do evil games expect evil prizes, thank you Rainer Forst

edit: this is a pedagogical post, not a philosophical one. i actually fully agree with the paradox of tolerance and its conclusion! i just find that it doesn’t work as well as an educational tool for introducing people to the concept. sorry for any confusion :)

  • Dogiedog64@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    It’s simple really. A tolerant society cannot exist if intolerant factions are tolerated. Ergo, bash the fash.

      • CommanderCloon@lemmy.ml
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        22 days ago

        It’s way simpler to say that tolerance is a contract and you’re not bound by a contract breached by the other party, that description isn’t paradoxical in any way

        • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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          22 days ago

          Yes, if you’re looking for a simple way to express the concept, that’s a good way to do it.

          Poppler’s formulation isn’t meant to be simple. It’s meant to be complete.

          If I’m teaching an end user how to use the program I wrote, I’m not going to explain the code line by line. But if they ask me why it can’t do some random and largely impossible thing that they want, I absolutely need to understand the code in order to explain why that isn’t possible.

          Understanding Poppler’s formulation allows you to address the many ways in which people will try to undermine your simplified version. An example I’ve used elsewhere in this thread is the idea that “We can’t ban Nazis from our platform because then we’d have to ban all forms of political expression. Otherwise we’re just playing favourites.” It’s the “If you censor me then you’re the one being intolerant” argument, usually strapped to a slippery slope fallacy about how you’ll never stop censoring stuff once you start. And it’s very, very effective. Lots of well meaning people who are not Nazis or Nazis sympathizers can still be very easily swayed by this logic.

          Poppler cuts through all that. He gives us a clear and definite criteria for what ideas are acceptable and what aren’t, and an ironclad justification for why. The theory he lays out is essential knowledge if you ever want to successfully defend the position expressed by “Tolerance is a social contract,” or the “Nazi bar” analogy, or any other excellent ways of introducing these ideas.

          You don’t have to start with Poppler’s paradox, but sooner or later you will need it.

      • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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        22 days ago

        i agree with what it says. i just don’t think it’s good as an educational tool for introducing people to the concept.

        e: oops sorry for the double comment

    • theneverfox@pawb.social
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      22 days ago

      I think it’s more fundamental than that

      Tolerance means you accept everyone into the social contract. Everyone. Even the nazis

      It’s inappropriate to hit on someone during a work meeting. Inappropriate for gay people, inappropriate for straight people, inappropriate for everyone. At a bar, it’s generally appropriate until told otherwise

      If anyone doesn’t follow the social contract, you respond appropriately based on the situation

      It’s inappropriate in pretty much all situations to express a desire for ethnic cleansing. It’s inappropriate to say bigoted things. It’s extremely inappropriate to act towards such goals. You should respond appropriately based on the context, as per the social contract

      There’s no paradox. You accept the nazis, until they start acting like nazis. If they keep that shit buried deep down, you tolerate them. If they don’t, they’ve broken the social contract

      • Dogiedog64@lemmy.world
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        22 days ago

        No. The second you “”“accept”“” the Nazis, your society is no longer tolerant, and is in fact a Nazi state. Get real, bootlicker.

        • theneverfox@pawb.social
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          21 days ago

          Think about it for 2 seconds.

          You don’t know what’s in their heart. And frankly, it doesn’t matter.

          If they act like a nazi, such as saying Nazi-like things, organizing for Nazi-aligned causes, or spreading hate/violence, you respond appropriately. From social rejection to disrupting them to outright violence, you fight.

          Otherwise, how do you even know they’re a Nazi? They might be an idiot swayed by propaganda on fox, they might be an edge lord looking for a reaction, they might be a reformed former Nazi. They might just give you weird vibes and not be a Nazi at all.

          These are people we need to reform, not herd into the Nazi echo chambers to become full blown Nazis. They still exist whether you accept them or not

          If you want less Nazis in the world, either you kill Nazis, you reduce their recruitment, or you reform them.

          That’s what tolerance is- you don’t make assumptions about the person, you say “these behaviors are tolerable, these ones aren’t”

      • latenightnoir@lemmy.world
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        22 days ago

        Well… half an egg on my face for not reading it, half-kudos for getting it right anyway!:)))

        Thank you for the truth! Sincerely!

        • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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          22 days ago

          i guess my meme was not clear lol. i fully agree with the paradox of tolerance and its conclusion. i just think the paradox as a tool for teaching people about the nuances of tolerance is ineffective in comparison to the social contract.

          • latenightnoir@lemmy.world
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            22 days ago

            I can certainly understand where you’re coming from, reading the actual philosophical postulates feels like technobabble after a point. But that’s philosophy, it really likes $20 words (and so do I, won’t lie!:)) )

            As for the layman, I think the “talk shit, get hit” rule is a better exemplifier. One would assume that most people understand what the aforementioned “shit” represents, maybe highlighting that Fashspeak is among the vilest examples of such would more easily contextualise it?

            Genuinely wondering, I realise that while my intent to study philosophy was my own, the time and opportunities to do so have been a privilege.

            • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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              22 days ago

              yeah i think that’s valid. something like a progression in a discussion as understanding increases wouldn’t be amiss i feel.

              ⬇️less understanding

              • talk (or do) shit, get hit
              • tolerance is like a contract
              • unlimited tolerance is impossible; enforcing universal tolerance leads to a paradoxical increase of intolerance

              ⬇️more understanding

              • latenightnoir@lemmy.world
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                22 days ago

                Oooh, I love that, it lays everything out very neatly! I’ll totally steal this progression next time this subject pops up!

  • sircac@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    Just be tolerant with the tolerants while intolerant with the intolerants, like a prisioner dilema strategy

      • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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        22 days ago

        i agree with what it says. i just don’t think it’s good as an educational tool for introducing people to the concept.

        • Zess@lemmy.world
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          22 days ago

          I’m not sure what concept you’re trying to introduce to people, but if they don’t understand the paradox of tolerance then you aren’t explaining it very well because it’s extremely easy to understand.

          • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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            22 days ago

            tell that to the 9373626 internet arguments i’ve seen misunderstanding it and saying “its a paradox there is no solution” lol

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      22 days ago

      yup! it’s quite simple and i wish the internet wasn’t so primed to cite the paradox posing a problem rather than saying the solution

      i see people get confused by the paradox all the time, because they are used to the concept of the logical kind of paradox which has no solution.

      but the concept of the social contract is intuitive. easy peasy.

      • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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        16 days ago

        i really wish this was taught with emphasis at schools, so many people think hostility is inherently the best strategy when almost universally the best thing for everyone is to just cooperate.

        even in nature where one would be lead to expect extreme violence and selfishness to be the best strategy, we see that most animals most of the time just… get along… You even have predators and prey giving each other side eye at watering holes because everyone needs to drink and thus the optimal strategy is for water in dry areas to generally be a neutral zone.

        Evolution tends to favour cooperation because it’s just obviously more efficient for two creatures to share resources rather than spend energy fighting over it. Why wrestle someone for an apple when you could instead spend the energy lifting them on your shoulders so they can reach the apples on a tree?

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      22 days ago

      precisely! such a consistent breadth of misunderstanding is why i prefer the contract as a method for introducing the concept.

      paradox is fine for more advanced discussions, like investigating why the moderate ideal of “unlimited tolerance, always” just leads to more intolerance.

      but for people (most!) who are new to it? just use the simpler argument first. there’s no point in shaming them for not “just getting” a more lofty model of understanding, when you can easily switch to the lower level, intuitive language, at least until a foundational understanding is reached.

  • Kidplayer_666@lemm.ee
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    22 days ago

    Less well known [than other paradoxes] is the paradox of tolerance: Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them. In this formulation, I do not imply, for instance, that we should always suppress the utterance of intolerant philosophies; as long as we can counter them by rational argument and keep them in check by public opinion, suppression would certainly be most unwise. But we should claim the right to suppress them if necessary even by force; for it may easily turn out that they are not prepared to meet us on the level of rational argument, but begin by denouncing all argument; they may forbid their followers to listen to rational argument, because it is deceptive, and teach them to answer arguments by the use of their fists or pistols. We should therefore claim, in the name of tolerance, the right not to tolerate the intolerant. We should claim that any movement preaching intolerance places itself outside the law and we should consider incitement to intolerance and persecution as criminal, in the same way as we should consider incitement to murder, or to kidnapping, or to the revival of the slave trade, as criminal. Karl Popper, 2 sentences after defining the paradox of tolerance he shows an easy answer to it. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradox_of_tolerance

    • TotallynotJessica@lemmy.world
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      22 days ago

      It’s more shorthand for the absurdity of tolerating intolerance. It’s a paradox of absolute tolerance, not of reality. It’s not meant to be unsolvable in practice, only unsolvable within the frameworks of spineless moderates.

      • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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        22 days ago

        It’s a paradox of absolute tolerance

        Literally! But I see people drop the “absolute” off the name all the time in conversations that introduce the concept (it’s not even in the Wikipedia title, despite “unlimited” being in the original author’s quote) which understandably scrambles the conversation. At best it leads to misunderstanding that needs to be corrected, at worst it leads to people calling each other nazi simps for not just “getting it.”

        • TotallynotJessica@lemmy.world
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          22 days ago

          That’s because seeing it that way is convenient. Any idea can be watered down and used for manipulation, from Marxism to loving your neighbor.

      • Kidplayer_666@lemm.ee
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        22 days ago

        Usually used by people who think it is adequate to respond to words that hurt their feelings with physical violence

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      22 days ago

      right, so if it’s a problem that’s always had an easy answer, why do i hear about the problem all the damn time 😡

      name one other example of a “paradox” being used as justification or argument for something. you can’t, because there’s a sense of instability inherent in the term; a proper logical paradox actually has no solution.

      so why do we fall back so quickly and consistently to the “paradox” as an explanation for perhaps the single most important concept in ethical philosophy when it comes to community preservation and mitigation of violence?

      it’s rhetorically inefficient. no one actually thinks about paradoxes in this fashion, so it doesn’t make for a compelling argument. imagine if queer advocates were like “yeah technically it’s like, totally natural for just males and females to experience mutual attraction, but some don’t. a paradox! 🤯” nobody would buy it. instead we say “sexual orientation, while most common in the male-female reciprocation, is diverse such that male-male and female-female attraction also exist throughout nature.”

      likewise: “tolerance is a social contract. violate the contract, society has the right to intervene.” boom. done and dusted. enough of the sophistry. enough of the sophistication olympics. use arguments that convince people, not ones that makes you sound smart.

      • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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        22 days ago

        It’s called a paradox because it is unsolveable… if you are a free speech absolutist.

        The point he’s getting at is that absolute tolerance is not only bad; it’s impossible. A society that tolerates absolutely everything - the kind free speech absolutists claim to envision - will inevitably become less and less tolerant over time, because the intolerant members of that society will abuse those freedoms to create more intolerance.

        Its framed the way it is because Poppler is essentially responding to those people who invoke the slippery slope to argue that you cannot ever censor anything, because then how do you decide what not to censor? Poppler replies “Here’s how.”

        If it helps you to frame it better, call it the “paradox of absolute tolerance” or the “paradox of perfect tolerance.”

        • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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          22 days ago

          totally. thank you for your insight and i fully agree for the record.

          but you needed four paragraphs to explain the “paradox”. that is a surefire signifier that is maybe not rhetorically the best fit for the role of convincing people deplatforming nazis is good…

          again, i’m criticizing the tool. i’m fully in alignment with what it does, there’s just so many better ways to say it.

          • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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            22 days ago

            No one is telling you that can’t say “Tolerance is a social contract.” But when you frame that as being in opposition to Poppler’s statement, rather than literally being a summation of his ultimate conclusion, all you’re doing is spreading misinformation. There are people in this very thread who think that you’re outright disagreeing with Poppler’s conclusions.

            The paradox is necessary, because without it you haven’t built out the philosophical underpinnings to support your version of the statement. That doesn’t mean that you have to start with the philosophical underpinnings - in many cases, you may not even need to elaborate on them at all - but you do need to understand them in order to defend yourself against common criticisms.

            The problem with “Tolerance is a social contract”, in absentia of Poppler’s groundwork, is that someone will inevitably say “But you are violating the social contract by being intolerant of me. Surely I now have a right to be intolerant of you. Where does it end?” This is more commonly framed as, for example, “We have to allow Nazis on Twitter, because if we start censoring some political speech then we would have to censor all political speech. Otherwise how are we to judge which political speech is acceptable and which isn’t?”

            This sounds reasonable enough that most people will nod and say “That’s a good point actually.” But Poppler’s framing cuts through those objections. It lays out, with absolute clarity that it is not not only good and necessary to silence intolerance, but that it is, in fact, impossible to create a tolerant space if you do not.

