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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
Survey Says
Sunday, May 23, 2010 6:56 AM
ANTHONYT
Freedom is Important because People are Important
Sunday, May 23, 2010 7:47 AM
KPO
Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.
Sunday, May 23, 2010 2:50 PM
Quote:Would you be in favor of the limited nudity that is natural to human culture?
Sunday, May 23, 2010 4:38 PM
DREAMTROVE
Sunday, May 23, 2010 10:45 PM
Sunday, May 23, 2010 10:48 PM
Monday, May 24, 2010 2:01 AM
KWICKO
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)
Monday, May 24, 2010 3:26 AM
SHINYGOODGUY
Monday, May 24, 2010 5:22 AM
MALACHITE
Monday, May 24, 2010 6:06 AM
Monday, May 24, 2010 7:10 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: I think you're conflating "allowing" a thing with "mandating" a thing. If I start a clothing-optional apartment complex, I'm not dictating that NOBODY can wear clothing when in the complex. I'm saying that you're ALLOWED to NOT wear clothing if you so desire. You can say that this is offensive, or that it is "inflicting" something on you, but no more than allowing people to be morbidly obese "inflicts" the horrific sight of 400-pound women in Spandex on the rest of us, which I might find personally offensive and obscene. Which leads us back to the question: Do you have a fundamental right to not be offended? Mike "I supported Bush in 2000 and 2004 and intellegence [sic] had very little to do with that decision." - Hero, Real World Event Discussions
Monday, May 24, 2010 7:28 AM
Monday, May 24, 2010 7:32 AM
Monday, May 24, 2010 7:38 AM
PHOENIXROSE
You think you know--what's to come, what you are. You haven't even begun.
Quote:Originally posted by kpo: Almost all religions/societies...even the very primitive ones?
Quote:brain scans pick up psychological trauma - do they pick up negative cultural/social attitudes, things like for e.g. mysogony, selfishness, xenophobia, materialism etc. etc...?
Quote:]Perhaps the social change should come from the bottom up not the top down?
Quote:Originally posted by kpo: Children are also initially very selfish and anti-social, and have no concept of cleanliness.
Quote:Originally posted by Malachite: if it means that we would suddenly mandate that everyone must go naked...
Quote:...or that anyone who wants to can go out in public naked whenever and wherever they like.
Quote:the only people I want to see naked are attractive females
Quote:let's say I have a desire to not objectify women and I find that nudity makes me focus on their nakedness, rate their attractiveness even more, and tempts me to cheat on my wife...
Quote:I think a government mandating nudity would be a strong step towards dehumanizing us all.
Quote:We get some of our identity from the clothing we wear ... clothing plays an important role in society
Quote:how do we distinguish the police officer from the robber from the termite inspector, from the village chief? Clothes, props and decorations certainly help.
Quote:chances are, I'd find their nudity a bit repulsive and/or distracting in most settings.
Monday, May 24, 2010 8:02 AM
Quote:Your question about having a right not to be offended is a good one. Has it been addressed yet?
Monday, May 24, 2010 8:17 AM
Quote: If you don't want to objectify, then don't. If you don't want to cheat on your wife, then don't. Control yourself. Everything you mention here is behavior controlled by you. Blaming the state of another for your behavior is what leads to things like putting women in beekeeper suits to "hide the temptation they represent." It's not the woman's fault, but she's the one who must completely cover herself, whether she likes it or not.
Monday, May 24, 2010 9:24 AM
Monday, May 24, 2010 10:05 AM
Monday, May 24, 2010 10:22 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: Quote:Your question about having a right not to be offended is a good one. Has it been addressed yet? It's been addressed over and over in our nation's 230 year history, but never really been ironed out once and for all. And I think ALL of Anthony's questions are good ones. This one about nudity seems to be the stickiest, though. For myself, I have no issues if others want to go nude, or at least topless. I'm not likely to do so myself (except at home), because as mentioned before, I've got some body image issues and some amazingly horrendous scarring that tends to send people screaming. But should kids be allowed to go nude? Is that too much temptation for the local pedophiles? Should the clothing-optional thing be only for adults? What happens when children of clothing-mandatory parents see topless or nude people going about their business? Who gets to explain to them? (I have a suspicion that's why there ARE so many rules and laws about behavior already - because uptight parents don't want to have uncomfortable, honest conversations with their children about these things) Mike "I supported Bush in 2000 and 2004 and intellegence [sic] had very little to do with that decision." - Hero, Real World Event Discussions
Monday, May 24, 2010 10:39 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Malachite: I agree with your sentiment that people being offended by something shouldn't automatically lead to its being outlawed and that things get murky when emotions are taken into account.
