
I think that even last year there were good reasons to oppose a Clinton candidacy including, her AUMF vote, her refusal to admit is was a mistake, her sponsoring of the flag burning amendment, and her weird hearings on video-game violence. None of these reasons are rooted in sexism.
My last word on the topic, just to Jon H,
I think that even last year there were good reasons to oppose a Clinton candidacy including, her AUMF vote, her refusal to admit is was a mistake, her sponsoring of the flag burning amendment, and her weird hearings on video-game violence. None of these reasons are rooted in sexism.
My last word on the topic, just to Jon H,
I think that even last year there were good reasons to oppose a Clinton candidacy including, her AUMF vote, her refusal to admit is was a mistake, her sponsoring of the flag burning amendment, and her weird hearings on video-game violence. None of these reasons are rooted in sexism.
I’d like to point out one thing: even if Clinton supporters were inherently more virtuous and wise than Obama supporters, we should expect to see a lot more Clinton supporters acting like jerks now because Clinton is losing. That makes people feel angry and powerless, and some of those supporters who are either not terribly well inform (and let’s face it, most Americans are not) or who have poured all their hatred and enmity onto Obama are going to react like jerks. So, even if one did empirical research and concluded that Clinton supporters are far more likely to act like jerks now, that doesn’t tell us anything about the intrinsic nature of Clinton versus Obama supporters. Of course, I tend to think that its extremely hard to even do the comparison given sampling issues and selection bias. In other words: Jeff and Jon H, you’re not helping. Please stop.
The real problem here isn’t that some Clinton supporters are acting nutty; in a large group of people backing the losing candidate, that’s inevitable and it has absolutely nothing to do with Clinton or her supporters. The real problem is that Clinton has been deceiving her supporters by encouraging them to believe that the nomination was “stolen” from her. That behavior suggests that either Clinton can’t accept unpleasant truths or that she’s unethical. But I can’t blame most of her supporters for believing that she’s telling them the truth.
I’d like to point out one thing: even if Clinton supporters were inherently more virtuous and wise than Obama supporters, we should expect to see a lot more Clinton supporters acting like jerks now because Clinton is losing. That makes people feel angry and powerless, and some of those supporters who are either not terribly well inform (and let’s face it, most Americans are not) or who have poured all their hatred and enmity onto Obama are going to react like jerks. So, even if one did empirical research and concluded that Clinton supporters are far more likely to act like jerks now, that doesn’t tell us anything about the intrinsic nature of Clinton versus Obama supporters. Of course, I tend to think that its extremely hard to even do the comparison given sampling issues and selection bias. In other words: Jeff and Jon H, you’re not helping. Please stop.
The real problem here isn’t that some Clinton supporters are acting nutty; in a large group of people backing the losing candidate, that’s inevitable and it has absolutely nothing to do with Clinton or her supporters. The real problem is that Clinton has been deceiving her supporters by encouraging them to believe that the nomination was “stolen” from her. That behavior suggests that either Clinton can’t accept unpleasant truths or that she’s unethical. But I can’t blame most of her supporters for believing that she’s telling them the truth.
I’d like to point out one thing: even if Clinton supporters were inherently more virtuous and wise than Obama supporters, we should expect to see a lot more Clinton supporters acting like jerks now because Clinton is losing. That makes people feel angry and powerless, and some of those supporters who are either not terribly well inform (and let’s face it, most Americans are not) or who have poured all their hatred and enmity onto Obama are going to react like jerks. So, even if one did empirical research and concluded that Clinton supporters are far more likely to act like jerks now, that doesn’t tell us anything about the intrinsic nature of Clinton versus Obama supporters. Of course, I tend to think that its extremely hard to even do the comparison given sampling issues and selection bias. In other words: Jeff and Jon H, you’re not helping. Please stop.
The real problem here isn’t that some Clinton supporters are acting nutty; in a large group of people backing the losing candidate, that’s inevitable and it has absolutely nothing to do with Clinton or her supporters. The real problem is that Clinton has been deceiving her supporters by encouraging them to believe that the nomination was “stolen” from her. That behavior suggests that either Clinton can’t accept unpleasant truths or that she’s unethical. But I can’t blame most of her supporters for believing that she’s telling them the truth.
Okay, Jon H, but just out of curiousity, if blatantly sexist language isn’t a sufficient indicator of sexism, what exactly is? Also, your “many”, “most”, “mostly” thing obscures the simple point I was trying to make which was that both sides have supporters the majority probably don’t agree with, and it is silly to attack the candidate for the words and actions of any particular supporter.
Basically, hate Clinton for Clinton, if hate her you must. Hate the specific Clinton supporters who warrant it, I know I do. But don’t hate half the party because they disagree with your choice for candidate. Instead, hate the Republicans for their choice. Hate them with the red hot passion of a thousand suns. Hate them for what they have brought upon us, and the world, and for what they wish to bring upon us all. All I’m saying is, give hate a chance.
Okay, Jon H, but just out of curiousity, if blatantly sexist language isn’t a sufficient indicator of sexism, what exactly is? Also, your “many”, “most”, “mostly” thing obscures the simple point I was trying to make which was that both sides have supporters the majority probably don’t agree with, and it is silly to attack the candidate for the words and actions of any particular supporter.
Basically, hate Clinton for Clinton, if hate her you must. Hate the specific Clinton supporters who warrant it, I know I do. But don’t hate half the party because they disagree with your choice for candidate. Instead, hate the Republicans for their choice. Hate them with the red hot passion of a thousand suns. Hate them for what they have brought upon us, and the world, and for what they wish to bring upon us all. All I’m saying is, give hate a chance.
Okay, Jon H, but just out of curiousity, if blatantly sexist language isn’t a sufficient indicator of sexism, what exactly is? Also, your “many”, “most”, “mostly” thing obscures the simple point I was trying to make which was that both sides have supporters the majority probably don’t agree with, and it is silly to attack the candidate for the words and actions of any particular supporter.
Basically, hate Clinton for Clinton, if hate her you must. Hate the specific Clinton supporters who warrant it, I know I do. But don’t hate half the party because they disagree with your choice for candidate. Instead, hate the Republicans for their choice. Hate them with the red hot passion of a thousand suns. Hate them for what they have brought upon us, and the world, and for what they wish to bring upon us all. All I’m saying is, give hate a chance.
br wrote: “I think that even last year there were good reasons to oppose a Clinton candidacy including, her AUMF vote, her refusal to admit is was a mistake, her sponsoring of the flag burning amendment, and her weird hearings on video-game violence. None of these reasons are rooted in sexism.”
Oh, I agree. I just mean that the use of sexist terms of abuse last year were more likely to be indicative of actual generalized sexism. Now, it’s more likely to be because she’s been a jerk.
br wrote: “I think that even last year there were good reasons to oppose a Clinton candidacy including, her AUMF vote, her refusal to admit is was a mistake, her sponsoring of the flag burning amendment, and her weird hearings on video-game violence. None of these reasons are rooted in sexism.”
Oh, I agree. I just mean that the use of sexist terms of abuse last year were more likely to be indicative of actual generalized sexism. Now, it’s more likely to be because she’s been a jerk.
br wrote: “I think that even last year there were good reasons to oppose a Clinton candidacy including, her AUMF vote, her refusal to admit is was a mistake, her sponsoring of the flag burning amendment, and her weird hearings on video-game violence. None of these reasons are rooted in sexism.”
Oh, I agree. I just mean that the use of sexist terms of abuse last year were more likely to be indicative of actual generalized sexism. Now, it’s more likely to be because she’s been a jerk.
When a person uses sexist language to insult a person it does make sense to imagine that sexism may in fact be a factor in this person’s thinking.
Allienne,
Um, maybe I missed something, but who exactly used sexist language? You’ve made several comments containing that claim and I can’t see what you’re referring to. It often helps to include the quote that you’re responding to in your comment, as I’ve done above.
When a person uses sexist language to insult a person it does make sense to imagine that sexism may in fact be a factor in this person’s thinking.
Allienne,
Um, maybe I missed something, but who exactly used sexist language? You’ve made several comments containing that claim and I can’t see what you’re referring to. It often helps to include the quote that you’re responding to in your comment, as I’ve done above.
When a person uses sexist language to insult a person it does make sense to imagine that sexism may in fact be a factor in this person’s thinking.
Allienne,
Um, maybe I missed something, but who exactly used sexist language? You’ve made several comments containing that claim and I can’t see what you’re referring to. It often helps to include the quote that you’re responding to in your comment, as I’ve done above.
Well, Turbulance, Jon H admitted that animosity towards Clinton might be expressed in sexist language, but that this did not necessarily imply that the animosity was generated by sexism. So, the “Fatal Attraction”, “Beat the Bitch”, stuff that has certainly not been hard to locate on the internet and TV is what I assumed he was referencing.
Well, Turbulance, Jon H admitted that animosity towards Clinton might be expressed in sexist language, but that this did not necessarily imply that the animosity was generated by sexism. So, the “Fatal Attraction”, “Beat the Bitch”, stuff that has certainly not been hard to locate on the internet and TV is what I assumed he was referencing.
Well, Turbulance, Jon H admitted that animosity towards Clinton might be expressed in sexist language, but that this did not necessarily imply that the animosity was generated by sexism. So, the “Fatal Attraction”, “Beat the Bitch”, stuff that has certainly not been hard to locate on the internet and TV is what I assumed he was referencing.
Allienne,
Thanks for the explanation. That makes your comments come together for me.
Just out of curiosity, is there any empirical reason to believe that sexist remarks played a significant role in Clinton’s failure to secure the nomination? I mean, given that sexism is competing with her general managerial incompetence, her Iraq/Iran war issues, her failure to plan for a post-super tuesday campaign, and her failure to effectively tap small donor networks, why should we assume that sexism was more of a problem than any of those other issues?
Of course sexism is reprehensible and should be stomped down whenever it appears. However, there are people who talk about McCain getting brainwashed by the Vietcong and Obama being a Muslim sleeper agent, so it seems that some people will deploy insane attacks against any candidate no matter what.
Allienne,
Thanks for the explanation. That makes your comments come together for me.
Just out of curiosity, is there any empirical reason to believe that sexist remarks played a significant role in Clinton’s failure to secure the nomination? I mean, given that sexism is competing with her general managerial incompetence, her Iraq/Iran war issues, her failure to plan for a post-super tuesday campaign, and her failure to effectively tap small donor networks, why should we assume that sexism was more of a problem than any of those other issues?
Of course sexism is reprehensible and should be stomped down whenever it appears. However, there are people who talk about McCain getting brainwashed by the Vietcong and Obama being a Muslim sleeper agent, so it seems that some people will deploy insane attacks against any candidate no matter what.
Allienne,
Thanks for the explanation. That makes your comments come together for me.
Just out of curiosity, is there any empirical reason to believe that sexist remarks played a significant role in Clinton’s failure to secure the nomination? I mean, given that sexism is competing with her general managerial incompetence, her Iraq/Iran war issues, her failure to plan for a post-super tuesday campaign, and her failure to effectively tap small donor networks, why should we assume that sexism was more of a problem than any of those other issues?
Of course sexism is reprehensible and should be stomped down whenever it appears. However, there are people who talk about McCain getting brainwashed by the Vietcong and Obama being a Muslim sleeper agent, so it seems that some people will deploy insane attacks against any candidate no matter what.
If it is playing a significant role, where is it doing so among the various segments of the population? Certainly not among older people and older women, which is her strength. And I’d be hesitant to pinpoint it among the younger and more educated voters without a lot of support…
If it is playing a significant role, where is it doing so among the various segments of the population? Certainly not among older people and older women, which is her strength. And I’d be hesitant to pinpoint it among the younger and more educated voters without a lot of support…
If it is playing a significant role, where is it doing so among the various segments of the population? Certainly not among older people and older women, which is her strength. And I’d be hesitant to pinpoint it among the younger and more educated voters without a lot of support…
Well, Turbulence, as I am sure you realize, it is extremely difficult to say to what degree sexism affects behavior in any particular case. I am not aware of any convincing evidence that sexism has resulted in a loss of support for Clinton, and I have nowhere argued that such is the case. However, I think it very likely that some men and women do not feel that a woman could be a good POTUS, just as some people will not believe a black man, or an atheist, or an S/M practitioner would be a good POTUS. People have their prejudices.
I brought in sexism originally to mock Jon H’s statement that “many” Clinton supporters are “low-information racist rubes”(7:29 above). It was a simple replacement to suggest that similar tactics could be used just as fairly against Obama supporters.
I honestly don’t see how anyone could imagine that Clinton has not suffered from sexism, just as I can’t imagine anyone could argue that racism has not been damaging to Obama.
Well, Turbulence, as I am sure you realize, it is extremely difficult to say to what degree sexism affects behavior in any particular case. I am not aware of any convincing evidence that sexism has resulted in a loss of support for Clinton, and I have nowhere argued that such is the case. However, I think it very likely that some men and women do not feel that a woman could be a good POTUS, just as some people will not believe a black man, or an atheist, or an S/M practitioner would be a good POTUS. People have their prejudices.
I brought in sexism originally to mock Jon H’s statement that “many” Clinton supporters are “low-information racist rubes”(7:29 above). It was a simple replacement to suggest that similar tactics could be used just as fairly against Obama supporters.
I honestly don’t see how anyone could imagine that Clinton has not suffered from sexism, just as I can’t imagine anyone could argue that racism has not been damaging to Obama.
Well, Turbulence, as I am sure you realize, it is extremely difficult to say to what degree sexism affects behavior in any particular case. I am not aware of any convincing evidence that sexism has resulted in a loss of support for Clinton, and I have nowhere argued that such is the case. However, I think it very likely that some men and women do not feel that a woman could be a good POTUS, just as some people will not believe a black man, or an atheist, or an S/M practitioner would be a good POTUS. People have their prejudices.
I brought in sexism originally to mock Jon H’s statement that “many” Clinton supporters are “low-information racist rubes”(7:29 above). It was a simple replacement to suggest that similar tactics could be used just as fairly against Obama supporters.
I honestly don’t see how anyone could imagine that Clinton has not suffered from sexism, just as I can’t imagine anyone could argue that racism has not been damaging to Obama.
Alliene wrote: ” So, the “Fatal Attraction”, “Beat the Bitch”, stuff that has certainly not been hard to locate on the internet and TV is what I assumed he was referencing.”
The ‘Fatal Attraction’ thing seems fairly weak as a case of sexism. There are plenty of movies with the genders reversed and a male psycho stalker. It’s fairly natural for people to use a prominent example with a female antagonist who is an overpersistent suitor who has worn out her welcome. That said, if the roles were reversed, and Obama were persisting despite a victory having been unlikely since March, they might well be comparing *him* to Glenn Close.
I’m sorry the comparison is unflattering to Senator Clinton, but she’s the one who chose the strategy and the rhetoric and the tone to use.
“Beat the Bitch” is pretty ugly, but wasn’t it a woman who asked McCain about how he was going to do it? Would it be used if the candidate was Kathleen Sebelius, rather than Hillary Clinton? I seriously doubt it. I think there’s a lot of animus there that is specific to Clinton.
Alliene wrote: ” So, the “Fatal Attraction”, “Beat the Bitch”, stuff that has certainly not been hard to locate on the internet and TV is what I assumed he was referencing.”
The ‘Fatal Attraction’ thing seems fairly weak as a case of sexism. There are plenty of movies with the genders reversed and a male psycho stalker. It’s fairly natural for people to use a prominent example with a female antagonist who is an overpersistent suitor who has worn out her welcome. That said, if the roles were reversed, and Obama were persisting despite a victory having been unlikely since March, they might well be comparing *him* to Glenn Close.
I’m sorry the comparison is unflattering to Senator Clinton, but she’s the one who chose the strategy and the rhetoric and the tone to use.
“Beat the Bitch” is pretty ugly, but wasn’t it a woman who asked McCain about how he was going to do it? Would it be used if the candidate was Kathleen Sebelius, rather than Hillary Clinton? I seriously doubt it. I think there’s a lot of animus there that is specific to Clinton.
Alliene wrote: ” So, the “Fatal Attraction”, “Beat the Bitch”, stuff that has certainly not been hard to locate on the internet and TV is what I assumed he was referencing.”
The ‘Fatal Attraction’ thing seems fairly weak as a case of sexism. There are plenty of movies with the genders reversed and a male psycho stalker. It’s fairly natural for people to use a prominent example with a female antagonist who is an overpersistent suitor who has worn out her welcome. That said, if the roles were reversed, and Obama were persisting despite a victory having been unlikely since March, they might well be comparing *him* to Glenn Close.
I’m sorry the comparison is unflattering to Senator Clinton, but she’s the one who chose the strategy and the rhetoric and the tone to use.
“Beat the Bitch” is pretty ugly, but wasn’t it a woman who asked McCain about how he was going to do it? Would it be used if the candidate was Kathleen Sebelius, rather than Hillary Clinton? I seriously doubt it. I think there’s a lot of animus there that is specific to Clinton.
For the record: Here is my cut-n-paste reply to every lefty charge of sexism/racism against the right for the rest of my life:
2008 Democratic Primary
You can’t buy this stuff, even on “Pay per View”… Heck – if it comes down to a floor fight they could put it on Pay per View and reduce the deficit from the proceeds…
For the record: Here is my cut-n-paste reply to every lefty charge of sexism/racism against the right for the rest of my life:
2008 Democratic Primary
You can’t buy this stuff, even on “Pay per View”… Heck – if it comes down to a floor fight they could put it on Pay per View and reduce the deficit from the proceeds…
For the record: Here is my cut-n-paste reply to every lefty charge of sexism/racism against the right for the rest of my life:
2008 Democratic Primary
You can’t buy this stuff, even on “Pay per View”… Heck – if it comes down to a floor fight they could put it on Pay per View and reduce the deficit from the proceeds…
Given the polling data on Clinton voters in recent days, why should that be mocked? That’s an accurate description of those voters in those states. Shouldn’t the impulse be to show how you’re not like those voters, and not to lash out?
Given the polling data on Clinton voters in recent days, why should that be mocked? That’s an accurate description of those voters in those states. Shouldn’t the impulse be to show how you’re not like those voters, and not to lash out?
Given the polling data on Clinton voters in recent days, why should that be mocked? That’s an accurate description of those voters in those states. Shouldn’t the impulse be to show how you’re not like those voters, and not to lash out?
“I brought in sexism originally to mock Jon H’s statement that “many” Clinton supporters are “low-information racist rubes”(7:29 above). It was a simple replacement to suggest that similar tactics could be used just as fairly against Obama supporters.”
‘Many’ has the nice property that a quantity of people can qualify as ‘many’ while being a small portion of the whole. Given the on-the-record comments of Hillary supporters, and the way that more Hillary supporters say they wouldn’t vote for Obama than the reverse, it seems reasonable to say that there are enough low-information racist rubes among Hillary’s supporters to qualify as ‘many’ even if they’re only 10% of the total.
“I honestly don’t see how anyone could imagine that Clinton has not suffered from sexism, just as I can’t imagine anyone could argue that racism has not been damaging to Obama.”
I don’t think she’s been substantively harmed by sexism in the Primary. She’d probably get more of it in the General. But considering how many Obama voters would vote for Hillary, and would support Hillary or another woman as VP, I can’t see sexism as having made a material difference to her campaign in the Primary.
The lack of sexist rumors about Hillary has certainly been a plus for her, when Obama’s been dealing with persistent rumors about his nationality, his race, his religion, etc.
It’s not like anyone’s felt the need to post a pro-Hillary website that is the anti-sexism equivalent of IsBarackObamaAMuslim.com
“I brought in sexism originally to mock Jon H’s statement that “many” Clinton supporters are “low-information racist rubes”(7:29 above). It was a simple replacement to suggest that similar tactics could be used just as fairly against Obama supporters.”
‘Many’ has the nice property that a quantity of people can qualify as ‘many’ while being a small portion of the whole. Given the on-the-record comments of Hillary supporters, and the way that more Hillary supporters say they wouldn’t vote for Obama than the reverse, it seems reasonable to say that there are enough low-information racist rubes among Hillary’s supporters to qualify as ‘many’ even if they’re only 10% of the total.
“I honestly don’t see how anyone could imagine that Clinton has not suffered from sexism, just as I can’t imagine anyone could argue that racism has not been damaging to Obama.”
I don’t think she’s been substantively harmed by sexism in the Primary. She’d probably get more of it in the General. But considering how many Obama voters would vote for Hillary, and would support Hillary or another woman as VP, I can’t see sexism as having made a material difference to her campaign in the Primary.
The lack of sexist rumors about Hillary has certainly been a plus for her, when Obama’s been dealing with persistent rumors about his nationality, his race, his religion, etc.
It’s not like anyone’s felt the need to post a pro-Hillary website that is the anti-sexism equivalent of IsBarackObamaAMuslim.com
“I brought in sexism originally to mock Jon H’s statement that “many” Clinton supporters are “low-information racist rubes”(7:29 above). It was a simple replacement to suggest that similar tactics could be used just as fairly against Obama supporters.”
‘Many’ has the nice property that a quantity of people can qualify as ‘many’ while being a small portion of the whole. Given the on-the-record comments of Hillary supporters, and the way that more Hillary supporters say they wouldn’t vote for Obama than the reverse, it seems reasonable to say that there are enough low-information racist rubes among Hillary’s supporters to qualify as ‘many’ even if they’re only 10% of the total.
“I honestly don’t see how anyone could imagine that Clinton has not suffered from sexism, just as I can’t imagine anyone could argue that racism has not been damaging to Obama.”
I don’t think she’s been substantively harmed by sexism in the Primary. She’d probably get more of it in the General. But considering how many Obama voters would vote for Hillary, and would support Hillary or another woman as VP, I can’t see sexism as having made a material difference to her campaign in the Primary.
The lack of sexist rumors about Hillary has certainly been a plus for her, when Obama’s been dealing with persistent rumors about his nationality, his race, his religion, etc.
It’s not like anyone’s felt the need to post a pro-Hillary website that is the anti-sexism equivalent of IsBarackObamaAMuslim.com
It was a simple replacement to suggest that similar tactics could be used just as fairly against Obama supporters.
I’m sure there are some Obama supporters that are incredibly sexist. However, I don’t think I’ve seen a state carried by Obama that had as much conscious blatant sexism displayed as WV showcased racism. I could be wrong, but I think that might be what Jon was referring to.
In any event, Clinton has done particularly well with low-information voters. I don’t think that’s something we can really argue about.
I honestly don’t see how anyone could imagine that Clinton has not suffered from sexism, just as I can’t imagine anyone could argue that racism has not been damaging to Obama.
She certainly has suffered from sexism. But she’s also a member of the most powerful club on earth and has a hundred million dollars sitting in the bank. And she’s done more than enough things wrong to explain losing the nomination, so I don’t really see why I should care overmuch about what role sexism played in denying her the nomination.
OCSteve: Yeah, you’re right. Democrats were a lot more vicious this year choosing between their female and African American candidates than the republicans were choosing among thei…oh, wait. I’m sorry, were you trying to make a point or were you just going to embarrass yourself? 😉
But hey, on the bright side, I’m sure African American approval for Bush has climbed above 2% by now…well, maybe not.
It was a simple replacement to suggest that similar tactics could be used just as fairly against Obama supporters.
I’m sure there are some Obama supporters that are incredibly sexist. However, I don’t think I’ve seen a state carried by Obama that had as much conscious blatant sexism displayed as WV showcased racism. I could be wrong, but I think that might be what Jon was referring to.
In any event, Clinton has done particularly well with low-information voters. I don’t think that’s something we can really argue about.
I honestly don’t see how anyone could imagine that Clinton has not suffered from sexism, just as I can’t imagine anyone could argue that racism has not been damaging to Obama.
She certainly has suffered from sexism. But she’s also a member of the most powerful club on earth and has a hundred million dollars sitting in the bank. And she’s done more than enough things wrong to explain losing the nomination, so I don’t really see why I should care overmuch about what role sexism played in denying her the nomination.
OCSteve: Yeah, you’re right. Democrats were a lot more vicious this year choosing between their female and African American candidates than the republicans were choosing among thei…oh, wait. I’m sorry, were you trying to make a point or were you just going to embarrass yourself? 😉
But hey, on the bright side, I’m sure African American approval for Bush has climbed above 2% by now…well, maybe not.
It was a simple replacement to suggest that similar tactics could be used just as fairly against Obama supporters.
I’m sure there are some Obama supporters that are incredibly sexist. However, I don’t think I’ve seen a state carried by Obama that had as much conscious blatant sexism displayed as WV showcased racism. I could be wrong, but I think that might be what Jon was referring to.
In any event, Clinton has done particularly well with low-information voters. I don’t think that’s something we can really argue about.
I honestly don’t see how anyone could imagine that Clinton has not suffered from sexism, just as I can’t imagine anyone could argue that racism has not been damaging to Obama.
She certainly has suffered from sexism. But she’s also a member of the most powerful club on earth and has a hundred million dollars sitting in the bank. And she’s done more than enough things wrong to explain losing the nomination, so I don’t really see why I should care overmuch about what role sexism played in denying her the nomination.
OCSteve: Yeah, you’re right. Democrats were a lot more vicious this year choosing between their female and African American candidates than the republicans were choosing among thei…oh, wait. I’m sorry, were you trying to make a point or were you just going to embarrass yourself? 😉
But hey, on the bright side, I’m sure African American approval for Bush has climbed above 2% by now…well, maybe not.
I’m sorry, Jon H, I was writing you a reply, but it was really boring. Look, can you just look at hilzoy’s last comment. That is really the only point I was trying to make. I didn’t come here to argue sexism, racism, or even policy points. I only posted because you annoyed me by suggesting that because some of Clinton’s supporters are nutjobs, no one should be associated with Clinton. I am offended by the behavior of both sides because they use dishonest tactics, and distract from the more important threat. I’m also a bit concerned that the Obama supporters are expecting a bit much from their candidate, and I’m afraid they will abandon him when he turns out to be an imperfect politician. I’ll still support him, just as I would support Clinton. I don’t like either of them, but the alternative is worse. That is what American politics is all about.
I’m sorry, Jon H, I was writing you a reply, but it was really boring. Look, can you just look at hilzoy’s last comment. That is really the only point I was trying to make. I didn’t come here to argue sexism, racism, or even policy points. I only posted because you annoyed me by suggesting that because some of Clinton’s supporters are nutjobs, no one should be associated with Clinton. I am offended by the behavior of both sides because they use dishonest tactics, and distract from the more important threat. I’m also a bit concerned that the Obama supporters are expecting a bit much from their candidate, and I’m afraid they will abandon him when he turns out to be an imperfect politician. I’ll still support him, just as I would support Clinton. I don’t like either of them, but the alternative is worse. That is what American politics is all about.
I’m sorry, Jon H, I was writing you a reply, but it was really boring. Look, can you just look at hilzoy’s last comment. That is really the only point I was trying to make. I didn’t come here to argue sexism, racism, or even policy points. I only posted because you annoyed me by suggesting that because some of Clinton’s supporters are nutjobs, no one should be associated with Clinton. I am offended by the behavior of both sides because they use dishonest tactics, and distract from the more important threat. I’m also a bit concerned that the Obama supporters are expecting a bit much from their candidate, and I’m afraid they will abandon him when he turns out to be an imperfect politician. I’ll still support him, just as I would support Clinton. I don’t like either of them, but the alternative is worse. That is what American politics is all about.
Turb: oh, wait. I’m sorry, were you trying to make a point or were you just going to embarrass yourself?
Well, we all know I have no problem embarrassing myself. At the same time, I’ll be hanging back here keeping score – how many minorities/women will Obama have in his cabinet? How many important positions will he fill with minorities/women? Will he do better than Bush? Hmm.
Do you really want to make the case that Democrats have not seriously embarrassed themselves on the issues of race and sexism in this primary?
Turb: oh, wait. I’m sorry, were you trying to make a point or were you just going to embarrass yourself?
Well, we all know I have no problem embarrassing myself. At the same time, I’ll be hanging back here keeping score – how many minorities/women will Obama have in his cabinet? How many important positions will he fill with minorities/women? Will he do better than Bush? Hmm.
Do you really want to make the case that Democrats have not seriously embarrassed themselves on the issues of race and sexism in this primary?
Turb: oh, wait. I’m sorry, were you trying to make a point or were you just going to embarrass yourself?
Well, we all know I have no problem embarrassing myself. At the same time, I’ll be hanging back here keeping score – how many minorities/women will Obama have in his cabinet? How many important positions will he fill with minorities/women? Will he do better than Bush? Hmm.
Do you really want to make the case that Democrats have not seriously embarrassed themselves on the issues of race and sexism in this primary?
I can see what you all must have been arguing againt for a while, because no matter what I write I am always somehow saying that Clinton is losing because of sexism. Well, have fun arguing against that. I’ll see you all later, well, actually I probably won’t.
I can see what you all must have been arguing againt for a while, because no matter what I write I am always somehow saying that Clinton is losing because of sexism. Well, have fun arguing against that. I’ll see you all later, well, actually I probably won’t.
I can see what you all must have been arguing againt for a while, because no matter what I write I am always somehow saying that Clinton is losing because of sexism. Well, have fun arguing against that. I’ll see you all later, well, actually I probably won’t.
Oh, and Steve, it is to the credit of Democrats that sexism and racism is an issue to us. For Republicans it is a standard tactic.
Oh, and Steve, it is to the credit of Democrats that sexism and racism is an issue to us. For Republicans it is a standard tactic.
Oh, and Steve, it is to the credit of Democrats that sexism and racism is an issue to us. For Republicans it is a standard tactic.
How many important positions will he fill with minorities/women? Will he do better than Bush? Hmm.
I do wonder if Obama will be able to bring people as talented as Condi Rice and Colin Powell. Those two were stunningly brilliant. Birth pangs indeed. I suppose that when one starts their military career by whitewashing My Lai, there is nowhere to go but up in Bush’s administration.
In other words, Bush doesn’t get points for appointing spectacularly incompetent and unethical women and minorities. Then again, given that Bush structured his administration so that Rice and Powell were systematically locked out of power, I’m not sure its fair to give him any credit on that score. At the end of the day, the only people who had actual authority in his administration were still old white guys like Cheney and Rumsfeld. One more thing: Bush brought about the deaths of a quarter million women and half a million brown people for no reason. He also replaced a secular republic with an Islamist theocracy that has severely curtailed women’s rights. In my book, those count as black marks on racism and sexism, but YMMV.
