Ghostvirus
Avenger
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This thread has become a chore to read. My god some of you are writing books man!!
What surprises me most about Holocaust deniers is that despite their denial of it, they think about it an awful lot. Honestly, I know about what happened and it was horrible and all, but unless a conversation like this, or a movie about it comes on (and I'm not even talking about the standard WWII fare, it has to be about the Holocaust directly), I just don't even think about it. Plainly put, I essentially forget about it for most of the time. I have my own life to live, but Holocaust deniers seem to devote much of their time to something they don't even believe happened.
It's confounding.
Not knowing something isn't nearly as dangerous as bigotry is.
My point was that the people who have this belief have developed it based on their own bigotry. The two things are intertwined in such a way that there's no way to separate them least of which by showing them pictures of dead jews and explaining that the holocaust was real.
But if you want your world to be easier then you should probably not attack the bigotry or ignorance of your father-in-law.
Again this is not what I meant. What I mean is that if you were comparing current media with cultural history that wouldn't be a good comparison. There are difference between the "lies" of the modern media and the lie of a propaganda driven "fake" holocaust.
So first you decided to assume that you knew what someone thought about one thing just because they thought something about something else? Just because someone doesn't believe the holocaust was an actual event they automatically think Hitler was awesome?[/
So he knows and apparently he's not afraid to bring it up and they still have to hear about it. Imagine that. I guess it didn't go off without a hitch afterall.
So you've done nothing but make him shut up around Billy. Why bring up a conversation just to get someone to shut up about something if you can just as easily ignore them?
Does it change it? No. Is it tremendously frustrating and offensive, especially to the people who are targeted by such malicious conspiracy theories (Jews, generally, but groups targeted by Nazis as a whole)? Yes.
And to answer your earlier question, anti-Semites deny the Holocaust because they believe it is a ploy by Jews to gain sympathy. Anything that would portray the Jewish people as oppressed or in any way put-upon, they either try to rationalize or out and out deny.
That's the point, it does. Bigots get their way, spread lies, etc. The people who directly suffer for it are the people they target, but then we also end up with laws based on that bigotry, for example.
Look at Maine. Did it matter that a lot of bigots think gay marriage is sinful? Yep, it did. Look at Austria, where neo-Nazis (they don't call themselves that, of course, but it's what they are) rose back to power for a while and are still a relevant political party. They relied on bigotry fueled by a lot of lies and propaganda about foreigners and other things in order to spread their beliefs and gain an electoral majority that sent them into power.
Holocaust denial is just one of lots of false beliefs and lies and propaganda that such people spread. If we ignore it, if we act like it's unimportant and doesn't matter, it spreads unchallenged. Plus, just on a basic level, if someone you know or in your family believes a terrible lie based on hatred, why wouldn't you want to tell them they are wrong? We can't stop lies that fuel hatred and bigotry if we refuse to confront them just because it feels uncomfortable.
"Everyone"? Quite an overstatement. I can think of perhaps one besides this thread where there was any significant instance of a person misunderstanding me a lot. It's usually a case of both sides not fully understanding one another. To the extent "it's me" -- which I don't deny -- it is the other side as well.Not to go out of my way to sound rude, but this isn't the first argument that you've had on these boards where everyone just couldn't understand your points... It could be you.
I never said that at all. I don't believe I even mildly implied it. It's a case where your interpretation is so far from what I said that I'm baffled. My argument is that Holocaust denial is an example of ONE of many lies and things that should be confronted, lest it spread and add fuel to bigotry. And I've consistently noted there are tons of factors leading to bigotry, and that belief in those doesn't make someone inherently a neo-Nazi.My point was that denying the holocaust doesn't turn someone into a neo-Nazi. You seem to mean that neo-Nazis turn into neo-Nazis when they hear that the holocaust isn't real. That's not true. ... But my point is that someone believing that the holocaust is fake does not necessarily mean that everyone who hears that is going to up and become a neo-Nazi like it's some sort of audible neo-Nazi plague. ... You realize that the belief that the holocaust was a big ol' fake does not make neo-Nazis but rather many many many beliefs. That's all I'm saying.
