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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
The Demonization of the Opposition
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 3:37 AM
DRAKON
Quote:Originally posted by HKCavalier: Seriously, Drakon, for instance, I didn't mean to call anyone names with the term "extremist." I simply meant it literally. A total ban on abortion, across the board legalization of firearms, and a hard-line commitment to only lowering taxes, in my view, are definitively "extreme," as in "there ain't nothing beyond that." See what I mean? There's nothing more anti-abortion than a total ban. The most condemning thing I intended in using the word "extremist" for was to imply that the temporary political imbalance created by the neocons and their extreme views did not define reality. That reality was probably somewhere closer to the middle.
Quote:You talk a lot about being bombed or killed or our enemies taking over America. I think this is a real fear of yours. You're afraid of dying, and you're willing to put up with an awful lot of abridgements of your rights if it means that your life is spared. That's your profit and loss assessment.
Quote: And I don't believe that America is in any real danger from terrorists. America will not be defeated this way. Yes, terrorist may strike at any time, but that has always been true and it cannot be stopped - where there's a will, there's a way. Thankfully, like serial murder and death cults, there are not a lot of people in the world who are really up for it.
Quote:In your reality, the "War on Terror" is necessary to safeguard your life and country. You seem to believe that there's a chance that a group of Islamic terrorist could somehow take over the United States. You imply that if we don't let Bush wage this war however he sees fit, they will conquer us.
Quote:For me, the attack on the WTC was a criminal act, not an act of war. There is no nation or dictator or ideology responsible for that crime. No attack on any nation or dictator or ideology will be effective against terrorism. The criminals are responsible for the crime. In my reality, the "War on Terror" is just rhetoric, not unlike the "War on Drugs." It's just talk.
Quote:Terrorism is similarly culturally based. Destroy Al Quaida and another torrorist organization will take its place. Terrorism is a spontaneous reaction to political hopelessness.
Quote:I think the Bush forces and the anti-bush forces suffer from a similar rift in reality. Basic disagreements about what is real and what isn't real are being ignored. It's as if people are speaking different languages. I just gotta I pray that we all get through it okay. I'm sorry for being a brat earlier, Drakon, but it's been a bad couple of years, you know what I mean?
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 4:04 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: So you see, unless you explain to me what you mean when you say "people", "life", "free", I really DON'T know what you mean!
Quote:Drakon, Soupcatcher- I think the question is not whether the ends justify the means, it's whether the ends justify ANY AND ALL means. Drakon's ends- freedom, security, liberty, whatever- are still undefined. Until I know what the ends are, I won't know whether the means are justified, or even likely to be effective.
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 5:05 AM
TOMSMEAGOL
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 7:23 AM
HONEY
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 9:56 AM
SIGNYM
I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 11:19 AM
HJERMSTED
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 2:08 PM
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 2:44 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Honey: Drakon, You have split this into black and white, as if there are only "good guys" and "bad guys" in your world. Furthermore, your posts indicate that you believe that since they are "the bad guys," by definition we must be "the good guys" -- and as such are incapable of doing bad ourselves.
Quote:You are arguing against my points as if I ascribe to that same immature 'philosophy' and your stance boils down to a belief that I am taking the side of the "bad guys." This greatly misrepresents what I've said. By taking this stance, you have missed entirely everything that I've tried to convey to you.
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 3:31 PM
Quote:Originally posted by TomSmeagol: What bothers me is that you feel the need to belittle and demean EVERY single point that someone else makes if you don't agree with it. I've read many posts that use perfectly valid debate techniques which you've dismissed as being invalid arguments. Just because someone doesn't agree with you doesn't mean their argument is invalid, Drakon.
Quote:And going back to one of your original statements, the minority party ALWAYS demonizes the majority party, whether that means democrats attacking republicans (which is what we currently have) or republicans attacking democrats (the Clinton era and Carter era are two recent examples).
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 3:55 PM
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 4:14 PM
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 10:15 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: So what about words that are abstract- like "freedom"?? How can we have a conversation when we can't discuss what those words mean?
Tuesday, July 13, 2004 10:42 PM
SOUPCATCHER
Wednesday, July 14, 2004 3:51 AM
Quote:With emotions the way they were shortly after 9-11, it is reasonable to assume that after the death and destruction of that day, some rather angry folks might not have been too discriminating as to which bin Ladan they lynched. And so, it seems prudent to get his relatives out of harms way as soon as possible. Yet this is taken as an example of something bad, something that should not have been done.
Wednesday, July 14, 2004 9:38 AM
Wednesday, July 14, 2004 2:55 PM
Wednesday, July 14, 2004 5:12 PM
RUE
I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!
