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What does this have to do with what I said or the discussion at hand? I know that radical people exist. Just because an idea can be taken too far doesn't mean that a healthy medium can't be found.Thepowaofhax said:Really? Because I see a bunch of radical feminists spewing **** like #killallmen. I'd still defend them even if they were being charged, such as Bahar Mustafa. It's still their freedom of speech, and if it is a private Facebook and not a public one it shouldn't matter until it leaks into the public one and they start spouting hate speech.
So... young adults can be pretentious? Again, you're blowing things out of proportion, and again, I don't really see the relevance of this.It is a majority. Just look at any college in America. You will have a majority of idiotic college students who don't want to here other peoples opinions, claim that x is privileged when they are themselves privileged, and other holier-than-thou ****.
Um... no?The idea of safe spaces are to save our idiot college students from other opinions because they don't feel like wanting to listen to them.
A "safe space":
A place where anyone can relax and be fully self-expressed, without fear of being made to feel uncomfortable, unwelcome or challenged on account of biological sex, race/ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, cultural background, age, or physical or mental ability; a place where the rules guard each person's self-respect, dignity and feelings.
It's literally just a group where people who face discrimination can go to be sure of being treated with respect. I don't understand your problem and I think, again, you're jumping to conclusions about something you don't actually know that much about.
I already told you I thought it was over the top. I think the general idea is a good one, though, regardless of some of the weirder parts. Like I said in my first post in this thread, I know that there are cases of people going to far with political correctness. That doesn't make it a bad idea.So you don't find it a problem for not stating facts such as America is the land of opportunity? I find this idiotic that you would be pro-censorship over this kind of phrase.
What? This is so exhausting. You change what you're arguing every time you reply. What relevance do "neo-progressives who think they have a place to be offended for other people" have and when did I mention them? We were talking about the effect words (slurs or generally bigoted statements) can have on marginalized groups, not whatever "neo progressives" you've decided to complain about. Also, what is "being offended for other people"? Just because I'm white doesn't mean I'm going to ignore someone when they're being blatantly racist. Yeah, people can get self righteous about being progressive but like... "some people are annoying" isn't a new concept and doesn't have anything to do with political correctness being a bad idea or not.If I have no place, then why do the neo-Progressives think they have a place to be offended for other people? Clearly that is illogical. Again, we can ignore and use block buttons if they're just spouting racist/sexist ****. If they're doing bigoted actions, spewing hate speech, or discriminating people (such as denying someone a job based on sex), then they should be fired.
My point was the bigoted statements/actions aren't something that we should be taking lightly, and that "just toughen up" is a dumb thing to say, especially if you have never been targeted for your race/sexuality/whathaveyou. Obviously you can block people who harass you online, but these things don't always come from internet trolls. You can't just block friends and family who are bigoted towards you (which is where political correctness comes in - people should know better than to make those kinds of comments).
I wanna quote Psychic here because I think this applies to you:
A lot of people don't benefit from political correctness, so it's unsurprising that they're the ones who push back against it the most
You've pretty continuously made little of the effect of discrimination and bigotry in favour of complaining about where your problems are, radical internet progressives. You think the cons outweigh the pros because the pros rarely affect you.