Monday, May 24, 2010 11:10 AM
Quote:Originally posted by PhoenixRose: Quote:Originally posted by Malachite: I agree with your sentiment that people being offended by something shouldn't automatically lead to its being outlawed and that things get murky when emotions are taken into account. But then you go on to lambaste me for saying that some things are emotional constructs, saying that implies I put no stock in emotion. Really, dude? Have you met me? Do you really think I would say emotions are totally invalid and we should all be Vulcans? How do you get from me saying that laws should not be based on emotional reactions to me saying that emotions are invalid? It's vastly irritating to have my words twisted that way. Emotions are totally valid. And great, great amounts of emotional distress do result in demonstrable harm. As I've said repeatedly, there are many effects on brain chemistry and structure. Someone who was being harassed or stalked would show evidence of the stress in a chemical imbalance that might result in depression, insomnia, anxiety, or something along those lines. These things, as I have said again and again, have marked effects on one's chemistry. They can be traced and measured. The harm is demonstrable. Same could go for being cheated on, or in some other way betrayed. These things do have reactions that can be measured and demonstrated. I've said so repeatedly, and I'm speaking very much from personal experience. I have had such effects measured and traced. It saved my fucking life, so don't you dare say I would dismiss that sort of harm, or think emotions are inadmissible in all things. What I said was that a negative emotional reaction wasn't a good basis for disallowing something. Same goes for something that is basically an emotional construct, which is why I pointed out some of the things in your argument which were exactly that. If you feel repulsed by the sight of the average naked man, but it causes no marked harm to you, up to and including imbalance of your brain chemistry due to stress, then saying it's wrong just because you don't like it makes for a rule stemming from emotion. I will use, as an example, the vast controversy surrounding same-sex relationships and marriage. Ultimately, the existence of such relationships does no harm. But some people find the idea repulsive, including some people who got it into certain religious dogmas. It's an emotional reaction that became a rule, and it's caused years of legal battles because so many people will stand by that emotional discomfort or repulsion or whatever that also got into their dogma. This is an emotional response to something with no demonstrable harm. It's a rule because there are people who don't like it, and go from not liking it to saying it's wrong. If those same people thought about how they might feel about being told they weren't allowed the relationships they had, they might re-think it, but they don't consider that because they're coming from that place of emotional construct. There is a HUGE difference between emotional constructs and emotional trauma. Emotional constructs or emotional reactions (that are not trauma, though that should be implied) should not be a basis for right and wrong. Something causing emotional trauma can absolutely be a basis for right and wrong. It's wrong to cause trauma. Discomfort is not trauma. I don't see what's difficult about that distinction. And yes, physical discomfort could be demonstrable harm. It's mild, but it could be harm. Especially in cases that might lead to heat stroke, unlikely as that might be. Chaffing, too, could lead to harm, if the skin became raw or started bleeding. These things do, in fact, trump whatever emotional response might result from a lack of clothes. Unless you can show me anything proving trauma from simply seeing someone in an unclad state. The trauma can't result from childhood repression or abuses, it must result simply from seeing someone naked. Show me proof of that, and I will back down on my argument. [/sig]
Monday, May 24, 2010 11:43 AM
Quote: You are okay with people going topless but not bottomless. Why? To me is seems there would be something inappropriate/gross/hygienically unclean/cringe inducing/insert negative word here. You also don't want people getting scared by your scars. Why? It sounds like you are trying to be considerate towards others in that you don't want to frighten anyone. In an ideal world, people would sort of "know" what they could/should expose to the population at large and in what venue it could be expressed
Monday, May 24, 2010 3:54 PM
FREMDFIRMA
Monday, May 24, 2010 4:23 PM
Quote:Quote: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- brain scans pick up psychological trauma - do they pick up negative cultural/social attitudes, things like for e.g. mysogony, selfishness, xenophobia, materialism etc. etc...? -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Actually, yes.
Quote:How can it come from the bottom if there are laws against it at the top?
Quote:Quote: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Originally posted by kpo: Children are also initially very selfish and anti-social, and have no concept of cleanliness. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Uh... I disagree.
Quote:, since there are areas where social nudity is allowed, and thousands of people happily exercise that right in parks and beaches,
Monday, May 24, 2010 4:47 PM
Quote:Oppressive and restrictive laws can be repealed if there are popular movements against them. Your problem is that society does not want public nudity enforced on it. Society likes the law because it feels protected by it, and one could argue that it is.
Monday, May 24, 2010 5:10 PM
Quote:When you can show me a baby who was born clothed, I'll consider clothing to be our most "natural" state. Until then, let's call it a "societal" construct, not a natural one.
Quote:and we seem to have conceded (at some point in the conversation; where, I have no idea, because certainly *I* never conceded the point) that any nudity "inflicted" upon children or the uncomfortable would likely somehow traumatize them.