Wednesday, July 14, 2004 5:49 PM
Wednesday, July 14, 2004 5:51 PM
Wednesday, July 14, 2004 5:56 PM
Wednesday, July 14, 2004 8:29 PM
HKCAVALIER
Quote:Originally posted by Honey: Mental health care professionals have three words to describe persistently splitting the world into black and white: "Borderline Personality Disorder," a.k.a., chronic inability to mature. Just sayin'. Look into it.
Wednesday, July 14, 2004 11:52 PM
Thursday, July 15, 2004 12:02 AM
PURPLEBELLY
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: He (I presume "he")
Thursday, July 15, 2004 12:07 AM
Thursday, July 15, 2004 12:08 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SoupCatcher: I'm not sure how we got here from there. But here's my summation of the responses to my original question. Drakon has proposed that members of the political party not in power demonize members of the political party in power because they feel helplessness and frustration. SPLibertarian has proposed that demonization is more a smoke screen put out by both sides to accentuate false differences and mask the similarities. (I hope that I have summed this up accurately). I tend to lean more towards SPLibertarian's explanation simply because I feel Drakon has only captured a portion of the demonization. For Drakon's explanation to be correct, we should have only seen demonization coming from the Republicans during the Clinton administration and demonization coming from the Democracts during the Bush administration. But from my perspective I have seen no real change in who is doing the demonizing. Liberal and neo-con are both used as swear words. People on all sides are throwing out the label "traitor" (which, in my mind, is a sure sign of demonization). Hell, this thread is headed in that general direction.
Thursday, July 15, 2004 12:21 AM
CAPNHARBATKIN
Thursday, July 15, 2004 12:24 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: I just recently read Drakon's newest posts and I did get a sort-of frantic, manic underlying mindset. Either 'THIS' OR ALL HELL'S GONNA BREAK LOOSE ! Patriot Act or DOOM! Invade Iraq or FACE DEATH ! And sometimes it was in nearly these words. I hope Drakon doesn't take offense, but it seems uncomfortable.
Thursday, July 15, 2004 12:26 AM
Quote: Drakon: Lets face facts. If we wanted to, we could end any problem with the Middle east in about an hour. We have the power to simply glass the entire area, kill every living thing from Morocco to the Indian border. We can, but we ain't done it yet. And I hope it never comes to that. But i do see situations where it might.
Thursday, July 15, 2004 12:30 AM
Thursday, July 15, 2004 12:52 AM
Quote:Originally posted by CapnHarbatkin: oh... almost forgot one more thing: Quote: Drakon: Lets face facts. If we wanted to, we could end any problem with the Middle east in about an hour. We have the power to simply glass the entire area, kill every living thing from Morocco to the Indian border. We can, but we ain't done it yet. And I hope it never comes to that. But i do see situations where it might. If that's your solution to END a problem, then I don't think any of us need to patronize you anymore with pseudo-intellectual discourse.
Thursday, July 15, 2004 2:11 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: So, where ARE you?
Thursday, July 15, 2004 2:38 AM
Quote:Originally posted by HKCavalier: To me his argument is really the embodiment of demonization, which is to say polarization, which is to say thinking always in terms of black and white. I'm thinking that Drakon's argument is really a fundamentalist one. Fundamentalism is characterized by very strict definitions that the fundamentalist doesn't think are strict at all because, to him, that's just the way things are. Fundamentalists have a very mystified idea of all those words that Signy wants him to define. They mean what they mean, everybody knows that--everybody who isn't dumb, or mental, or playing word games.
Quote:What came to mind were hate and naivete. The lefties are nothing if not kind and gentle and compassionate, aren't they? And if you call a conservative naive, he'll just laugh and blow smoke in your face, right?
Quote:After 9/11 the left really pushed their own agressive rage way way down, and projected it on the right. I think that fueled a lot of the whole, "We deserved it" rhetoric that was flying around before a lot of the families in New York even knew if their loved ones were still alive. It was spooky. So I think a lot of formerly left leaning folk out there kinda moved away from the left. They felt their rage and owned it instead of burrying it and a lot of them supported the "War on Terror" because it spoke to them.
Quote:But at the same time, and to a larger and larger degree it seems, the right live in the imagination of their President.
Thursday, July 15, 2004 2:53 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: That's why I really want to talk to Drakon. He (I presume "he") has obviously thought for a long time about a lot of things, and believes and feels deeply. But he's also too close to his own viewpoint to be able to think about it. A little distance is a good thing.
