From a comment on a social media post advocating that we stop protesting people with Trump hats:
Here was my response:
This is an increasing problem with relativist views. I see it in my students often who really want everyone to be right all the time. "He's not wrong; he just has a different idea." But there can be right and wrong ideas. In fact, there HAS to be. We have to all agree that holding a view that harming other people based on their group affiliation is just plain wrong. People who hold that immoral view have to be TOLD they're wrong over and over by everyone they meet.
Or else. If that view gains traction, which it is, then we KNOW the path our society could take. It's up to us, right now, to stop it in its tracks.
ETA in brief:
Her: Allowing the state to dictate what we're allowed to do or not allowed to do is advocating totalitarianism.
Me: That's a slippery slope. Canadians have lived with hate crime laws on the books for decades without becoming totalitarian in nature. We are able to stop discrimination without lumping in non-discriminatory actions. It is possible to create a clear line.
For the Popper quote, see Notes to Chapter 7, in The Open Society and Its Enemies, or page 544 of this PDF.
"The trouble with refusing to serve someone because you abhor their views, is that tomorrow someone else will do the same thing to you."
Here was my response:
That's like saying we have to tolerate everything in order to support tolerance. We don't. As Popper said, "We should claim, in the name of tolerance, the right not to tolerate the intolerant." It's not that one principle has to govern all actions, but that we have to look at the use of the principle and decide from there. Someone with a Nazi armband can be ousted from a restaurant by the owner because they clearly and openly advocate harm to a group of people, which we can all agree is heinous and wrong. But someone with a rainbow shirt isn't advocating harm to anyone; they just want to be allowed to exist. So refusing them service should cause an outrage.
This is an increasing problem with relativist views. I see it in my students often who really want everyone to be right all the time. "He's not wrong; he just has a different idea." But there can be right and wrong ideas. In fact, there HAS to be. We have to all agree that holding a view that harming other people based on their group affiliation is just plain wrong. People who hold that immoral view have to be TOLD they're wrong over and over by everyone they meet.
Or else. If that view gains traction, which it is, then we KNOW the path our society could take. It's up to us, right now, to stop it in its tracks.
ETA in brief:
Her: Allowing the state to dictate what we're allowed to do or not allowed to do is advocating totalitarianism.
Me: That's a slippery slope. Canadians have lived with hate crime laws on the books for decades without becoming totalitarian in nature. We are able to stop discrimination without lumping in non-discriminatory actions. It is possible to create a clear line.
For the Popper quote, see Notes to Chapter 7, in The Open Society and Its Enemies, or page 544 of this PDF.
6 comments:
I should probably read The Open Society, but I suspect Popper is delving into a philosophical pseudo-problem. Tolerance per se isn't a virtue, it's a tool: we should tolerate the tolerable and condemn the intolerable. We should, for example, tolerate homosexuality not because tolerance itself is a virtue but because homosexuality is tolerable. We should not tolerate racism because racism is intolerable. We can disagree about what is tolerable and what is intolerable, but arguing on the basis that tolerance itself is a virtue is absurd.
Never mind hate speech or hate crime laws, the notion that "[a]llowing the state to dictate what we're allowed to do or not allowed to do is advocating totalitarianism" is absurd on its face. First, that's what the state is for. The state dictates, for example, that we are not allowed to arbitrarily kill each other. More importantly, even in a democratic republic, the state is not some exogenous entity: it is part of society, and the individuals in that society have considerable influence on what the state can and cannot dictate.
@Larry - Absolutely! Unfortunately neither I nor another commenter could convince the original poster. As we tag-teamed her, trying to explain this idea in a variety of ways, she shut us up with, "LOL round and round we go!" because obviously she is either unwilling or unable to see the reason behind our arguments.
Of course you couldn't. You can't reason a person out of a position they didn't reason themselves into.
But the larger issue is, I think, just the idea that tolerance by itself is a virtue is not really tenable.
"The trouble with refusing to serve someone because you abhor their views, is that tomorrow someone else will do the same thing to you." Well, duh. Of course they will. We might as well say that the "trouble" with disagreeing with someone is that tomorrow someone else will disagree with you. The trouble with voting against someone is that someone else will vote against you.
If, for example, Sarah Huckabee Sanders is a good person, then it was a terrible thing to deny her service; if she's a terrible person, it was good to deny her service. To say that it's bad per se to deny her service regardless of whether she's a good person or a terrible person is nonsense.
I expect people who think I'm terrible to try to ostracize me. If they really believe I'm terrible, then it would be cowardice to refuse to confront me. I don't expect to live without conflict. One of the reasons I try not to be a terrible person is precisely so people don't ostracize me.
Yes, you've got at the crux of the problem.
Here in the United States of America, people have the political freedom to campaign for a candidate for President of the United States, who is both Head of State and Head of Government under our system. This freedom includes the freedom to wear shirts and hats supporting their desired candidate for President as well as other political offices, to make campaign speeches supporting their desired candidate, etc. Once the President is elected, the people have the freedom to continue wearing shirts and hats supporting their President. I did not support nor vote for Trump, however I believe that if these sorts of political freedoms were stripped away from people under the pretense that they could lead to a Hitler, our system would become a sham-democracy.
Marie, I apologize for leading DVJ your way. He's descending into total lunacy on my blog, and I've asked him there to cool his jets, and now he's come here and inflicting himself on you.
Dustin, literally nobody but paranoid lunatics are talking about stripping away anyone's political freedoms. There is a vast middle ground between throwing people in prison for saying the wrong thing on the one hand, and silently and uncritically accepting anything that anyone says, however stupid, ignorant, wrong, or evil, on the other hand.
You have the right to speak, and I have the right to say that your speech is stupid, ignorant, wrong, and evil, if I think that it it. You have the right to wear an MAGA hat, and I have the right to give you the finger when I see it.
Please stop acting like a little special snowflake who can't handle a little criticism without seeing mobs of jackbooted thugs approaching with torches and pitchforks. It's really getting pathetic and tiresome. Get your shit together.
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