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#27 Jun 13 2020 at 4:17 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
I will do the same thing I always do when folks try to say "but we were just peacefully policing and these other people came in an killed black people"...
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#28 Jun 14 2020 at 11:39 AM Rating: Excellent
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Elinda wrote:


Also zerging is a video game thing, not to be confused with a real life thing.



You're telling me you can't think of a single example of smaller, weaker things (be they people or otherwise) in the real world overcoming fewer, more heavily fortified things in a swarming fashion? Or did you just not know what zerging was?
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#29 Jun 15 2020 at 8:35 AM Rating: Good
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Kuwoobie wrote:
Elinda wrote:


Also zerging is a video game thing, not to be confused with a real life thing.



You're telling me you can't think of a single example of smaller, weaker things (be they people or otherwise) in the real world overcoming fewer, more heavily fortified things in a swarming fashion? Or did you just not know what zerging was?

I thought I did, I went to the google to check, and yes, it's a gaming term for what you said - apparently originating in StarCraft. I'm most familiar with the zerg from the years I played Warhammer Online.

I don't think swarming the proverbial castle is the best method for structural change in the 2020 real world.
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#30 Jun 15 2020 at 1:55 PM Rating: Good
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I don't know, rushing is a pretty good strategy. Previous generations realised that Johnny Foreigner doesn't like the taste of cold steel, but recent scholarship has revealed that, far from being a unique quirk of the foreign mind, precious few people in fact like it up them.

In response, Boris Johnson has ordered the weekly bayoneting of all children, so as to build up an immunity.

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#31 Jun 16 2020 at 4:18 PM Rating: Good
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Elinda wrote:
I don't think swarming the proverbial castle is the best method for structural change in the 2020 real world.
Aside from voting, what do you think would be helpful?

At this point, with a new USPS head who's a Trump supporter I honestly thing mail-in ballots may not reach their intended home. What then? What's your breaking point?
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#32 Jun 30 2020 at 6:27 PM Rating: Decent
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Friar Bijou wrote:
You were kinda normal and reasonable for most of that post.

Having said that, this bit caught my eye.

gbaji wrote:
I will do the same thing I always do when folks try to say "but we were just peacefully protesting and these other people came in an rioted": If your protest is providing cover for the folks who are throwing bricks and bottles, then you are part of the problem. I'm not saying don't protest, but that your response to someone throwing something from anywhere near you should *not* be to roar louder, and wave your sign more. It should be to move as rapidly as possible away from the folks throwing stuff. Just move away. If everyone does this, then the folks throwing rocks find themselves standing alone with rocks in their hands, and the police can just walk over and arrest them without incident.
I recall saying something like this in regard to CLEARLY racist assholes attaching themselves to GOP/Tea party rallies. Funny how that never, ever, happened, right?


It never happened. Seriously. I don't know what Tea Party rally you are talking about, or if you're just parroting the "angry violent mob" narrative the media loved to throw out there (while labeling the actual violent and angry occupy protests "peaceful" at the same time). The Tea Party rallies were notable for how consistently anyone who got out of hand was isolated, pointed out to security and escorted out of the event. No rioting. No angry mobs. The only violence that occurred was when folks opposed to the Tea Party folks would show up and try to create violence. Again though, no one bought it. Everyone moved away and let the police remove the agitators.

That's the example of how to do this properly that I was talking about. Now if you have a specific case where a Tea Party got violent and out of hand, I'd really love to have you link to some sort of data about it. Because I've heard nothing but the opposite of what you are claiming.


Unless, of course, you're equating speech you disagree with as "violence". But that's an amazing double standard if you're trying to go that route.
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#33 Jul 07 2020 at 9:31 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
It never happened. .
Never.
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#34 Jul 07 2020 at 10:56 PM Rating: Excellent
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Friar Bijou wrote:
gbaji wrote:
It never happened. .
Never.

Never














will garbaji admit to being wrong, which is all the time, as his tiny brain would explode and he would pass out from lack of testicular fortitude
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#35 Jul 21 2020 at 4:29 PM Rating: Decent
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Friar Bijou wrote:
gbaji wrote:
It never happened. .
Never.


Your problem is that you are applying your assumption to my statement. I don't assume that someone who carries the Virginia Battle Flag (not the "Confederate Flag") is "clearly a racist asshole". That's your assumption. There are a whole lot of people who disagree with you, and not surprisingly most of them are conservative, and thus most likely to have been at an event like that in the first place, which kinda nullifies your opinion. Unless you walked up to each and every person at that event and asked them why they were flying that flag, and what that flag represented to them, you can't infer *anything* about them with regard to their views on race.