More seriously, what point are you trying to make here? Are you suggesting that Obama won’t have enough minorities on his cabinet? That he’ll systemically discriminate against women when it comes to appointing people? What? Do you really believe that Obama himself is a racist or a sexist? Or do you think that Clinton has so enraged him that he’ll take it out on all women in general?
Do you really want to make the case that Democrats have not seriously embarrassed themselves on the issues of race and sexism in this primary?
Yes, yes I do. It makes zero sense to talk about people embarrassing themselves except in relative terms. So who are you comparing Democrats’ behavior to? Republicans? Americans in general? Human beings? The truth is that lots of people, not just in the US but all over the world are racist or sexist. And that includes a fair number of Democrats. Being in the Dem party isn’t about racial and gender perfection or only associating with non-sexist non-racist people; its about recognizing that racism and sexism are real and trying to find ways to address those problems as a society.
There are tens of millions of Democrats in this country. Can you name for me even one group of people in the US that is as large as the Democratic party and as a group, is less sexist or less racist? Just one? Surely you can find one, right?
How many important positions will he fill with minorities/women? Will he do better than Bush? Hmm.
I do wonder if Obama will be able to bring people as talented as Condi Rice and Colin Powell. Those two were stunningly brilliant. Birth pangs indeed. I suppose that when one starts their military career by whitewashing My Lai, there is nowhere to go but up in Bush’s administration.
In other words, Bush doesn’t get points for appointing spectacularly incompetent and unethical women and minorities. Then again, given that Bush structured his administration so that Rice and Powell were systematically locked out of power, I’m not sure its fair to give him any credit on that score. At the end of the day, the only people who had actual authority in his administration were still old white guys like Cheney and Rumsfeld. One more thing: Bush brought about the deaths of a quarter million women and half a million brown people for no reason. He also replaced a secular republic with an Islamist theocracy that has severely curtailed women’s rights. In my book, those count as black marks on racism and sexism, but YMMV.
More seriously, what point are you trying to make here? Are you suggesting that Obama won’t have enough minorities on his cabinet? That he’ll systemically discriminate against women when it comes to appointing people? What? Do you really believe that Obama himself is a racist or a sexist? Or do you think that Clinton has so enraged him that he’ll take it out on all women in general?
Do you really want to make the case that Democrats have not seriously embarrassed themselves on the issues of race and sexism in this primary?
Yes, yes I do. It makes zero sense to talk about people embarrassing themselves except in relative terms. So who are you comparing Democrats’ behavior to? Republicans? Americans in general? Human beings? The truth is that lots of people, not just in the US but all over the world are racist or sexist. And that includes a fair number of Democrats. Being in the Dem party isn’t about racial and gender perfection or only associating with non-sexist non-racist people; its about recognizing that racism and sexism are real and trying to find ways to address those problems as a society.
There are tens of millions of Democrats in this country. Can you name for me even one group of people in the US that is as large as the Democratic party and as a group, is less sexist or less racist? Just one? Surely you can find one, right?
How many important positions will he fill with minorities/women? Will he do better than Bush? Hmm.
I do wonder if Obama will be able to bring people as talented as Condi Rice and Colin Powell. Those two were stunningly brilliant. Birth pangs indeed. I suppose that when one starts their military career by whitewashing My Lai, there is nowhere to go but up in Bush’s administration.
In other words, Bush doesn’t get points for appointing spectacularly incompetent and unethical women and minorities. Then again, given that Bush structured his administration so that Rice and Powell were systematically locked out of power, I’m not sure its fair to give him any credit on that score. At the end of the day, the only people who had actual authority in his administration were still old white guys like Cheney and Rumsfeld. One more thing: Bush brought about the deaths of a quarter million women and half a million brown people for no reason. He also replaced a secular republic with an Islamist theocracy that has severely curtailed women’s rights. In my book, those count as black marks on racism and sexism, but YMMV.
More seriously, what point are you trying to make here? Are you suggesting that Obama won’t have enough minorities on his cabinet? That he’ll systemically discriminate against women when it comes to appointing people? What? Do you really believe that Obama himself is a racist or a sexist? Or do you think that Clinton has so enraged him that he’ll take it out on all women in general?
Do you really want to make the case that Democrats have not seriously embarrassed themselves on the issues of race and sexism in this primary?
Yes, yes I do. It makes zero sense to talk about people embarrassing themselves except in relative terms. So who are you comparing Democrats’ behavior to? Republicans? Americans in general? Human beings? The truth is that lots of people, not just in the US but all over the world are racist or sexist. And that includes a fair number of Democrats. Being in the Dem party isn’t about racial and gender perfection or only associating with non-sexist non-racist people; its about recognizing that racism and sexism are real and trying to find ways to address those problems as a society.
There are tens of millions of Democrats in this country. Can you name for me even one group of people in the US that is as large as the Democratic party and as a group, is less sexist or less racist? Just one? Surely you can find one, right?
Turb: (a) I don’t think Powell is incompetent. I think he should have resigned over Iraq, but he’s not incompetent.
(b) OCSteve made the (true) claim that some Democrats have embarrassed themselves by revealing themselves to be racists and/or sexists. You made the (true) claim that Republicans escaped this embarrassment by running white guys. These two are not in conflict, since it’s not a contest.
(c) I don’t see why Steve has to answer for the sins of the GOP, since last I heard, he wasn’t a member of it.
Turb: (a) I don’t think Powell is incompetent. I think he should have resigned over Iraq, but he’s not incompetent.
(b) OCSteve made the (true) claim that some Democrats have embarrassed themselves by revealing themselves to be racists and/or sexists. You made the (true) claim that Republicans escaped this embarrassment by running white guys. These two are not in conflict, since it’s not a contest.
(c) I don’t see why Steve has to answer for the sins of the GOP, since last I heard, he wasn’t a member of it.
Turb: (a) I don’t think Powell is incompetent. I think he should have resigned over Iraq, but he’s not incompetent.
(b) OCSteve made the (true) claim that some Democrats have embarrassed themselves by revealing themselves to be racists and/or sexists. You made the (true) claim that Republicans escaped this embarrassment by running white guys. These two are not in conflict, since it’s not a contest.
(c) I don’t see why Steve has to answer for the sins of the GOP, since last I heard, he wasn’t a member of it.
nah, OCSteve’s 100% right.
the Dems, to their credit, can now say they’ve given either a woman and a black man as much of a chance to make it to the top as either party in the US ever has. but too many of the rank-n-file the Dems have proven unquestionably that they are as racist as anyone could’ve imagined supporters of any party could be.
personally, i don’t see the sexism in the base (though i can see it in the media, esp. clowns like Matthews). i know the most vocal of the Clinton supporters see it everywhere, in everything anyone does that isn’t explicitly pro-Hillary – but they’re also innumerate, illogical, disingenuous, hypocritical and frankly, fncking crazy; so i pay their arguments no heed. but the racism is front and center in the Dem base. and to her eternal shame (i hope) Clinton is banking on it.
it’s terribly embarrassing to me that people like that call themselves Democrats. and, though the country will suffer their decision, i’m a little happy that they’ve declared that they’ll go with McCain instead of a Obama – get them out of the party for good. i hope they leave and never come back. as far as i’m concerned, the Republicans can have Appalachia and the rest of the racist scum. so here, GOP: take them. enjoy them.
choke on them.
nah, OCSteve’s 100% right.
the Dems, to their credit, can now say they’ve given either a woman and a black man as much of a chance to make it to the top as either party in the US ever has. but too many of the rank-n-file the Dems have proven unquestionably that they are as racist as anyone could’ve imagined supporters of any party could be.
personally, i don’t see the sexism in the base (though i can see it in the media, esp. clowns like Matthews). i know the most vocal of the Clinton supporters see it everywhere, in everything anyone does that isn’t explicitly pro-Hillary – but they’re also innumerate, illogical, disingenuous, hypocritical and frankly, fncking crazy; so i pay their arguments no heed. but the racism is front and center in the Dem base. and to her eternal shame (i hope) Clinton is banking on it.
it’s terribly embarrassing to me that people like that call themselves Democrats. and, though the country will suffer their decision, i’m a little happy that they’ve declared that they’ll go with McCain instead of a Obama – get them out of the party for good. i hope they leave and never come back. as far as i’m concerned, the Republicans can have Appalachia and the rest of the racist scum. so here, GOP: take them. enjoy them.
choke on them.
nah, OCSteve’s 100% right.
the Dems, to their credit, can now say they’ve given either a woman and a black man as much of a chance to make it to the top as either party in the US ever has. but too many of the rank-n-file the Dems have proven unquestionably that they are as racist as anyone could’ve imagined supporters of any party could be.
personally, i don’t see the sexism in the base (though i can see it in the media, esp. clowns like Matthews). i know the most vocal of the Clinton supporters see it everywhere, in everything anyone does that isn’t explicitly pro-Hillary – but they’re also innumerate, illogical, disingenuous, hypocritical and frankly, fncking crazy; so i pay their arguments no heed. but the racism is front and center in the Dem base. and to her eternal shame (i hope) Clinton is banking on it.
it’s terribly embarrassing to me that people like that call themselves Democrats. and, though the country will suffer their decision, i’m a little happy that they’ve declared that they’ll go with McCain instead of a Obama – get them out of the party for good. i hope they leave and never come back. as far as i’m concerned, the Republicans can have Appalachia and the rest of the racist scum. so here, GOP: take them. enjoy them.
choke on them.
I don’t think Powell is incompetent. I think he should have resigned over Iraq, but he’s not incompetent.
Getting consistently outmaneuvered by Cheney and Rumsfeld doesn’t speak to one’s competence I would think. Nor does signing up to join Bush’s administration. Nor does blowing off INR in favor Chalabi and Curveball based intelligence when speaking before the UN. Nor, for that matter, was deciding to lay your credibility on the line for an administration that was hellbent on invading Iraq no matter what; I mean, Powell had front row seats when it came to understanding that the Bush administration was neither honest nor smart by that point. But opinions can certainly differ.
OCSteve made the (true) claim that some Democrats have embarrassed themselves by revealing themselves to be racists and/or sexists.
He did? I don’t recall seeing that claim. Can you quote what you’re referring to please? In any event, the notion that some of the tens of millions of Democrats in this country might be racist or sexist strikes me as something so trivially obvious that no one as smart as OCSteve would waste our time by repeating. And given that he spoke about the 2008 nomination process in terms of a defense against accusations regarding conservative racism and sexism, I don’t think that your interpretation makes sense. I mean, arguing against the existence of individual racists or sexists among Democratic party members has no relationship with the existence of institutionalized racism and sexism amongst conservative groups.
I don’t see why Steve has to answer for the sins of the GOP, since last I heard, he wasn’t a member of it.
I don’t know what you’re referring to here. I don’t think I asked him to answer for anyone’s sins. What exactly are you talking about?
I don’t think Powell is incompetent. I think he should have resigned over Iraq, but he’s not incompetent.
Getting consistently outmaneuvered by Cheney and Rumsfeld doesn’t speak to one’s competence I would think. Nor does signing up to join Bush’s administration. Nor does blowing off INR in favor Chalabi and Curveball based intelligence when speaking before the UN. Nor, for that matter, was deciding to lay your credibility on the line for an administration that was hellbent on invading Iraq no matter what; I mean, Powell had front row seats when it came to understanding that the Bush administration was neither honest nor smart by that point. But opinions can certainly differ.
OCSteve made the (true) claim that some Democrats have embarrassed themselves by revealing themselves to be racists and/or sexists.
He did? I don’t recall seeing that claim. Can you quote what you’re referring to please? In any event, the notion that some of the tens of millions of Democrats in this country might be racist or sexist strikes me as something so trivially obvious that no one as smart as OCSteve would waste our time by repeating. And given that he spoke about the 2008 nomination process in terms of a defense against accusations regarding conservative racism and sexism, I don’t think that your interpretation makes sense. I mean, arguing against the existence of individual racists or sexists among Democratic party members has no relationship with the existence of institutionalized racism and sexism amongst conservative groups.
I don’t see why Steve has to answer for the sins of the GOP, since last I heard, he wasn’t a member of it.
I don’t know what you’re referring to here. I don’t think I asked him to answer for anyone’s sins. What exactly are you talking about?
I don’t think Powell is incompetent. I think he should have resigned over Iraq, but he’s not incompetent.
Getting consistently outmaneuvered by Cheney and Rumsfeld doesn’t speak to one’s competence I would think. Nor does signing up to join Bush’s administration. Nor does blowing off INR in favor Chalabi and Curveball based intelligence when speaking before the UN. Nor, for that matter, was deciding to lay your credibility on the line for an administration that was hellbent on invading Iraq no matter what; I mean, Powell had front row seats when it came to understanding that the Bush administration was neither honest nor smart by that point. But opinions can certainly differ.
OCSteve made the (true) claim that some Democrats have embarrassed themselves by revealing themselves to be racists and/or sexists.
He did? I don’t recall seeing that claim. Can you quote what you’re referring to please? In any event, the notion that some of the tens of millions of Democrats in this country might be racist or sexist strikes me as something so trivially obvious that no one as smart as OCSteve would waste our time by repeating. And given that he spoke about the 2008 nomination process in terms of a defense against accusations regarding conservative racism and sexism, I don’t think that your interpretation makes sense. I mean, arguing against the existence of individual racists or sexists among Democratic party members has no relationship with the existence of institutionalized racism and sexism amongst conservative groups.
I don’t see why Steve has to answer for the sins of the GOP, since last I heard, he wasn’t a member of it.
I don’t know what you’re referring to here. I don’t think I asked him to answer for anyone’s sins. What exactly are you talking about?
I haven’t read all the comments on this thread, and I haven’t had a chance to write up anything from my RBC observation today. At this point, I’ll just say that the woman in this video was sitting behind me when I came back from lunch and is a large part of the reason I didn’t stick around for the rest of the proceedings.
I haven’t read all the comments on this thread, and I haven’t had a chance to write up anything from my RBC observation today. At this point, I’ll just say that the woman in this video was sitting behind me when I came back from lunch and is a large part of the reason I didn’t stick around for the rest of the proceedings.
I haven’t read all the comments on this thread, and I haven’t had a chance to write up anything from my RBC observation today. At this point, I’ll just say that the woman in this video was sitting behind me when I came back from lunch and is a large part of the reason I didn’t stick around for the rest of the proceedings.
The specific argument I was responding to was the idea that Obama’s nutjobs aren’t as bad as Clinton’s nutjobs.
I’d like to expand on the point Turbulence made. Clinton’s supporters have spent the last three months insisting that she could win the nomination, when her chances of winning have moved steadily from unlikely to very unlikely to extremely unlikely to damn near impossible. Obama’s supporters, OTOH, have spent the last three months insisting that he is winning the nomination race, which he is.
That being the case, Clinton’s nutjobs may not be worse than Obama’s nutjobs, but they are certainly more prominent. At this point, anyone who thinks that she can still win the nomination is pretty much a nutjob by definition.
The specific argument I was responding to was the idea that Obama’s nutjobs aren’t as bad as Clinton’s nutjobs.
I’d like to expand on the point Turbulence made. Clinton’s supporters have spent the last three months insisting that she could win the nomination, when her chances of winning have moved steadily from unlikely to very unlikely to extremely unlikely to damn near impossible. Obama’s supporters, OTOH, have spent the last three months insisting that he is winning the nomination race, which he is.
That being the case, Clinton’s nutjobs may not be worse than Obama’s nutjobs, but they are certainly more prominent. At this point, anyone who thinks that she can still win the nomination is pretty much a nutjob by definition.
The specific argument I was responding to was the idea that Obama’s nutjobs aren’t as bad as Clinton’s nutjobs.
I’d like to expand on the point Turbulence made. Clinton’s supporters have spent the last three months insisting that she could win the nomination, when her chances of winning have moved steadily from unlikely to very unlikely to extremely unlikely to damn near impossible. Obama’s supporters, OTOH, have spent the last three months insisting that he is winning the nomination race, which he is.
That being the case, Clinton’s nutjobs may not be worse than Obama’s nutjobs, but they are certainly more prominent. At this point, anyone who thinks that she can still win the nomination is pretty much a nutjob by definition.
Turb: I was mostly reacting to this:
“Can you name for me even one group of people in the US that is as large as the Democratic party and as a group, is less sexist or less racist? Just one? Surely you can find one, right?”
Turb: I was mostly reacting to this:
“Can you name for me even one group of people in the US that is as large as the Democratic party and as a group, is less sexist or less racist? Just one? Surely you can find one, right?”
Turb: I was mostly reacting to this:
“Can you name for me even one group of people in the US that is as large as the Democratic party and as a group, is less sexist or less racist? Just one? Surely you can find one, right?”
pox on both houses
is
the
perennial
phrase
of
the
losing,
and lazy
partisan
pox on both houses
is
the
perennial
phrase
of
the
losing,
and lazy
partisan
pox on both houses
is
the
perennial
phrase
of
the
losing,
and lazy
partisan
hilzoy,
I’m sorry to bother you but I’m feeling particularly thick today with a head cold that won’t quit and I don’t understand what you’re talking about. Was your last comment regarding your point (b) or point (c)?
Assuming it was (c), I really don’t see how I asked OCSteve to defend the Republican party. The point I was trying to make in that quote was that ANY large group of people in the US is going to have some sexists and racists in it because sexism and racism are very prevalent in our society. Moreover, I think that any group as large as the Dem party (tens of millions of Americans) is going to have lots of sexists and racists because the group is a physically and organizationally realizable group: it is not a theoretical abstraction such as “the top 30 million Americans who are less sexist and racist than other Americans”.
I was responding to OCSteve’s comment wherein he said:
“Do you really want to make the case that Democrats have not seriously embarrassed themselves on the issues of race and sexism in this primary?” which I took to be implying that the Democrats as a group have seriously embarrassed themselves on racism and sexism. Now, I know for a fact that OCSteve would (rightly IMHO) take umbrage at the statement that “the US military has seriously embarrassed itself because of a rape in Okinawa”. I think he’d point out that any large group of people is going to contain some criminal and that you can’t judge the whole by the actions of a few. Consequently, I’ve assumed that OCSteve was making a statement about Democrats as a group rather than a few bad apples. Insofar as he’s done that, I think it is fair to ask him what other comparable groups of people (comparable in size and geographic distribution — by no means limited to political parties) have behaved in a better fashion. For example, the Catholic Church would be one comparable group.
Did I just horribly misread your concerns and respond to an issue you have no interest in?
hilzoy,
I’m sorry to bother you but I’m feeling particularly thick today with a head cold that won’t quit and I don’t understand what you’re talking about. Was your last comment regarding your point (b) or point (c)?
Assuming it was (c), I really don’t see how I asked OCSteve to defend the Republican party. The point I was trying to make in that quote was that ANY large group of people in the US is going to have some sexists and racists in it because sexism and racism are very prevalent in our society. Moreover, I think that any group as large as the Dem party (tens of millions of Americans) is going to have lots of sexists and racists because the group is a physically and organizationally realizable group: it is not a theoretical abstraction such as “the top 30 million Americans who are less sexist and racist than other Americans”.
I was responding to OCSteve’s comment wherein he said:
“Do you really want to make the case that Democrats have not seriously embarrassed themselves on the issues of race and sexism in this primary?” which I took to be implying that the Democrats as a group have seriously embarrassed themselves on racism and sexism. Now, I know for a fact that OCSteve would (rightly IMHO) take umbrage at the statement that “the US military has seriously embarrassed itself because of a rape in Okinawa”. I think he’d point out that any large group of people is going to contain some criminal and that you can’t judge the whole by the actions of a few. Consequently, I’ve assumed that OCSteve was making a statement about Democrats as a group rather than a few bad apples. Insofar as he’s done that, I think it is fair to ask him what other comparable groups of people (comparable in size and geographic distribution — by no means limited to political parties) have behaved in a better fashion. For example, the Catholic Church would be one comparable group.
Did I just horribly misread your concerns and respond to an issue you have no interest in?
hilzoy,
I’m sorry to bother you but I’m feeling particularly thick today with a head cold that won’t quit and I don’t understand what you’re talking about. Was your last comment regarding your point (b) or point (c)?
Assuming it was (c), I really don’t see how I asked OCSteve to defend the Republican party. The point I was trying to make in that quote was that ANY large group of people in the US is going to have some sexists and racists in it because sexism and racism are very prevalent in our society. Moreover, I think that any group as large as the Dem party (tens of millions of Americans) is going to have lots of sexists and racists because the group is a physically and organizationally realizable group: it is not a theoretical abstraction such as “the top 30 million Americans who are less sexist and racist than other Americans”.
I was responding to OCSteve’s comment wherein he said:
“Do you really want to make the case that Democrats have not seriously embarrassed themselves on the issues of race and sexism in this primary?” which I took to be implying that the Democrats as a group have seriously embarrassed themselves on racism and sexism. Now, I know for a fact that OCSteve would (rightly IMHO) take umbrage at the statement that “the US military has seriously embarrassed itself because of a rape in Okinawa”. I think he’d point out that any large group of people is going to contain some criminal and that you can’t judge the whole by the actions of a few. Consequently, I’ve assumed that OCSteve was making a statement about Democrats as a group rather than a few bad apples. Insofar as he’s done that, I think it is fair to ask him what other comparable groups of people (comparable in size and geographic distribution — by no means limited to political parties) have behaved in a better fashion. For example, the Catholic Church would be one comparable group.
Did I just horribly misread your concerns and respond to an issue you have no interest in?
“I’d like to point out that you forgot to add that Clinton voters are low-information racist rubes.”
This seems to be a groundless remark, unless you can link to a past comment of Bruce Baugh’s in which he’s written something remotely similarly insulting about “Clinton voters.” Cite?
What Bruce did write was that “a lot of Clinton’s supporters aren’t computer literate.”
Unless one has an idiosyncratic definition of “a lot,” this seems indisuptable. Similarly, a lot of Barack Obama’s supporters aren’t computer literate, a lot of John McCain’s supporters aren’t computer literate, a lot of John Edwards’ supporters aren’t computer literate, a lot of Dennis Kucinich supporters aren’t computer literate, a lot of Americans aren’t computer literate, and so on.
“I’d like to point out that you forgot to add that Clinton voters are low-information racist rubes.”
This seems to be a groundless remark, unless you can link to a past comment of Bruce Baugh’s in which he’s written something remotely similarly insulting about “Clinton voters.” Cite?
What Bruce did write was that “a lot of Clinton’s supporters aren’t computer literate.”
Unless one has an idiosyncratic definition of “a lot,” this seems indisuptable. Similarly, a lot of Barack Obama’s supporters aren’t computer literate, a lot of John McCain’s supporters aren’t computer literate, a lot of John Edwards’ supporters aren’t computer literate, a lot of Dennis Kucinich supporters aren’t computer literate, a lot of Americans aren’t computer literate, and so on.
“I’d like to point out that you forgot to add that Clinton voters are low-information racist rubes.”
This seems to be a groundless remark, unless you can link to a past comment of Bruce Baugh’s in which he’s written something remotely similarly insulting about “Clinton voters.” Cite?
What Bruce did write was that “a lot of Clinton’s supporters aren’t computer literate.”
Unless one has an idiosyncratic definition of “a lot,” this seems indisuptable. Similarly, a lot of Barack Obama’s supporters aren’t computer literate, a lot of John McCain’s supporters aren’t computer literate, a lot of John Edwards’ supporters aren’t computer literate, a lot of Dennis Kucinich supporters aren’t computer literate, a lot of Americans aren’t computer literate, and so on.
Yes, it’s always easy to find a justification for being rude and insulting. “She started it” works so well for 7-year-olds.
And the resulting conversations, once it turns into an insult exchange, are so enlightening and profitable.
“Look, if you all want to believe”
Please don’t generalize: cite and link to the comments and people you wish to address. “You all” either assumes there is a vast conspiracy against the writer, or it slurs a group of people unfairly. Address individuals. Thanks.
And could people drop the inane arguments about unanswerable points? There are plenty of insane and ignorant Americans, and humans. This includes supporters and opponents of every politician in America. That’s all that can be said about that topic. Unless someone has a statistic survey, or study, or other set of uncontrovertible facts to cite, making vague generalized accusations is the way a sixth-grader argues. Can people please grow up?
Thanks.
The amount of signal to noise in this thread has not been impressive so far; I’d like to think folks who show up here can do better.
Yes, it’s always easy to find a justification for being rude and insulting. “She started it” works so well for 7-year-olds.
And the resulting conversations, once it turns into an insult exchange, are so enlightening and profitable.
“Look, if you all want to believe”
Please don’t generalize: cite and link to the comments and people you wish to address. “You all” either assumes there is a vast conspiracy against the writer, or it slurs a group of people unfairly. Address individuals. Thanks.
And could people drop the inane arguments about unanswerable points? There are plenty of insane and ignorant Americans, and humans. This includes supporters and opponents of every politician in America. That’s all that can be said about that topic. Unless someone has a statistic survey, or study, or other set of uncontrovertible facts to cite, making vague generalized accusations is the way a sixth-grader argues. Can people please grow up?
Thanks.
The amount of signal to noise in this thread has not been impressive so far; I’d like to think folks who show up here can do better.
Yes, it’s always easy to find a justification for being rude and insulting. “She started it” works so well for 7-year-olds.
And the resulting conversations, once it turns into an insult exchange, are so enlightening and profitable.
“Look, if you all want to believe”
Please don’t generalize: cite and link to the comments and people you wish to address. “You all” either assumes there is a vast conspiracy against the writer, or it slurs a group of people unfairly. Address individuals. Thanks.
And could people drop the inane arguments about unanswerable points? There are plenty of insane and ignorant Americans, and humans. This includes supporters and opponents of every politician in America. That’s all that can be said about that topic. Unless someone has a statistic survey, or study, or other set of uncontrovertible facts to cite, making vague generalized accusations is the way a sixth-grader argues. Can people please grow up?
Thanks.
The amount of signal to noise in this thread has not been impressive so far; I’d like to think folks who show up here can do better.
“I don’t think she’s been substantively harmed by sexism in the Primary.”
You mean “in the nomination process,” or “in the fight for the nomination.” Primaries and caucuses are events singular to individual states. There is no “the Primary” in the American electoral system.
“I can see what you all must have been arguing againt for a while, because no matter what I write I am always somehow saying that Clinton is losing because of sexism.”
Whom are you addressing? Specifically?
“I’ll see you all later, well, actually I probably won’t.”
Why? Most folks haven’t had a chance to comment on this thread yet. If you’re annoyed with an individual, be annoyed with an individual. Otherwise, why wouldn’t it make equal sense for me to scold you because of something, oh, Jeff said?
“I don’t think she’s been substantively harmed by sexism in the Primary.”
You mean “in the nomination process,” or “in the fight for the nomination.” Primaries and caucuses are events singular to individual states. There is no “the Primary” in the American electoral system.
“I can see what you all must have been arguing againt for a while, because no matter what I write I am always somehow saying that Clinton is losing because of sexism.”
Whom are you addressing? Specifically?
“I’ll see you all later, well, actually I probably won’t.”
Why? Most folks haven’t had a chance to comment on this thread yet. If you’re annoyed with an individual, be annoyed with an individual. Otherwise, why wouldn’t it make equal sense for me to scold you because of something, oh, Jeff said?
“I don’t think she’s been substantively harmed by sexism in the Primary.”
You mean “in the nomination process,” or “in the fight for the nomination.” Primaries and caucuses are events singular to individual states. There is no “the Primary” in the American electoral system.
“I can see what you all must have been arguing againt for a while, because no matter what I write I am always somehow saying that Clinton is losing because of sexism.”
Whom are you addressing? Specifically?
“I’ll see you all later, well, actually I probably won’t.”
Why? Most folks haven’t had a chance to comment on this thread yet. If you’re annoyed with an individual, be annoyed with an individual. Otherwise, why wouldn’t it make equal sense for me to scold you because of something, oh, Jeff said?
Turb: possibly I just misread.
Turb: possibly I just misread.
Turb: possibly I just misread.
Allienne Goddard: …it is to the credit of Democrats that sexism and racism is an issue to us. For Republicans it is a standard tactic.
Well, yes. … But you guys are supposed to better about this kind of thing. Have you been in this primary?
Turb: More seriously, what point are you trying to make here? Are you suggesting that Obama won’t have enough minorities on his cabinet? That he’ll systemically discriminate against women when it comes to appointing people? What?
I think that Obama won’t actually be able to do squat once he takes the oath of office. I’ll just be watching though, to see if he does better than Bush in this area. I think that will be tough. We’ll see. I stand ready to be proven wrong. I hope I am. Really though, it will suck if he can’t do at least as well as Bush, no?
So who are you comparing Democrats’ behavior to?
Democrats – the ones who are supposed to be above all this. You know, it’s us GOP folks who are racist/sexist. You guys have gotten beyond all that. You’re ah, post-racism and post-sexism. Or so we thought… Seriously dude – do you really want to argue that Democrats are in the clear on this?
I suppose I am having a “John Cole” moment. Slowly, over time, I came to realize that the GOP sucks. So I looked at the Democrats… They suck as well. Now what?
Sorry Turb. This is really all emotion and not logic. I’m mad as hell and it spills out everywhere. You don’t deserve crap from me – you’re a good guy. You are one of the best. I guess I take out my frustrations on you folks who will tolerate me. That is wrong, but I’m so god-damned angry. And sorry. And angry. And just f’n mad as hell. And sorry. And mad as hell.
Allienne Goddard: …it is to the credit of Democrats that sexism and racism is an issue to us. For Republicans it is a standard tactic.
Well, yes. … But you guys are supposed to better about this kind of thing. Have you been in this primary?
Turb: More seriously, what point are you trying to make here? Are you suggesting that Obama won’t have enough minorities on his cabinet? That he’ll systemically discriminate against women when it comes to appointing people? What?
I think that Obama won’t actually be able to do squat once he takes the oath of office. I’ll just be watching though, to see if he does better than Bush in this area. I think that will be tough. We’ll see. I stand ready to be proven wrong. I hope I am. Really though, it will suck if he can’t do at least as well as Bush, no?
So who are you comparing Democrats’ behavior to?
Democrats – the ones who are supposed to be above all this. You know, it’s us GOP folks who are racist/sexist. You guys have gotten beyond all that. You’re ah, post-racism and post-sexism. Or so we thought… Seriously dude – do you really want to argue that Democrats are in the clear on this?
I suppose I am having a “John Cole” moment. Slowly, over time, I came to realize that the GOP sucks. So I looked at the Democrats… They suck as well. Now what?