Thursday, July 15, 2004 4:39 AM
Quote:Originally posted by CapnHarbatkin: Sorry for jumping in so late here. I've just spent 2 hours reading and considering this thread and I have a real problem with Drakon stating things over and over and over again as facts with no offered proof. I can't believe no one has called him on any of the dozens of unsupported assertions he's made. I'll just take two around the prison scandal as a start... Drakon's Assertion: "Second, again we are talking about bad guys, folks who have gassed Kurds, killed both civilian Iraqis and US troops, terrorists and thugs. " My offered evidence that this is not true: " Many of the prisoners abused at the Abu Ghraib prison were innocent Iraqis picked up at random by US troops, and incarcerated by under-qualified intelligence officers, a former US interrogator from the notorious jail told the Guardian." ( http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1211374,00.html) "Military officials said 70% to 90% of the Iraqis swept up for interrogation were arrested by mistake, the International Committee of the Red Cross reported." http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/editorials/2004-06-09-our-view_x.htm
Thursday, July 15, 2004 4:57 AM
Thursday, July 15, 2004 5:15 AM
Thursday, July 15, 2004 6:08 AM
Quote:Quote:Mental health care professionals have three words to describe persistently splitting the world into black and white: "Borderline Personality Disorder," a.k.a., chronic inability to mature. And accusing those who disagree with you of some sort of pyschological problem, to dismiss their views and their voice, well that does not strike me as too mature either.
Quote:Mental health care professionals have three words to describe persistently splitting the world into black and white: "Borderline Personality Disorder," a.k.a., chronic inability to mature.
Quote:Trying to blow off my arguments because you don't like them, well that don't sound too mature to me.
Quote:For something like 200 years, Carthage kept attacking Rome, invading the Roman Empire, and generally being a pain in the butt. Rome got fed up with it, and destroyed the city, killed or enslaved its population and dispersed the survivors throughout the empire. And salted the earth, so the city could never ever be rebuilt. It may have been brutal and repulsive and well I am sure you can come up with all sorts of negative descriptions. But one inarguable fact is that Carthage was never a problem again.
Quote:I don't want it to come to that. And I doubt you or anyone else does either. That is why the middle east is going to have to change. And soon too. Combine suicidal terrorist tactics with WMDs and you have a major problem. A few people can wreck death and destruction on a large population, on scales undreamed of in human history.
Quote:If the situation gets desperate enough, if the governments that use terrorism to deflect their population's anger away from their home grown problems don't change, it may create the will needed to commit such a horrible act. That is one reason why Iraq must succeed.
Quote:First off, there is an anti-intellectualism backlash that is growing amongst conservatives. We see that the liberals have taken over the colleges and universities. We get the impression that a lot of what they are producing as deep insight, is useless, ineffective. We see so called smart people hung up with definitions of simple words, wanting to argue them, instead of dealing with the real world problems. It is as if they have forgotten that the purpose of all this mental gymnastics is to aid folks in their daily lives, their constant interaction with the real, physical world. Conservatives prefer a more "common sense" approach. Anyway, That is a brief (no really) thumbnail of how some on our side see things. We see modern day lefties as confusing the political and cultural structures here in America as identical to the ones that have existed in Europe. Which leads them to think that American conservatives are trying to conserve the same things as European ones had in the past. Instead of a completely different paradigm. That misunderstanding also contributes to the demonization from the left. Which gives rise to the old saw about how liberals think conservatives are evil, and conservatives think liberals are stupid. I am not so sure. There are some (Hitchens comes to mind) on the left who do support the war. But I think a lot of folks on the left see the struggle as one of the oppressed striking back against an aristocracy, us.
Quote:You mistake my defense of the President as a call that there should be no critisism. I will insist that it be relevant, and constructive, as opposed to what has been dished out so far. But that is not what I have been facing. What you are seeing I think is a "sample problem" We're going to defend the President's actions in the war because we see it as the right thing to do. We won't chew him out publically, because that would be bad for the war effort. So you see the support, you won't see the critisism. And so it is natural for you to come to the conclusion you just did.
Quote:And I have spent a lot of time on owl shift, and before that, midwatches in the Navy, where it is dull and boring (and thank goodness. Excitement means you are being shot at, or shooting. And with 16 nuclear missiles, you really don't want to do much shooting)
Thursday, July 15, 2004 6:34 AM
Thursday, July 15, 2004 11:30 AM
Quote:Originally posted by TomSmeagol: That's true. Carthage wasn't a problem again. But does that make it right? If your brother constantly picks fights with you, destroys your belongings, and heaps non-stop verbal abuse upon you, does that mean you're justified to kill him so he won't do it anymore?