I didn't put words into your mouth. You said THIS on the previous page:No. I didn't. You do not need to put words into my mouth to make a point.
And I didn't make it into one. I also didn't say that if Billy doesn't refute his father-in-law that we'll all live in a Nazi society. Read the first and second pages of this thread, where broader issues got raised. I'm not blowing it out of proportion, I responded about broader issues because they got raised by others. You're blowing my own comments out of proportion, partly it seems because you've dramatically misread them. "One step closer to Hitler" as an outgrowth of me saying we should challenge bigoted lies and propaganda is a better example of blowing things out of proportion.You act like if the OP doesn't immediately confront his father-in-law then tomorrow we'll all be goosestepping around the ovens. I think you might be blowing this out of proportion just a little bit. This was never meant to be a world scale argument.
Uh, I'M making a big deal out of it? Several other people raised "greatness". I explained my disagreement. Then YOU are the one who in fact raised it again by ASKING for my definition. So I gave it to you, as you requested. Then you responded AGAIN saying you disagree with me about it. Now you've posted definitions of the word. WHO is making a big deal about it?Stop making such a great big deal about it.
Nope. I could say I think you are misunderstanding/misquoting me just want to write a bunch of long posts for the point of being argumentative. But that's a rather presumptuous thing to say, right? I knew that in ONE person's comments about Hitler being a "great leader" he probably didn't mean the common-use definition -- but this thread is about a father-in-law whom I think DID mean the common-use definition when he said it. I used the fact of other people making the same remark from different perspectives as a way to address the original actual way it was meant (in my opinion, which I think there's pretty strong evidence to support) in the thread.And then after that you admitted that you knew that the intent of the word great in the post you responded to was probably NOT what you decided to base your ENTIRE argument in the response about. I think you just wanted to write a nice long post about how you don't like Hitler and completely ignore the contest of the post you quoted.
No, why would he? And I don't hate him. I am his favorite son-in-law, and we get along terrific and spend a lot of time hanging out whenever I'm around my in-laws.Does he hate you?
"Had in-laws" -- do you not have them anymore? And did they/do they hate you?I have had in-laws before and we disagreed on a lot of things so in order to maintain civility we didn't bring those topics up. It's not a difficult task.
Serious question: if you "had" them but don't anymore, is part of your reluctance to confront family on these sorts of things due to any problems that arose with your own in-laws, and which in any way is related to them being former in-laws? If they are still in-laws, obviously these questions don't apply. But I'd like to know if your experience is influencing your view here -- my own experiences obviously influence my view on it.No, I don't. Why do you ask? Be honest. Anyway, I'll "throw my 2 cents in" when it affects me personally (for example, if my dad praises Hitler and thinks the Jews conspire to make Nazis look bad or something like that). Or if someone at work feels comfortable enough to say they hate black people, then I certainly feel comfortable enough to tell them they're a bigot. But it depends on the conversation and what's said. If I'm PART of a conversation, then I feel free to state my own viewpoint. Do you feel the need to avoid sharing your opinion on topics, like if someone called black people a racial slur would you pipe down and worry about offending them by responding?Do you always feel the need to share your opinion anytime someone brings up a topic? Like if someone were to make a political comment at work do you immediately throw in your 2 cents about it?
If someone makes an untactful, annoying racial slur, they aren't maintaining peace in the environment. And it's a pretty good way to make people hate them, too. I'm not so obsessed with maintaining peaceful environments that I just ignore every single instance of someone else disrupting that peace. If I'm at work and someone expresses political views, I usually ignore it and rarely care anyway. But if someone says, "Blacks are stupid criminals" then I'm going to respond. And I really, really don't care if I'm hated by people who would hate me for denouncing the use of a racial slur at work.That's pretty untactful, annoying, and not a way to maintain peace in any environment. It is a good way to make people hate you though.