Sorry Turb. This is really all emotion and not logic. I’m mad as hell and it spills out everywhere. You don’t deserve crap from me – you’re a good guy. You are one of the best. I guess I take out my frustrations on you folks who will tolerate me. That is wrong, but I’m so god-damned angry. And sorry. And angry. And just f’n mad as hell. And sorry. And mad as hell.
Allienne Goddard: …it is to the credit of Democrats that sexism and racism is an issue to us. For Republicans it is a standard tactic.
Well, yes. … But you guys are supposed to better about this kind of thing. Have you been in this primary?
Turb: More seriously, what point are you trying to make here? Are you suggesting that Obama won’t have enough minorities on his cabinet? That he’ll systemically discriminate against women when it comes to appointing people? What?
I think that Obama won’t actually be able to do squat once he takes the oath of office. I’ll just be watching though, to see if he does better than Bush in this area. I think that will be tough. We’ll see. I stand ready to be proven wrong. I hope I am. Really though, it will suck if he can’t do at least as well as Bush, no?
So who are you comparing Democrats’ behavior to?
Democrats – the ones who are supposed to be above all this. You know, it’s us GOP folks who are racist/sexist. You guys have gotten beyond all that. You’re ah, post-racism and post-sexism. Or so we thought… Seriously dude – do you really want to argue that Democrats are in the clear on this?
I suppose I am having a “John Cole” moment. Slowly, over time, I came to realize that the GOP sucks. So I looked at the Democrats… They suck as well. Now what?
Sorry Turb. This is really all emotion and not logic. I’m mad as hell and it spills out everywhere. You don’t deserve crap from me – you’re a good guy. You are one of the best. I guess I take out my frustrations on you folks who will tolerate me. That is wrong, but I’m so god-damned angry. And sorry. And angry. And just f’n mad as hell. And sorry. And mad as hell.
Personally, I take this as encouragement to keep our own house in order and to strive to be better than what we are. Any failure is magnified by not attempting to improve.
Personally, I take this as encouragement to keep our own house in order and to strive to be better than what we are. Any failure is magnified by not attempting to improve.
Personally, I take this as encouragement to keep our own house in order and to strive to be better than what we are. Any failure is magnified by not attempting to improve.
I think that Obama won’t actually be able to do squat once he takes the oath of office. I’ll just be watching though, to see if he does better than Bush in this area. I think that will be tough. We’ll see. I stand ready to be proven wrong. I hope I am.
Not sure if I follow you here. I do worry a bit about whether Obama will be able to meet expectations (what happens if he wins by a much smaller margin than expected?) and whether the Dems will make as much progress in Congress as expected and whether the Dem Congress will be sufficiently cooperative to get things done. All those things weigh on my mind at times, but worrying doesn’t help.
Really though, it will suck if he can’t do at least as well as Bush, no?
That would indeed suck. On the other hand, sometimes not doing stuff is good, especially if the stuff is really bad, such as bombing Iran and thereby causing our Shiite allies to completely choke our supply lines from Kuwait.
Democrats – the ones who are supposed to be above all this. You know, it’s us GOP folks who are racist/sexist. You guys have gotten beyond all that. You’re ah, post-racism and post-sexism. Or so we thought…
Looking back, it seems like I must have failed in previous conversations to distinguish between the Republican party as a racist/sexist institution versus all Republican voters as racist/sexist people. Ironically, thinking about how to avoid pissing off the moderate Clinton supporters has clarified this issue for me. I think that the racists and sexists are disproportionately drawn to the Republican Party and the Party as an institution has institutionalized some of that racism/sexism. However, I know there are plenty of racists and sexists among Democrats and there are plenty of non-racist/sexist folk among Republican voters. I should have made that clear in the past. My bad, and my apologies.
Seriously dude – do you really want to argue that Democrats are in the clear on this?
Like I said, it is all relative. I think they’ve done pretty well for a bunch of Americans and for a bunch of human beings, but I’ve got a pretty low opinion of both of those groups. In all honesty, I really have been shocked at how many people have not just supported but become genuinely excited about Obama and Clinton. We still suck though.
I suppose I am having a “John Cole” moment. Slowly, over time, I came to realize that the GOP sucks. So I looked at the Democrats… They suck as well. Now what?
Ah, I’m starting to understand much better where you’re coming from. Many thanks for this comment, it really was a quantum leap in understanding why you’ve (and a larger group of people for which I think you’re the most sane representative) have been strangely hating on Dems lately.
I feel for you. I really do. People like me have it easier because we’ve been hating on the Democrats from the left for a looong time so we’re all about “the lessor of two evils” rather than “choose the good”. I don’t write much about that especially these past few years because I see the Republican Party as so much worse, but there are all sorts of things I hate about the Democratic Party. Some it is policy (hi intellectual property and Israel), some of it is people (I’m looking at you Mark Penn and the DLC), and some of it is (borderline) crooked machine politics.
This will likely be unhelpful, but our politics suck because we suck, and its not just us Americans but people all over the world. You were in Germany which has pretty effective government: didn’t you ever spend time with Germans complaining about how much their government sucked? The truth is that America is a huge country with a great deal more diversity than most other countries. That makes government a lot harder because consensus is a lot harder because we’re hard wired to resent and distrust people different from us.
Sorry Turb. This is really all emotion and not logic. I’m mad as hell and it spills out everywhere. You don’t deserve crap from me – you’re a good guy.
Nah, I’m sure I’ve done something to deserve a beat-down, so you should relax and send an invoice to karma with you billable hours. Heck, call my wife and ask her: she’s got a list of horrible things I’ve done recently that justify a good beat-down.
I guess I take out my frustrations on you folks who will tolerate me. That is wrong, but I’m so god-damned angry. And sorry. And angry. And just f’n mad as hell. And sorry. And mad as hell.
No worries dude. We all get angry. This is rather important stuff after all and our politics really are a bad joke sometimes.
I think that Obama won’t actually be able to do squat once he takes the oath of office. I’ll just be watching though, to see if he does better than Bush in this area. I think that will be tough. We’ll see. I stand ready to be proven wrong. I hope I am.
Not sure if I follow you here. I do worry a bit about whether Obama will be able to meet expectations (what happens if he wins by a much smaller margin than expected?) and whether the Dems will make as much progress in Congress as expected and whether the Dem Congress will be sufficiently cooperative to get things done. All those things weigh on my mind at times, but worrying doesn’t help.
Really though, it will suck if he can’t do at least as well as Bush, no?
That would indeed suck. On the other hand, sometimes not doing stuff is good, especially if the stuff is really bad, such as bombing Iran and thereby causing our Shiite allies to completely choke our supply lines from Kuwait.
Democrats – the ones who are supposed to be above all this. You know, it’s us GOP folks who are racist/sexist. You guys have gotten beyond all that. You’re ah, post-racism and post-sexism. Or so we thought…
Looking back, it seems like I must have failed in previous conversations to distinguish between the Republican party as a racist/sexist institution versus all Republican voters as racist/sexist people. Ironically, thinking about how to avoid pissing off the moderate Clinton supporters has clarified this issue for me. I think that the racists and sexists are disproportionately drawn to the Republican Party and the Party as an institution has institutionalized some of that racism/sexism. However, I know there are plenty of racists and sexists among Democrats and there are plenty of non-racist/sexist folk among Republican voters. I should have made that clear in the past. My bad, and my apologies.
Seriously dude – do you really want to argue that Democrats are in the clear on this?
Like I said, it is all relative. I think they’ve done pretty well for a bunch of Americans and for a bunch of human beings, but I’ve got a pretty low opinion of both of those groups. In all honesty, I really have been shocked at how many people have not just supported but become genuinely excited about Obama and Clinton. We still suck though.
I suppose I am having a “John Cole” moment. Slowly, over time, I came to realize that the GOP sucks. So I looked at the Democrats… They suck as well. Now what?
Ah, I’m starting to understand much better where you’re coming from. Many thanks for this comment, it really was a quantum leap in understanding why you’ve (and a larger group of people for which I think you’re the most sane representative) have been strangely hating on Dems lately.
I feel for you. I really do. People like me have it easier because we’ve been hating on the Democrats from the left for a looong time so we’re all about “the lessor of two evils” rather than “choose the good”. I don’t write much about that especially these past few years because I see the Republican Party as so much worse, but there are all sorts of things I hate about the Democratic Party. Some it is policy (hi intellectual property and Israel), some of it is people (I’m looking at you Mark Penn and the DLC), and some of it is (borderline) crooked machine politics.
This will likely be unhelpful, but our politics suck because we suck, and its not just us Americans but people all over the world. You were in Germany which has pretty effective government: didn’t you ever spend time with Germans complaining about how much their government sucked? The truth is that America is a huge country with a great deal more diversity than most other countries. That makes government a lot harder because consensus is a lot harder because we’re hard wired to resent and distrust people different from us.
Sorry Turb. This is really all emotion and not logic. I’m mad as hell and it spills out everywhere. You don’t deserve crap from me – you’re a good guy.
Nah, I’m sure I’ve done something to deserve a beat-down, so you should relax and send an invoice to karma with you billable hours. Heck, call my wife and ask her: she’s got a list of horrible things I’ve done recently that justify a good beat-down.
I guess I take out my frustrations on you folks who will tolerate me. That is wrong, but I’m so god-damned angry. And sorry. And angry. And just f’n mad as hell. And sorry. And mad as hell.
No worries dude. We all get angry. This is rather important stuff after all and our politics really are a bad joke sometimes.
I think that Obama won’t actually be able to do squat once he takes the oath of office. I’ll just be watching though, to see if he does better than Bush in this area. I think that will be tough. We’ll see. I stand ready to be proven wrong. I hope I am.
Not sure if I follow you here. I do worry a bit about whether Obama will be able to meet expectations (what happens if he wins by a much smaller margin than expected?) and whether the Dems will make as much progress in Congress as expected and whether the Dem Congress will be sufficiently cooperative to get things done. All those things weigh on my mind at times, but worrying doesn’t help.
Really though, it will suck if he can’t do at least as well as Bush, no?
That would indeed suck. On the other hand, sometimes not doing stuff is good, especially if the stuff is really bad, such as bombing Iran and thereby causing our Shiite allies to completely choke our supply lines from Kuwait.
Democrats – the ones who are supposed to be above all this. You know, it’s us GOP folks who are racist/sexist. You guys have gotten beyond all that. You’re ah, post-racism and post-sexism. Or so we thought…
Looking back, it seems like I must have failed in previous conversations to distinguish between the Republican party as a racist/sexist institution versus all Republican voters as racist/sexist people. Ironically, thinking about how to avoid pissing off the moderate Clinton supporters has clarified this issue for me. I think that the racists and sexists are disproportionately drawn to the Republican Party and the Party as an institution has institutionalized some of that racism/sexism. However, I know there are plenty of racists and sexists among Democrats and there are plenty of non-racist/sexist folk among Republican voters. I should have made that clear in the past. My bad, and my apologies.
Seriously dude – do you really want to argue that Democrats are in the clear on this?
Like I said, it is all relative. I think they’ve done pretty well for a bunch of Americans and for a bunch of human beings, but I’ve got a pretty low opinion of both of those groups. In all honesty, I really have been shocked at how many people have not just supported but become genuinely excited about Obama and Clinton. We still suck though.
I suppose I am having a “John Cole” moment. Slowly, over time, I came to realize that the GOP sucks. So I looked at the Democrats… They suck as well. Now what?
Ah, I’m starting to understand much better where you’re coming from. Many thanks for this comment, it really was a quantum leap in understanding why you’ve (and a larger group of people for which I think you’re the most sane representative) have been strangely hating on Dems lately.
I feel for you. I really do. People like me have it easier because we’ve been hating on the Democrats from the left for a looong time so we’re all about “the lessor of two evils” rather than “choose the good”. I don’t write much about that especially these past few years because I see the Republican Party as so much worse, but there are all sorts of things I hate about the Democratic Party. Some it is policy (hi intellectual property and Israel), some of it is people (I’m looking at you Mark Penn and the DLC), and some of it is (borderline) crooked machine politics.
This will likely be unhelpful, but our politics suck because we suck, and its not just us Americans but people all over the world. You were in Germany which has pretty effective government: didn’t you ever spend time with Germans complaining about how much their government sucked? The truth is that America is a huge country with a great deal more diversity than most other countries. That makes government a lot harder because consensus is a lot harder because we’re hard wired to resent and distrust people different from us.
Sorry Turb. This is really all emotion and not logic. I’m mad as hell and it spills out everywhere. You don’t deserve crap from me – you’re a good guy.
Nah, I’m sure I’ve done something to deserve a beat-down, so you should relax and send an invoice to karma with you billable hours. Heck, call my wife and ask her: she’s got a list of horrible things I’ve done recently that justify a good beat-down.
I guess I take out my frustrations on you folks who will tolerate me. That is wrong, but I’m so god-damned angry. And sorry. And angry. And just f’n mad as hell. And sorry. And mad as hell.
No worries dude. We all get angry. This is rather important stuff after all and our politics really are a bad joke sometimes.
“I suppose I am having a “John Cole” moment. Slowly, over time, I came to realize that the GOP sucks. So I looked at the Democrats… They suck as well. Now what?
I agree that the Democrats suck as well. The racism/sexism thing is just people – there are too many racists and sexists in both parties. The Democrats, to their credit, have done a decent job by not supporting policies that would attract people with those sorts of views.
Also, the “political machine” thing is just politics. Every party is going to suffer from that, and all you can do is minimize it.
I think the real reason the Democratic party sucks is that the party as a whole does not know (or is unable to express) the principles upon which its various policy positions are founded. And in the rare case when it does know, it is unwilling to acknowledge those principles because they sound too wussy.
When my oldest daughter was an infant, my wife went back to work, and I cut my work hours in half to stay home with her. I was taken completely by surprise when I was teased about it (mostly by people I didn’t know very well). The most frequent comment had to do with me being a “Mr. Mom”. The Democratic party is like that. They need to get over the fact that people are going to call them Mr. Mom.
“I suppose I am having a “John Cole” moment. Slowly, over time, I came to realize that the GOP sucks. So I looked at the Democrats… They suck as well. Now what?
I agree that the Democrats suck as well. The racism/sexism thing is just people – there are too many racists and sexists in both parties. The Democrats, to their credit, have done a decent job by not supporting policies that would attract people with those sorts of views.
Also, the “political machine” thing is just politics. Every party is going to suffer from that, and all you can do is minimize it.
I think the real reason the Democratic party sucks is that the party as a whole does not know (or is unable to express) the principles upon which its various policy positions are founded. And in the rare case when it does know, it is unwilling to acknowledge those principles because they sound too wussy.
When my oldest daughter was an infant, my wife went back to work, and I cut my work hours in half to stay home with her. I was taken completely by surprise when I was teased about it (mostly by people I didn’t know very well). The most frequent comment had to do with me being a “Mr. Mom”. The Democratic party is like that. They need to get over the fact that people are going to call them Mr. Mom.
“I suppose I am having a “John Cole” moment. Slowly, over time, I came to realize that the GOP sucks. So I looked at the Democrats… They suck as well. Now what?
I agree that the Democrats suck as well. The racism/sexism thing is just people – there are too many racists and sexists in both parties. The Democrats, to their credit, have done a decent job by not supporting policies that would attract people with those sorts of views.
Also, the “political machine” thing is just politics. Every party is going to suffer from that, and all you can do is minimize it.
I think the real reason the Democratic party sucks is that the party as a whole does not know (or is unable to express) the principles upon which its various policy positions are founded. And in the rare case when it does know, it is unwilling to acknowledge those principles because they sound too wussy.
When my oldest daughter was an infant, my wife went back to work, and I cut my work hours in half to stay home with her. I was taken completely by surprise when I was teased about it (mostly by people I didn’t know very well). The most frequent comment had to do with me being a “Mr. Mom”. The Democratic party is like that. They need to get over the fact that people are going to call them Mr. Mom.
That’s nicely put, David. I like, and agree.
That’s nicely put, David. I like, and agree.
That’s nicely put, David. I like, and agree.
Dear Hilzoy: I hope you are well.
I have wondered about Hillary Clinton’s curious behavior. Doesn’t she realize her sore loser behavior is not only putting the final nails in her coffin this year, but also for the future? That is, by refusing to admit with sense and dignity that she has lost, she is spoiling her chances of another try in 2012.
I’m reminded of Al Gore in 2000. If he had conceded defeat like a gentleman, he might well have gotten another try in 2004. Instead his sore loser tactics merely discredited him forever as a Presidential candidate. The same fate is likely to be what Hillary Clinton faces.
Not that Barack Obama is any better. What with being a member of a racist church with Jeremiah Wright as pastor for TWWENTY years, he is DEEPLY suspect by me of being a racist himself. And his shady Chicago connections also makes me skeptical of him.
There are so many reasons why I don’t like Obama. His dishonesty, his former church and Jeremiah Wright, his liberalism, his 100 percent NARAL rating, and so on.
I’m VERY glad I plan to vote for Senator McCain.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Hilzoy: I hope you are well.
I have wondered about Hillary Clinton’s curious behavior. Doesn’t she realize her sore loser behavior is not only putting the final nails in her coffin this year, but also for the future? That is, by refusing to admit with sense and dignity that she has lost, she is spoiling her chances of another try in 2012.
I’m reminded of Al Gore in 2000. If he had conceded defeat like a gentleman, he might well have gotten another try in 2004. Instead his sore loser tactics merely discredited him forever as a Presidential candidate. The same fate is likely to be what Hillary Clinton faces.
Not that Barack Obama is any better. What with being a member of a racist church with Jeremiah Wright as pastor for TWWENTY years, he is DEEPLY suspect by me of being a racist himself. And his shady Chicago connections also makes me skeptical of him.
There are so many reasons why I don’t like Obama. His dishonesty, his former church and Jeremiah Wright, his liberalism, his 100 percent NARAL rating, and so on.
I’m VERY glad I plan to vote for Senator McCain.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Hilzoy: I hope you are well.
I have wondered about Hillary Clinton’s curious behavior. Doesn’t she realize her sore loser behavior is not only putting the final nails in her coffin this year, but also for the future? That is, by refusing to admit with sense and dignity that she has lost, she is spoiling her chances of another try in 2012.
I’m reminded of Al Gore in 2000. If he had conceded defeat like a gentleman, he might well have gotten another try in 2004. Instead his sore loser tactics merely discredited him forever as a Presidential candidate. The same fate is likely to be what Hillary Clinton faces.
Not that Barack Obama is any better. What with being a member of a racist church with Jeremiah Wright as pastor for TWWENTY years, he is DEEPLY suspect by me of being a racist himself. And his shady Chicago connections also makes me skeptical of him.
There are so many reasons why I don’t like Obama. His dishonesty, his former church and Jeremiah Wright, his liberalism, his 100 percent NARAL rating, and so on.
I’m VERY glad I plan to vote for Senator McCain.
Sincerely, Sean
“Have you been in this primary?”
No. I was elected to the county convention from my precinct caucus, and from there to my Congressional District convention, and the Colorado State Convention. At no time have I participated in a primary.
Same goes for 1980, and 1984, when I was “in” the Washington State caucus, was elected to the county convention as a delegate, etc.
“Democrats – the ones who are supposed to be above all this. You know, it’s us GOP folks who are racist/sexist. You guys have gotten beyond all that. You’re ah, post-racism and post-sexism.”
OCSteve, I can only speak for myself, and for myself, this is pretty annoying. I’m one of “you guys,” and unless you can provide a link to me making such a statement or claim, I’ll ask you to withdraw your assertion that I’ve ever said or written any such thing at any time in my life, ever.
Alternatively, provide cites to anyone in this thread who has written such a thing here.
Alternatively, provice cites to anyone in this thread who has ever written such a thing, anywhere.
If you can’t substantiate any of your claims along these lines, please don’t make them: is that a fair request?
Thanks.
“I’m reminded of Al Gore in 2000. If he had conceded defeat like a gentleman, he might well have gotten another try in 2004. Instead his sore loser tactics merely discredited him forever as a Presidential candidate.”
Sean, what, exactly, is it that Al Gore did that was a “sore loser tactic” that the other candidate didn’t engage in? Cite?
“I’m VERY glad I plan to vote for Senator McCain.”
Would you be interested in a detailed statement from me as to how I feel about various things that run through my mind right now? No? Would you be interested in my writing about my feelings about Senator McCain?
Why is it that people are suddenly putting for statements about their emotional state? Are we supposed to be debating people’s emotional states? Is it useful fodder for a productive discussion?
Speaking of trying to have a productive conversation, how about responding to this? I’m losing track, absent checking, if this makes the third or fourth time I’ve asked, so help me out here by please responding, rather than posting more bulletins about how you feel about things. Thanks muchly!
How is your recovery from surgery coming, by the way? Well, I hope?
“Have you been in this primary?”
No. I was elected to the county convention from my precinct caucus, and from there to my Congressional District convention, and the Colorado State Convention. At no time have I participated in a primary.
Same goes for 1980, and 1984, when I was “in” the Washington State caucus, was elected to the county convention as a delegate, etc.
“Democrats – the ones who are supposed to be above all this. You know, it’s us GOP folks who are racist/sexist. You guys have gotten beyond all that. You’re ah, post-racism and post-sexism.”
OCSteve, I can only speak for myself, and for myself, this is pretty annoying. I’m one of “you guys,” and unless you can provide a link to me making such a statement or claim, I’ll ask you to withdraw your assertion that I’ve ever said or written any such thing at any time in my life, ever.
Alternatively, provide cites to anyone in this thread who has written such a thing here.
Alternatively, provice cites to anyone in this thread who has ever written such a thing, anywhere.
If you can’t substantiate any of your claims along these lines, please don’t make them: is that a fair request?
Thanks.
“I’m reminded of Al Gore in 2000. If he had conceded defeat like a gentleman, he might well have gotten another try in 2004. Instead his sore loser tactics merely discredited him forever as a Presidential candidate.”
Sean, what, exactly, is it that Al Gore did that was a “sore loser tactic” that the other candidate didn’t engage in? Cite?
“I’m VERY glad I plan to vote for Senator McCain.”
Would you be interested in a detailed statement from me as to how I feel about various things that run through my mind right now? No? Would you be interested in my writing about my feelings about Senator McCain?
Why is it that people are suddenly putting for statements about their emotional state? Are we supposed to be debating people’s emotional states? Is it useful fodder for a productive discussion?
Speaking of trying to have a productive conversation, how about responding to this? I’m losing track, absent checking, if this makes the third or fourth time I’ve asked, so help me out here by please responding, rather than posting more bulletins about how you feel about things. Thanks muchly!
How is your recovery from surgery coming, by the way? Well, I hope?
“Have you been in this primary?”
No. I was elected to the county convention from my precinct caucus, and from there to my Congressional District convention, and the Colorado State Convention. At no time have I participated in a primary.
Same goes for 1980, and 1984, when I was “in” the Washington State caucus, was elected to the county convention as a delegate, etc.
“Democrats – the ones who are supposed to be above all this. You know, it’s us GOP folks who are racist/sexist. You guys have gotten beyond all that. You’re ah, post-racism and post-sexism.”
OCSteve, I can only speak for myself, and for myself, this is pretty annoying. I’m one of “you guys,” and unless you can provide a link to me making such a statement or claim, I’ll ask you to withdraw your assertion that I’ve ever said or written any such thing at any time in my life, ever.
Alternatively, provide cites to anyone in this thread who has written such a thing here.
Alternatively, provice cites to anyone in this thread who has ever written such a thing, anywhere.
If you can’t substantiate any of your claims along these lines, please don’t make them: is that a fair request?
Thanks.
“I’m reminded of Al Gore in 2000. If he had conceded defeat like a gentleman, he might well have gotten another try in 2004. Instead his sore loser tactics merely discredited him forever as a Presidential candidate.”
Sean, what, exactly, is it that Al Gore did that was a “sore loser tactic” that the other candidate didn’t engage in? Cite?
“I’m VERY glad I plan to vote for Senator McCain.”
Would you be interested in a detailed statement from me as to how I feel about various things that run through my mind right now? No? Would you be interested in my writing about my feelings about Senator McCain?
Why is it that people are suddenly putting for statements about their emotional state? Are we supposed to be debating people’s emotional states? Is it useful fodder for a productive discussion?
Speaking of trying to have a productive conversation, how about responding to this? I’m losing track, absent checking, if this makes the third or fourth time I’ve asked, so help me out here by please responding, rather than posting more bulletins about how you feel about things. Thanks muchly!
How is your recovery from surgery coming, by the way? Well, I hope?
Sean M. Brooks, when you strew a flurry of innuendo about Obama and follow it with uncritical support of McCain, you make me doubt that you have ever objectively compared their records. If you’re going to judge candidates based on guilt-by-association, why not turn some of that laser-like focus onto McCain? Just off the top of my head, an objective person might follow up on his lobbying connections.
McCain first came to national attention as a member of the Keating Five, and the reports during this primary season about his close relationships with lobbyists both in and off his staff suggest that l’affaire Keating merely taught him to mouth ethics principles better. A history of sucking up to illicit funding sources strikes me as somewhat more serious than where he goes to church. And association with people who are paid to influence people like John McCain regarding such matters as support for dictators and arms manufacturers strikes me as more significant than an association with some loudmouth pastor who sometimes says angry, stupid things. In short, why are you more concerned with Obama’s friends’ attitudes than with McCain’s staff’s actions?
Why not take an hour and scout around for some dirt on McCain with the same sort of skepticism you show towards Obama? I did exactly that with Obama before deciding to support him in this primary season.
Sean M. Brooks, when you strew a flurry of innuendo about Obama and follow it with uncritical support of McCain, you make me doubt that you have ever objectively compared their records. If you’re going to judge candidates based on guilt-by-association, why not turn some of that laser-like focus onto McCain? Just off the top of my head, an objective person might follow up on his lobbying connections.
McCain first came to national attention as a member of the Keating Five, and the reports during this primary season about his close relationships with lobbyists both in and off his staff suggest that l’affaire Keating merely taught him to mouth ethics principles better. A history of sucking up to illicit funding sources strikes me as somewhat more serious than where he goes to church. And association with people who are paid to influence people like John McCain regarding such matters as support for dictators and arms manufacturers strikes me as more significant than an association with some loudmouth pastor who sometimes says angry, stupid things. In short, why are you more concerned with Obama’s friends’ attitudes than with McCain’s staff’s actions?
Why not take an hour and scout around for some dirt on McCain with the same sort of skepticism you show towards Obama? I did exactly that with Obama before deciding to support him in this primary season.
Sean M. Brooks, when you strew a flurry of innuendo about Obama and follow it with uncritical support of McCain, you make me doubt that you have ever objectively compared their records. If you’re going to judge candidates based on guilt-by-association, why not turn some of that laser-like focus onto McCain? Just off the top of my head, an objective person might follow up on his lobbying connections.
McCain first came to national attention as a member of the Keating Five, and the reports during this primary season about his close relationships with lobbyists both in and off his staff suggest that l’affaire Keating merely taught him to mouth ethics principles better. A history of sucking up to illicit funding sources strikes me as somewhat more serious than where he goes to church. And association with people who are paid to influence people like John McCain regarding such matters as support for dictators and arms manufacturers strikes me as more significant than an association with some loudmouth pastor who sometimes says angry, stupid things. In short, why are you more concerned with Obama’s friends’ attitudes than with McCain’s staff’s actions?
Why not take an hour and scout around for some dirt on McCain with the same sort of skepticism you show towards Obama? I did exactly that with Obama before deciding to support him in this primary season.
Gary, I appreciate your passion for substantiation, but sometimes I think you deny the obvious merely as a strategic manuever in debate. I hope I am wrong about that.
I have heard Democrats all my life claim that Republicans are the modern party of racism and sexism, Democrats the party of fairness and tolerance. We point to the Republican “Southern Strategy,” to their resistance to the Civil Rights Act and similar legislation, to the “old white male” look of the party leadership and elected officials, to the Federalist Society’s contempt for Brown v. Board of Education and Roe v. Wade, etc.
It seems to me that there is no need for OCSteve to drag in hyperlinks for matters of common knowledge. Rather, the onus is on you to make a specific challenge. Saying that you personally never said that it not to the point, as he never said you did. In context, “you guys” clearly referred to Democrats as a group, not to every single Democrat.
Gary, I appreciate your passion for substantiation, but sometimes I think you deny the obvious merely as a strategic manuever in debate. I hope I am wrong about that.
I have heard Democrats all my life claim that Republicans are the modern party of racism and sexism, Democrats the party of fairness and tolerance. We point to the Republican “Southern Strategy,” to their resistance to the Civil Rights Act and similar legislation, to the “old white male” look of the party leadership and elected officials, to the Federalist Society’s contempt for Brown v. Board of Education and Roe v. Wade, etc.
It seems to me that there is no need for OCSteve to drag in hyperlinks for matters of common knowledge. Rather, the onus is on you to make a specific challenge. Saying that you personally never said that it not to the point, as he never said you did. In context, “you guys” clearly referred to Democrats as a group, not to every single Democrat.
Gary, I appreciate your passion for substantiation, but sometimes I think you deny the obvious merely as a strategic manuever in debate. I hope I am wrong about that.
I have heard Democrats all my life claim that Republicans are the modern party of racism and sexism, Democrats the party of fairness and tolerance. We point to the Republican “Southern Strategy,” to their resistance to the Civil Rights Act and similar legislation, to the “old white male” look of the party leadership and elected officials, to the Federalist Society’s contempt for Brown v. Board of Education and Roe v. Wade, etc.
It seems to me that there is no need for OCSteve to drag in hyperlinks for matters of common knowledge. Rather, the onus is on you to make a specific challenge. Saying that you personally never said that it not to the point, as he never said you did. In context, “you guys” clearly referred to Democrats as a group, not to every single Democrat.
“In context, “you guys” clearly referred to Democrats as a group, not to every single Democrat.”
I’d first like to know who it is that reputely has been saying that no Democrats are or have ever been racist or sexist. I’m unaware of any remotely widespread such claims. But if I’ve missed that, I’d like to know.
Until that claim is substantiated, I’m uninterested in making more specific challenges.
I bring this up because the claim strikes me as made of straw.
Anyone who would, or who ever has, denied that there are plenty of Democrats who either at times engage in racist or sexist behavior or statements, or that are fairly labelable overall, to some degree, as “sexists” or “racists,” would have to be some kind of flaming idiot, after all. So who are these masses of Democrats who have allegedly been making such claims?