Quote:I disagree. I don't think we would ever devolve to mass genocide. If we did, we would be no different than Nazi Germany. And I agree that Iraq needs to succeed. I think we probably have very different definitions of success, but I agree that it would be wrong for us to allow it to fall into a state of chaos.
Quote:How are your statements above not in themselves demonization? You accuse the left of spouting hurtful and stereotypical rehtoric, yet you yourself use it as a "valid" argument.
Quote:Contradict yourself much? How can you say first that it is OK to criticize the president (albeit if it's relevant and constructive) and yet later claim that it is wrong to ever criticize the president publically? And by the way, regardless of whether you think you're contradicting yourself or not, I happen to strongly disagree that the president is not open to criticism, even in a time of war. If the president does something that I feel is inappropriate or incorrect, I have the right as a citizen to disagree with him, even in a public place. If the framers of the constitution hadn't felt the same, they wouldn't have felt the need to include the first amendment.
Quote:Well, that certainly explains one thing. The military teaches its soldiers to see in terms of black and white, because in a combat situation, you HAVE to see that way. However, Drakon, it's unfortunate that you haven't learned to mix in shades of grey in your palette now that you're in the civilian world. 'Cause that's just the way the non-military world is--shades of grey.
Thursday, July 15, 2004 11:43 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: (But I hope that doesn't happen! O'wise I'll be disappeared by Homeland Security!)
Quote:But I also realize that at the technical/ security end there's only so much the USA can do, unless we want to turn ourselves into a clone of Stalinist Russia. Even Israel can't deal 100% with the "Palestinian problem". I think it was the Shin Bet that stated the only ones who can stop Palestinian suicide bombings are the Palestinians themselves. The answer is not JUST more and better security because every security measure has a counter-measure.
Quote: Nobody here is arguing that we should just kick back and let terrorism continue. But what we need are EFFECTIVE tools against terrorism.
Thursday, July 15, 2004 3:51 PM
Quote:I really hate saying this, but right or wrong ain't got nothing to do with it. It is a fact of nature, you put almost any life form in a desperate enough situation, they will fight back to the best of their ability, with anything and everything they got.... If someone told me 4 years ago that some folks would commit suicide by crashing planes into a skyscraper, killing thousands, I would have thought you were crazy, that nobody was that stupid or insane.
Quote:In this piece, I was attempting only to describe what I see as a common perseption amongst conservatives. I was trying very hard not to make a judgement call here, but only describe the perception. That is the way a lot of us (conservatives) see things. And that perception is what you have to fight against, if you want to change it...Do you want to change things? Do you want to help? Do you want them to listen to you, or do you want to get blown off for any number of reasons?
Thursday, July 15, 2004 4:01 PM
Friday, July 16, 2004 12:32 AM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: You assume that Cheney, Rumsfeld, Perle, Wolfowitz, Feith, Wurmser, Abrams, Bolton, and Rice share your views, that they give a crap about what either of us think, and that they will continue to be in power. Absent any that, why in hell would I even be worried about "helping" them?
Friday, July 16, 2004 12:47 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: Summary of one topic DRAKON (asserts binary nature of choices - offers limited examples) In a lot of cases, it is a binary choice. Should taxes go up, or down? Should guns be banned or not? Should abortion be legal or illegal? Is this idea right or wrong? Or even is this idea more right (correct, consistent with reality, functional) than that one. Life or death are mutually exclusive. Happiness and misery ditto. If you are one, that automatically rules out the other.
Quote: Part of the reason why you don't recognize grey is b/c you fudge it into the way you frame your either/or proposals. You 'weight' the choices. You select the balance point. And you select the time frame. In one case you will set the choice as 'any possible chance', in another case not. Your balance point changes between utility to further your own happiness to 'us winning', and other places in a vast territory. And you select between short-term goals, mid-term goals and long-term goals at whim.
Friday, July 16, 2004 3:22 AM
Friday, July 16, 2004 4:59 AM
Friday, July 16, 2004 5:08 AM
Friday, July 16, 2004 6:35 AM
Friday, July 16, 2004 9:35 AM
Quote: This illustrates one of the big problems with the whole demonization thing. Whether you like it or not, they got the job now. And there is a pretty good chance they will end up with that job for the next four years. Recent polls indicate its still about a 50 50 split in the country, right now. You may end up stuck with them. And if you approach your political opposition with this kind of attitude, no they won't care what you think. Whats more, you run the very real risk of shrinking your side's support, as people look at your views, and your manner of discussing them, and write them off. Is that what you want? You don't get the votes, you are going to be stuck with them. You keep up this demonization, folks will think your not quite right in the head, and that will not only discredit you, but your views and your political side. Then you won't get the votes.
Friday, July 16, 2004 2:45 PM
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