How is this relevant to this discussion, or are you just talking about general bigotry and ignorance?
1. How does it spread if no one thinks its important?
2. In my family? In my family, we allow people to make up their own minds about what they believe, and people reap what they sow and all that. I might mention "Hey, you keep saying things like that, you're going to look like a *****e", but that would be about it.
3. You can't really stop lies that fuel hatred and bigotry by simply confronting people or ostracizing them. It's up to individuals to choose what they do.
Wow....even I know the horrible things Germans did to Jews back in the day. I'm curious if both Germans and Jews get along now? I know it's been 50+ years...but...yeah.
Can someone that knows tell me how long the Nazi's hid what they were doing from the world?
This thread has become a chore to read. My god some of you are writing books man!!
I'm probably right and you're probably wrong.


I concur, all of my further arguments can be summed up by this:
Ha! You should've put "In summary:" before that.
I'll sum up my future arguments:
I think I'm right and you're wrong, too... but I proved it.![]()

Yeah. That's why gay marriage was banned. It wasn't that a lot of people simply don't agree with it to begin with. It was because it would be taught in schools (?). I suppose that's possible, though it's the first I've heard of this. Where did you obtain this information?It's relevant because a good portion of people who voted to ban gay marriage did so due to a ridiculous, outlandish claim made by extreme fringe people who oppose gay marriage -- namely, that the law allowing gay marriage would force gay marriage to be taught in schools.
Just because YOU and I think something is unimportant and stupid doesn't mean it doesn't spread. Do you really have trouble thinking of any stupid, absurd lies that have spread and had an influence in society despite the fact the ideas are crazy and are actually only believed by a minority of people?
Really? You have a family that doesn't debate any issues, ever? You just all form your opinions apart from one another's views, and then don't mention them? And if your mom came home and told you she just heard something that you know is a lie but she believes it, you never tell her it's not true? Wow.[p/quote]
You did see this, didn't you?
I might mention "Hey, you keep saying things like that, you're going to look like a *****e"
We don't generally need to debate any issues, no, as we're all intelligent people, and we generally don't need to be conflicted about what, to us, seems obvious. I don't have issues with "bigotry and ignorance" in my family. Closest we have are a few family members who do stupid things every so often. Drugs, crime, being irresponsible, etc.
Do you know what we do collectively when those family members commit crimes, did drugs, etc?
We ignore them and leave them to their own devices, and to reap the consequences of their individual actions. We don't give in to what is sometimes OBVIOUS attention seeking behavior.
Know what happened? They stopped doing those things around us. Some of them matured and grew up a little.
My family believes that everyone is responsible for their own actions, and I happen to agree with them. If someone wants help with something, I'll provide help. If someone wants advice, I'll give it. If someone is just acting like a complete dumbass, though...that's on them. I'm not going to go "You're EMBARASSING ME!" or "That's IMMATURE and WRONG!" Because frankly, they're just embarassing themselves. I expect people to put on their big boy and big girl pants...and act like mature adults...or they're on their own.
Really? You should build a time machine and go back and tell the civil rights movement, or the abolitionists, or the Jews in Nazi Germany, or Apartheid South Africa, that confronting and ostracizing people fueled by hatred and bigotry doesn't work. Let 'em know to just let the slaveowners and segregationists and Nazis and Apartheid regime to chose what to believe
You really think that simply confronting people with bigoted ideas is what changed things duringthe Civil Rights Movement, Abolitionists, Nazi Germany, or Apartheid?
As I recall, it was mostly down to people who disagreed with bigoted and ignorant behavior setting a better example, working toward what they wanted, a better world and a better coexistence, without trying to outright "change" people's minds overnight. I really don't feel like marching around with signs is what changed things. But what do I know?