“In context, “you guys” clearly referred to Democrats as a group, not to every single Democrat.”
I’d first like to know who it is that reputely has been saying that no Democrats are or have ever been racist or sexist. I’m unaware of any remotely widespread such claims. But if I’ve missed that, I’d like to know.
Until that claim is substantiated, I’m uninterested in making more specific challenges.
I bring this up because the claim strikes me as made of straw.
Anyone who would, or who ever has, denied that there are plenty of Democrats who either at times engage in racist or sexist behavior or statements, or that are fairly labelable overall, to some degree, as “sexists” or “racists,” would have to be some kind of flaming idiot, after all. So who are these masses of Democrats who have allegedly been making such claims?
“In context, “you guys” clearly referred to Democrats as a group, not to every single Democrat.”
I’d first like to know who it is that reputely has been saying that no Democrats are or have ever been racist or sexist. I’m unaware of any remotely widespread such claims. But if I’ve missed that, I’d like to know.
Until that claim is substantiated, I’m uninterested in making more specific challenges.
I bring this up because the claim strikes me as made of straw.
Anyone who would, or who ever has, denied that there are plenty of Democrats who either at times engage in racist or sexist behavior or statements, or that are fairly labelable overall, to some degree, as “sexists” or “racists,” would have to be some kind of flaming idiot, after all. So who are these masses of Democrats who have allegedly been making such claims?
Again, you are confusing groups as entities with groups as collections of individuals. Admittedly, OCSteve can be read as conflating the two, but I do not think that is the most reasonable way to view his comment. (he can speak for himself, of course).
I doubt anyone ever said all Democrats are free of racist or sexist views. In suggesting that either OCSteve or I said that, it is you who are presenting a straw man. Many people have said, however, that the Democratic Party is in favor of racial and sexual equality and is against racism and sexism. Indeed, IIRC, those are party platform points and have been for a long time. OCSteve said, in essence, that it is disappointing or startling to see so many members of the Party with those views acting racist or sexist. If you want to argue about that, please go ahead — but leave the straw men alone.
Again, you are confusing groups as entities with groups as collections of individuals. Admittedly, OCSteve can be read as conflating the two, but I do not think that is the most reasonable way to view his comment. (he can speak for himself, of course).
I doubt anyone ever said all Democrats are free of racist or sexist views. In suggesting that either OCSteve or I said that, it is you who are presenting a straw man. Many people have said, however, that the Democratic Party is in favor of racial and sexual equality and is against racism and sexism. Indeed, IIRC, those are party platform points and have been for a long time. OCSteve said, in essence, that it is disappointing or startling to see so many members of the Party with those views acting racist or sexist. If you want to argue about that, please go ahead — but leave the straw men alone.
Again, you are confusing groups as entities with groups as collections of individuals. Admittedly, OCSteve can be read as conflating the two, but I do not think that is the most reasonable way to view his comment. (he can speak for himself, of course).
I doubt anyone ever said all Democrats are free of racist or sexist views. In suggesting that either OCSteve or I said that, it is you who are presenting a straw man. Many people have said, however, that the Democratic Party is in favor of racial and sexual equality and is against racism and sexism. Indeed, IIRC, those are party platform points and have been for a long time. OCSteve said, in essence, that it is disappointing or startling to see so many members of the Party with those views acting racist or sexist. If you want to argue about that, please go ahead — but leave the straw men alone.
Gary, in that same comment by OCSteve, he later explained that he was angry and sorry, hurt and confused. I think I’ve done a decent job of hounding him for substantiation, but now that he’s admitted that he wrote that in anger after trying to reconcile his shattered dreams of Democratic party non-sucktitude, I don’t see much point in further hounding. The guy is hurt and angry and trying to make a sense of a shifting set of facts and impressions. He’s already apologized for making a bunch of statements. Why don’t you cut him some slack?
It would have been great if he broke up his comment into a formal apology, but really, I think it was fair of him to expect you to read the whole comment and process the bits at the end.
Gary, in that same comment by OCSteve, he later explained that he was angry and sorry, hurt and confused. I think I’ve done a decent job of hounding him for substantiation, but now that he’s admitted that he wrote that in anger after trying to reconcile his shattered dreams of Democratic party non-sucktitude, I don’t see much point in further hounding. The guy is hurt and angry and trying to make a sense of a shifting set of facts and impressions. He’s already apologized for making a bunch of statements. Why don’t you cut him some slack?
It would have been great if he broke up his comment into a formal apology, but really, I think it was fair of him to expect you to read the whole comment and process the bits at the end.
Gary, in that same comment by OCSteve, he later explained that he was angry and sorry, hurt and confused. I think I’ve done a decent job of hounding him for substantiation, but now that he’s admitted that he wrote that in anger after trying to reconcile his shattered dreams of Democratic party non-sucktitude, I don’t see much point in further hounding. The guy is hurt and angry and trying to make a sense of a shifting set of facts and impressions. He’s already apologized for making a bunch of statements. Why don’t you cut him some slack?
It would have been great if he broke up his comment into a formal apology, but really, I think it was fair of him to expect you to read the whole comment and process the bits at the end.
I doubt anyone ever said all Democrats are free of racist or sexist views. In suggesting that either OCSteve or I said that, it is you who are presenting a straw man. Many people have said, however, that the Democratic Party is in favor of racial and sexual equality and is against racism and sexism. Indeed, IIRC, those are party platform points and have been for a long time. OCSteve said, in essence, that it is disappointing or startling to see so many members of the Party with those views acting racist or sexist.
My two cents:
I have no idea if this is what OCSteve meant by with his “John Cole moment” comment, but I can imagine that it would be a moment of terrible disillusionment to turn one’s back on years of GOP anti-Democratic party rhetoric and decide to give the Dems a fresh look, and then have the worst of what this nomination contest has had to offer thrown in one’s face.
That would really be wretched, in a way that those of us who have lived for years with low expectations for the Dems (balanced by even lower expectations for the GOP) on account of long experience fighting losing battles inside the party may have difficulty imagining, and should show some sympathy for.
If there is anyone out there going through this right now let me throw out a more hopeful thought: yes, on a great many issues the Democratic party advertises shining ideals while having feet of clay. That may seem like hypocrisy, and it is, but remember that hypocrisy is the compliment that vice pays to virtue. In other words, it is a starting point, and the best that one can ask for when crooked timber is all we have to work with.
Look back at the history of our country – we have always fallen short of our ideals, and yet that has not been cause to despair, but cause for celebration. The story of the United States has been in part the story of unfulfilled promises which remain within the reach of future generations to approach more closely than we can.
Somehow we’ve found a way to stumble towards them, sometimes moving forward and sometimes not, but in the long run we do seem to find a way to get closer to them. That is called making progress, and believing in the possibility of making progress is why some of us choose to call ourselves progressives.
I think one can believe in that possibility and still be a conservative, if by that you mean someone who sees the obstacles as daunting, the progress slow and at times confusing, and feels that this is a journey which requires patience and prudence rather than an enthusiastic leap forward which might put at jeopardy that which we’ve already achieved.
So if our ideals exceed our reality, look on that as a good thing, and work towards them by whichever path best suits you. It is better than not having any ideals at all.
I doubt anyone ever said all Democrats are free of racist or sexist views. In suggesting that either OCSteve or I said that, it is you who are presenting a straw man. Many people have said, however, that the Democratic Party is in favor of racial and sexual equality and is against racism and sexism. Indeed, IIRC, those are party platform points and have been for a long time. OCSteve said, in essence, that it is disappointing or startling to see so many members of the Party with those views acting racist or sexist.
My two cents:
I have no idea if this is what OCSteve meant by with his “John Cole moment” comment, but I can imagine that it would be a moment of terrible disillusionment to turn one’s back on years of GOP anti-Democratic party rhetoric and decide to give the Dems a fresh look, and then have the worst of what this nomination contest has had to offer thrown in one’s face.
That would really be wretched, in a way that those of us who have lived for years with low expectations for the Dems (balanced by even lower expectations for the GOP) on account of long experience fighting losing battles inside the party may have difficulty imagining, and should show some sympathy for.
If there is anyone out there going through this right now let me throw out a more hopeful thought: yes, on a great many issues the Democratic party advertises shining ideals while having feet of clay. That may seem like hypocrisy, and it is, but remember that hypocrisy is the compliment that vice pays to virtue. In other words, it is a starting point, and the best that one can ask for when crooked timber is all we have to work with.
Look back at the history of our country – we have always fallen short of our ideals, and yet that has not been cause to despair, but cause for celebration. The story of the United States has been in part the story of unfulfilled promises which remain within the reach of future generations to approach more closely than we can.
Somehow we’ve found a way to stumble towards them, sometimes moving forward and sometimes not, but in the long run we do seem to find a way to get closer to them. That is called making progress, and believing in the possibility of making progress is why some of us choose to call ourselves progressives.
I think one can believe in that possibility and still be a conservative, if by that you mean someone who sees the obstacles as daunting, the progress slow and at times confusing, and feels that this is a journey which requires patience and prudence rather than an enthusiastic leap forward which might put at jeopardy that which we’ve already achieved.
So if our ideals exceed our reality, look on that as a good thing, and work towards them by whichever path best suits you. It is better than not having any ideals at all.
I doubt anyone ever said all Democrats are free of racist or sexist views. In suggesting that either OCSteve or I said that, it is you who are presenting a straw man. Many people have said, however, that the Democratic Party is in favor of racial and sexual equality and is against racism and sexism. Indeed, IIRC, those are party platform points and have been for a long time. OCSteve said, in essence, that it is disappointing or startling to see so many members of the Party with those views acting racist or sexist.
My two cents:
I have no idea if this is what OCSteve meant by with his “John Cole moment” comment, but I can imagine that it would be a moment of terrible disillusionment to turn one’s back on years of GOP anti-Democratic party rhetoric and decide to give the Dems a fresh look, and then have the worst of what this nomination contest has had to offer thrown in one’s face.
That would really be wretched, in a way that those of us who have lived for years with low expectations for the Dems (balanced by even lower expectations for the GOP) on account of long experience fighting losing battles inside the party may have difficulty imagining, and should show some sympathy for.
If there is anyone out there going through this right now let me throw out a more hopeful thought: yes, on a great many issues the Democratic party advertises shining ideals while having feet of clay. That may seem like hypocrisy, and it is, but remember that hypocrisy is the compliment that vice pays to virtue. In other words, it is a starting point, and the best that one can ask for when crooked timber is all we have to work with.
Look back at the history of our country – we have always fallen short of our ideals, and yet that has not been cause to despair, but cause for celebration. The story of the United States has been in part the story of unfulfilled promises which remain within the reach of future generations to approach more closely than we can.
Somehow we’ve found a way to stumble towards them, sometimes moving forward and sometimes not, but in the long run we do seem to find a way to get closer to them. That is called making progress, and believing in the possibility of making progress is why some of us choose to call ourselves progressives.
I think one can believe in that possibility and still be a conservative, if by that you mean someone who sees the obstacles as daunting, the progress slow and at times confusing, and feels that this is a journey which requires patience and prudence rather than an enthusiastic leap forward which might put at jeopardy that which we’ve already achieved.
So if our ideals exceed our reality, look on that as a good thing, and work towards them by whichever path best suits you. It is better than not having any ideals at all.
Dear That:
Just a correction, I have FAR lower expectations of liberal Democrats than I do for the GOP.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear That:
Just a correction, I have FAR lower expectations of liberal Democrats than I do for the GOP.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear That:
Just a correction, I have FAR lower expectations of liberal Democrats than I do for the GOP.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Gary; Thank you for your note.
I’m SUPRISED you insist on me being specific on how Al Gore behaved as a sore loser in 2000. Because I THOUGHT everyone, deep down, knew he behaved exactly like that. Do I have to give a detailed recounting of the endless wrangling by Gore’s team over the technicalities of voting machines? Or exactly how, in the numerous recounts in FL, the wranglings over hanging chads, or whether this ballot had a vote for Bush or Gore?
And, btw, Pres. Bush won ALL the recounts, no matter how narrowly. It was Gore’s stubborn refusal to admit defeat when he WAS defeated and his attempts to lawyer his way into the White House which discredited him forever as a future candidate. If you insist, I will call that merely my opinion.
And why do you insist on me giving a detailed explanation of why I have a strong dislike for Teddy Kennedy? The man might well be dying, after all. So, I was willing to leave it at the level of simple dislike and disagreement.
But, if you insist, I will give two concrete examples of why I have a DEEP dislike for Kennedy: Chappaquiddick, and abortion.
I have GRAVE reservations about a man who drives his car off Dike’s Road into the water, gets out, and then waits HOURS to inform the police about his “accident.” If Kennedy had called for help IMMEDIATELY on getting back to shore, Mary Jo Kopechne might not have died.
If, as I suspect, you are a liberal, no discussion about abortion will be productive. We will not be able to agree on first principles.
Sincerely, Sean
PS. On a less tense note, I’m happy to say I was able to buy a near mint first edition hard cover of Poul Anderson’s classic SF novel BRAIN WAVE. At a very REASONABLE price. Also, do you know an SF writer named Tim Powers? I sometimes talk to him in the AOL Catholic Chat room.
Dear Gary; Thank you for your note.
I’m SUPRISED you insist on me being specific on how Al Gore behaved as a sore loser in 2000. Because I THOUGHT everyone, deep down, knew he behaved exactly like that. Do I have to give a detailed recounting of the endless wrangling by Gore’s team over the technicalities of voting machines? Or exactly how, in the numerous recounts in FL, the wranglings over hanging chads, or whether this ballot had a vote for Bush or Gore?
And, btw, Pres. Bush won ALL the recounts, no matter how narrowly. It was Gore’s stubborn refusal to admit defeat when he WAS defeated and his attempts to lawyer his way into the White House which discredited him forever as a future candidate. If you insist, I will call that merely my opinion.
And why do you insist on me giving a detailed explanation of why I have a strong dislike for Teddy Kennedy? The man might well be dying, after all. So, I was willing to leave it at the level of simple dislike and disagreement.
But, if you insist, I will give two concrete examples of why I have a DEEP dislike for Kennedy: Chappaquiddick, and abortion.
I have GRAVE reservations about a man who drives his car off Dike’s Road into the water, gets out, and then waits HOURS to inform the police about his “accident.” If Kennedy had called for help IMMEDIATELY on getting back to shore, Mary Jo Kopechne might not have died.
If, as I suspect, you are a liberal, no discussion about abortion will be productive. We will not be able to agree on first principles.
Sincerely, Sean
PS. On a less tense note, I’m happy to say I was able to buy a near mint first edition hard cover of Poul Anderson’s classic SF novel BRAIN WAVE. At a very REASONABLE price. Also, do you know an SF writer named Tim Powers? I sometimes talk to him in the AOL Catholic Chat room.
Dear Gary; Thank you for your note.
I’m SUPRISED you insist on me being specific on how Al Gore behaved as a sore loser in 2000. Because I THOUGHT everyone, deep down, knew he behaved exactly like that. Do I have to give a detailed recounting of the endless wrangling by Gore’s team over the technicalities of voting machines? Or exactly how, in the numerous recounts in FL, the wranglings over hanging chads, or whether this ballot had a vote for Bush or Gore?
And, btw, Pres. Bush won ALL the recounts, no matter how narrowly. It was Gore’s stubborn refusal to admit defeat when he WAS defeated and his attempts to lawyer his way into the White House which discredited him forever as a future candidate. If you insist, I will call that merely my opinion.
And why do you insist on me giving a detailed explanation of why I have a strong dislike for Teddy Kennedy? The man might well be dying, after all. So, I was willing to leave it at the level of simple dislike and disagreement.
But, if you insist, I will give two concrete examples of why I have a DEEP dislike for Kennedy: Chappaquiddick, and abortion.
I have GRAVE reservations about a man who drives his car off Dike’s Road into the water, gets out, and then waits HOURS to inform the police about his “accident.” If Kennedy had called for help IMMEDIATELY on getting back to shore, Mary Jo Kopechne might not have died.
If, as I suspect, you are a liberal, no discussion about abortion will be productive. We will not be able to agree on first principles.
Sincerely, Sean
PS. On a less tense note, I’m happy to say I was able to buy a near mint first edition hard cover of Poul Anderson’s classic SF novel BRAIN WAVE. At a very REASONABLE price. Also, do you know an SF writer named Tim Powers? I sometimes talk to him in the AOL Catholic Chat room.
Dear That:
Just a correction, I have FAR lower expectations of liberal Democrats than I do for the GOP.
Sincerely, Sean
Sean,
It may surprise you (or not) to hear this, but that gladdens my heart. Not because I take it to mean that you have lower expectations of the Dems, but because I take it to mean that you have higher expectations of your chosen party the GOP. That is right and proper – we each should hold the group to which we belong to a higher standard than we do the opposition.
The GOP can use people like you (I mean that in a good way, without a trace of sarcasm), and the country can too. Your civility is greatly appreciated, and I hope it is matched in return.
Dear That:
Just a correction, I have FAR lower expectations of liberal Democrats than I do for the GOP.
Sincerely, Sean
Sean,
It may surprise you (or not) to hear this, but that gladdens my heart. Not because I take it to mean that you have lower expectations of the Dems, but because I take it to mean that you have higher expectations of your chosen party the GOP. That is right and proper – we each should hold the group to which we belong to a higher standard than we do the opposition.
The GOP can use people like you (I mean that in a good way, without a trace of sarcasm), and the country can too. Your civility is greatly appreciated, and I hope it is matched in return.
Dear That:
Just a correction, I have FAR lower expectations of liberal Democrats than I do for the GOP.
Sincerely, Sean
Sean,
It may surprise you (or not) to hear this, but that gladdens my heart. Not because I take it to mean that you have lower expectations of the Dems, but because I take it to mean that you have higher expectations of your chosen party the GOP. That is right and proper – we each should hold the group to which we belong to a higher standard than we do the opposition.
The GOP can use people like you (I mean that in a good way, without a trace of sarcasm), and the country can too. Your civility is greatly appreciated, and I hope it is matched in return.
That is right and proper – we each should hold the group to which we belong to a higher standard than we do the opposition.
This may be a ridiculous question, but, um, why? I can see a good case to be made that we should hold all groups to the same standard. Is the idea here that we should do this in order to compensate for cognitive biases that cause us to give in-groups the benefit of the doubt more so than we would with out-groups?
The notion of being tougher with your own groups worries me a little because of how easily people deify their own groups. Raising expectations dramatically can have negative consequences when the organization inevitably fails to meet them and reality rears its ugly head.
Your civility is greatly appreciated, and I hope it is matched in return.
This issue is broader than Sean but I’m a little bit puzzled by the high esteem people hold civility in, or at least, a narrowly tailored definition of civility that boils down to “be polite and don’t say fuck”. I’d much rather people rudely engage with me than civilly and politely refuse to take my arguments seriously. Even though Sean has kind of blown of Gary here, I recall him making a pretty good effort at engaging in past threads. What really puzzled me is how several people seemed to congratulate melinda for her civility after she repeatedly lambasted large groups of people here for imaginary crimes and then bolted the minute people questioned her about it.
That is right and proper – we each should hold the group to which we belong to a higher standard than we do the opposition.
This may be a ridiculous question, but, um, why? I can see a good case to be made that we should hold all groups to the same standard. Is the idea here that we should do this in order to compensate for cognitive biases that cause us to give in-groups the benefit of the doubt more so than we would with out-groups?
The notion of being tougher with your own groups worries me a little because of how easily people deify their own groups. Raising expectations dramatically can have negative consequences when the organization inevitably fails to meet them and reality rears its ugly head.
Your civility is greatly appreciated, and I hope it is matched in return.
This issue is broader than Sean but I’m a little bit puzzled by the high esteem people hold civility in, or at least, a narrowly tailored definition of civility that boils down to “be polite and don’t say fuck”. I’d much rather people rudely engage with me than civilly and politely refuse to take my arguments seriously. Even though Sean has kind of blown of Gary here, I recall him making a pretty good effort at engaging in past threads. What really puzzled me is how several people seemed to congratulate melinda for her civility after she repeatedly lambasted large groups of people here for imaginary crimes and then bolted the minute people questioned her about it.
That is right and proper – we each should hold the group to which we belong to a higher standard than we do the opposition.
This may be a ridiculous question, but, um, why? I can see a good case to be made that we should hold all groups to the same standard. Is the idea here that we should do this in order to compensate for cognitive biases that cause us to give in-groups the benefit of the doubt more so than we would with out-groups?
The notion of being tougher with your own groups worries me a little because of how easily people deify their own groups. Raising expectations dramatically can have negative consequences when the organization inevitably fails to meet them and reality rears its ugly head.
Your civility is greatly appreciated, and I hope it is matched in return.
This issue is broader than Sean but I’m a little bit puzzled by the high esteem people hold civility in, or at least, a narrowly tailored definition of civility that boils down to “be polite and don’t say fuck”. I’d much rather people rudely engage with me than civilly and politely refuse to take my arguments seriously. Even though Sean has kind of blown of Gary here, I recall him making a pretty good effort at engaging in past threads. What really puzzled me is how several people seemed to congratulate melinda for her civility after she repeatedly lambasted large groups of people here for imaginary crimes and then bolted the minute people questioned her about it.
Is the idea here that we should do this in order to compensate for cognitive biases that cause us to give in-groups the benefit of the doubt more so than we would with out-groups?
Yes, that is the core of it. Consider the opposite: If we don’t hold ourselves to a higher standard, then the logic of “but X is worse” can always be used to justify our actions (within limits spanning the extent of our cognitive bias), even if a more neutral and objective observer might think that the actions we are justifying are a step downwards from what X has done in the past.
What happens when both sides then apply that logic? The result is a race to the bottom. By small increments perhaps, but the trend is clear.
This is not just an abstract idea, it is one of the templates I’ve used to make sense of much of our politics here in the US during my lifetime. It is the logic of polarization. Holding our own group up to (what we think is) a higher standard is one cognitive tool we can deploy to resist this logic. This is another aspect of the idea I expressed on the “Go Start Anew” thread that politics can be thought of as an iterated Prisoner’s Dilemma. Without a cognitive bias handicap to restrain our instincts for what we think is justified retaliation, Tit-for-Tat-with-Forgiveness rapidly breaks down into just pure 100% defection.
I’m a little bit puzzled by the high esteem people hold civility in, or at least, a narrowly tailored definition of civility that boils down to “be polite and don’t say f*ck”. I’d much rather people rudely engage with me than civilly and politely refuse to take my arguments seriously.
Seems obvious to me. If there is to be any basis at all for debate between people with strongly held opinions, at a bare minimum you have to concede that both sides have a right to participate. Civility is a symbolic marker indicating a mutual understanding and acceptance of that idea. It creates a frame within which the game can then be played. It is the first attempt at signaling the possibility of cooperation, in the Tit-for-Tat dance.
This blog seems like a rather strange place to dispute that idea, since the comparative civility of the discourse here is IMHO one of the distinguishing traits that marks ObWings as different from other political blogs with similar interests where verbal bomb throwing is the norm. Maybe what you are detecting is a defensive reaction intended to protect that trait, even at the expense of excessive reverence being given to civility for its own sake.
Of course I could be wrong. Please point me to the galaxy of other political blogs where a wide range of views are expressed with courtesy – it isn’t as if I have a pile of unread books that need attention or anything, so I’m sure I could use a few more time sinks.
Is the idea here that we should do this in order to compensate for cognitive biases that cause us to give in-groups the benefit of the doubt more so than we would with out-groups?
Yes, that is the core of it. Consider the opposite: If we don’t hold ourselves to a higher standard, then the logic of “but X is worse” can always be used to justify our actions (within limits spanning the extent of our cognitive bias), even if a more neutral and objective observer might think that the actions we are justifying are a step downwards from what X has done in the past.
What happens when both sides then apply that logic? The result is a race to the bottom. By small increments perhaps, but the trend is clear.
This is not just an abstract idea, it is one of the templates I’ve used to make sense of much of our politics here in the US during my lifetime. It is the logic of polarization. Holding our own group up to (what we think is) a higher standard is one cognitive tool we can deploy to resist this logic. This is another aspect of the idea I expressed on the “Go Start Anew” thread that politics can be thought of as an iterated Prisoner’s Dilemma. Without a cognitive bias handicap to restrain our instincts for what we think is justified retaliation, Tit-for-Tat-with-Forgiveness rapidly breaks down into just pure 100% defection.
I’m a little bit puzzled by the high esteem people hold civility in, or at least, a narrowly tailored definition of civility that boils down to “be polite and don’t say f*ck”. I’d much rather people rudely engage with me than civilly and politely refuse to take my arguments seriously.
Seems obvious to me. If there is to be any basis at all for debate between people with strongly held opinions, at a bare minimum you have to concede that both sides have a right to participate. Civility is a symbolic marker indicating a mutual understanding and acceptance of that idea. It creates a frame within which the game can then be played. It is the first attempt at signaling the possibility of cooperation, in the Tit-for-Tat dance.
This blog seems like a rather strange place to dispute that idea, since the comparative civility of the discourse here is IMHO one of the distinguishing traits that marks ObWings as different from other political blogs with similar interests where verbal bomb throwing is the norm. Maybe what you are detecting is a defensive reaction intended to protect that trait, even at the expense of excessive reverence being given to civility for its own sake.
Of course I could be wrong. Please point me to the galaxy of other political blogs where a wide range of views are expressed with courtesy – it isn’t as if I have a pile of unread books that need attention or anything, so I’m sure I could use a few more time sinks.
Is the idea here that we should do this in order to compensate for cognitive biases that cause us to give in-groups the benefit of the doubt more so than we would with out-groups?
Yes, that is the core of it. Consider the opposite: If we don’t hold ourselves to a higher standard, then the logic of “but X is worse” can always be used to justify our actions (within limits spanning the extent of our cognitive bias), even if a more neutral and objective observer might think that the actions we are justifying are a step downwards from what X has done in the past.
What happens when both sides then apply that logic? The result is a race to the bottom. By small increments perhaps, but the trend is clear.
This is not just an abstract idea, it is one of the templates I’ve used to make sense of much of our politics here in the US during my lifetime. It is the logic of polarization. Holding our own group up to (what we think is) a higher standard is one cognitive tool we can deploy to resist this logic. This is another aspect of the idea I expressed on the “Go Start Anew” thread that politics can be thought of as an iterated Prisoner’s Dilemma. Without a cognitive bias handicap to restrain our instincts for what we think is justified retaliation, Tit-for-Tat-with-Forgiveness rapidly breaks down into just pure 100% defection.
I’m a little bit puzzled by the high esteem people hold civility in, or at least, a narrowly tailored definition of civility that boils down to “be polite and don’t say f*ck”. I’d much rather people rudely engage with me than civilly and politely refuse to take my arguments seriously.
Seems obvious to me. If there is to be any basis at all for debate between people with strongly held opinions, at a bare minimum you have to concede that both sides have a right to participate. Civility is a symbolic marker indicating a mutual understanding and acceptance of that idea. It creates a frame within which the game can then be played. It is the first attempt at signaling the possibility of cooperation, in the Tit-for-Tat dance.
This blog seems like a rather strange place to dispute that idea, since the comparative civility of the discourse here is IMHO one of the distinguishing traits that marks ObWings as different from other political blogs with similar interests where verbal bomb throwing is the norm. Maybe what you are detecting is a defensive reaction intended to protect that trait, even at the expense of excessive reverence being given to civility for its own sake.
Of course I could be wrong. Please point me to the galaxy of other political blogs where a wide range of views are expressed with courtesy – it isn’t as if I have a pile of unread books that need attention or anything, so I’m sure I could use a few more time sinks.
This may be a ridiculous question, but, um, why?
because when we simply aim for the same standard, it becomes to easy to excuse the sins of our in-group while holding other to what becomes a de facto higher standard.
As for civility, of course, the swear word ban shouldn’t be taken as being something out done out of civility, but in order to avoid workplace word filters. I certainly wouldn’t want my students or colleagues seeing some expletive filled rant and presuming that this is the norm for US discussion (as much as it may be) But civility comes in because it is far to easy to let sharp questioning become insulting and belittling and prevent people from participating. Of course, some people start off with a chip on their shoulder and there can be an element of self-confirmation, such that ‘I knew those people wouldn’t take my points seriously’. Stepping back and taking them seriously, at least in the confines of this blog, both deprives them of that justification and might have them become valuable contributors. At least that’s my take.
This may be a ridiculous question, but, um, why?
because when we simply aim for the same standard, it becomes to easy to excuse the sins of our in-group while holding other to what becomes a de facto higher standard.
As for civility, of course, the swear word ban shouldn’t be taken as being something out done out of civility, but in order to avoid workplace word filters. I certainly wouldn’t want my students or colleagues seeing some expletive filled rant and presuming that this is the norm for US discussion (as much as it may be) But civility comes in because it is far to easy to let sharp questioning become insulting and belittling and prevent people from participating. Of course, some people start off with a chip on their shoulder and there can be an element of self-confirmation, such that ‘I knew those people wouldn’t take my points seriously’. Stepping back and taking them seriously, at least in the confines of this blog, both deprives them of that justification and might have them become valuable contributors. At least that’s my take.
This may be a ridiculous question, but, um, why?
because when we simply aim for the same standard, it becomes to easy to excuse the sins of our in-group while holding other to what becomes a de facto higher standard.
As for civility, of course, the swear word ban shouldn’t be taken as being something out done out of civility, but in order to avoid workplace word filters. I certainly wouldn’t want my students or colleagues seeing some expletive filled rant and presuming that this is the norm for US discussion (as much as it may be) But civility comes in because it is far to easy to let sharp questioning become insulting and belittling and prevent people from participating. Of course, some people start off with a chip on their shoulder and there can be an element of self-confirmation, such that ‘I knew those people wouldn’t take my points seriously’. Stepping back and taking them seriously, at least in the confines of this blog, both deprives them of that justification and might have them become valuable contributors. At least that’s my take.
Because I THOUGHT everyone, deep down, knew he behaved exactly like that.
You need to expand your circle of friends, then.
And, btw, Pres. Bush won ALL the recounts, no matter how narrowly.
This is false.
Because I THOUGHT everyone, deep down, knew he behaved exactly like that.
You need to expand your circle of friends, then.
And, btw, Pres. Bush won ALL the recounts, no matter how narrowly.
This is false.
Because I THOUGHT everyone, deep down, knew he behaved exactly like that.
You need to expand your circle of friends, then.