Quote:no more than allowing people to be morbidly obese "inflicts" the horrific sight of 400-pound women in Spandex on the rest of us, which I might find personally offensive and obscene.
Quote:I wouldn't want a law forcing you to stare at naked people
Monday, May 24, 2010 5:13 PM
Quote:You keep saying that "allowing" a thing equates to "inflicting" a thing or "mandating" a thing on us.
Quote:So I take it you'd agree that we should not allow religion in this country, correct? After all, why should we inflict idiocy like christianity (replete with all its rape, incest, and murder life lessons) on society?
Monday, May 24, 2010 5:15 PM
Monday, May 24, 2010 5:21 PM
Monday, May 24, 2010 5:27 PM
Monday, May 24, 2010 5:37 PM
Quote:They cause me emotional distress. They cause me societal stress. I cannot simply not see them.
Monday, May 24, 2010 5:39 PM
Quote:Originally posted by kpo: Quote:They cause me emotional distress. They cause me societal stress. I cannot simply not see them. Luckily this is not a cultural sensibility (not quite). This is just your sensibility. We can't have a law to protect just you. Do you agree that being sight-offended is not the same as being sensibility-offended (a beautiful naked woman in public could offend one and not the other)? Heads should roll
Monday, May 24, 2010 5:47 PM
Quote:But you're arguing for a law that would protect JUST YOU. You claim others need protection, but everything you've offered is your own emotional baggage about nudity.
Quote:And obese people don't just offend my sight; they offend my sensibility.
Quote:Or are you arguing that any law which most people want is automatically a good law?
Monday, May 24, 2010 6:19 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Malachite: It seemed to me in your first response that you were proposing the idea that physical harm was the primary means for determining whether something was wrong.
Quote:Originally posted by kpo: a policy or experiment mandating young children to watch pornography I think would inflict serious psychological trauma.
Quote:Originally posted by Fremdfirma: Y'all done stole all my thunder, especially PR
Monday, May 24, 2010 8:01 PM
Tuesday, May 25, 2010 12:03 AM
AURAPTOR
America loves a winner!
Tuesday, May 25, 2010 8:01 AM
Tuesday, May 25, 2010 8:11 AM
Quote: Mikey and KPO are doin a good job of volleyin this ball back and forth to boil down and refine the arguments both ways without coming to knives, and I been holding my two pence cause it's right informative to watch, a regular learnin experience...
Tuesday, May 25, 2010 4:18 PM
Quote:That sort of response is what leads to dogma being written and laws being passed that inflict restrictions on those who are "different" and elicit a (rather illogical) response of fear or repulsion or whatever. For these things women are stoned to death for showing their faces; and no, they can't just move away if they don't like it. For these things both genders have been subjected to genital mutilations. For these things people are ostracized simply for being in love. For these things the humanity of someone who is "different" has been ignored and the result was slavery.
Quote:You're equating nudity with pornography a lot.
Tuesday, May 25, 2010 6:49 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: PR: I have nothing left to say. You've just summed up everything I've been trying in vain to articulate. I bow to you. Hell, I'd even disrobe to do it, as a sign of honor. :)
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: I'm not arguing for nudity to be accepted simply because I'm a dirty old man who wants to ogle the supple young college girls here in town; I'm saying it shouldn't even be an issue.
Quote:Originally posted by kpo: you link sexual modesty to so much human evil.
Wednesday, May 26, 2010 1:21 AM
Quote: Well I can see why you're quite passionate about this, since you link sexual modesty to so much human evil. To my mind modesty is an easy scapegoat, and a natural cultural sensibility - you can call it a 'societal construct' - but it is one that is rooted in the human soul.
Wednesday, May 26, 2010 2:20 AM
PIZMOBEACH
... fully loaded, safety off...
Wednesday, May 26, 2010 2:30 AM
Quote:Originally posted by kpo: I'm nervous in general of people who are willing to reshape society for ideology's sake (true of libertarians/anarchists as well I think...).
Wednesday, May 26, 2010 12:53 PM
Quote:I wasn't discussing "human modesty" in the paragraph you quoted, but rather the determining of right and wrong based on a surface emotional response, rather than empathy and analyzation.
Quote:You seem to have a very negative emotional response to the idea of nudity,
Quote:You have to TEACH them to dress themselves, and you have to TEACH them to keep their clothes on, because to most toddlers, it seems being out of their clothes is the more natural way to be.
Quote:Indeed, I get into it with other anarchists about it, like wall to wall brawls, cause blowing the supports out from under a society people are unwilling to part with...
Wednesday, May 26, 2010 4:56 PM
Quote:No, as I explained I'm resistant to ideological people deciding that they know what is natural for a society better than the society itself, and proposing appropriate re-shaping of it.