            It’s not meant to be a teaching tool. It was never originally framed as such. It’s a proof; Poppler is showing his work.

            • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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              22 days ago

              thank you for clarifying the point of confusion; I actually posted an edit a few seconds ago

      • Kidplayer_666@lemm.ee
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        22 days ago

        I gotta say, I love the fact I learned this through a comedian, who actually is literate and went through the work of reading and realising the answer is right there

  • crapwittyname@lemm.ee
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    21 days ago

    I still fail to understand what your issue is with the paradox? I can’t see why it would be easier or more effective to explain a social contract than a paradox. It differs from other reciprocal social contracts, such as trust for example, because a) it’s the lack of the commodity itself (tolerance) which dictates whether it should be granted and b) it’s not global, i.e. you can remain tolerant of a bigot’s queerness while not tolerating their hatred. I think a) makes it a paradox, which sets it apart from other social contracts. So why not call it a paradox? I’m still not getting it.

    • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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      22 days ago

      Because neither does OP. They’re acting as if the paradox of tolerance is framed as an unsolvable problem, but it’s not.

      Poppler formulates the paradox like this: If you try to create a society that tolerates everything, you’ll end up tolerating people who will abuse that freedom to create a society that is deeply intolerant (ie, bigoted, hateful, etc). In other words, if you act as a free speech absolutist, defending the rights of Nazis to be Nazis, they’ll use that freedom to create a Nazi society.

      Poppler formulates this paradox to push back against free speech absolutism. His argument is that the only logical conclusion is that a perfectly tolerant society must - paradoxically - be intolerant of exactly one thing; intolerance.

      He’s not saying “Oh no, what a conundrum.” He’s laying out a simple framework that allows you to determine exactly what it is and is not acceptable to refuse to tolerate.

      The paradox forms the perfect counterargument to the slippery slope justifications used for free speech absolutism. Nazis will say “If you censor us, where does it end? Soon you’ll be censoring everything. Maybe you’re the real fascists because you’re trying to take away our rights.” Poppler refutes this by drawing a clear, explicit line and saying “This is where it ends. Right here.” It shatters their slippery slope argument in one swift stroke.

    • Aaron@lemmy.nz
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      22 days ago

      There’s no such thing as a paradox of tolerance. People who think there is such a thing just don’t understand social contracts.

      • Aaron@lemmy.nz
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        22 days ago

        Longer explanation: the supposed paradox of tolerance is when people whine about not being protected by tolerant society when they do something intolerant. They claim society isn’t so tolerant if it doesn’t tolerate their intolerance.

        In reality, society is built upon social contracts. One of those contracts is tolerance. If someone is intolerant, they’ve broken the social contract and therefore are no longer protected by that contract. In fact, it is society’s responsibility to reject the intolerant actors to protect the rest of society.

      • Nora@lemmy.ml
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        22 days ago

        I like the paradox better. It’s more eloquent and it extends beyond a society. It can be used in many situations.

        Plus, like, social contracts can change. If the society is a bunch of fascists, then clearly they don’t give a shit about tolerance. Whereas the paradox can be applied all the time and can be strived for.

  • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    22 days ago

    So here’s the thing, as I see it.

    Ultimately we need to tolerate everyone. Everybody is entitled to the same rights and protections. (Ideally, this would include food, shelter, safety, family, access to important media, access to sports events…all the things we find important, but I digress).

    The problem is, everyone (seriously everyone ) thinks that someone should be excluded. Popular examples are people who commit heinous crimes: child predators, rampage killers, serial killers, and far right interests will typically use them to set precedent that some people need to be shot, or locked up in abusive conditions, or subject to excessive searches, or not allowed to speak, or whatever, and then those precedents are expanded to include anyone they can associate with them, and the next thing you know, liberals are rumored to have a child-trafficking sex ring in the basement of the Comet Ping Pong pizzeria. Also women don’t have the right to vote because fetuses are more persons than their mothers are.

    But we’re not even there yet: Only recently has the LGBT+ community decided that trans folk and enbies are people too, and deserve to march in the regular pride parade (rather than their own side-mini-parade). This is one of the reasons the far right is attacking the trans community, because they’re easy prey and the militants expect little resistance from the mainstream.