And, btw, Pres. Bush won ALL the recounts, no matter how narrowly.
This is false.
Dear That. Thank you for your note.
Actually, I simply HOPE the GOP governs some what better than the Dems. Because it’s my belief that at least formal affirmation of belief in limited gov’t, lower taxes, and fewer laws and regulations makes it more LIKELY for a party to govern well.
In short my view is that of George Washington, loosely quoted from memory: “Government is a dangerous servant but a worse master.” I am sure I’m wrong about the exact wording, tho.
A far more detailed expostion of my basic political philosophy can be found in works like Russell Kirk’s THE CONSERVATIVE MIND or the anthology edited by William F. Buckley, Jr., DIU YOU EVER SEE A DREAM WALKING?, to name just two.
I’m neither an anarchist or libertarian. Becsause I know our corrupted human nature makes SOME government necessary. But too much government ends up becoming a CANCER devouring the society it was supposed to defend and serve.
And thank you for suggesting I should become a more active GOPer. If only by donating money to my preferred canidates campaign funds!
Sincerely, Sean
Dear That. Thank you for your note.
Actually, I simply HOPE the GOP governs some what better than the Dems. Because it’s my belief that at least formal affirmation of belief in limited gov’t, lower taxes, and fewer laws and regulations makes it more LIKELY for a party to govern well.
In short my view is that of George Washington, loosely quoted from memory: “Government is a dangerous servant but a worse master.” I am sure I’m wrong about the exact wording, tho.
A far more detailed expostion of my basic political philosophy can be found in works like Russell Kirk’s THE CONSERVATIVE MIND or the anthology edited by William F. Buckley, Jr., DIU YOU EVER SEE A DREAM WALKING?, to name just two.
I’m neither an anarchist or libertarian. Becsause I know our corrupted human nature makes SOME government necessary. But too much government ends up becoming a CANCER devouring the society it was supposed to defend and serve.
And thank you for suggesting I should become a more active GOPer. If only by donating money to my preferred canidates campaign funds!
Sincerely, Sean
Dear That. Thank you for your note.
Actually, I simply HOPE the GOP governs some what better than the Dems. Because it’s my belief that at least formal affirmation of belief in limited gov’t, lower taxes, and fewer laws and regulations makes it more LIKELY for a party to govern well.
In short my view is that of George Washington, loosely quoted from memory: “Government is a dangerous servant but a worse master.” I am sure I’m wrong about the exact wording, tho.
A far more detailed expostion of my basic political philosophy can be found in works like Russell Kirk’s THE CONSERVATIVE MIND or the anthology edited by William F. Buckley, Jr., DIU YOU EVER SEE A DREAM WALKING?, to name just two.
I’m neither an anarchist or libertarian. Becsause I know our corrupted human nature makes SOME government necessary. But too much government ends up becoming a CANCER devouring the society it was supposed to defend and serve.
And thank you for suggesting I should become a more active GOPer. If only by donating money to my preferred canidates campaign funds!
Sincerely, Sean
TL-ABQ,
I very much like and agree with your “race to the bottom” logic. This is the crux of the issue why I have been so dismayed and disgusted with the current administration, and in particular all the horrors committed in our name in the “War on Terror”. We are supposed to be the good guys, and we have not been living up to that.
However, when Sean B. comes and drops things like “Al Gore was a sore loser” and “Bush won all the recounts”, and does it in a “civil” fashion, unfortunately I want to go off the rails. I would strongly encourage Sean B. to investigate these issues more thoroughly. Surely we can all agree that there was not a comprehensive official recount of the vote in Florida, and that, in the end, is what Gore was looking for.
Furthermore, if the issue is that Sean B. is going to vote for candidates based on their position on making abortion illegal, that is of course his right. However, I don’t think there is anything else to discuss, because if that issue trumps everything else, then I don’t see the point in discussing the merits of our Iraq policy or our tax policies or our health care policies or anything else that is advocated by the current administration, or the aspiring McCain administration, or the current GOP.
Sean himself says that “no discussion on abortion will be productive”. In that case, what other discussion will possibly be productive, when he will always fall back on that as a rationale for supporting a particular candidate?
I can be civil, but I don’t need to engage. Miss Manners, I think, would agree ;-).
TL-ABQ,
I very much like and agree with your “race to the bottom” logic. This is the crux of the issue why I have been so dismayed and disgusted with the current administration, and in particular all the horrors committed in our name in the “War on Terror”. We are supposed to be the good guys, and we have not been living up to that.
However, when Sean B. comes and drops things like “Al Gore was a sore loser” and “Bush won all the recounts”, and does it in a “civil” fashion, unfortunately I want to go off the rails. I would strongly encourage Sean B. to investigate these issues more thoroughly. Surely we can all agree that there was not a comprehensive official recount of the vote in Florida, and that, in the end, is what Gore was looking for.
Furthermore, if the issue is that Sean B. is going to vote for candidates based on their position on making abortion illegal, that is of course his right. However, I don’t think there is anything else to discuss, because if that issue trumps everything else, then I don’t see the point in discussing the merits of our Iraq policy or our tax policies or our health care policies or anything else that is advocated by the current administration, or the aspiring McCain administration, or the current GOP.
Sean himself says that “no discussion on abortion will be productive”. In that case, what other discussion will possibly be productive, when he will always fall back on that as a rationale for supporting a particular candidate?
I can be civil, but I don’t need to engage. Miss Manners, I think, would agree ;-).
TL-ABQ,
I very much like and agree with your “race to the bottom” logic. This is the crux of the issue why I have been so dismayed and disgusted with the current administration, and in particular all the horrors committed in our name in the “War on Terror”. We are supposed to be the good guys, and we have not been living up to that.
However, when Sean B. comes and drops things like “Al Gore was a sore loser” and “Bush won all the recounts”, and does it in a “civil” fashion, unfortunately I want to go off the rails. I would strongly encourage Sean B. to investigate these issues more thoroughly. Surely we can all agree that there was not a comprehensive official recount of the vote in Florida, and that, in the end, is what Gore was looking for.
Furthermore, if the issue is that Sean B. is going to vote for candidates based on their position on making abortion illegal, that is of course his right. However, I don’t think there is anything else to discuss, because if that issue trumps everything else, then I don’t see the point in discussing the merits of our Iraq policy or our tax policies or our health care policies or anything else that is advocated by the current administration, or the aspiring McCain administration, or the current GOP.
Sean himself says that “no discussion on abortion will be productive”. In that case, what other discussion will possibly be productive, when he will always fall back on that as a rationale for supporting a particular candidate?
I can be civil, but I don’t need to engage. Miss Manners, I think, would agree ;-).
Miss Manners would be in enthusiastic (but of course polite) agreement with Whammer’s last point. One of the things she emphasizes in many volumes is that there are a lot of situations in which you do not owe the other person anything but courtesy as you rapidly disengage.
Miss Manners would be in enthusiastic (but of course polite) agreement with Whammer’s last point. One of the things she emphasizes in many volumes is that there are a lot of situations in which you do not owe the other person anything but courtesy as you rapidly disengage.
Miss Manners would be in enthusiastic (but of course polite) agreement with Whammer’s last point. One of the things she emphasizes in many volumes is that there are a lot of situations in which you do not owe the other person anything but courtesy as you rapidly disengage.
“Civility is a symbolic marker indicating a mutual understanding and acceptance of that idea. It creates a frame within which the game can then be played. It is the first attempt at signaling the possibility of cooperation, in the Tit-for-Tat dance.”
The idea behind the Prisoner’s Dilemma, of course, is that no communication of intentions is possible. But you have me thinking again. How would an IPD tournament turn out if the players could signal their intentions and use those signals (if desired) to make their decisions? Would lying come out on top? Would an initial signal of defection (rudeness) create a disadvantage? It would be an interesting thing to run.
“Civility is a symbolic marker indicating a mutual understanding and acceptance of that idea. It creates a frame within which the game can then be played. It is the first attempt at signaling the possibility of cooperation, in the Tit-for-Tat dance.”
The idea behind the Prisoner’s Dilemma, of course, is that no communication of intentions is possible. But you have me thinking again. How would an IPD tournament turn out if the players could signal their intentions and use those signals (if desired) to make their decisions? Would lying come out on top? Would an initial signal of defection (rudeness) create a disadvantage? It would be an interesting thing to run.
“Civility is a symbolic marker indicating a mutual understanding and acceptance of that idea. It creates a frame within which the game can then be played. It is the first attempt at signaling the possibility of cooperation, in the Tit-for-Tat dance.”
The idea behind the Prisoner’s Dilemma, of course, is that no communication of intentions is possible. But you have me thinking again. How would an IPD tournament turn out if the players could signal their intentions and use those signals (if desired) to make their decisions? Would lying come out on top? Would an initial signal of defection (rudeness) create a disadvantage? It would be an interesting thing to run.
“Because it’s my belief that at least formal affirmation of belief in limited gov’t, lower taxes, and fewer laws and regulations makes it more LIKELY for a party to govern well.”
I’m interested in how you square this with the performance of Republican versus Democratic administrations
“Because it’s my belief that at least formal affirmation of belief in limited gov’t, lower taxes, and fewer laws and regulations makes it more LIKELY for a party to govern well.”
I’m interested in how you square this with the performance of Republican versus Democratic administrations
“Because it’s my belief that at least formal affirmation of belief in limited gov’t, lower taxes, and fewer laws and regulations makes it more LIKELY for a party to govern well.”
I’m interested in how you square this with the performance of Republican versus Democratic administrations
Seems obvious to me. If there is to be any basis at all for debate between people with strongly held opinions, at a bare minimum you have to concede that both sides have a right to participate. Civility is a symbolic marker indicating a mutual understanding and acceptance of that idea.
I think I failed in my last comment to explain what I had in mind, so I’ll try again. Civility can mean different things to different people. One might assume that civility is largely satisfied by mere courtesy. By that standard, Melinda was indeed quite civil, and I am not confused.
However, that strikes me as a rather pointless definition: if we mean courtesy, we should use the word courtesy. Thus I usually take civilly to mean modes of writing that connote respect and give other participants the benefits of the doubt. This definition is inconsistent with accusing other participants of things they have not done or spreading lies about them or assuming the worst of them in your writing. By this definition, I don’t understand how one can consider Melinda civil.
It creates a frame within which the game can then be played. It is the first attempt at signaling the possibility of cooperation, in the Tit-for-Tat dance.
Do you think that accusing people of terrible things they haven’t done is a good way to signal the possibility of cooperation? I suppose it is better than many other means of signaling such as slitting throats, but it still doesn’t seem very good.
This blog seems like a rather strange place to dispute that idea, since the comparative civility of the discourse here is IMHO one of the distinguishing traits that marks ObWings as different from other political blogs with similar interests where verbal bomb throwing is the norm. Maybe what you are detecting is a defensive reaction intended to protect that trait, even at the expense of excessive reverence being given to civility for its own sake.
Maybe. It is hard to know without determining what you mean when you use the word civility though.
Of course I could be wrong. Please point me to the galaxy of other political blogs where a wide range of views are expressed with courtesy – it isn’t as if I have a pile of unread books that need attention or anything, so I’m sure I could use a few more time sinks.
To be honest, I have difficulty understanding false and hateful accusations as courteous, let alone civil. If you think such behavior is courteous, then you should have no trouble finding other blogs with similarly “courteous” discussion without my help.
Seems obvious to me. If there is to be any basis at all for debate between people with strongly held opinions, at a bare minimum you have to concede that both sides have a right to participate. Civility is a symbolic marker indicating a mutual understanding and acceptance of that idea.
I think I failed in my last comment to explain what I had in mind, so I’ll try again. Civility can mean different things to different people. One might assume that civility is largely satisfied by mere courtesy. By that standard, Melinda was indeed quite civil, and I am not confused.
However, that strikes me as a rather pointless definition: if we mean courtesy, we should use the word courtesy. Thus I usually take civilly to mean modes of writing that connote respect and give other participants the benefits of the doubt. This definition is inconsistent with accusing other participants of things they have not done or spreading lies about them or assuming the worst of them in your writing. By this definition, I don’t understand how one can consider Melinda civil.
It creates a frame within which the game can then be played. It is the first attempt at signaling the possibility of cooperation, in the Tit-for-Tat dance.
Do you think that accusing people of terrible things they haven’t done is a good way to signal the possibility of cooperation? I suppose it is better than many other means of signaling such as slitting throats, but it still doesn’t seem very good.
This blog seems like a rather strange place to dispute that idea, since the comparative civility of the discourse here is IMHO one of the distinguishing traits that marks ObWings as different from other political blogs with similar interests where verbal bomb throwing is the norm. Maybe what you are detecting is a defensive reaction intended to protect that trait, even at the expense of excessive reverence being given to civility for its own sake.
Maybe. It is hard to know without determining what you mean when you use the word civility though.
Of course I could be wrong. Please point me to the galaxy of other political blogs where a wide range of views are expressed with courtesy – it isn’t as if I have a pile of unread books that need attention or anything, so I’m sure I could use a few more time sinks.
To be honest, I have difficulty understanding false and hateful accusations as courteous, let alone civil. If you think such behavior is courteous, then you should have no trouble finding other blogs with similarly “courteous” discussion without my help.
Seems obvious to me. If there is to be any basis at all for debate between people with strongly held opinions, at a bare minimum you have to concede that both sides have a right to participate. Civility is a symbolic marker indicating a mutual understanding and acceptance of that idea.
I think I failed in my last comment to explain what I had in mind, so I’ll try again. Civility can mean different things to different people. One might assume that civility is largely satisfied by mere courtesy. By that standard, Melinda was indeed quite civil, and I am not confused.
However, that strikes me as a rather pointless definition: if we mean courtesy, we should use the word courtesy. Thus I usually take civilly to mean modes of writing that connote respect and give other participants the benefits of the doubt. This definition is inconsistent with accusing other participants of things they have not done or spreading lies about them or assuming the worst of them in your writing. By this definition, I don’t understand how one can consider Melinda civil.
It creates a frame within which the game can then be played. It is the first attempt at signaling the possibility of cooperation, in the Tit-for-Tat dance.
Do you think that accusing people of terrible things they haven’t done is a good way to signal the possibility of cooperation? I suppose it is better than many other means of signaling such as slitting throats, but it still doesn’t seem very good.
This blog seems like a rather strange place to dispute that idea, since the comparative civility of the discourse here is IMHO one of the distinguishing traits that marks ObWings as different from other political blogs with similar interests where verbal bomb throwing is the norm. Maybe what you are detecting is a defensive reaction intended to protect that trait, even at the expense of excessive reverence being given to civility for its own sake.
Maybe. It is hard to know without determining what you mean when you use the word civility though.
Of course I could be wrong. Please point me to the galaxy of other political blogs where a wide range of views are expressed with courtesy – it isn’t as if I have a pile of unread books that need attention or anything, so I’m sure I could use a few more time sinks.
To be honest, I have difficulty understanding false and hateful accusations as courteous, let alone civil. If you think such behavior is courteous, then you should have no trouble finding other blogs with similarly “courteous” discussion without my help.
As for civility, of course, the swear word ban shouldn’t be taken as being something out done out of civility, but in order to avoid workplace word filters.
Um, this explanation has always struck me as profoundly stupid. This blog does have swear words on it. The ban is quite porous and in any event, comment spammers work ceaselessly. If the criteria for blocking is the presence of swear words, the battle has long been lost. Moreover, I have difficulty imagining a company that insists on blocking web sites that contain swear words that would also countenance employees reading political blogs on company time. It really does seem absurd to justify a policy like this without regularly checking the blocks are still an issue and having some idea about how many regular readers are actually affected.
Now, the ban on swearing may have other perfectly reasonable justifications (such as encouraging civil discourse), but I don’t think this explanation makes sense.
I certainly wouldn’t want my students or colleagues seeing some expletive filled rant and presuming that this is the norm for US discussion (as much as it may be)
Why do you want to deceive people? And if you’re going to be ashamed of the US, shouldn’t you be ashamed of things like the Iraq War or the use of nuclear weapons long before you even notice the crudeness of our language? I can’t imagine looking at curse filled rant and thinking “boy, those Americans really are awful — look how much they swear”.
Are your students or colleagues really so…provincial that they would look at a single web page and make conclusions about the aggregate behavior of a nation of 300 million people? If so, then surely they’ve already encountered problematic web pages, so what additional harm could come from seeing more at OW?
But civility comes in because it is far to easy to let sharp questioning become insulting and belittling and prevent people from participating.
If civility is important, then presumably it matters that we not label any behavior as civil. Hence my confusion above. Again, if you could explain in what manner falsely accusing people of doing hateful things comports with civil discourse, I’d greatly appreciate it. If instead we simply agree that all manner of non-civil discourse will now be labeled civil, my confusion would dissipate.
As for civility, of course, the swear word ban shouldn’t be taken as being something out done out of civility, but in order to avoid workplace word filters.
Um, this explanation has always struck me as profoundly stupid. This blog does have swear words on it. The ban is quite porous and in any event, comment spammers work ceaselessly. If the criteria for blocking is the presence of swear words, the battle has long been lost. Moreover, I have difficulty imagining a company that insists on blocking web sites that contain swear words that would also countenance employees reading political blogs on company time. It really does seem absurd to justify a policy like this without regularly checking the blocks are still an issue and having some idea about how many regular readers are actually affected.
Now, the ban on swearing may have other perfectly reasonable justifications (such as encouraging civil discourse), but I don’t think this explanation makes sense.
I certainly wouldn’t want my students or colleagues seeing some expletive filled rant and presuming that this is the norm for US discussion (as much as it may be)
Why do you want to deceive people? And if you’re going to be ashamed of the US, shouldn’t you be ashamed of things like the Iraq War or the use of nuclear weapons long before you even notice the crudeness of our language? I can’t imagine looking at curse filled rant and thinking “boy, those Americans really are awful — look how much they swear”.
Are your students or colleagues really so…provincial that they would look at a single web page and make conclusions about the aggregate behavior of a nation of 300 million people? If so, then surely they’ve already encountered problematic web pages, so what additional harm could come from seeing more at OW?
But civility comes in because it is far to easy to let sharp questioning become insulting and belittling and prevent people from participating.
If civility is important, then presumably it matters that we not label any behavior as civil. Hence my confusion above. Again, if you could explain in what manner falsely accusing people of doing hateful things comports with civil discourse, I’d greatly appreciate it. If instead we simply agree that all manner of non-civil discourse will now be labeled civil, my confusion would dissipate.
As for civility, of course, the swear word ban shouldn’t be taken as being something out done out of civility, but in order to avoid workplace word filters.
Um, this explanation has always struck me as profoundly stupid. This blog does have swear words on it. The ban is quite porous and in any event, comment spammers work ceaselessly. If the criteria for blocking is the presence of swear words, the battle has long been lost. Moreover, I have difficulty imagining a company that insists on blocking web sites that contain swear words that would also countenance employees reading political blogs on company time. It really does seem absurd to justify a policy like this without regularly checking the blocks are still an issue and having some idea about how many regular readers are actually affected.
Now, the ban on swearing may have other perfectly reasonable justifications (such as encouraging civil discourse), but I don’t think this explanation makes sense.
I certainly wouldn’t want my students or colleagues seeing some expletive filled rant and presuming that this is the norm for US discussion (as much as it may be)
Why do you want to deceive people? And if you’re going to be ashamed of the US, shouldn’t you be ashamed of things like the Iraq War or the use of nuclear weapons long before you even notice the crudeness of our language? I can’t imagine looking at curse filled rant and thinking “boy, those Americans really are awful — look how much they swear”.
Are your students or colleagues really so…provincial that they would look at a single web page and make conclusions about the aggregate behavior of a nation of 300 million people? If so, then surely they’ve already encountered problematic web pages, so what additional harm could come from seeing more at OW?
But civility comes in because it is far to easy to let sharp questioning become insulting and belittling and prevent people from participating.
If civility is important, then presumably it matters that we not label any behavior as civil. Hence my confusion above. Again, if you could explain in what manner falsely accusing people of doing hateful things comports with civil discourse, I’d greatly appreciate it. If instead we simply agree that all manner of non-civil discourse will now be labeled civil, my confusion would dissipate.
The idea behind the Prisoner’s Dilemma, of course, is that no communication of intentions is possible. But you have me thinking again. How would an IPD tournament turn out if the players could signal their intentions and use those signals (if desired) to make their decisions? Would lying come out on top? Would an initial signal of defection (rudeness) create a disadvantage? It would be an interesting thing to run.
I’m not an expert on the theory of social games, but it seems to me that one of the idealized assumptions in a classic IPD tournament is atomicity of the players, and this places some serious limits on how far we can extrapolate these games to real world situations like politics.
In the real world even individual people are not always of the same mind from one moment to the next, and when you generalize the game further to encompass interactions between groups (i.e. 1 “player” in the IPD game = many actual people), then there is a very real problem of mixed messages, which makes signal interpretation more difficult. Not only does the recipient of a message need to evaluate if it is deceptive or not, but worse yet they need to evaluate who is in charge and how stable that leadership is, in the other “player”, which means that in forecasting the future one has to take into account the worst possible anticipated behavior rather than just the most likely.
It often strikes me when reading about historical examples of polarization, that this problem is one that often is the trigger for a spiral of increasingly polarized reactions, because one side perceives signals that are sent from the more unreasonable or extreme subset of the other group, and visa-versa, and once the cycle begins then moderates on both sides are undercut and discredited by the extremists.
In that sense the extremists on both sides in a polarizing political environment are structural allies of each other, since each of them can provide assistance to the other in overcoming internal opposition on the part of the moderates.
Perlstein’s Nixonland is full of these sorts of examples, and other examples come readily to mind. A great many cases of troops firing on (more or less) unarmed crowds strike me as being cases of polarization dynamics spiralling out of control due to the mixed message problem.
A less extreme example would be the way that conversations on blogs tend to spiral out of control because each person reacts primarily to the more outrageous statements being made by opposing partisans, out of a mixed group with varying opinions, and takes the opinions which are outliers as indicative of the median for the other side. You can see this very clearly right now in the way the pro-Obama and pro-Hillary blogs like to quote each other, I believe the neologism “nutpicking” has been coined to describe this dynamic.
For that reason, I think it is even more important for groups (than for individuals) to use a substantial cognitive bias handicapping factor in adjusting downwards their own sense of the rightousness of their side vs. the other side, in proportion to how large and how varied their own group is.
In other words if you belong to a big group the other side will see you as only being as “good” as your worst behaved members, so you need to either reign them in, or adjust your self-image accordingly. That is why I think it is a very good idea for groups to set high standards for themselves and use internal criticism and feedback to attempt to enforce them.
The idea behind the Prisoner’s Dilemma, of course, is that no communication of intentions is possible. But you have me thinking again. How would an IPD tournament turn out if the players could signal their intentions and use those signals (if desired) to make their decisions? Would lying come out on top? Would an initial signal of defection (rudeness) create a disadvantage? It would be an interesting thing to run.
I’m not an expert on the theory of social games, but it seems to me that one of the idealized assumptions in a classic IPD tournament is atomicity of the players, and this places some serious limits on how far we can extrapolate these games to real world situations like politics.
In the real world even individual people are not always of the same mind from one moment to the next, and when you generalize the game further to encompass interactions between groups (i.e. 1 “player” in the IPD game = many actual people), then there is a very real problem of mixed messages, which makes signal interpretation more difficult. Not only does the recipient of a message need to evaluate if it is deceptive or not, but worse yet they need to evaluate who is in charge and how stable that leadership is, in the other “player”, which means that in forecasting the future one has to take into account the worst possible anticipated behavior rather than just the most likely.
It often strikes me when reading about historical examples of polarization, that this problem is one that often is the trigger for a spiral of increasingly polarized reactions, because one side perceives signals that are sent from the more unreasonable or extreme subset of the other group, and visa-versa, and once the cycle begins then moderates on both sides are undercut and discredited by the extremists.
In that sense the extremists on both sides in a polarizing political environment are structural allies of each other, since each of them can provide assistance to the other in overcoming internal opposition on the part of the moderates.
Perlstein’s Nixonland is full of these sorts of examples, and other examples come readily to mind. A great many cases of troops firing on (more or less) unarmed crowds strike me as being cases of polarization dynamics spiralling out of control due to the mixed message problem.
A less extreme example would be the way that conversations on blogs tend to spiral out of control because each person reacts primarily to the more outrageous statements being made by opposing partisans, out of a mixed group with varying opinions, and takes the opinions which are outliers as indicative of the median for the other side. You can see this very clearly right now in the way the pro-Obama and pro-Hillary blogs like to quote each other, I believe the neologism “nutpicking” has been coined to describe this dynamic.
For that reason, I think it is even more important for groups (than for individuals) to use a substantial cognitive bias handicapping factor in adjusting downwards their own sense of the rightousness of their side vs. the other side, in proportion to how large and how varied their own group is.
In other words if you belong to a big group the other side will see you as only being as “good” as your worst behaved members, so you need to either reign them in, or adjust your self-image accordingly. That is why I think it is a very good idea for groups to set high standards for themselves and use internal criticism and feedback to attempt to enforce them.
The idea behind the Prisoner’s Dilemma, of course, is that no communication of intentions is possible. But you have me thinking again. How would an IPD tournament turn out if the players could signal their intentions and use those signals (if desired) to make their decisions? Would lying come out on top? Would an initial signal of defection (rudeness) create a disadvantage? It would be an interesting thing to run.
I’m not an expert on the theory of social games, but it seems to me that one of the idealized assumptions in a classic IPD tournament is atomicity of the players, and this places some serious limits on how far we can extrapolate these games to real world situations like politics.
In the real world even individual people are not always of the same mind from one moment to the next, and when you generalize the game further to encompass interactions between groups (i.e. 1 “player” in the IPD game = many actual people), then there is a very real problem of mixed messages, which makes signal interpretation more difficult. Not only does the recipient of a message need to evaluate if it is deceptive or not, but worse yet they need to evaluate who is in charge and how stable that leadership is, in the other “player”, which means that in forecasting the future one has to take into account the worst possible anticipated behavior rather than just the most likely.
It often strikes me when reading about historical examples of polarization, that this problem is one that often is the trigger for a spiral of increasingly polarized reactions, because one side perceives signals that are sent from the more unreasonable or extreme subset of the other group, and visa-versa, and once the cycle begins then moderates on both sides are undercut and discredited by the extremists.
In that sense the extremists on both sides in a polarizing political environment are structural allies of each other, since each of them can provide assistance to the other in overcoming internal opposition on the part of the moderates.
Perlstein’s Nixonland is full of these sorts of examples, and other examples come readily to mind. A great many cases of troops firing on (more or less) unarmed crowds strike me as being cases of polarization dynamics spiralling out of control due to the mixed message problem.
A less extreme example would be the way that conversations on blogs tend to spiral out of control because each person reacts primarily to the more outrageous statements being made by opposing partisans, out of a mixed group with varying opinions, and takes the opinions which are outliers as indicative of the median for the other side. You can see this very clearly right now in the way the pro-Obama and pro-Hillary blogs like to quote each other, I believe the neologism “nutpicking” has been coined to describe this dynamic.
For that reason, I think it is even more important for groups (than for individuals) to use a substantial cognitive bias handicapping factor in adjusting downwards their own sense of the rightousness of their side vs. the other side, in proportion to how large and how varied their own group is.
In other words if you belong to a big group the other side will see you as only being as “good” as your worst behaved members, so you need to either reign them in, or adjust your self-image accordingly. That is why I think it is a very good idea for groups to set high standards for themselves and use internal criticism and feedback to attempt to enforce them.
I think I failed in my last comment to explain what I had in mind, so I’ll try again. Civility can mean different things to different people. One might assume that civility is largely satisfied by mere courtesy. By that standard, Melinda was indeed quite civil, and I am not confused.
However, that strikes me as a rather pointless definition: if we mean courtesy, we should use the word courtesy. Thus I usually take civilly to mean modes of writing that connote respect and give other participants the benefits of the doubt. This definition is inconsistent with accusing other participants of things they have not done or spreading lies about them or assuming the worst of them in your writing. By this definition, I don’t understand how one can consider Melinda civil.
It is really late so I can’t really do this justice, but here’s a quick reply.
We are talking about different levels of what I am calling civility. I would call them weak and strong forms of civility respectively, you split them up by using courtesy as an alternative term for the weaker variety.
My standards appear to be somewhat weaker than yours (or to put it another way, you seem to arguing for higher standards than I am) for two reasons:
(1) the weaker version which pertains mainly to the diction used is quicker and easier to verify since it does not involve factual claims or other epistemelogical issues, and thus more likely to form a basis for mutual agreement over who is being civil and who is not, amongst people who are experiencing difficulty finding much else to agree on. This is sort of like the early stage of peace negotiations where arguing (and settling) on what shape the table should be is the best we can do.
The stronger form of civility that you prefer is harder to obtain because eliminating things like “lies”, or giving others “the benefit of the doubt” pull you into an area of more subjective evaluations which become increasingly ambiguous when there is no consensus over how to verify things and what constitutes proof. I know this sounds ridiculous but from my experience people can be very stubborn about not agreeing to things which place them at a disadvantage in the debate, and at some point this reality needs to be dealt with or we will just go round and round in circles.
(2) See my comment above at 3:38 AM for reasons why heterogeneous groups need to hold themselves to a higher internal standard in order to block possible polarizing dynamics. The converse of this is that you need to hold the other side to a lower standard of discourse until the conversation can get going on a positive and reciprocal basis, at which point we can start raising expectations for everyone.
In other words, if putting up with some guff from the other side is the price which has to be paid to get started a conversation which contains the seeds for something better, that seems to me to be a reasonable approach to take. My philosophy is that I don’t expect the conversation to remain static in terms of tone, instead I expect it to grow and develope over time (hopefully in a positive direction), so I don’t have particularly high standards at the beginning, if some basis for improvement can be established. Being nice to people sometimes has that effect, and it doesn’t cost me very much.
caveat: I don’t always live by these words – we are taking goals here, not necessarily realities. I can be a nasty cuss too, sometimes.
I think I failed in my last comment to explain what I had in mind, so I’ll try again. Civility can mean different things to different people. One might assume that civility is largely satisfied by mere courtesy. By that standard, Melinda was indeed quite civil, and I am not confused.
However, that strikes me as a rather pointless definition: if we mean courtesy, we should use the word courtesy. Thus I usually take civilly to mean modes of writing that connote respect and give other participants the benefits of the doubt. This definition is inconsistent with accusing other participants of things they have not done or spreading lies about them or assuming the worst of them in your writing. By this definition, I don’t understand how one can consider Melinda civil.