Quote:The fact that they all FEEL right once they have been learnt, shows to me that they are natural instincts that just need to be cultivated. And it turns out that every advanced and successful society does so.
Wednesday, May 26, 2010 6:26 PM
Quote:Originally posted by PhoenixRose: Quote:Originally posted by Malachite: 1: It seemed to me in your first response that you were proposing the idea that physical harm was the primary means for determining whether something was wrong. "It is, or at least should be" 2:"Like I said, if there is any proof that legal nudity causes more harm than it avoids, I'll of course consider it."
Quote:Originally posted by Malachite: 1: It seemed to me in your first response that you were proposing the idea that physical harm was the primary means for determining whether something was wrong.
Wednesday, May 26, 2010 6:52 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Malachite: Quote:Originally posted by PhoenixRose: Quote:Originally posted by Malachite: 1: It seemed to me in your first response that you were proposing the idea that physical harm was the primary means for determining whether something was wrong. "It is, or at least should be" 2:"Like I said, if there is any proof that legal nudity causes more harm than it avoids, I'll of course consider it." Okay, I don't know how to do all of the fancy quote post and response techniques you do, so I just labeled them 1 and 2. Let me ask a quick question about #2 first. You are asking me to provide proof that legal nudity causes more harm than good. How can I, if there aren't any studies in which several random US cities suddenly have clothing laws repealed and the results are then objectively recorded, analyzed and published? I think sometimes we still have to use logic and reason for these kind of discussions when studies allude us.
Quote:I might have missed it: have you already provided proof that our current US society clothing standards (ie do what you want in the privacy of your own home, choose for yourself whether you want to live in a nudist colony/clothing optional apartment, choose whether or not you want to go to a topless beach in Florida/topless tanning area in Las Vegas, or how much or how little clothing within reason you want to wear in your average public area -- and, as far as I can see, people can get away with wearing pretty little in lot of public settings) cause more harm than good when people follow them? If you already provided a link to the study in an earlier post, I missed it -- which isn't surprising seeing as I seem to be getting more and more adhd as I get older...
Quote:Now to #1. I'm going to try to be concise. First off, I think it is kind of neat to have the general principle that physical harm be the primary means of determining whether something is wrong. That being said, I still don't think it works well. Examples I can think of would be noise pollution (such as a neighbor playing their stereo too loud and too long, or letting their dog bark all night, when I would like peace and quiet). No it doesn't cause me physical harm, and, with earplugs, I might not lose too much sleep, but it is annoying and I should have some lawful means at my disposal to have it addressed. Other examples of this could be sexual harassment (or any kind of harassment, including racist comments or sexual jokes). I don't think I can demonstrate that squeezing some girl's behind or saying something inappropriate is physically harmful to the woman, but doesn't she have some right to not be harassed? What about stereotypical images used in the media, like advertisments? Ethnic rights groups tend to get upset about them and call for them to be changed or stopped. I don't think it can be demonstrated that the Frito Bandito really caused anybody physical harm, though. Negative stereotypes may reinforce wrong notions, but the act of stereotyping doesn't cause measurable physical harm as far as I know. It is still wrong, though, right? And, I know, with the nudity example, it doesn't do me any physical harm, but I still don't want to be exposed to male genitals on a regular basis and I don't want to be exposed to anyone's fecal matter if I sit somewhere they just sat (like a bus, or a restaurant seat) and I don't want to have my office furniture stained with said grossness, but I also don't want a people mad at me for "discriminating" against them when I post the sign, "no shirt, no shoes, no pants, no service". I also wonder if the rule applies to animal cruelty. I'm not causing anyone physical harm, it is "only" an animal. If the physical harm principle applies to animals as well, though, then we are in trouble, because many people kill and eat meat. Would we have to mandate vegetarianism and make hunting illegal?
Quote: Another example I wonder about is school prayer. If one can use the principle to determine that gay marriage should be legal (because it harms no one), can one use it to say that school prayer is fine? The child is exposed to something that a parent might find objectionable but which can't be demonstrated to be doing physical harm. The child can choose whether or not to actually pray. Does that mean it is okay for prayer in school at the teacher's discretion (ie they can choose to only have one religious prayer type represented and others ignored, because it can't be demonstrated that ignoring the budhist prayer is physically harmful to the child)?
Thursday, May 27, 2010 3:33 AM
Thursday, May 27, 2010 4:00 AM
Quote: Also, just so you know, I think I am using logic and reason to discuss the ideas at hand, so I'm not sure personal insults (your quote, "That would be fine, IF you were using logic and reason. You aren't; you're using intuition, supposition, superstition, and opinion, and trying to pass them off as logic, reason, and fact.")to the contrary are necessary or productive... Just sayin'...
Thursday, May 27, 2010 5:57 AM
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