    Another example: Even here on Lemmy, discussions of furries leads to suggestions and arguments that all furries are furverts into yiffing, when most of them just like adventures and dramas featuring anthros that might be other than Disney and Warner Bros. Looney Tunes. Observe also, rumors from the right wing about liberal schools providing litterboxes for catgirl children.

    So yes, the problem of othering is epidemic. When it comes to people who actually committed crimes, we still can’t help ourselves but just dump them in the (squallid, abusive, sometimes for-profit) prison industrial complex figuring they deserve the soap jokes featuring Bubba, but they too deserve real protections as per the Bill of Rights in the Constitution of the United States. They too deserve to be treated humanely, and when we don’t we find that those guilty of possession (of cannabis for medical purposes) also get imprisoned in squalid abusive conditions, as do women seeking abortions.

    It helps to think of those who committed terrible crimes as broken like a toaster, rather than evil like a Disney villain. And if you’re happy to wish them eaten by hyenas, then yeah, eventually those who are insufficiently patriotic and loyal to Dear Leader (or is just no longer useful now) will also end up in the hyena pit at dinnertime. Granted, some of our super-antisocial citizens are beyond our current capacity for treatment, but then our response should be to R&D more effective treatments, and in the meantime, keep them well and preserve their rights as much as possible, as if they’re disabled in the brain, not as if they’re self-aware monsters.

    This is incredibly hard to do, and as the 2024 general election shows, the general population is easy to convince to just let the hyenas – or in this case the leopards – eat the faces of the marginalized, and risk that the leopards might still be hungry once there are only mainstream faces left to eat.

    And that’s to say, I know the society I want, but I have only a small fraction of the clues of how to get there. And I’m not sure there are enough of us who want that same society. 🎶 You might say that I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one… 🎵

    And I’m not even sure human society could get there from here before we run out of water and the climate crisis turns into a giant population correction (featuring not just famine, but war, natural disasters, Mad Max and cannibalism; It’s going to be a big mess).

    • Olgratin_Magmatoe@lemmy.world
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      22 days ago

      No, we do not need to tolerate everyone, because everyone includes neo nazis. We should not tolerate neo nazis. The same goes for any other group that intends to act, or acts to harm others. That includes CEOs who make a buck off of intentionally keeping people ill, dying, or dead for the sake of their company’s bottom line.

      The only way to solve the paradox of intolerance is to not tolerate that shit.

      • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        21 days ago

        No, we need to find a way to tolerate absolutely everyone, down to the worst monster.

        Granted if someone makes a racist statement in public, it is still appropriate to treat them as if they just puked their last five drinks in the middle of the bar. If someone commits a hate crime, it’s still right and proper to arrest and detain them and try to figure out how they’ve gone mad.

        But even fascists, neo-nazis and members of the white Christian nationalist movement deserve to have their rights respected (to the extent we can allow while preserving the safety of the community), which includes due process, and fair treatment while detained.

        Firstly, we human beings are prone towards bigotry (what is likely – we aren’t absolutely certain – was how human tribes protected themselves from infectious disease, case in point, COVID-19 spreading worldwide inside a year), and secondly we have to assume that antisocial behavior is not a character flaw, but a physiological problem, even if we don’t immediately have treatment for it yet.

        Generally, in functional societies, racial supremacy movements and religious-political movements don’t get much purchase except due to large amounts of precarity, and they can be mitigated further with information- and electoral-literacy. Or in Marxist speak moving more people from the lumpen-proletariat into the proletariat. And yes, it’s a problem because working people harder in the factories not only reduces political involvement but also parenting, resulting in intergenerational neglect and dysfunction.

        Sadly, our ownership class prefer to be kings of a petty banana state than middle managers in an intergalactic civilization. And it’s so consistent among the ownership class that again, it looks like mental illness or a human bias, which is why they put only tiny fractions of their wealth into public works, and then ones that won’t ever threaten their position as a patrician.

        • Olgratin_Magmatoe@lemmy.world
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          21 days ago

          But even fascists, neo-nazis and members of the white Christian nationalist movement deserve to have their rights respected (to the extent we can allow while preserving the safety of the community), which includes due process, and fair treatment while detained.

          That is a separate, different issue than tolerance. You’ve moved the goal posts.

  • babydriver@lemmy.ml
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    22 days ago

    If a so called “social contract” said you can’t shit in the toilet, what would you do liberal? Would you shit in the sink if the “contract” told you to?