It is really late so I can’t really do this justice, but here’s a quick reply.
We are talking about different levels of what I am calling civility. I would call them weak and strong forms of civility respectively, you split them up by using courtesy as an alternative term for the weaker variety.
My standards appear to be somewhat weaker than yours (or to put it another way, you seem to arguing for higher standards than I am) for two reasons:
(1) the weaker version which pertains mainly to the diction used is quicker and easier to verify since it does not involve factual claims or other epistemelogical issues, and thus more likely to form a basis for mutual agreement over who is being civil and who is not, amongst people who are experiencing difficulty finding much else to agree on. This is sort of like the early stage of peace negotiations where arguing (and settling) on what shape the table should be is the best we can do.
The stronger form of civility that you prefer is harder to obtain because eliminating things like “lies”, or giving others “the benefit of the doubt” pull you into an area of more subjective evaluations which become increasingly ambiguous when there is no consensus over how to verify things and what constitutes proof. I know this sounds ridiculous but from my experience people can be very stubborn about not agreeing to things which place them at a disadvantage in the debate, and at some point this reality needs to be dealt with or we will just go round and round in circles.
(2) See my comment above at 3:38 AM for reasons why heterogeneous groups need to hold themselves to a higher internal standard in order to block possible polarizing dynamics. The converse of this is that you need to hold the other side to a lower standard of discourse until the conversation can get going on a positive and reciprocal basis, at which point we can start raising expectations for everyone.
In other words, if putting up with some guff from the other side is the price which has to be paid to get started a conversation which contains the seeds for something better, that seems to me to be a reasonable approach to take. My philosophy is that I don’t expect the conversation to remain static in terms of tone, instead I expect it to grow and develope over time (hopefully in a positive direction), so I don’t have particularly high standards at the beginning, if some basis for improvement can be established. Being nice to people sometimes has that effect, and it doesn’t cost me very much.
caveat: I don’t always live by these words – we are taking goals here, not necessarily realities. I can be a nasty cuss too, sometimes.
I think I failed in my last comment to explain what I had in mind, so I’ll try again. Civility can mean different things to different people. One might assume that civility is largely satisfied by mere courtesy. By that standard, Melinda was indeed quite civil, and I am not confused.
However, that strikes me as a rather pointless definition: if we mean courtesy, we should use the word courtesy. Thus I usually take civilly to mean modes of writing that connote respect and give other participants the benefits of the doubt. This definition is inconsistent with accusing other participants of things they have not done or spreading lies about them or assuming the worst of them in your writing. By this definition, I don’t understand how one can consider Melinda civil.
It is really late so I can’t really do this justice, but here’s a quick reply.
We are talking about different levels of what I am calling civility. I would call them weak and strong forms of civility respectively, you split them up by using courtesy as an alternative term for the weaker variety.
My standards appear to be somewhat weaker than yours (or to put it another way, you seem to arguing for higher standards than I am) for two reasons:
(1) the weaker version which pertains mainly to the diction used is quicker and easier to verify since it does not involve factual claims or other epistemelogical issues, and thus more likely to form a basis for mutual agreement over who is being civil and who is not, amongst people who are experiencing difficulty finding much else to agree on. This is sort of like the early stage of peace negotiations where arguing (and settling) on what shape the table should be is the best we can do.
The stronger form of civility that you prefer is harder to obtain because eliminating things like “lies”, or giving others “the benefit of the doubt” pull you into an area of more subjective evaluations which become increasingly ambiguous when there is no consensus over how to verify things and what constitutes proof. I know this sounds ridiculous but from my experience people can be very stubborn about not agreeing to things which place them at a disadvantage in the debate, and at some point this reality needs to be dealt with or we will just go round and round in circles.
(2) See my comment above at 3:38 AM for reasons why heterogeneous groups need to hold themselves to a higher internal standard in order to block possible polarizing dynamics. The converse of this is that you need to hold the other side to a lower standard of discourse until the conversation can get going on a positive and reciprocal basis, at which point we can start raising expectations for everyone.
In other words, if putting up with some guff from the other side is the price which has to be paid to get started a conversation which contains the seeds for something better, that seems to me to be a reasonable approach to take. My philosophy is that I don’t expect the conversation to remain static in terms of tone, instead I expect it to grow and develope over time (hopefully in a positive direction), so I don’t have particularly high standards at the beginning, if some basis for improvement can be established. Being nice to people sometimes has that effect, and it doesn’t cost me very much.
caveat: I don’t always live by these words – we are taking goals here, not necessarily realities. I can be a nasty cuss too, sometimes.
hi Turb,
Since you were reacting to me, I’ll try and address your points, though I’m not sure if I can do justice to all of them.
About the profanity filters, my impression was that you felt it was a prissy way of trying to enforce civility (my phrase, not yours) and I was trying to point out that it didn’t start from any sort of prissiness, it started from a reason separate from civility. You seemed to focus on that as a symbol of some problem here, and I was just trying to point out that the original impulse wasn’t want you seemed to think it was. I do think that it has proved its worth.
As far as the provincial nature of my students and colleagues, unfortunately, Japanese have a tendency, especially when foreigners are concerned, of generalizing from a single case. I’m not a prude, but I want to be able to explain about how profanity works and what various words mean at my own speed, and not be ambushed. So I appreciate the no-profanity setting.
Also, profanity has a way of triggering a reaction. I’ve seen too many blogs where people end up saying “I said the ideas was a @#&*$%*&# idea, not that you were a @(*&#^$*&^# person”, usually at the end of a exchange where the general tenor has convinced everyone that the participants think precisely that.
To my mind, civility is important because it reduces the role of emotions and emotional appeals, which then lets us pinpoint why actions or policies are wrong. The construct of civility that you suggest seems like simply a synonym for good and uncivil means bad. I’d agree that there are people who do bad things under the guise of civility, and get away with things that perhaps they would not if we ran across the line of civility and let them have it. But it seems that people who do that have ended up getting hoisted by their own petard.
I’ve just returned to this comment and see that TLT has posted things that I’d like to think I was trying to get at, only in a vague and unsubstantiated way, but I will post this so it doesn’t appear that I am not interested in replying.
hi Turb,
Since you were reacting to me, I’ll try and address your points, though I’m not sure if I can do justice to all of them.
About the profanity filters, my impression was that you felt it was a prissy way of trying to enforce civility (my phrase, not yours) and I was trying to point out that it didn’t start from any sort of prissiness, it started from a reason separate from civility. You seemed to focus on that as a symbol of some problem here, and I was just trying to point out that the original impulse wasn’t want you seemed to think it was. I do think that it has proved its worth.
As far as the provincial nature of my students and colleagues, unfortunately, Japanese have a tendency, especially when foreigners are concerned, of generalizing from a single case. I’m not a prude, but I want to be able to explain about how profanity works and what various words mean at my own speed, and not be ambushed. So I appreciate the no-profanity setting.
Also, profanity has a way of triggering a reaction. I’ve seen too many blogs where people end up saying “I said the ideas was a @#&*$%*&# idea, not that you were a @(*&#^$*&^# person”, usually at the end of a exchange where the general tenor has convinced everyone that the participants think precisely that.
To my mind, civility is important because it reduces the role of emotions and emotional appeals, which then lets us pinpoint why actions or policies are wrong. The construct of civility that you suggest seems like simply a synonym for good and uncivil means bad. I’d agree that there are people who do bad things under the guise of civility, and get away with things that perhaps they would not if we ran across the line of civility and let them have it. But it seems that people who do that have ended up getting hoisted by their own petard.
I’ve just returned to this comment and see that TLT has posted things that I’d like to think I was trying to get at, only in a vague and unsubstantiated way, but I will post this so it doesn’t appear that I am not interested in replying.
hi Turb,
Since you were reacting to me, I’ll try and address your points, though I’m not sure if I can do justice to all of them.
About the profanity filters, my impression was that you felt it was a prissy way of trying to enforce civility (my phrase, not yours) and I was trying to point out that it didn’t start from any sort of prissiness, it started from a reason separate from civility. You seemed to focus on that as a symbol of some problem here, and I was just trying to point out that the original impulse wasn’t want you seemed to think it was. I do think that it has proved its worth.
As far as the provincial nature of my students and colleagues, unfortunately, Japanese have a tendency, especially when foreigners are concerned, of generalizing from a single case. I’m not a prude, but I want to be able to explain about how profanity works and what various words mean at my own speed, and not be ambushed. So I appreciate the no-profanity setting.
Also, profanity has a way of triggering a reaction. I’ve seen too many blogs where people end up saying “I said the ideas was a @#&*$%*&# idea, not that you were a @(*&#^$*&^# person”, usually at the end of a exchange where the general tenor has convinced everyone that the participants think precisely that.
To my mind, civility is important because it reduces the role of emotions and emotional appeals, which then lets us pinpoint why actions or policies are wrong. The construct of civility that you suggest seems like simply a synonym for good and uncivil means bad. I’d agree that there are people who do bad things under the guise of civility, and get away with things that perhaps they would not if we ran across the line of civility and let them have it. But it seems that people who do that have ended up getting hoisted by their own petard.
I’ve just returned to this comment and see that TLT has posted things that I’d like to think I was trying to get at, only in a vague and unsubstantiated way, but I will post this so it doesn’t appear that I am not interested in replying.
About the workplace filters argument for not having profanity: that was, actually, the original reason for not allowing it. One of the blog’s founders had just such a filter at his workplace, and wanted to read his blog on the job. It sounded like a good reason to me.
That said, I do not have such a filter. I have no idea how they work, but I had always imagined a sort of page by page approach, not ‘does one of these words appear anywhere on this blog?’ approach. If the letter, then of course we’ve long since failed.
I also think it helps with general civility. Of course this, like all ways of trying to get to civility, is — well, “imperfect” isn’t nearly strong enough. But my sense is that it helps. I could be wrong, obviously.
About the workplace filters argument for not having profanity: that was, actually, the original reason for not allowing it. One of the blog’s founders had just such a filter at his workplace, and wanted to read his blog on the job. It sounded like a good reason to me.
That said, I do not have such a filter. I have no idea how they work, but I had always imagined a sort of page by page approach, not ‘does one of these words appear anywhere on this blog?’ approach. If the letter, then of course we’ve long since failed.
I also think it helps with general civility. Of course this, like all ways of trying to get to civility, is — well, “imperfect” isn’t nearly strong enough. But my sense is that it helps. I could be wrong, obviously.
About the workplace filters argument for not having profanity: that was, actually, the original reason for not allowing it. One of the blog’s founders had just such a filter at his workplace, and wanted to read his blog on the job. It sounded like a good reason to me.
That said, I do not have such a filter. I have no idea how they work, but I had always imagined a sort of page by page approach, not ‘does one of these words appear anywhere on this blog?’ approach. If the letter, then of course we’ve long since failed.
I also think it helps with general civility. Of course this, like all ways of trying to get to civility, is — well, “imperfect” isn’t nearly strong enough. But my sense is that it helps. I could be wrong, obviously.
That said, I do not have such a filter. I have no idea how they work, but I had always imagined a sort of page by page approach, not ‘does one of these words appear anywhere on this blog?’ approach. If the letter, then of course we’ve long since failed.
When last I looked, most filters used an overall site metric rather than a page by page approach. Moreover, most filters took a very dim view of comment areas in general because anyone could post anything to them long after the company had assessed them as clean.
I also think it helps with general civility. Of course this, like all ways of trying to get to civility, is — well, “imperfect” isn’t nearly strong enough. But my sense is that it helps. I could be wrong, obviously.
I agree and imperfect in this context seems more than good enough. I just never found the filtering explanation reasonable.
That said, I do not have such a filter. I have no idea how they work, but I had always imagined a sort of page by page approach, not ‘does one of these words appear anywhere on this blog?’ approach. If the letter, then of course we’ve long since failed.
When last I looked, most filters used an overall site metric rather than a page by page approach. Moreover, most filters took a very dim view of comment areas in general because anyone could post anything to them long after the company had assessed them as clean.
I also think it helps with general civility. Of course this, like all ways of trying to get to civility, is — well, “imperfect” isn’t nearly strong enough. But my sense is that it helps. I could be wrong, obviously.
I agree and imperfect in this context seems more than good enough. I just never found the filtering explanation reasonable.
That said, I do not have such a filter. I have no idea how they work, but I had always imagined a sort of page by page approach, not ‘does one of these words appear anywhere on this blog?’ approach. If the letter, then of course we’ve long since failed.
When last I looked, most filters used an overall site metric rather than a page by page approach. Moreover, most filters took a very dim view of comment areas in general because anyone could post anything to them long after the company had assessed them as clean.
I also think it helps with general civility. Of course this, like all ways of trying to get to civility, is — well, “imperfect” isn’t nearly strong enough. But my sense is that it helps. I could be wrong, obviously.
I agree and imperfect in this context seems more than good enough. I just never found the filtering explanation reasonable.
I agree with Hilzoy et al about the use of the filters and standard, I just keep being reminded of the slogan a friend used to use as a BBS sig file. In the original, of course, it was all spelled out:
PROFANITY IS THE LAST RESORT OF THE INARTICULATE M*TH*RF**KER.
I agree with Hilzoy et al about the use of the filters and standard, I just keep being reminded of the slogan a friend used to use as a BBS sig file. In the original, of course, it was all spelled out:
PROFANITY IS THE LAST RESORT OF THE INARTICULATE M*TH*RF**KER.
I agree with Hilzoy et al about the use of the filters and standard, I just keep being reminded of the slogan a friend used to use as a BBS sig file. In the original, of course, it was all spelled out:
PROFANITY IS THE LAST RESORT OF THE INARTICULATE M*TH*RF**KER.
Turb: yeah, that’s why I mentioned that I don’t actually have one, and am clueless about how they work. The actual explanation of that part is less ‘there are filters’ than ‘Moe said there were filters, and hilzoy thought: well, sounds plausible to me’, even though she has no idea whether it’s right, and so even after Moe left, she has continued to say so.
Turb: yeah, that’s why I mentioned that I don’t actually have one, and am clueless about how they work. The actual explanation of that part is less ‘there are filters’ than ‘Moe said there were filters, and hilzoy thought: well, sounds plausible to me’, even though she has no idea whether it’s right, and so even after Moe left, she has continued to say so.
Turb: yeah, that’s why I mentioned that I don’t actually have one, and am clueless about how they work. The actual explanation of that part is less ‘there are filters’ than ‘Moe said there were filters, and hilzoy thought: well, sounds plausible to me’, even though she has no idea whether it’s right, and so even after Moe left, she has continued to say so.
Turb,
Was this in another thread that I missed? I agree that Melinda didn’t stick around too long, but the worst she said in this thread was “But so many of (Obama’s) supporters are so incredibly alienating — insulting, sexist, offensive, and cheap — and sometimes it’s a little difficult to separate them from their candidate.” That doesn’t seem out of line to me. I know I’ve seen similar things said about Hillary supporters. And hey, some Obama supporters are alienating, as are some Clintonites. Not so much here at ObWi, but being as she’s not a regular, I didn’t necessarily take her to be referring to people here. Can you elaborate on what you found uncivil?
On the subject of the profanity ban, I was fairly disdainful of it when I first started coming here long, long ago. But I think it really does contribute the superior tone of discussion here. For one, it discourages bomb-throwers and insult specialists from posting here regularly.
Turb,
Was this in another thread that I missed? I agree that Melinda didn’t stick around too long, but the worst she said in this thread was “But so many of (Obama’s) supporters are so incredibly alienating — insulting, sexist, offensive, and cheap — and sometimes it’s a little difficult to separate them from their candidate.” That doesn’t seem out of line to me. I know I’ve seen similar things said about Hillary supporters. And hey, some Obama supporters are alienating, as are some Clintonites. Not so much here at ObWi, but being as she’s not a regular, I didn’t necessarily take her to be referring to people here. Can you elaborate on what you found uncivil?
On the subject of the profanity ban, I was fairly disdainful of it when I first started coming here long, long ago. But I think it really does contribute the superior tone of discussion here. For one, it discourages bomb-throwers and insult specialists from posting here regularly.
Turb,
Was this in another thread that I missed? I agree that Melinda didn’t stick around too long, but the worst she said in this thread was “But so many of (Obama’s) supporters are so incredibly alienating — insulting, sexist, offensive, and cheap — and sometimes it’s a little difficult to separate them from their candidate.” That doesn’t seem out of line to me. I know I’ve seen similar things said about Hillary supporters. And hey, some Obama supporters are alienating, as are some Clintonites. Not so much here at ObWi, but being as she’s not a regular, I didn’t necessarily take her to be referring to people here. Can you elaborate on what you found uncivil?
On the subject of the profanity ban, I was fairly disdainful of it when I first started coming here long, long ago. But I think it really does contribute the superior tone of discussion here. For one, it discourages bomb-throwers and insult specialists from posting here regularly.
Turb,
Was this in another thread that I missed? I agree that Melinda didn’t stick around too long, but the worst she said in this thread was “But so many of (Obama’s) supporters are so incredibly alienating — insulting, sexist, offensive, and cheap — and sometimes it’s a little difficult to separate them from their candidate.” That doesn’t seem out of line to me. I know I’ve seen similar things said about Hillary supporters. And hey, some Obama supporters are alienating, as are some Clintonites. Not so much here at ObWi, but being as she’s not a regular, I didn’t necessarily take her to be referring to people here. Can you elaborate on what you found uncivil?
On the subject of the profanity ban, I was fairly disdainful of it when I first started coming here long, long ago. But I think it really does contribute the superior tone of discussion here. For one, it discourages bomb-throwers and insult specialists from posting here regularly.
Turb,
Was this in another thread that I missed? I agree that Melinda didn’t stick around too long, but the worst she said in this thread was “But so many of (Obama’s) supporters are so incredibly alienating — insulting, sexist, offensive, and cheap — and sometimes it’s a little difficult to separate them from their candidate.” That doesn’t seem out of line to me. I know I’ve seen similar things said about Hillary supporters. And hey, some Obama supporters are alienating, as are some Clintonites. Not so much here at ObWi, but being as she’s not a regular, I didn’t necessarily take her to be referring to people here. Can you elaborate on what you found uncivil?
On the subject of the profanity ban, I was fairly disdainful of it when I first started coming here long, long ago. But I think it really does contribute the superior tone of discussion here. For one, it discourages bomb-throwers and insult specialists from posting here regularly.
Turb,
Was this in another thread that I missed? I agree that Melinda didn’t stick around too long, but the worst she said in this thread was “But so many of (Obama’s) supporters are so incredibly alienating — insulting, sexist, offensive, and cheap — and sometimes it’s a little difficult to separate them from their candidate.” That doesn’t seem out of line to me. I know I’ve seen similar things said about Hillary supporters. And hey, some Obama supporters are alienating, as are some Clintonites. Not so much here at ObWi, but being as she’s not a regular, I didn’t necessarily take her to be referring to people here. Can you elaborate on what you found uncivil?
On the subject of the profanity ban, I was fairly disdainful of it when I first started coming here long, long ago. But I think it really does contribute the superior tone of discussion here. For one, it discourages bomb-throwers and insult specialists from posting here regularly.
Larv,
See this thread, where she writes:
I regard a lot of the comments about Clinton in this particular forum (although it’s not alone) as being of a similar quality as you all seem to regard some of the stuff coming out of Clinton supporters. It’s over-the-top, hostile, and inappropriate. A small wee tiny simple gesture you could make might be to use “Clinton” and “Obama” or “Hillary” and “Barack,” rather than “Hillary” and “Obama.”
and this:
For starters, the “Fuck Hillary” and “Her supporters are all insane” stuff isn’t good. Like it or not Obama isn’t winning this in a walk – it’s been a close, close race. Just how much of the Democratic constituency do you think you can toss overboard and still win?
Next, some of the comments here really have been offensive and really are “elitist.” The reason that Clinton supporters don’t spend much time here, or at least don’t post here, is that it’s a very hostile environment for us. It’s not that Clinton supporters don’t know how to use computers, and trying to explain *that* piece of inanity away with an assertion that it’s that working class/blue collar people don’t know how to use computers just makes things a lot worse. Seriously.
and here in this thread, also this:
I’d like to point out that you forgot to add that Clinton voters are low-information racist rubes.
Larv,
See this thread, where she writes:
I regard a lot of the comments about Clinton in this particular forum (although it’s not alone) as being of a similar quality as you all seem to regard some of the stuff coming out of Clinton supporters. It’s over-the-top, hostile, and inappropriate. A small wee tiny simple gesture you could make might be to use “Clinton” and “Obama” or “Hillary” and “Barack,” rather than “Hillary” and “Obama.”
and this:
For starters, the “Fuck Hillary” and “Her supporters are all insane” stuff isn’t good. Like it or not Obama isn’t winning this in a walk – it’s been a close, close race. Just how much of the Democratic constituency do you think you can toss overboard and still win?
Next, some of the comments here really have been offensive and really are “elitist.” The reason that Clinton supporters don’t spend much time here, or at least don’t post here, is that it’s a very hostile environment for us. It’s not that Clinton supporters don’t know how to use computers, and trying to explain *that* piece of inanity away with an assertion that it’s that working class/blue collar people don’t know how to use computers just makes things a lot worse. Seriously.
and here in this thread, also this:
I’d like to point out that you forgot to add that Clinton voters are low-information racist rubes.
Larv,
See this thread, where she writes:
I regard a lot of the comments about Clinton in this particular forum (although it’s not alone) as being of a similar quality as you all seem to regard some of the stuff coming out of Clinton supporters. It’s over-the-top, hostile, and inappropriate. A small wee tiny simple gesture you could make might be to use “Clinton” and “Obama” or “Hillary” and “Barack,” rather than “Hillary” and “Obama.”
and this:
For starters, the “Fuck Hillary” and “Her supporters are all insane” stuff isn’t good. Like it or not Obama isn’t winning this in a walk – it’s been a close, close race. Just how much of the Democratic constituency do you think you can toss overboard and still win?
Next, some of the comments here really have been offensive and really are “elitist.” The reason that Clinton supporters don’t spend much time here, or at least don’t post here, is that it’s a very hostile environment for us. It’s not that Clinton supporters don’t know how to use computers, and trying to explain *that* piece of inanity away with an assertion that it’s that working class/blue collar people don’t know how to use computers just makes things a lot worse. Seriously.
and here in this thread, also this:
I’d like to point out that you forgot to add that Clinton voters are low-information racist rubes.
Turb,
The quotations you’ve provided from Melinda are good examples of what I was describing above when I wrote that:
A less extreme example would be the way that conversations on blogs tend to spiral out of control because each person reacts primarily to the more outrageous statements being made by opposing partisans, out of a mixed group with varying opinions, and takes the opinions which are outliers as indicative of the median for the other side. You can see this very clearly right now in the way the pro-Obama and pro-Hillary blogs like to quote each other, I believe the neologism “nutpicking” has been coined to describe this dynamic.
Melinda was IMHO engaging in nutpicking the statements from Obama supporters which she found to be the most inflammatory and using them as a synecdoche for the broader set of opinions. The second quote “For starters…” doesn’t really tell us if she is even distinguishing between comments on this blog and comments on other blogs.
There are a couple of ways to try to defuse this polarizing cycle. One is to insist that people be specific and use quotations and links to reference what it is that they are reacting to. Gary has been leading the charge on that front for a long time, with what looks to me like mixed success.
The other way to approach a polarizing cycle is to try to calm down the emotional tone of the exchange, and it seems to me that extending an olive branch to the other person by finding something appreciative to say about their contribution is as good a way as any to do so. It doesn’t seem to me that doing this necessarily compromises my beliefs or positions, so I just don’t see a downside which would weigh against doing this.
standard disclaimers: YMMV, IMHO, etc., etc.
Turb,
The quotations you’ve provided from Melinda are good examples of what I was describing above when I wrote that:
A less extreme example would be the way that conversations on blogs tend to spiral out of control because each person reacts primarily to the more outrageous statements being made by opposing partisans, out of a mixed group with varying opinions, and takes the opinions which are outliers as indicative of the median for the other side. You can see this very clearly right now in the way the pro-Obama and pro-Hillary blogs like to quote each other, I believe the neologism “nutpicking” has been coined to describe this dynamic.
Melinda was IMHO engaging in nutpicking the statements from Obama supporters which she found to be the most inflammatory and using them as a synecdoche for the broader set of opinions. The second quote “For starters…” doesn’t really tell us if she is even distinguishing between comments on this blog and comments on other blogs.
There are a couple of ways to try to defuse this polarizing cycle. One is to insist that people be specific and use quotations and links to reference what it is that they are reacting to. Gary has been leading the charge on that front for a long time, with what looks to me like mixed success.
The other way to approach a polarizing cycle is to try to calm down the emotional tone of the exchange, and it seems to me that extending an olive branch to the other person by finding something appreciative to say about their contribution is as good a way as any to do so. It doesn’t seem to me that doing this necessarily compromises my beliefs or positions, so I just don’t see a downside which would weigh against doing this.
standard disclaimers: YMMV, IMHO, etc., etc.
Turb,
The quotations you’ve provided from Melinda are good examples of what I was describing above when I wrote that:
A less extreme example would be the way that conversations on blogs tend to spiral out of control because each person reacts primarily to the more outrageous statements being made by opposing partisans, out of a mixed group with varying opinions, and takes the opinions which are outliers as indicative of the median for the other side. You can see this very clearly right now in the way the pro-Obama and pro-Hillary blogs like to quote each other, I believe the neologism “nutpicking” has been coined to describe this dynamic.
Melinda was IMHO engaging in nutpicking the statements from Obama supporters which she found to be the most inflammatory and using them as a synecdoche for the broader set of opinions. The second quote “For starters…” doesn’t really tell us if she is even distinguishing between comments on this blog and comments on other blogs.
There are a couple of ways to try to defuse this polarizing cycle. One is to insist that people be specific and use quotations and links to reference what it is that they are reacting to. Gary has been leading the charge on that front for a long time, with what looks to me like mixed success.
The other way to approach a polarizing cycle is to try to calm down the emotional tone of the exchange, and it seems to me that extending an olive branch to the other person by finding something appreciative to say about their contribution is as good a way as any to do so. It doesn’t seem to me that doing this necessarily compromises my beliefs or positions, so I just don’t see a downside which would weigh against doing this.
standard disclaimers: YMMV, IMHO, etc., etc.
I think the attempts to minimize or eliminate profanity, calls for assassination, and so forth have a salutary effect on the conversation here, not just because it helps keep away would-be firestarters but because it requires a little more effort from commenters. It is more difficult to substitute moral indignation for thought when you aren’t allowed to bellow, “&^*( you, %^#^%$#!!11!!” at someone with whom you disagree.
Just my two cents.
I think the attempts to minimize or eliminate profanity, calls for assassination, and so forth have a salutary effect on the conversation here, not just because it helps keep away would-be firestarters but because it requires a little more effort from commenters. It is more difficult to substitute moral indignation for thought when you aren’t allowed to bellow, “&^*( you, %^#^%$#!!11!!” at someone with whom you disagree.
Just my two cents.
I think the attempts to minimize or eliminate profanity, calls for assassination, and so forth have a salutary effect on the conversation here, not just because it helps keep away would-be firestarters but because it requires a little more effort from commenters. It is more difficult to substitute moral indignation for thought when you aren’t allowed to bellow, “&^*( you, %^#^%$#!!11!!” at someone with whom you disagree.
Just my two cents.
There are a couple of ways to try to defuse this polarizing cycle. One is to insist that people be specific and use quotations and links to reference what it is that they are reacting to.
TLTIA,
I’ve been mulling this over for a while. I think your approach of focused depolarization is sound and has a lot to recommend it, but I’m troubled by some aspects. I’ve tried to work through them below.
Gary has been leading the charge on that front for a long time, with what looks to me like mixed success.
Whether it has been successful or not may depend greatly on what your goal is. If your goal is to maximize the likelihood that any new commenter can productively engage and join the community no matter how polarized they are, then I think results have been very mixed indeed. But if your goal is to ensure that OW hosts productive discussions, then I think it has been more successful. If you’re focused on the first goal, then you’re going to tolerate a lot of borderline acceptable behavior that does nothing to advance productive discussions but does make the place less pleasant. If you’re focused on the second goal however, then you will end up pushing away some commenters who could eventually become depolarized.
To formalize a bit: consider the population of new commenters that arrive on any given day. Some of them are wonderful; they’re not my concern here. Some of them are hostile and consistently attempt to ramp up polarization. Some of this polarized group can be lulled through your systematic peacemaking techniques into adopting more respectful discourse styles — this means that over the long term, they can be integrated as productive depolarized commenters. However, some of the polarized commenters have no hope of ever becoming depolarized commenters, no matter how you treat them.
If OW treats polarized commenters with kid gloves, then we increase the fraction of initially hostile commenters who depolarize. If OW treats them like long-time commenters are treated or worse, then we decrease that fraction. If that was all there was to it, I’d say we should treat new polarized commenters very gently indeed. But polarized commenters impose large costs to the community. Treating them with kid gloves encourages them to stick around spewing bile and lowering the quality of discourse. For those that eventually depolarize, that cost is balanced by an eventual benefit. But for those who remain polarized until they leave, that cost is never redeemed: we take the hit and never recoup anything.
So what kind of policy should we have? Depends on the community’s values in general. However, it also depends on matters of fact. If you believe that the fraction of initially polarized commenters that eventually depolarize is very low independent of whether they get kid glove treatment, then for almost any policy (where policy is a formal statement of community values), you shouldn’t treat them especially gently. Under that assumption, treating them especially gently imposes a large and immediate cost weighed against a small uncertain future gain.
Personally, I’m ambivalent about what choice to make. But if people want to make a choice, I’d like to at least know whether or not they’ve considered the tradeoffs properly.
The other way to approach a polarizing cycle is to try to calm down the emotional tone of the exchange, and it seems to me that extending an olive branch to the other person by finding something appreciative to say about their contribution is as good a way as any to do so. It doesn’t seem to me that doing this necessarily compromises my beliefs or positions, so I just don’t see a downside which would weigh against doing this.
There are downsides though: you risk reinforcing the notion in the commenter’s mind that their current behavior is acceptable or desirable. And why shouldn’t they assume that? You did compliment them after all…Moreover, this effect is not limited to them: others are watching and can take your cues to heart in the same way.