Additionally, while that article (which is so clearly unbiased, lol!) makes a big deal about park police and swat being called, there were no actual acts of violence. No clashes with said police at all. And it makes a big deal about damage to public property, but the only actual damage was to the temporary barricades set around the parks in order to artificially restrict access to parks that are normally unfenced and available to the public 24/7 even when there are no park personnel on the grounds. That was the big reason for the protest. Obama responded to the shut down by going way over the top to make it as painful for people as possible. Putting fences around parks that are normally freely open, is one example of the insanity he did there. Another was the absurdity of putting a drape on the window in the museum that houses the liberty bell. So normally, even when the museum is closed, folks can walk by on the street and *see* the bell. On no! We're shut down, so gotta block that view.

That went well beyond furloughing park personal. Way way beyond.

Which is funny because this is somewhat of a theme for the Dems. Fits in with their current policy of making the shutdowns as painful as possible to the public to service their political narrative. Hmmm... Almost like a pattern of behavior, right?

Edited, Jul 21st 2020 2:31pm by gbaji
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#36 Jul 22 2020 at 7:47 AM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Friar Bijou wrote:
gbaji wrote:
It never happened. .
Never.


Your problem is that you are applying your assumption to my statement. I don't assume that someone who carries the Virginia Battle Flag (not the "Confederate Flag") is "clearly a racist asshole". That's your assumption. There are a whole lot of people who disagree with you, and not surprisingly most of them are conservative

Because the they say they are not racist, they are not racists. You've totally convinced me with your amazing rebuttal!!

The swastika has may interpretations, but if I walk down the street with one on a flag or poster pretty much everybody knows where I stand.

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#37 Jul 22 2020 at 1:52 PM Rating: Decent
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Friar Bijou wrote:
Because the they say they are not racist, they are not racists. You've totally convinced me with your amazing rebuttal!!


What makes someone a racist (well, a racial bigot to be more technical) is if they actually engage in behavior that discriminates against people based on their race. Waving a symbol around that means one thing to them, but something else to you doesn't qualify for that label. That's you re-interpreting a symbol to mean something new and then applying it to them. Waving a flag around doesn't mean anything in terms of someone's actual behavior or beliefs. Well, it does, but based on that person's interpretation of the meaning of said flag. I wave the US flag and I see all the ideals upon which this nation was based and other "good things". Colin Kapernick sees the same flag and sees only the bad things about the US today which he doesn't like.

See how that works? You'd be wrong to see me waving a US flag and concluding that I like all the bad things that others see. Because I interpret the symbol differently. Same deal with the VBF. You simply can't assume what someone else view that flag to mean.

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The swastika has may interpretations, but if I walk down the street with one on a flag or poster pretty much everybody knows where I stand.


There's a key difference here. The swastika was adopted as an official symbol of the **** party in Germany. That party went on to gain power in Germany and their ideology of racial purity produced horrific harm to millions of people (we're not even talking about deaths in the war itself here). The point is that the folks who did this and held to that ideology took that symbol as their own.

What you're doing here is not looking at the flag of the Confederacy, but a flag that was specifically chosen to represent southern veterans and over time the south as a whole, with the intention of selecting a flag that was *not* associated with slavery and racism so as to effectively turn over a new leaf for the south, so to speak. But over time, idiots decided that it's a flag, and it represents the south, and the south had slavery, so therefor it must be a symbol of slavery and racism.

That would be like taking the German flag selected after the war with a clear separation from the **** regime, and then decades later decide that it too means racism and cleansing of all undesirables and whatnot. That's kinda ridiculous. It's artificially created conflict. You convince a bunch of people, ignorant of the past, that a flag means something it does not, spend a few decades repeating this message over and over, and then eventually you'll get enough people to believe it that they just can't understand why those people in the south who know what the flag really represents would fly a flag that so clearly (to the idiotic) is a symbol of racism and slavery. Um... But that's all in your head. Someone taught you that meaning for that flag. Why do you suppose that was?
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#38 Jul 22 2020 at 3:04 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Friar Bijou wrote:
Because the they say they are not racist, they are not racists. You've totally convinced me with your amazing rebuttal!!


