"You want to prevent white supremacist fascism from organizing hate crimes and infiltrating government positions? YOU'RE the REAL Nazi!"

-- so, so, so many fucking shitheads

I'm not sure how clueless one has to be to ignore the end game of actual white supremacists, but it's depressingly common.

@sydneyfalk You're entirely right, but I beg you to drop the whole SQW/SJW tribalism thing, it's counterproductive. Neither acronym is any less disingenuous and serves to further dilute any rational thought in a situation that desperately needs it. It is that entire paradigm that feeds idiots who want to be contrarian as fuck, and eventually serves to support the goals of the actual-not-kidding-goose-stepping-Nazis and white supremacists.

@VacuumForest

> neither acronym is any less disingenuous

I disagree, but I consider all groups disingenuous to a degree.

> It is that entire paradigm that feeds idiots who want to be contrarian as fuck

I strongly disagree -- if being 'contrarian as fuck' is 'upholding things as they are', then I'm not seeing how the difference between upholding the status quo and improving the status quo isn't a relevant issue.

@sydneyfalk The terms "social justice" and "status quo" represent a dichotomy that resonates with the world-view of chucklefuck hate speech apologists. The associations are inherently accusative and bring connotations that negate the actual aims that may or may not be represented under that label. You toss garbage in a bin, not ideas.

@VacuumForest

> chucklefuck hate speech apologists

Isn't this really just going to end up being another catch-all that ignores the distinction between SQWs (who aren't thinking about consequences) and FFNs (who are simply lying fascists)?

> You toss garbage in a bin, not ideas.

Allow me to synthesize: You toss garbage *ideas* into a metaphorical bin, don't you?

You're asking me to do precisely that with 'SQW', since it's 'unproductive' to you.

@sydneyfalk No, I think your "SQW" is more what I had in mind, not "FFN". Hopefully we can make a distinction between idiots and bad actors. Maybe I'm just allergic to acronyms?

I probably should avoid metaphors if I'm going to eschew acronyms. I was trying to make a point about sorting bins, not garbage bins. I'm not good at metaphors, at all.

I think that the whole SQW and SJW label is more productive to people who are just looking to argue.

@VacuumForest

I like acronyms because it reduces typing strain.

SQWs argue against progressive stuff reflexively, often because their own lives are Pretty Much Okay. Think South Park -- every episode (with I think a handful of exceptions) has the same moral: "Everybody stop caring so much, things will calm down, it's already okay, guys."

As for arguing -- I hope more arguing goes on, really. Complacency is how this mess got this bad, IMHO. :(

@sydneyfalk I'm sorry I initially phrased it the way I did. I have no right to tell you what to call a sandwich.

I'm just tired of watching people bandwagon to defend awful things and I wonder how it can be stopped. You're right about a lot of things as I can see it, and you make solid arguments for your thinking.

I want all arguments to reach a point of resolution where we can agree that we're all human.

@VacuumForest

> I want all arguments to reach a point of resolution where we can agree that we're all human.

I *want* that.

I do not think it's possible, any longer, if I'm painfully honest.

I think there's always going to be a subset of people who decide the wrong skin color is the problem, or the wrong language, religion, or culture.

The stupid ones are loud and very shortsighted. The smart ones become what I term FFNs, 'frozen fruit Nazis'.

@sydneyfalk Frozen fruit Nazis, that's a good one. I suppose a solid taxonomy is a way to understand the body of the problem. The pathology, on the other hand, is more complicated. I think one avenue is to re-couch the issue in terms of mental health rather than "freedom of speech".

@VacuumForest

Mental health issues aren't the relevant part, though, IMO. There will always be people who can be lured into listening to the basest, most animal parts of their mind.

Blaming the mentally ill for it is likely to just increase negative impact on the mentally ill as a whole.

The FFNs are the relevant part, IMO. If they no longer have the "LEGALLY it's part of FREE SPEECH" argument, then they just look like Nazis, which -- they are.

@sydneyfalk I don't think we need to paint atrocities as mental illness, but we do need to reflect on the lessons of the Stanford Prison Experiment, and so on to reject the notion that hate should get a platform. Hate is a disease.

But yes, if we were in Germany, there would be no avenue to say "of course we can do the Nazi salute and our 14 words thingy, free speech!"

@VacuumForest

I'm all in favor of (eventually) working out root causes.

However, this is a gunshot wound on the global human culture, and gunshot wounds do not need lengthy research about why gun violence occurs.

They need bandaging, rapidly. They need triage, immediately.

@sydneyfalk I'm thinking aggressive cancer, really aggressive stage-4 cancer, mixed with a hand grenade.

@VacuumForest

Well, degrees. I mean, there ARE people applying pressure, there ARE people setting up triage, there ARE people trying to put the pin back in.

It's potentially lethal, but it is by no means inevitable at this point. The heart is still pumping.

There's just a lot of blood spilled, metaphorically and otherwise.

@sydneyfalk Fucking culture wars never end. It took a lot just to get the right to vote for many. "But that happened like a million years ago, and it's totally not a problem today, right?" They never end, but people forget in interesting ways what went down.

You can walk through Hiroshima and never realize what happened there until you go to the museum and see a little girl's fingernails that fell out, next to a half-melted roof tile.

@VacuumForest

There's been a few moments that Hiroshima has been burned into my mind -- despite the fact I have never been to the museum -- because I have read accounts and seen photographs (and, in the case of Infocom's Trinity, learned about the cranes.)

The shadows Dave Barry described in his chapter on Hiroshima are where I first felt things.

The world has a lot of thoughtless cruelty -- and thoughtful cruelty isn't much better. :(

@sydneyfalk It's such a beautiful city. I got chills sitting by the river and thinking about it. Actually some of the "hibakusha" trees have placards that tell you "this tree survived a nuclear bomb". A man who lost his mother to the bomb gave me some seeds from one. Not sure what happened to those. That city hits me in the feels, always.

@VacuumForest

Thank you for listening to my points -- and I believe I understand the personal situation you're in, even if we disagree about aspects of the larger situation.

I can't talk about this any more, though. This topic often crashes my everything mentally and emotionally, and i don't want to risk it more.

Thank you again -- and please, feel free to respond about other things if you wish. I just don't want to discuss this further. <3

@sydneyfalk Hey, you really carried out a great conversation, I think I grok where you're coming from. Thank you very much for engaging with me about it. I agree that we've probably said all we can about it for now. Thanks! ❤