There are a couple of ways to try to defuse this polarizing cycle. One is to insist that people be specific and use quotations and links to reference what it is that they are reacting to.
TLTIA,
I’ve been mulling this over for a while. I think your approach of focused depolarization is sound and has a lot to recommend it, but I’m troubled by some aspects. I’ve tried to work through them below.
Gary has been leading the charge on that front for a long time, with what looks to me like mixed success.
Whether it has been successful or not may depend greatly on what your goal is. If your goal is to maximize the likelihood that any new commenter can productively engage and join the community no matter how polarized they are, then I think results have been very mixed indeed. But if your goal is to ensure that OW hosts productive discussions, then I think it has been more successful. If you’re focused on the first goal, then you’re going to tolerate a lot of borderline acceptable behavior that does nothing to advance productive discussions but does make the place less pleasant. If you’re focused on the second goal however, then you will end up pushing away some commenters who could eventually become depolarized.
To formalize a bit: consider the population of new commenters that arrive on any given day. Some of them are wonderful; they’re not my concern here. Some of them are hostile and consistently attempt to ramp up polarization. Some of this polarized group can be lulled through your systematic peacemaking techniques into adopting more respectful discourse styles — this means that over the long term, they can be integrated as productive depolarized commenters. However, some of the polarized commenters have no hope of ever becoming depolarized commenters, no matter how you treat them.
If OW treats polarized commenters with kid gloves, then we increase the fraction of initially hostile commenters who depolarize. If OW treats them like long-time commenters are treated or worse, then we decrease that fraction. If that was all there was to it, I’d say we should treat new polarized commenters very gently indeed. But polarized commenters impose large costs to the community. Treating them with kid gloves encourages them to stick around spewing bile and lowering the quality of discourse. For those that eventually depolarize, that cost is balanced by an eventual benefit. But for those who remain polarized until they leave, that cost is never redeemed: we take the hit and never recoup anything.
So what kind of policy should we have? Depends on the community’s values in general. However, it also depends on matters of fact. If you believe that the fraction of initially polarized commenters that eventually depolarize is very low independent of whether they get kid glove treatment, then for almost any policy (where policy is a formal statement of community values), you shouldn’t treat them especially gently. Under that assumption, treating them especially gently imposes a large and immediate cost weighed against a small uncertain future gain.
Personally, I’m ambivalent about what choice to make. But if people want to make a choice, I’d like to at least know whether or not they’ve considered the tradeoffs properly.
The other way to approach a polarizing cycle is to try to calm down the emotional tone of the exchange, and it seems to me that extending an olive branch to the other person by finding something appreciative to say about their contribution is as good a way as any to do so. It doesn’t seem to me that doing this necessarily compromises my beliefs or positions, so I just don’t see a downside which would weigh against doing this.
There are downsides though: you risk reinforcing the notion in the commenter’s mind that their current behavior is acceptable or desirable. And why shouldn’t they assume that? You did compliment them after all…Moreover, this effect is not limited to them: others are watching and can take your cues to heart in the same way.
There are a couple of ways to try to defuse this polarizing cycle. One is to insist that people be specific and use quotations and links to reference what it is that they are reacting to.
TLTIA,
I’ve been mulling this over for a while. I think your approach of focused depolarization is sound and has a lot to recommend it, but I’m troubled by some aspects. I’ve tried to work through them below.
Gary has been leading the charge on that front for a long time, with what looks to me like mixed success.
Whether it has been successful or not may depend greatly on what your goal is. If your goal is to maximize the likelihood that any new commenter can productively engage and join the community no matter how polarized they are, then I think results have been very mixed indeed. But if your goal is to ensure that OW hosts productive discussions, then I think it has been more successful. If you’re focused on the first goal, then you’re going to tolerate a lot of borderline acceptable behavior that does nothing to advance productive discussions but does make the place less pleasant. If you’re focused on the second goal however, then you will end up pushing away some commenters who could eventually become depolarized.
To formalize a bit: consider the population of new commenters that arrive on any given day. Some of them are wonderful; they’re not my concern here. Some of them are hostile and consistently attempt to ramp up polarization. Some of this polarized group can be lulled through your systematic peacemaking techniques into adopting more respectful discourse styles — this means that over the long term, they can be integrated as productive depolarized commenters. However, some of the polarized commenters have no hope of ever becoming depolarized commenters, no matter how you treat them.
If OW treats polarized commenters with kid gloves, then we increase the fraction of initially hostile commenters who depolarize. If OW treats them like long-time commenters are treated or worse, then we decrease that fraction. If that was all there was to it, I’d say we should treat new polarized commenters very gently indeed. But polarized commenters impose large costs to the community. Treating them with kid gloves encourages them to stick around spewing bile and lowering the quality of discourse. For those that eventually depolarize, that cost is balanced by an eventual benefit. But for those who remain polarized until they leave, that cost is never redeemed: we take the hit and never recoup anything.
So what kind of policy should we have? Depends on the community’s values in general. However, it also depends on matters of fact. If you believe that the fraction of initially polarized commenters that eventually depolarize is very low independent of whether they get kid glove treatment, then for almost any policy (where policy is a formal statement of community values), you shouldn’t treat them especially gently. Under that assumption, treating them especially gently imposes a large and immediate cost weighed against a small uncertain future gain.
Personally, I’m ambivalent about what choice to make. But if people want to make a choice, I’d like to at least know whether or not they’ve considered the tradeoffs properly.
The other way to approach a polarizing cycle is to try to calm down the emotional tone of the exchange, and it seems to me that extending an olive branch to the other person by finding something appreciative to say about their contribution is as good a way as any to do so. It doesn’t seem to me that doing this necessarily compromises my beliefs or positions, so I just don’t see a downside which would weigh against doing this.
There are downsides though: you risk reinforcing the notion in the commenter’s mind that their current behavior is acceptable or desirable. And why shouldn’t they assume that? You did compliment them after all…Moreover, this effect is not limited to them: others are watching and can take your cues to heart in the same way.
Dear Whammer. I hope you are well.
I do not think I was unreasonable to declare my belief a discussion of abortion will be unproductive here. HOW can there be such a discussion when pro lifers and pro abortionists base their stands on opposing and irreconcilable first principles?
For the arguments, pro and con, on abortion, I recommend reading the discussion on abortion in Fr. Austin Fagothey, SJ, treatise on ethics called RIGHT AND REASON (C.V. Mosby, sixth ed., 1976). Fr. Fagothey bases the argument solely on reason and natural justice.
I realize this work may be difficult to find. So, if you wish, I’m willing to copy out the relevant sections and send it to you by email.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Whammer. I hope you are well.
I do not think I was unreasonable to declare my belief a discussion of abortion will be unproductive here. HOW can there be such a discussion when pro lifers and pro abortionists base their stands on opposing and irreconcilable first principles?
For the arguments, pro and con, on abortion, I recommend reading the discussion on abortion in Fr. Austin Fagothey, SJ, treatise on ethics called RIGHT AND REASON (C.V. Mosby, sixth ed., 1976). Fr. Fagothey bases the argument solely on reason and natural justice.
I realize this work may be difficult to find. So, if you wish, I’m willing to copy out the relevant sections and send it to you by email.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Whammer. I hope you are well.
I do not think I was unreasonable to declare my belief a discussion of abortion will be unproductive here. HOW can there be such a discussion when pro lifers and pro abortionists base their stands on opposing and irreconcilable first principles?
For the arguments, pro and con, on abortion, I recommend reading the discussion on abortion in Fr. Austin Fagothey, SJ, treatise on ethics called RIGHT AND REASON (C.V. Mosby, sixth ed., 1976). Fr. Fagothey bases the argument solely on reason and natural justice.
I realize this work may be difficult to find. So, if you wish, I’m willing to copy out the relevant sections and send it to you by email.
Sincerely, Sean
Sean: I appreciate your civil/courteous efforts to participate in this discussion, but you leave one question, previously asked by someone else, unanswered.
If, as seems to be the case – forgive me if I have misinterpreted you – you regard abortion as such an “absolute” issue that you will vote for any candidate who opposes it (i.e., would make it illegal) over any candidate who does not (i.e., would allow women, not the state, to choose), what is the point in your discussing any other issue?
Why bother to say – and here I paraphrase coarsely – “Obama’s policy on Iraq has me worried” or “I find McCain’s vision for the economic future of America compelling” when neither of these issues can sway your vote? What’s the point?
Sean: I appreciate your civil/courteous efforts to participate in this discussion, but you leave one question, previously asked by someone else, unanswered.
If, as seems to be the case – forgive me if I have misinterpreted you – you regard abortion as such an “absolute” issue that you will vote for any candidate who opposes it (i.e., would make it illegal) over any candidate who does not (i.e., would allow women, not the state, to choose), what is the point in your discussing any other issue?
Why bother to say – and here I paraphrase coarsely – “Obama’s policy on Iraq has me worried” or “I find McCain’s vision for the economic future of America compelling” when neither of these issues can sway your vote? What’s the point?
Sean: I appreciate your civil/courteous efforts to participate in this discussion, but you leave one question, previously asked by someone else, unanswered.
If, as seems to be the case – forgive me if I have misinterpreted you – you regard abortion as such an “absolute” issue that you will vote for any candidate who opposes it (i.e., would make it illegal) over any candidate who does not (i.e., would allow women, not the state, to choose), what is the point in your discussing any other issue?
Why bother to say – and here I paraphrase coarsely – “Obama’s policy on Iraq has me worried” or “I find McCain’s vision for the economic future of America compelling” when neither of these issues can sway your vote? What’s the point?
“I’m SUPRISED you insist on me being specific on how Al Gore behaved as a sore loser in 2000.”
Sean, if you’re going to make an allegation, expect people to ask you to support it. People interested in facts are funny that way.
“Because I THOUGHT everyone, deep down, knew he behaved exactly like that.”
You think everyone who likes Al Gore, which is more or less half the country, is faking it, because you disagree?
“…which discredited him forever as a future candidate.”
With the same people who would never vote for him in the first place. Back in objective reality, as is confirmable by any number of polls, your claim is obviously untrue.
Why is it that when facts are available in a few seconds, people can’t be bothered to check them, and come up instead with wacko “theories”?
I don’t get it. Just check the facts. Why not? It takes a few seconds. If you’re really clueless about Google, maybe a whole minute. Why not just check the facts?
“And why do you insist on me giving a detailed explanation of why I have a strong dislike for Teddy Kennedy?”
Sean, we can have a productive conversation about actual issues you do or do not agree with Senator Kennedy about, or not.
We can’t have any kind of productive or useful conversation about what someone “thinks” about something, that’s fact and content-free. It’s that simple. Emotions aren’t debatable, and why would anyone offer them up for discussion?
So, yeah, I don’t see much point in anyone offering pure content-free opinion, with no relationship to anything anyone can actually discuss: what’s the point? What’s your goal in throwing out such statements? Why should anyone be interested in anyone else’s emotional state about an issue of substance, if the goal is to reach a better understanding of… anything other than someone’s therapy, or inner emotional life?
So if you want to discuss Kennedy, or anyone or anything else, I urge you, and everyone, to offer up something we can discuss — in this case, specifics about what you don’t like about Kennedy’s substance and policies.
If you don’t want to, feel free to offer up nothing.
But what the point of statements like “I don’t like potatoes; potatoes make me nauseated,” when the point of the blog is to discuss issues, say, whether potatoes are a better crop for feeding the hungry than wheat, I have no idea.
“So, I was willing to leave it at the level of simple dislike ”
Why should anyone care about who or what you or I like or dislike, as regards any issue of substance? Is that what we’re here for? To talk about stuff that can’t possibly be debated?
Turbulence: “I’d much rather people rudely engage with me than civilly and politely refuse to take my arguments seriously.”
I’m not very interested in having discussions with people who wish to move beyond a certain level of rudeness, and into a certain level of personal abusiveness, and certainly when they start calling names. Life is too short, my emotional life is too fragile, my personal history is too fraught with childhood trauma as to that sort of thing, and I’m just not going to hang around for it if a gun isn’t pointed at my head. YMMV, but since you asked.
“I’m SUPRISED you insist on me being specific on how Al Gore behaved as a sore loser in 2000.”
Sean, if you’re going to make an allegation, expect people to ask you to support it. People interested in facts are funny that way.
“Because I THOUGHT everyone, deep down, knew he behaved exactly like that.”
You think everyone who likes Al Gore, which is more or less half the country, is faking it, because you disagree?
“…which discredited him forever as a future candidate.”
With the same people who would never vote for him in the first place. Back in objective reality, as is confirmable by any number of polls, your claim is obviously untrue.
Why is it that when facts are available in a few seconds, people can’t be bothered to check them, and come up instead with wacko “theories”?
I don’t get it. Just check the facts. Why not? It takes a few seconds. If you’re really clueless about Google, maybe a whole minute. Why not just check the facts?
“And why do you insist on me giving a detailed explanation of why I have a strong dislike for Teddy Kennedy?”
Sean, we can have a productive conversation about actual issues you do or do not agree with Senator Kennedy about, or not.
We can’t have any kind of productive or useful conversation about what someone “thinks” about something, that’s fact and content-free. It’s that simple. Emotions aren’t debatable, and why would anyone offer them up for discussion?
So, yeah, I don’t see much point in anyone offering pure content-free opinion, with no relationship to anything anyone can actually discuss: what’s the point? What’s your goal in throwing out such statements? Why should anyone be interested in anyone else’s emotional state about an issue of substance, if the goal is to reach a better understanding of… anything other than someone’s therapy, or inner emotional life?
So if you want to discuss Kennedy, or anyone or anything else, I urge you, and everyone, to offer up something we can discuss — in this case, specifics about what you don’t like about Kennedy’s substance and policies.
If you don’t want to, feel free to offer up nothing.
But what the point of statements like “I don’t like potatoes; potatoes make me nauseated,” when the point of the blog is to discuss issues, say, whether potatoes are a better crop for feeding the hungry than wheat, I have no idea.
“So, I was willing to leave it at the level of simple dislike ”
Why should anyone care about who or what you or I like or dislike, as regards any issue of substance? Is that what we’re here for? To talk about stuff that can’t possibly be debated?
Turbulence: “I’d much rather people rudely engage with me than civilly and politely refuse to take my arguments seriously.”
I’m not very interested in having discussions with people who wish to move beyond a certain level of rudeness, and into a certain level of personal abusiveness, and certainly when they start calling names. Life is too short, my emotional life is too fragile, my personal history is too fraught with childhood trauma as to that sort of thing, and I’m just not going to hang around for it if a gun isn’t pointed at my head. YMMV, but since you asked.
“I’m SUPRISED you insist on me being specific on how Al Gore behaved as a sore loser in 2000.”
Sean, if you’re going to make an allegation, expect people to ask you to support it. People interested in facts are funny that way.
“Because I THOUGHT everyone, deep down, knew he behaved exactly like that.”
You think everyone who likes Al Gore, which is more or less half the country, is faking it, because you disagree?
“…which discredited him forever as a future candidate.”
With the same people who would never vote for him in the first place. Back in objective reality, as is confirmable by any number of polls, your claim is obviously untrue.
Why is it that when facts are available in a few seconds, people can’t be bothered to check them, and come up instead with wacko “theories”?
I don’t get it. Just check the facts. Why not? It takes a few seconds. If you’re really clueless about Google, maybe a whole minute. Why not just check the facts?
“And why do you insist on me giving a detailed explanation of why I have a strong dislike for Teddy Kennedy?”
Sean, we can have a productive conversation about actual issues you do or do not agree with Senator Kennedy about, or not.
We can’t have any kind of productive or useful conversation about what someone “thinks” about something, that’s fact and content-free. It’s that simple. Emotions aren’t debatable, and why would anyone offer them up for discussion?
So, yeah, I don’t see much point in anyone offering pure content-free opinion, with no relationship to anything anyone can actually discuss: what’s the point? What’s your goal in throwing out such statements? Why should anyone be interested in anyone else’s emotional state about an issue of substance, if the goal is to reach a better understanding of… anything other than someone’s therapy, or inner emotional life?
So if you want to discuss Kennedy, or anyone or anything else, I urge you, and everyone, to offer up something we can discuss — in this case, specifics about what you don’t like about Kennedy’s substance and policies.
If you don’t want to, feel free to offer up nothing.
But what the point of statements like “I don’t like potatoes; potatoes make me nauseated,” when the point of the blog is to discuss issues, say, whether potatoes are a better crop for feeding the hungry than wheat, I have no idea.
“So, I was willing to leave it at the level of simple dislike ”
Why should anyone care about who or what you or I like or dislike, as regards any issue of substance? Is that what we’re here for? To talk about stuff that can’t possibly be debated?
Turbulence: “I’d much rather people rudely engage with me than civilly and politely refuse to take my arguments seriously.”
I’m not very interested in having discussions with people who wish to move beyond a certain level of rudeness, and into a certain level of personal abusiveness, and certainly when they start calling names. Life is too short, my emotional life is too fragile, my personal history is too fraught with childhood trauma as to that sort of thing, and I’m just not going to hang around for it if a gun isn’t pointed at my head. YMMV, but since you asked.
“PS. On a less tense note, I’m happy to say I was able to buy a near mint first edition hard cover of Poul Anderson’s classic SF novel BRAIN WAVE. At a very REASONABLE price. Also, do you know an SF writer named Tim Powers? I sometimes talk to him in the AOL Catholic Chat room.”
Brain Wave was a nice read in its day, and Poul a fine writer of many types of stories. I was pleased to meet him on numerous occasions, and to get to hang out at his daughter and son-in-law (Greg Bear)’s place in Washington on a couple of occasions. I remain extremely fond of a long list of Poul’s work, from Nick van Rijn and Dominic Flandry, through the Hoka stories, and Tau Zero, and The High Crusade, and “The Queen of Air and Darkness,” and on and on.
I’ve never had any direct contact with Tim Powers, beyond being in the same room with him a few times, and perhaps saying “hello,” and wouldn’t expect him to know me from a hole in the wall (though I’ve been surprised, at times, in the past, in that regard), but I’m certainly well familiar with him and his work, of course, ever since Epitaph in Rust, and, of course, The Anubis Gates, which won the Philip K. Dick Memorial Award in 1984, and brought Tim Powers to the attention of everyone who pays attention in the field.
Terrific writer, needless to say.
“PS. On a less tense note, I’m happy to say I was able to buy a near mint first edition hard cover of Poul Anderson’s classic SF novel BRAIN WAVE. At a very REASONABLE price. Also, do you know an SF writer named Tim Powers? I sometimes talk to him in the AOL Catholic Chat room.”
Brain Wave was a nice read in its day, and Poul a fine writer of many types of stories. I was pleased to meet him on numerous occasions, and to get to hang out at his daughter and son-in-law (Greg Bear)’s place in Washington on a couple of occasions. I remain extremely fond of a long list of Poul’s work, from Nick van Rijn and Dominic Flandry, through the Hoka stories, and Tau Zero, and The High Crusade, and “The Queen of Air and Darkness,” and on and on.
I’ve never had any direct contact with Tim Powers, beyond being in the same room with him a few times, and perhaps saying “hello,” and wouldn’t expect him to know me from a hole in the wall (though I’ve been surprised, at times, in the past, in that regard), but I’m certainly well familiar with him and his work, of course, ever since Epitaph in Rust, and, of course, The Anubis Gates, which won the Philip K. Dick Memorial Award in 1984, and brought Tim Powers to the attention of everyone who pays attention in the field.
Terrific writer, needless to say.
“PS. On a less tense note, I’m happy to say I was able to buy a near mint first edition hard cover of Poul Anderson’s classic SF novel BRAIN WAVE. At a very REASONABLE price. Also, do you know an SF writer named Tim Powers? I sometimes talk to him in the AOL Catholic Chat room.”
Brain Wave was a nice read in its day, and Poul a fine writer of many types of stories. I was pleased to meet him on numerous occasions, and to get to hang out at his daughter and son-in-law (Greg Bear)’s place in Washington on a couple of occasions. I remain extremely fond of a long list of Poul’s work, from Nick van Rijn and Dominic Flandry, through the Hoka stories, and Tau Zero, and The High Crusade, and “The Queen of Air and Darkness,” and on and on.
I’ve never had any direct contact with Tim Powers, beyond being in the same room with him a few times, and perhaps saying “hello,” and wouldn’t expect him to know me from a hole in the wall (though I’ve been surprised, at times, in the past, in that regard), but I’m certainly well familiar with him and his work, of course, ever since Epitaph in Rust, and, of course, The Anubis Gates, which won the Philip K. Dick Memorial Award in 1984, and brought Tim Powers to the attention of everyone who pays attention in the field.
Terrific writer, needless to say.
“Gary has been leading the charge on that front for a long time, with what looks to me like mixed success.”
Whether it has been successful or not may depend greatly on what your goal is. If your goal is to maximize the likelihood that any new commenter can productively engage and join the community no matter how polarized they are, then I think results have been very mixed indeed. But if your goal is to ensure that OW hosts productive discussions, then I think it has been more successful.
With regard to just the “mixed success” comment, my point was vastly simpler: it seems to me that in response to prompting from Gary some people have learned to use quotes and links, and others have not, with the split being about 50-50.
That was it. I wasn’t trying to make a more complex observation.
There are downsides though: you risk reinforcing the notion in the commenter’s mind that their current behavior is acceptable or desirable.
Personally, harshing on new people just isn’t my style (remember, I’m pretty new myself, so I can empathize with someone who finds this board a bit intimidating especially on a first visit), so I probably wouldn’t comment as frequently if that was the prevailing ethos around here, but I can see your point about the soft bigotry of low expectations and its destructive consequences for the broader community.
You may have noticed that I don’t go so far in extending gratuitous compliments to regular commenters of long standing who don’t seem to be in need of a friendly welcome, and it seems to me that it should be possible to cut people who are new some slack and then press for rising standards over time as they get settled in.
If doing that is destructive to the community vibe I would certainly respect the consesus of the commentariat regarding the preferred tone to be taken with people who are using polite words to say uncivil things.
“Gary has been leading the charge on that front for a long time, with what looks to me like mixed success.”
Whether it has been successful or not may depend greatly on what your goal is. If your goal is to maximize the likelihood that any new commenter can productively engage and join the community no matter how polarized they are, then I think results have been very mixed indeed. But if your goal is to ensure that OW hosts productive discussions, then I think it has been more successful.
With regard to just the “mixed success” comment, my point was vastly simpler: it seems to me that in response to prompting from Gary some people have learned to use quotes and links, and others have not, with the split being about 50-50.
That was it. I wasn’t trying to make a more complex observation.
There are downsides though: you risk reinforcing the notion in the commenter’s mind that their current behavior is acceptable or desirable.
Personally, harshing on new people just isn’t my style (remember, I’m pretty new myself, so I can empathize with someone who finds this board a bit intimidating especially on a first visit), so I probably wouldn’t comment as frequently if that was the prevailing ethos around here, but I can see your point about the soft bigotry of low expectations and its destructive consequences for the broader community.
You may have noticed that I don’t go so far in extending gratuitous compliments to regular commenters of long standing who don’t seem to be in need of a friendly welcome, and it seems to me that it should be possible to cut people who are new some slack and then press for rising standards over time as they get settled in.
If doing that is destructive to the community vibe I would certainly respect the consesus of the commentariat regarding the preferred tone to be taken with people who are using polite words to say uncivil things.
“Gary has been leading the charge on that front for a long time, with what looks to me like mixed success.”
Whether it has been successful or not may depend greatly on what your goal is. If your goal is to maximize the likelihood that any new commenter can productively engage and join the community no matter how polarized they are, then I think results have been very mixed indeed. But if your goal is to ensure that OW hosts productive discussions, then I think it has been more successful.
With regard to just the “mixed success” comment, my point was vastly simpler: it seems to me that in response to prompting from Gary some people have learned to use quotes and links, and others have not, with the split being about 50-50.
That was it. I wasn’t trying to make a more complex observation.
There are downsides though: you risk reinforcing the notion in the commenter’s mind that their current behavior is acceptable or desirable.
Personally, harshing on new people just isn’t my style (remember, I’m pretty new myself, so I can empathize with someone who finds this board a bit intimidating especially on a first visit), so I probably wouldn’t comment as frequently if that was the prevailing ethos around here, but I can see your point about the soft bigotry of low expectations and its destructive consequences for the broader community.
You may have noticed that I don’t go so far in extending gratuitous compliments to regular commenters of long standing who don’t seem to be in need of a friendly welcome, and it seems to me that it should be possible to cut people who are new some slack and then press for rising standards over time as they get settled in.
If doing that is destructive to the community vibe I would certainly respect the consesus of the commentariat regarding the preferred tone to be taken with people who are using polite words to say uncivil things.
“Is the idea here that we should do this in order to compensate for cognitive biases that cause us to give in-groups the benefit of the doubt more so than we would with out-groups?”
That seems only sensible to me, yes. Not to you?
“In short my view is that of George Washington, loosely quoted from memory: “Government is a dangerous servant but a worse master.” I am sure I’m wrong about the exact wording, tho.”
Not only that, it’s a famously phony quote, believed only by the credulous and gullible.
See here.
It’s really really useful to be able to find out how to tell truth from fiction, and to check facts. It prevents, you know, believing all sorts of untrue things.
See link for links. See more here.
“Is the idea here that we should do this in order to compensate for cognitive biases that cause us to give in-groups the benefit of the doubt more so than we would with out-groups?”
That seems only sensible to me, yes. Not to you?
“In short my view is that of George Washington, loosely quoted from memory: “Government is a dangerous servant but a worse master.” I am sure I’m wrong about the exact wording, tho.”
Not only that, it’s a famously phony quote, believed only by the credulous and gullible.
See here.
It’s really really useful to be able to find out how to tell truth from fiction, and to check facts. It prevents, you know, believing all sorts of untrue things.
See link for links. See more here.
“Is the idea here that we should do this in order to compensate for cognitive biases that cause us to give in-groups the benefit of the doubt more so than we would with out-groups?”
That seems only sensible to me, yes. Not to you?
“In short my view is that of George Washington, loosely quoted from memory: “Government is a dangerous servant but a worse master.” I am sure I’m wrong about the exact wording, tho.”
Not only that, it’s a famously phony quote, believed only by the credulous and gullible.
See here.
It’s really really useful to be able to find out how to tell truth from fiction, and to check facts. It prevents, you know, believing all sorts of untrue things.
See link for links. See more here.
“If the criteria for blocking is the presence of swear words, the battle has long been lost.”
I pointed this out a number of times, a few years ago, and then gave up.
Similarly, posting rules visible only from a tiny sidebar link that you’d have to go looking for to find, demonstrably don’t work, so I don’t understand the point of that, either. Either post them somewhere where people are forced to see the link before posting (the only chance to make the rules work), or give it up. The current system demonstrably doesn’t work. So switch to one that does, or quit banging your head against the wall. I don’t get why anyone would go for a third alternative, such as the current one, which is to have effectively invisible, as well as vaguely worded, “rules,” that are only seen by those who need to see them when someone points them out after the fact, which demonstrably does little to no good at all.
Repeatedly doing something that doesn’t work, over and over again, is often offered up as a definition of insanity. Certainly it’s tautologically futile.
But no one asked me, so I only mention this point on occasions it again seems relevant.
There’s naught so queer as folk. And I’ve never been able to understand some things about most people.
“If the criteria for blocking is the presence of swear words, the battle has long been lost.”
I pointed this out a number of times, a few years ago, and then gave up.
Similarly, posting rules visible only from a tiny sidebar link that you’d have to go looking for to find, demonstrably don’t work, so I don’t understand the point of that, either. Either post them somewhere where people are forced to see the link before posting (the only chance to make the rules work), or give it up. The current system demonstrably doesn’t work. So switch to one that does, or quit banging your head against the wall. I don’t get why anyone would go for a third alternative, such as the current one, which is to have effectively invisible, as well as vaguely worded, “rules,” that are only seen by those who need to see them when someone points them out after the fact, which demonstrably does little to no good at all.
Repeatedly doing something that doesn’t work, over and over again, is often offered up as a definition of insanity. Certainly it’s tautologically futile.
But no one asked me, so I only mention this point on occasions it again seems relevant.
There’s naught so queer as folk. And I’ve never been able to understand some things about most people.
“If the criteria for blocking is the presence of swear words, the battle has long been lost.”
I pointed this out a number of times, a few years ago, and then gave up.
Similarly, posting rules visible only from a tiny sidebar link that you’d have to go looking for to find, demonstrably don’t work, so I don’t understand the point of that, either. Either post them somewhere where people are forced to see the link before posting (the only chance to make the rules work), or give it up. The current system demonstrably doesn’t work. So switch to one that does, or quit banging your head against the wall. I don’t get why anyone would go for a third alternative, such as the current one, which is to have effectively invisible, as well as vaguely worded, “rules,” that are only seen by those who need to see them when someone points them out after the fact, which demonstrably does little to no good at all.
Repeatedly doing something that doesn’t work, over and over again, is often offered up as a definition of insanity. Certainly it’s tautologically futile.
But no one asked me, so I only mention this point on occasions it again seems relevant.
There’s naught so queer as folk. And I’ve never been able to understand some things about most people.
“even though she has no idea whether it’s right,”
All you have to do is ask.
Or google: swear filters. More.
I’m not clear what the exact question you have is, though. I’ll try to give or find you an answer, if you phrase a direct question.
“even though she has no idea whether it’s right,”
All you have to do is ask.
Or google: swear filters. More.
I’m not clear what the exact question you have is, though. I’ll try to give or find you an answer, if you phrase a direct question.
“even though she has no idea whether it’s right,”
All you have to do is ask.
Or google: swear filters. More.
I’m not clear what the exact question you have is, though. I’ll try to give or find you an answer, if you phrase a direct question.
“On the subject of the profanity ban […] I think it really does contribute the superior tone of discussion here. For one, it discourages bomb-throwers and insult specialists from posting here regularly.”
I strongly agree, and personally, I take offense easily at name-calling, so I very much prefer that the policy be maintained, no matter that it’s futile as regards almost any internet nanny software.
But I think we should see the warning before posting, a la the classic nn warning:
We already have to pass a captcha: use some non-broken software, and throw that up on the same, or another intercepting, page, too, and the damn warning will actually get read beforehand.
That, or nuke everyone from orbit. It’s the only way to be sure.
“On the subject of the profanity ban […] I think it really does contribute the superior tone of discussion here. For one, it discourages bomb-throwers and insult specialists from posting here regularly.”