What makes someone a racist (well, a racial bigot to be more technical) is if they actually engage in behavior that discriminates against people based on their race. Waving a symbol around that means one thing to them, but something else to you doesn't qualify for that label.
The Confedracy was wholly about keeping colored people as slaves. Full stop. Read the Consitution of the Confederacy and the Constitution of all related staes and thay ALL proclaim slavery as an inalienable right. Full stop again. Any flag remotely resembling the Confederate flag represents the same. To claim otherwise is assinine.


Grow the fuck up
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#39 Jul 22 2020 at 3:10 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
That would be like taking the German flag selected after the war with a clear separation from the **** regime, and then decades later decide that it too means racism and cleansing of all undesirables and whatnot.
So if I wave the LGBTQ flag and then switch to the anarchist flag that means the anarchist and the LGBTQ goals are the same?


Get a PET scan, man.
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#40 Jul 22 2020 at 3:39 PM Rating: Decent
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Friar Bijou wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Friar Bijou wrote:
Because the they say they are not racist, they are not racists. You've totally convinced me with your amazing rebuttal!!


What makes someone a racist (well, a racial bigot to be more technical) is if they actually engage in behavior that discriminates against people based on their race. Waving a symbol around that means one thing to them, but something else to you doesn't qualify for that label.
The Confedracy was wholly about keeping colored people as slaves. Full stop. Read the Consitution of the Confederacy and the Constitution of all related staes and thay ALL proclaim slavery as an inalienable right. Full stop again. Any flag remotely resembling the Confederate flag represents the same. To claim otherwise is assinine.


Um. Ok. How many times do I have to point out to you that at no point was the Virginia Battle Flag flown as the Confederate Flag? It does not resemble the actual Confederate Flag (although there were some later versions which included the VBF as a small portion within the larger flag, so there's that).

The VBF predates the Confederacy. That flag does not and has never represented "The Confederate Sates of America". Ever. It was a well known symbol in the South, not of slavery but a battle flag, used for decades while the southern states were all part of the US. The actual Confederate Flag had a field of blue with stars, and three stripes, two red, and one white. Aside from the color scheme, which btw is the same scheme used in most US flags, and kinda inherited from old Brittish flags colors, it bears no resemblance to the Confederate Flag.

There. Happy? It doesn't look like the Confederate flag. So any association with the Confederate states founding, focus on slavery and racism, etc, is entirely inside your own (and unfortunately many other people's) head.


Quote:
[Grow the fuck up


Strange coming from someone who continually repeats the same false premise and then insists we all join in his delusion to someone who's actually making an argument based on facts and data. Why don't you grow up, spend some time actually learning about the history of the flag in question and then maybe become educated on the subject instead of just having constant knee-jerk emotional reactions to something you've been trained like Pavlov's dogs to react to in exactly that way?

Again. Just a thought.
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#41 Jul 22 2020 at 3:50 PM Rating: Decent
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Friar Bijou wrote:
gbaji wrote:
That would be like taking the German flag selected after the war with a clear separation from the **** regime, and then decades later decide that it too means racism and cleansing of all undesirables and whatnot.
So if I wave the LGBTQ flag and then switch to the anarchist flag that means the anarchist and the LGBTQ goals are the same?


Huh? No. A better analogy would be folks attending a series of protests against unfairness in the current government, some of them are anarchists and are waving the anarchists flag, others are LGBTQ folks and are waving their flag (among others as well). Let's say that as part of this movement (whatever it is), the anarchists take control of the government, and proceed to put people in death camps for a few years until overthrown and order is restored. Then, decades later, someone looks at the fact that some of the folks in the original movement that lead to those anarchists taking over were waving LGBTQ flags as well, and declares that the LGBTQ flag is equivalent to those evil anarchists and anyone who waves it must really support the exact same form of anarchy that our hypothetical nation endured and should be attacked and proclaimed to be anarchists if they wave that flag.

Meanwhile the LGBTQ folks are going "huh? That's not what our flag means at all. Yeah, we supported that movement back then because we opposed a set of rules that oppressed us, but we certainly didn't condone the things the anarchists did when in power, and our flag certainly doesn't mean we agree with what they did'.

Se how that works. In the same way that the veterans latched on to the VBF as a means of representing themselves and their struggle after the war, and the citizens did as well, during the long rebuilding of the south after the war, finding it in a symbol of hope, strength and will to go on, that most specifically did *not* have association with the principles of the Confederacy itself (slavery, racism, etc). That was the precise point for using that flag.

That it's meaning has been twisted over time is what is sad here. The idea that General Lee's flag was a symbol of racism and white supremacy is a very new idea. Not sure where it came from, but it didn't exist when I was a kid (no one thought that the symbol was problematic when it was on the car in the Dukes of Hazard tv show, for example). So sometime after the 80s, perceptions changed. Again, not sure why, but they did. The question you have to ask is if a flag didn't have that meaning back when the historical events we're referring to existed, then why associate that meaning now?

That seems odd, don't you think?
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#42 Jul 22 2020 at 5:29 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
The idea that General Lee's flag was a symbol of racism and white supremacy is a very new idea. Not sure where it came from
Racists in the mid-20th century who used it as a rallying banner for denying Black Americans their rights and ginned up false "Southern pride" as an excuse to glorify white supremacy. This is pretty well documented so, next time you have no idea about something, you could probably spend five minutes on the internet looking it up rather than twenty minutes typing Zam manifestos.
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#43 Jul 23 2020 at 8:06 AM Rating: Decent
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Gbaji wrote:
What makes someone a racist (well, a racial bigot to be more technical) is if they actually engage in behavior that discriminates against people based on their race.


So you can't love or hate someone unless you behave in a certain way that demonstrates that feeling? I'm pretty sure I can have feelings toward someone and not demonstrate them.

Gbaji wrote:
Waving a symbol around that means one thing to them, but something else to you doesn't qualify for that label.
Sure, but that's how society works. Just because you view a picture of a woman riding cowgirl on a man as "Patriotic art of beauty" doesn't change how it will be accepted in society. I can also say me calling you an "idiot" is a sign of love, etc.
#44 Jul 23 2020 at 1:32 PM Rating: Decent
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Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
The idea that General Lee's flag was a symbol of racism and white supremacy is a very new idea. Not sure where it came from
Racists in the mid-20th century who used it as a rallying banner for denying Black Americans their rights and ginned up false "Southern pride" as an excuse to glorify white supremacy. This is pretty well documented so, next time you have no idea about something, you could probably spend five minutes on the internet looking it up rather than twenty minutes typing Zam manifestos.


Let me make one thing clear. I don't have a particular dog in this hunt. I've never flown that flag. I've never owned anything with it inscribed on it. I don't attach any particular weight to it. For me though, this is about process and how we do things as a society. It concerns me that we are allowing small fringe groups to define how we view things, and when we give in to those definitions, we allow those fringe groups/ideas to have power and agency over us.

Even at it's height, what percentage of the entire population do you suppose were in the KKK or other white supremacy groups? Heck. Let's even look at today? We're talking about groups that can barely manage to gather a few hundred people at a "big" rally somewhere. Contrast those numbers to the percentage of people who fly that flag for reasons having nothing at all to do with hate, bigotry, racism, or support for slavery or the ideals of the Confederacy.

That second number has always vastly outnumbered the first. Always. Even moreso today, where folks who are not from or in the south often see it as the "rebel" flag, and is just a general symbol saying "I'm not just going to roll over and do what the authorities tell me to do". The point here is that it's a small number who use it as a symbol of racism, yet we let them define what that means to all of us.

let's take a thought experiment. Let's imaging that a small hate group decides to use the rainbow flag as their symbol of bigotry. They fly this prominently at rallies promoting their hate message. Do we fast forward a few decades and insist that anyone waving that flag is a bigot and they should stop using it? Guess the LGBTQ folks will just have to find another symbol, right?

Fringe groups can do this with any existing symbol. That's the problem. We only empower them if we accept their meaning and interpretation and repeat it. Which is, unfortunately, exactly what has happened here. Again, my issue isn't with this particular flag, but with what the process suggests for us as a society. We should not allow fringe groups and ideas to so strongly influence us in this way.
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#45 Jul 23 2020 at 1:47 PM Rating: Decent
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Almalieque wrote:
Gbaji wrote:
What makes someone a racist (well, a racial bigot to be more technical) is if they actually engage in behavior that discriminates against people based on their race.


So you can't love or hate someone unless you behave in a certain way that demonstrates that feeling? I'm pretty sure I can have feelings toward someone and not demonstrate them.


No. I'm saying that you can't know what is happening inside someone else's head. You can't read their thoughts. You can only judge them based on actions. I'm countering the idea that since *we* associate a symbol with support for racism doesn't mean that the person displaying that symbol does, and thus can't assume that person is somehow declaring their racism when doing so.

We can and should only conclude someone is a racist if they actually engage in an act of racism. And again, flying a flag doesn't do that.