I strongly agree, and personally, I take offense easily at name-calling, so I very much prefer that the policy be maintained, no matter that it’s futile as regards almost any internet nanny software.
But I think we should see the warning before posting, a la the classic nn warning:
We already have to pass a captcha: use some non-broken software, and throw that up on the same, or another intercepting, page, too, and the damn warning will actually get read beforehand.
That, or nuke everyone from orbit. It’s the only way to be sure.
“On the subject of the profanity ban […] I think it really does contribute the superior tone of discussion here. For one, it discourages bomb-throwers and insult specialists from posting here regularly.”
I strongly agree, and personally, I take offense easily at name-calling, so I very much prefer that the policy be maintained, no matter that it’s futile as regards almost any internet nanny software.
But I think we should see the warning before posting, a la the classic nn warning:
We already have to pass a captcha: use some non-broken software, and throw that up on the same, or another intercepting, page, too, and the damn warning will actually get read beforehand.
That, or nuke everyone from orbit. It’s the only way to be sure.
Sean, Tim Powers is a favorite of mine, too. I just recently read Three Days to Never and was deeply moved. I’ve commented elsewhere that it’s not very uncommon to find grim tragedy and all in good fiction, but it’s hard to do sadness well. It’s such a fragile, subtle emotion. But Three Days to Never really caught it, the sense that it’s just plain a shame that the world should be so and people have to do such.
Sean, Tim Powers is a favorite of mine, too. I just recently read Three Days to Never and was deeply moved. I’ve commented elsewhere that it’s not very uncommon to find grim tragedy and all in good fiction, but it’s hard to do sadness well. It’s such a fragile, subtle emotion. But Three Days to Never really caught it, the sense that it’s just plain a shame that the world should be so and people have to do such.
Sean, Tim Powers is a favorite of mine, too. I just recently read Three Days to Never and was deeply moved. I’ve commented elsewhere that it’s not very uncommon to find grim tragedy and all in good fiction, but it’s hard to do sadness well. It’s such a fragile, subtle emotion. But Three Days to Never really caught it, the sense that it’s just plain a shame that the world should be so and people have to do such.
“remember, I’m pretty new myself,”
Yes, but you’re a terrific contributor. And Turbulence is, overall, an excellent addition, as well, if, y’know, a tad argumentative, a trait I myself know nothing about.
“so I can empathize with someone who finds this board a bit intimidating especially on a first visit”
This probably means I shouldn’t point out that this isn’t a “board,” nor a “bulletin board system,” but a blog. 🙂
“remember, I’m pretty new myself,”
Yes, but you’re a terrific contributor. And Turbulence is, overall, an excellent addition, as well, if, y’know, a tad argumentative, a trait I myself know nothing about.
“so I can empathize with someone who finds this board a bit intimidating especially on a first visit”
This probably means I shouldn’t point out that this isn’t a “board,” nor a “bulletin board system,” but a blog. 🙂
“remember, I’m pretty new myself,”
Yes, but you’re a terrific contributor. And Turbulence is, overall, an excellent addition, as well, if, y’know, a tad argumentative, a trait I myself know nothing about.
“so I can empathize with someone who finds this board a bit intimidating especially on a first visit”
This probably means I shouldn’t point out that this isn’t a “board,” nor a “bulletin board system,” but a blog. 🙂
That seems only sensible to me, yes. Not to you?
I asked not because I disagreed per se but because I was uncertain what TLTIA had in mind.
Since you ask, I think holding in-groups to higher standard is better than doing nothing if one is concerned about compensating for this particular cognitive bias, but I’m skeptical whether it is particularly effective compared to alternatives. In engineering, active compensation is generally superior to passive compensation; ship captains and aircraft pilots avoid dead reckoning when possible. So my gut feeling is that active compensation might be superior.
What would active compensation involve? A commitment to hold all parties to the same standard coupled with repeated comparisons and attempts to justify contrary positions all rooted in the knowledge that we suffer from this bias and can’t completely trust ourselves. For example, when I hear something negative about Clinton and find myself giving credence to it, I try assuming that I’m only accepting it because I already dislike Clinton and then attempt to work my way to a contradiction. So I begin by asking if I know of comparable stories about other politicians and if so, did I feel the same way about those other politicians as I did about Clinton. If not, why not?
This might be only a matter of preference, but I dislike compensation techniques that rely on self deception; they seem too clever by half. Humans are very very good at self-deception, but I worry that we’re not particularly good at lying to ourselves in this particular way. Beyond that, the practical details nag at me: how much higher a standard should I hold in-groups to? Arbitrarily high? Surely not. Then where do you draw the line? You have to decide on a case by case basis, at the time when you’re already most emotionally invested in think well of the in-group. That doesn’t mean this approach is unworkable, but the practical problems suggest that we should consider alternatives.
The upshot here is that I’d much rather everyone could articulate the existence of common cognitive biases and admit that those biases affect their thinking sometimes rather than have everyone commit to holding in-groups to higher standards.
That seems only sensible to me, yes. Not to you?
I asked not because I disagreed per se but because I was uncertain what TLTIA had in mind.
Since you ask, I think holding in-groups to higher standard is better than doing nothing if one is concerned about compensating for this particular cognitive bias, but I’m skeptical whether it is particularly effective compared to alternatives. In engineering, active compensation is generally superior to passive compensation; ship captains and aircraft pilots avoid dead reckoning when possible. So my gut feeling is that active compensation might be superior.
What would active compensation involve? A commitment to hold all parties to the same standard coupled with repeated comparisons and attempts to justify contrary positions all rooted in the knowledge that we suffer from this bias and can’t completely trust ourselves. For example, when I hear something negative about Clinton and find myself giving credence to it, I try assuming that I’m only accepting it because I already dislike Clinton and then attempt to work my way to a contradiction. So I begin by asking if I know of comparable stories about other politicians and if so, did I feel the same way about those other politicians as I did about Clinton. If not, why not?
This might be only a matter of preference, but I dislike compensation techniques that rely on self deception; they seem too clever by half. Humans are very very good at self-deception, but I worry that we’re not particularly good at lying to ourselves in this particular way. Beyond that, the practical details nag at me: how much higher a standard should I hold in-groups to? Arbitrarily high? Surely not. Then where do you draw the line? You have to decide on a case by case basis, at the time when you’re already most emotionally invested in think well of the in-group. That doesn’t mean this approach is unworkable, but the practical problems suggest that we should consider alternatives.
The upshot here is that I’d much rather everyone could articulate the existence of common cognitive biases and admit that those biases affect their thinking sometimes rather than have everyone commit to holding in-groups to higher standards.
That seems only sensible to me, yes. Not to you?
I asked not because I disagreed per se but because I was uncertain what TLTIA had in mind.
Since you ask, I think holding in-groups to higher standard is better than doing nothing if one is concerned about compensating for this particular cognitive bias, but I’m skeptical whether it is particularly effective compared to alternatives. In engineering, active compensation is generally superior to passive compensation; ship captains and aircraft pilots avoid dead reckoning when possible. So my gut feeling is that active compensation might be superior.
What would active compensation involve? A commitment to hold all parties to the same standard coupled with repeated comparisons and attempts to justify contrary positions all rooted in the knowledge that we suffer from this bias and can’t completely trust ourselves. For example, when I hear something negative about Clinton and find myself giving credence to it, I try assuming that I’m only accepting it because I already dislike Clinton and then attempt to work my way to a contradiction. So I begin by asking if I know of comparable stories about other politicians and if so, did I feel the same way about those other politicians as I did about Clinton. If not, why not?
This might be only a matter of preference, but I dislike compensation techniques that rely on self deception; they seem too clever by half. Humans are very very good at self-deception, but I worry that we’re not particularly good at lying to ourselves in this particular way. Beyond that, the practical details nag at me: how much higher a standard should I hold in-groups to? Arbitrarily high? Surely not. Then where do you draw the line? You have to decide on a case by case basis, at the time when you’re already most emotionally invested in think well of the in-group. That doesn’t mean this approach is unworkable, but the practical problems suggest that we should consider alternatives.
The upshot here is that I’d much rather everyone could articulate the existence of common cognitive biases and admit that those biases affect their thinking sometimes rather than have everyone commit to holding in-groups to higher standards.
Just to clarify above: for me, holding in-groups to higher standards feels like self-deception because I remain committed to universal standards. Treating people in a knowingly stricter standard for no reason other than group identity galls me. So in order to hold in-groups to a higher standard, I end up temporarily maintaining the fiction that the universal standard actually is higher when considering my in-group. For people that are more comfortable accepting different standards for different people based on arbitrary criteria, this approach might not involve any self deception.
Just to clarify above: for me, holding in-groups to higher standards feels like self-deception because I remain committed to universal standards. Treating people in a knowingly stricter standard for no reason other than group identity galls me. So in order to hold in-groups to a higher standard, I end up temporarily maintaining the fiction that the universal standard actually is higher when considering my in-group. For people that are more comfortable accepting different standards for different people based on arbitrary criteria, this approach might not involve any self deception.
Just to clarify above: for me, holding in-groups to higher standards feels like self-deception because I remain committed to universal standards. Treating people in a knowingly stricter standard for no reason other than group identity galls me. So in order to hold in-groups to a higher standard, I end up temporarily maintaining the fiction that the universal standard actually is higher when considering my in-group. For people that are more comfortable accepting different standards for different people based on arbitrary criteria, this approach might not involve any self deception.
Dear Bruce. I trust you are well.
Thanks for your comment about Tim Powers. He’s a very nice guy, altho I’ve only talked to him in the AOL Catholic Chat room.
I liked THREE DAYS TO NEVER. Altho, it was not until Tim alluded to the Manichaeans that I got a handle on just WHY the Cabal was opposing the Israeli agents.
Besides ANUBIS GATES, I have other books by Tim. I esp. liked DECLARE.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Bruce. I trust you are well.
Thanks for your comment about Tim Powers. He’s a very nice guy, altho I’ve only talked to him in the AOL Catholic Chat room.
I liked THREE DAYS TO NEVER. Altho, it was not until Tim alluded to the Manichaeans that I got a handle on just WHY the Cabal was opposing the Israeli agents.
Besides ANUBIS GATES, I have other books by Tim. I esp. liked DECLARE.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Bruce. I trust you are well.
Thanks for your comment about Tim Powers. He’s a very nice guy, altho I’ve only talked to him in the AOL Catholic Chat room.
I liked THREE DAYS TO NEVER. Altho, it was not until Tim alluded to the Manichaeans that I got a handle on just WHY the Cabal was opposing the Israeli agents.
Besides ANUBIS GATES, I have other books by Tim. I esp. liked DECLARE.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Gary. I hope you are well.
Thanks for the notes you sent me. Here, I’ll reply to your comments about PA and Tim Powers.
I am JEALOUS that you actually met Poul Anderson six or seven times. It would have been a high honor if I could have done so.
I had the great honor of corresponding with PA off and on from 1978 to 1995. He replied to EVERY one of the sometimes far too long and argumentative letters I wrote to him.
In fact, a French scholar named Jean Daniel Breque found out I had corresponded with PA, and got into touch with me. M. Breque asked if I could assist with a book he was wrting about PA. I was glad to send him copies of all 24 of the letters PA and I exchanged. M. Breque did me the honor of saying he was delighted by the letters. And quoted from them nine or ten times in his book ORPHEE AUX ETOILES.
I have happy memories of the pleasure and insights books like BRAIN WAVE, THE BROKEN SWORD, THE HIGH CRUSADE, THREE HEARTS AND THREE LIONS, HARVEST THE FIRE, GOING FOR INFINITY, etc., have given me. And some of his short stories, like “Sister Planet,” “Nightpiece, and “The Martyr,” were moving or very disturbing.
I hope you someday get into touch with Tim Powers. He was always very nice to me in the Catholic Chat room. And I have enjoyed books of his like THE ANUBIS GATES, DECLARE, and THREE DAYS TO NEVER.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Gary. I hope you are well.
Thanks for the notes you sent me. Here, I’ll reply to your comments about PA and Tim Powers.
I am JEALOUS that you actually met Poul Anderson six or seven times. It would have been a high honor if I could have done so.
I had the great honor of corresponding with PA off and on from 1978 to 1995. He replied to EVERY one of the sometimes far too long and argumentative letters I wrote to him.
In fact, a French scholar named Jean Daniel Breque found out I had corresponded with PA, and got into touch with me. M. Breque asked if I could assist with a book he was wrting about PA. I was glad to send him copies of all 24 of the letters PA and I exchanged. M. Breque did me the honor of saying he was delighted by the letters. And quoted from them nine or ten times in his book ORPHEE AUX ETOILES.
I have happy memories of the pleasure and insights books like BRAIN WAVE, THE BROKEN SWORD, THE HIGH CRUSADE, THREE HEARTS AND THREE LIONS, HARVEST THE FIRE, GOING FOR INFINITY, etc., have given me. And some of his short stories, like “Sister Planet,” “Nightpiece, and “The Martyr,” were moving or very disturbing.
I hope you someday get into touch with Tim Powers. He was always very nice to me in the Catholic Chat room. And I have enjoyed books of his like THE ANUBIS GATES, DECLARE, and THREE DAYS TO NEVER.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Gary. I hope you are well.
Thanks for the notes you sent me. Here, I’ll reply to your comments about PA and Tim Powers.
I am JEALOUS that you actually met Poul Anderson six or seven times. It would have been a high honor if I could have done so.
I had the great honor of corresponding with PA off and on from 1978 to 1995. He replied to EVERY one of the sometimes far too long and argumentative letters I wrote to him.
In fact, a French scholar named Jean Daniel Breque found out I had corresponded with PA, and got into touch with me. M. Breque asked if I could assist with a book he was wrting about PA. I was glad to send him copies of all 24 of the letters PA and I exchanged. M. Breque did me the honor of saying he was delighted by the letters. And quoted from them nine or ten times in his book ORPHEE AUX ETOILES.
I have happy memories of the pleasure and insights books like BRAIN WAVE, THE BROKEN SWORD, THE HIGH CRUSADE, THREE HEARTS AND THREE LIONS, HARVEST THE FIRE, GOING FOR INFINITY, etc., have given me. And some of his short stories, like “Sister Planet,” “Nightpiece, and “The Martyr,” were moving or very disturbing.
I hope you someday get into touch with Tim Powers. He was always very nice to me in the Catholic Chat room. And I have enjoyed books of his like THE ANUBIS GATES, DECLARE, and THREE DAYS TO NEVER.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Gary.
Thank you for the correction re the Washington quote. AT most, only POSSIBLY by Washington. But most likely apocryphal. Noted.
Nonetheless, I agree with the SENTIMENT, whoever first said. And that is one, among many, why I oppose the Democrats: their drive to amass more and more power in the state.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Gary.
Thank you for the correction re the Washington quote. AT most, only POSSIBLY by Washington. But most likely apocryphal. Noted.
Nonetheless, I agree with the SENTIMENT, whoever first said. And that is one, among many, why I oppose the Democrats: their drive to amass more and more power in the state.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Gary.
Thank you for the correction re the Washington quote. AT most, only POSSIBLY by Washington. But most likely apocryphal. Noted.
Nonetheless, I agree with the SENTIMENT, whoever first said. And that is one, among many, why I oppose the Democrats: their drive to amass more and more power in the state.
Sincerely, Sean
Turb,
Your position makes sense to me in terms of logic, it’s just that I tend to follow my instincts guided by intuition and emotion as much as or more than what my intellect suggests. I just don’t feel comfortable harshing on new people, and the idea that maybe some people will respond in a positive manner if I try to open a conversation with them in a positive and supportive manner just feels right to me.
I’m not arguing that your more even-handed approach is either illogical or wrong, it just isn’t a good fit for my personal sense of style in terms of how to present an online persona. It is entirely possible that I am overcompensating for negative traits that I’m aware of in my real world personality (pedantic, overbearing, bad tempered, sarcastic, and I don’t suffer fools gladly).
I imagine that being more virtuous you are not under as much pressure to do that and can carry the mantle for logical and fair minded people more effectively than I could :->
YMMV, and don’t take any of this as criticism because I appreciate the more critical approach you take in your comments, it helps keep people here from getting away with BS that needs to be challenged (he says, having been on the receiving end on more than one occasion).
a tad argumentative
Gary,
Ya sure, none of us who spend our valuable frree time posting comments on blogs (not boards) would know anything about being argumentative. I resemble that remark 🙂
Also, good luck with the links and quotes bit. IMHO achieving a 50 percent success rate is a heroic achievement. And thanks for the praise, even if my current efforts may not merit it, living up to encouraging comments from you gives me something to shoot for.
Turb,
Your position makes sense to me in terms of logic, it’s just that I tend to follow my instincts guided by intuition and emotion as much as or more than what my intellect suggests. I just don’t feel comfortable harshing on new people, and the idea that maybe some people will respond in a positive manner if I try to open a conversation with them in a positive and supportive manner just feels right to me.
I’m not arguing that your more even-handed approach is either illogical or wrong, it just isn’t a good fit for my personal sense of style in terms of how to present an online persona. It is entirely possible that I am overcompensating for negative traits that I’m aware of in my real world personality (pedantic, overbearing, bad tempered, sarcastic, and I don’t suffer fools gladly).
I imagine that being more virtuous you are not under as much pressure to do that and can carry the mantle for logical and fair minded people more effectively than I could :->
YMMV, and don’t take any of this as criticism because I appreciate the more critical approach you take in your comments, it helps keep people here from getting away with BS that needs to be challenged (he says, having been on the receiving end on more than one occasion).
a tad argumentative
Gary,
Ya sure, none of us who spend our valuable frree time posting comments on blogs (not boards) would know anything about being argumentative. I resemble that remark 🙂
Also, good luck with the links and quotes bit. IMHO achieving a 50 percent success rate is a heroic achievement. And thanks for the praise, even if my current efforts may not merit it, living up to encouraging comments from you gives me something to shoot for.
Turb,
Your position makes sense to me in terms of logic, it’s just that I tend to follow my instincts guided by intuition and emotion as much as or more than what my intellect suggests. I just don’t feel comfortable harshing on new people, and the idea that maybe some people will respond in a positive manner if I try to open a conversation with them in a positive and supportive manner just feels right to me.
I’m not arguing that your more even-handed approach is either illogical or wrong, it just isn’t a good fit for my personal sense of style in terms of how to present an online persona. It is entirely possible that I am overcompensating for negative traits that I’m aware of in my real world personality (pedantic, overbearing, bad tempered, sarcastic, and I don’t suffer fools gladly).
I imagine that being more virtuous you are not under as much pressure to do that and can carry the mantle for logical and fair minded people more effectively than I could :->
YMMV, and don’t take any of this as criticism because I appreciate the more critical approach you take in your comments, it helps keep people here from getting away with BS that needs to be challenged (he says, having been on the receiving end on more than one occasion).
a tad argumentative
Gary,
Ya sure, none of us who spend our valuable frree time posting comments on blogs (not boards) would know anything about being argumentative. I resemble that remark 🙂
Also, good luck with the links and quotes bit. IMHO achieving a 50 percent success rate is a heroic achievement. And thanks for the praise, even if my current efforts may not merit it, living up to encouraging comments from you gives me something to shoot for.
At the risk of taking the thread even more off-topic:
But Three Days to Never really caught it, the sense that it’s just plain a shame that the world should be so and people have to do such.
I love Tim Powers’ works, but think he started to go a bit down-hill with the “ghost” stories, starting with Last Call. Three Days to Never was, for me, his weakest book — the actions of the characters didn’t flow form their histories. Compared with Stress of her Regard (to my mind, his best book), it seems a bit weak.
I hope he gets back to writing “non-connected” books soon.
We now resume the normal thread…
At the risk of taking the thread even more off-topic:
But Three Days to Never really caught it, the sense that it’s just plain a shame that the world should be so and people have to do such.
I love Tim Powers’ works, but think he started to go a bit down-hill with the “ghost” stories, starting with Last Call. Three Days to Never was, for me, his weakest book — the actions of the characters didn’t flow form their histories. Compared with Stress of her Regard (to my mind, his best book), it seems a bit weak.
I hope he gets back to writing “non-connected” books soon.
We now resume the normal thread…
At the risk of taking the thread even more off-topic:
But Three Days to Never really caught it, the sense that it’s just plain a shame that the world should be so and people have to do such.
I love Tim Powers’ works, but think he started to go a bit down-hill with the “ghost” stories, starting with Last Call. Three Days to Never was, for me, his weakest book — the actions of the characters didn’t flow form their histories. Compared with Stress of her Regard (to my mind, his best book), it seems a bit weak.
I hope he gets back to writing “non-connected” books soon.
We now resume the normal thread…
Dear Dr Ngo. I hope you are well.
Very well, you, Whammer, and Gary, have convinced me I should explanations of why I consider abortion an ABSOLUTE evil.
Please, give me time to finish copying the arguments, pro and con, about abortion from Fr. Austin Fagothey’s treatise on ethics: RIGHT AND REASON. One point I want to stress is that Fr. Fagothey concentrates on using only human reason and natural justice for analyzing the ethics of abortion in this treatise.
When I’m finished, I will let you know. And email it to you and any other interested persons who may wish to read it.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Dr Ngo. I hope you are well.
Very well, you, Whammer, and Gary, have convinced me I should explanations of why I consider abortion an ABSOLUTE evil.
Please, give me time to finish copying the arguments, pro and con, about abortion from Fr. Austin Fagothey’s treatise on ethics: RIGHT AND REASON. One point I want to stress is that Fr. Fagothey concentrates on using only human reason and natural justice for analyzing the ethics of abortion in this treatise.
When I’m finished, I will let you know. And email it to you and any other interested persons who may wish to read it.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Dr Ngo. I hope you are well.
Very well, you, Whammer, and Gary, have convinced me I should explanations of why I consider abortion an ABSOLUTE evil.
Please, give me time to finish copying the arguments, pro and con, about abortion from Fr. Austin Fagothey’s treatise on ethics: RIGHT AND REASON. One point I want to stress is that Fr. Fagothey concentrates on using only human reason and natural justice for analyzing the ethics of abortion in this treatise.
When I’m finished, I will let you know. And email it to you and any other interested persons who may wish to read it.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Dr Ngo. I hope you are well.
Very well, you, Whammer, and Gary, have convinced me I should explanations of why I consider abortion an ABSOLUTE evil.
Actually, that was not at all the thrust of my comment. I’m sure you have what you consider excellent reasons for your conviction and pretty sure I wouldn’t be swayed by them, but abortion is not really a discourse I particularly relish. I’d just as soon let it be. (You have happened on this blog during a period in which the notorious pro-choice warrior “Jesurgislac” is taking some time off. When she gets back, or if you venture to her site, you can get all the argument you would ever want.)
My question to you was different, however. Given that you have this “ABSOLUTE” conviction on abortion, and that therefore you will always support the anti-abortion candidate, why do you bother to discuss other issues, which cannot possibly affect your vote?
You say, for example, “why I oppose the Democrats: their drive to amass more and more power in the state.” One might well question whether those arms of the state concerned with “homeland security” and the invasion of privacy have ever been stronger than they have under the current Republican administration, nor whether the executive branch of the state has in general ever claimed such “power” as it has under GWB and his coterie. IOW, your factual premise is dubious at best. (And is it necessary to point out that the national debt, a crude but useful index of the power of the state, has skyrocketed to unprecedented heights under Republican presidents?)
But what would be the point of raising any of this with you? You cannot be convinced to change your partisan views, because the abortion issue, in your opinion, trumps all. GOP forever.
I can respect that, but I’m not sure I can enter into any meaningful dialogue with it. “Absolutes” of any sort tend to be conversation killers.
Dear Dr Ngo. I hope you are well.
Very well, you, Whammer, and Gary, have convinced me I should explanations of why I consider abortion an ABSOLUTE evil.
Actually, that was not at all the thrust of my comment. I’m sure you have what you consider excellent reasons for your conviction and pretty sure I wouldn’t be swayed by them, but abortion is not really a discourse I particularly relish. I’d just as soon let it be. (You have happened on this blog during a period in which the notorious pro-choice warrior “Jesurgislac” is taking some time off. When she gets back, or if you venture to her site, you can get all the argument you would ever want.)
My question to you was different, however. Given that you have this “ABSOLUTE” conviction on abortion, and that therefore you will always support the anti-abortion candidate, why do you bother to discuss other issues, which cannot possibly affect your vote?
You say, for example, “why I oppose the Democrats: their drive to amass more and more power in the state.” One might well question whether those arms of the state concerned with “homeland security” and the invasion of privacy have ever been stronger than they have under the current Republican administration, nor whether the executive branch of the state has in general ever claimed such “power” as it has under GWB and his coterie. IOW, your factual premise is dubious at best. (And is it necessary to point out that the national debt, a crude but useful index of the power of the state, has skyrocketed to unprecedented heights under Republican presidents?)
But what would be the point of raising any of this with you? You cannot be convinced to change your partisan views, because the abortion issue, in your opinion, trumps all. GOP forever.
I can respect that, but I’m not sure I can enter into any meaningful dialogue with it. “Absolutes” of any sort tend to be conversation killers.
Dear Dr Ngo. I hope you are well.
Very well, you, Whammer, and Gary, have convinced me I should explanations of why I consider abortion an ABSOLUTE evil.
Actually, that was not at all the thrust of my comment. I’m sure you have what you consider excellent reasons for your conviction and pretty sure I wouldn’t be swayed by them, but abortion is not really a discourse I particularly relish. I’d just as soon let it be. (You have happened on this blog during a period in which the notorious pro-choice warrior “Jesurgislac” is taking some time off. When she gets back, or if you venture to her site, you can get all the argument you would ever want.)
My question to you was different, however. Given that you have this “ABSOLUTE” conviction on abortion, and that therefore you will always support the anti-abortion candidate, why do you bother to discuss other issues, which cannot possibly affect your vote?
You say, for example, “why I oppose the Democrats: their drive to amass more and more power in the state.” One might well question whether those arms of the state concerned with “homeland security” and the invasion of privacy have ever been stronger than they have under the current Republican administration, nor whether the executive branch of the state has in general ever claimed such “power” as it has under GWB and his coterie. IOW, your factual premise is dubious at best. (And is it necessary to point out that the national debt, a crude but useful index of the power of the state, has skyrocketed to unprecedented heights under Republican presidents?)
But what would be the point of raising any of this with you? You cannot be convinced to change your partisan views, because the abortion issue, in your opinion, trumps all. GOP forever.
I can respect that, but I’m not sure I can enter into any meaningful dialogue with it. “Absolutes” of any sort tend to be conversation killers.
Sean: I forgot to provide a link to Jesurgislac’s blog.
Proceed at your own risk.
Sean: I forgot to provide a link to Jesurgislac’s blog.
Proceed at your own risk.
Sean: I forgot to provide a link to Jesurgislac’s blog.
Proceed at your own risk.
“Very well, you, Whammer, and Gary, have convinced me I should explanations of why I consider abortion an ABSOLUTE evil.”
I have no interest whatever in debating abortion, and won’t respond on the topic, and I’m pretty sure I know what your arguments are, so I urge you not to bother writing about them here. I know the arguments, I don’t agree, and I don’t care to argue back. Speaking only for myself. Maybe you and Jes can have fun. Or you and someone else. Have fun.
(You’re not going to convince me that a fertilized human cell, or any human embryo that has not yet developed a forebrain, is morally the same as a creature with a forebrain; end of story; don’t waste your time.)
“Very well, you, Whammer, and Gary, have convinced me I should explanations of why I consider abortion an ABSOLUTE evil.”
I have no interest whatever in debating abortion, and won’t respond on the topic, and I’m pretty sure I know what your arguments are, so I urge you not to bother writing about them here. I know the arguments, I don’t agree, and I don’t care to argue back. Speaking only for myself. Maybe you and Jes can have fun. Or you and someone else. Have fun.
(You’re not going to convince me that a fertilized human cell, or any human embryo that has not yet developed a forebrain, is morally the same as a creature with a forebrain; end of story; don’t waste your time.)
“Very well, you, Whammer, and Gary, have convinced me I should explanations of why I consider abortion an ABSOLUTE evil.”
I have no interest whatever in debating abortion, and won’t respond on the topic, and I’m pretty sure I know what your arguments are, so I urge you not to bother writing about them here. I know the arguments, I don’t agree, and I don’t care to argue back. Speaking only for myself. Maybe you and Jes can have fun. Or you and someone else. Have fun.
(You’re not going to convince me that a fertilized human cell, or any human embryo that has not yet developed a forebrain, is morally the same as a creature with a forebrain; end of story; don’t waste your time.)
I agree with Gary and Dr. Ngo on this one. A revisiting of abortion issues isn’t going to help anything. I’d skip it, certainly.
I find Dr. Ngo’s question much more interesting, and worth generalizing: For anyone who has an issue of absolute importance, is there a point in ever discussing anything else? What are the boundaries of this? How about non-absolute but terribly important ones? I’ve been wrestling a bit with it on and off myself, to no particular conclusion.
I agree with Gary and Dr. Ngo on this one. A revisiting of abortion issues isn’t going to help anything. I’d skip it, certainly.
I find Dr. Ngo’s question much more interesting, and worth generalizing: For anyone who has an issue of absolute importance, is there a point in ever discussing anything else? What are the boundaries of this? How about non-absolute but terribly important ones? I’ve been wrestling a bit with it on and off myself, to no particular conclusion.
I agree with Gary and Dr. Ngo on this one. A revisiting of abortion issues isn’t going to help anything. I’d skip it, certainly.
I find Dr. Ngo’s question much more interesting, and worth generalizing: For anyone who has an issue of absolute importance, is there a point in ever discussing anything else? What are the boundaries of this? How about non-absolute but terribly important ones? I’ve been wrestling a bit with it on and off myself, to no particular conclusion.
Dear Gary and Dr. Ngo. I hope you are well.
Very well, I will not send you the arguments against something as evil as abortion. It was as I pointed out some time ago: we cannot agree on FIRST principles. IOW, we can only oppose one another on matters like abortion.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Gary and Dr. Ngo. I hope you are well.
Very well, I will not send you the arguments against something as evil as abortion. It was as I pointed out some time ago: we cannot agree on FIRST principles. IOW, we can only oppose one another on matters like abortion.
Sincerely, Sean
Dear Gary and Dr. Ngo. I hope you are well.
Very well, I will not send you the arguments against something as evil as abortion. It was as I pointed out some time ago: we cannot agree on FIRST principles. IOW, we can only oppose one another on matters like abortion.
Sincerely, Sean