Quote:
Gbaji wrote:
Waving a symbol around that means one thing to them, but something else to you doesn't qualify for that label.
Sure, but that's how society works. Just because you view a picture of a woman riding cowgirl on a man as "Patriotic art of beauty" doesn't change how it will be accepted in society.


Um. That it's overwhelmingly going to be seen as art. Admittedly, art that may not be appropriate for all ages (which is itself a social more), but still art. No one would conclude that displaying such a picture (say in your home) means you are a sexist, or racist, or bigot of any kind. We could conclude that you perhaps find beauty in the human form and sexuality.

You kinda picked a weird example there. That's also not a "symbol", so kinda falls outside this discussion.

Quote:
I can also say me calling you an "idiot" is a sign of love, etc.


This is at least a bit closer, because words in language have accepted meanings, which is a step more specific than those of symbols, which may have many different meanings. So closer, but still not quite right.

I think the key bit here is that symbols do have multiple meanings. Always have. And yes, I get that this particular one right now has a specific meaning to many people. But I'm also trying to point out that a lot of that is the result of a long campaign to make people view the symbol that way. If you tell enough people for a long enough time that any symbol is a symbol of hate, then poll on how many people think it's a symbol of hate, you'll see a good percentage report that they think it's a symbol of hate. That's not education, that's indoctrination.

And to repeat my concerns from my previous post, it concerns me when that's how we define things. You can literally get a population to adopt *anything* if they are simply exposed to enough repetitive claims affirming that thing. Doesn't matter what it is. We should not form our opinions based on that methodology, but should educate ourselves instead. But most people don't want to bother doing that.
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#46 Jul 23 2020 at 2:17 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
The idea that General Lee's flag was a symbol of racism and white supremacy is a very new idea. Not sure where it came from
Racists in the mid-20th century who used it as a rallying banner for denying Black Americans their rights and ginned up false "Southern pride" as an excuse to glorify white supremacy. This is pretty well documented so, next time you have no idea about something, you could probably spend five minutes on the internet looking it up rather than twenty minutes typing Zam manifestos.


Let me make one thing clear. I don't have a particular dog in this hunt. I've never flown that flag. I've never owned anything with it inscribed on it. I don't attach any particular weight to it. I even have a black friend



FTFY
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#47 Jul 23 2020 at 2:19 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
Let me make one thing clear. I don't have a particular dog in this hunt. I've never flown that flag.

Yes, of course, "just asking questions" like Obama's birth certificate, etc. Funny the direction your questions always seem to go.

Anyway, I once spent far too much time attempting (in vain, apparently) to educate you about the flag and all that. I have no real desire to watch you "just ask questions" for another fifteen posts. I only answered above because it was a simple factual question to answer. Watching you "just ask questions" as you tapdance around it holds no interest for me.
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#48 Jul 23 2020 at 2:22 PM Rating: Good
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clickbait title: Rating up Joph; Like screaming into the Void?
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#49 Jul 23 2020 at 2:37 PM Rating: Decent
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Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Let me make one thing clear. I don't have a particular dog in this hunt. I've never flown that flag.

Yes, of course, "just asking questions" like Obama's birth certificate, etc. Funny the direction your questions always seem to go.


Taking positions based on the principle and methodlogy involved rather than how the thing affects me personally? Yeah. Isn't that how we should do things?

Quote:
Anyway, I once spent far too much time attempting (in vain, apparently) to educate you about the flag and all that. I have no real desire to watch you "just ask questions" for another fifteen posts. I only answered above because it was a simple factual question to answer. Watching you "just ask questions" as you tapdance around it holds no interest for me.


I don't recall me "just asking questions" here though Joph. I pretty specifically recall making a rather direct point about how we as a society decide how to determine what symbols we should condone or condemn, and that the way this one is going is not the correct method. You're free to ignore my actual point and go off on a strange historical tangent, but then that's you avoiding the actual argument I'm making.

My point about my personal opinion of the battle flag is to make it clear that this isn't about "that flag" for me. It is, and has always been about the methodology we follow and whether I think that's the right way to make decisions as a society. What's funny is that both of you decided to completely ignore the actual argument I was making in favor of what is essentially window dressing.

I'd be making the same argument about any symbol being condemned in this manner.

Edited, Jul 23rd 2020 12:55pm by gbaji
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#50 Jul 23 2020 at 5:16 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
You're free to ignore my actual point and go off on a strange historical tangent

I literally answered the question you asked. But you wouldn't be you if you weren't playing the crying martyr.
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#51 Jul 23 2020 at 6:46 PM Rating: Excellent
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