The issue with the Nazis turned into a war. I suppose that's a confrontation, but it didn't really solve the issue of bigotry that Jews faced and still do face often.
See, people tend to ACT on their beliefs. And to try and spread them. This notion that we just can't accomplish anything by confronting hatred and bigotry, and that we should just let people believe it without even speaking up against it, is so glaringly misguided and counter to the historical record that I am stunned to see it embraced by so many of you here
I never said you can't accomplish anything by confronting hatred and bigotry. I don't know that anyone else did, either. I think it's pretty clear that people simply feel that doing so in a familial setting is a bad idea. There's a huge difference between speaking out against something at the right time, and in the right way...and drawing others into direct confrontation that will often only escalate the situation.
In the case of Billy, it could be a bad idea to draw Uncle Ignoramus into conflict, when he could otherwise just set a good example with his own actions.
Yeah. That's why gay marriage was banned. It wasn't that a lot of people simply don't agree with it to begin with. It was because it would be taught in schools (?).
I suppose that's possible, though it's the first I've heard of this. Where did you obtain this information?
A lot of things seep through society. Confronting them every time they come up isn't going to stop them. It will only mark you as someone who is confrontational.
Sure, ideas get exchanged. That is the nature of human interaction. But you are apparently suggesting that ignorance and bigotry, in this modern day, left unchecked, leads to actual laws that propagate hatred.
Which hatred laws are you referring to? I'm just not seeing that. At least here in the US.
Yeah. That's why gay marriage was banned. It wasn't that a lot of people simply don't agree with it to begin with. It was because it would be taught in schools (?).
I suppose that's possible, though it's the first I've heard of this. Where did you obtain this information?
A lot of things seep through society. Confronting them every time they come up isn't going to stop them. It will only mark you as someone who is confrontational.
Sure, ideas get exchanged. That is the nature of human interaction. But you are apparently suggesting that ignorance and bigotry, in this modern day, left unchecked, leads to actual laws that propagate hatred.
Which hatred laws are you referring to? I'm just not seeing that. At least here in the US.
I never said I feel something is unimportant or stupid.
If no one gives any credence to things like people saying the Holocaust never happened...if we, in fact, effectively treat them as somewhat childish and unimportant or irrelevant, then how are those ideas going to spread through the larger society?
Unless you really think that one person at a time will slowly become convinced that the holocaust never happened, or act like this, simply because others belive it, and that this will happen in large enough numbers to be significant in the larger society.
You really think that simply confronting people with bigoted ideas is what changed things duringthe Civil Rights Movement, Abolitionists, Nazi Germany, or Apartheid?
As I recall, it was mostly down to people who disagreed with bigoted and ignorant behavior setting a better example, working toward what they wanted, a better world and a better coexistence, without trying to outright "change" people's minds overnight. I really don't feel like marching around with signs is what changed things. But what do I know?
The issue with the Nazis turned into a war. I suppose that's a confrontation, but it didn't really solve the issue of bigotry that Jews faced and still do face often.
I never said you can't accomplish anything by confronting hatred and bigotry. I don't know that anyone else did, either.
I think it's pretty clear that people simply feel that doing so in a familial setting is a bad idea. There's a huge difference between speaking out against something at the right time, and in the right way...and drawing others into direct confrontation that will often only escalate the situation.
I concur, all of my further arguments can be summed up by this:
I'm probably right and you're probably wrong.
I don't really see how it is an argument. A person that denies the holocaust is a person that I do not want to associate with.
Yeah, it is. A lot of people - bigots - DO disagree with it. But it passed by a very narrow margin, and some people showed up to vote against it because of the TV ads that claimed (erroneously) that it would have to be taught in schools.
And for the people who did just oppose gay marriage across the board, you think they just oppose it without any actual beliefs about homosexuality or marriage as the underlying root cause of their opinion? No, they heard things, were told things, etc that influenced them in their lives to the point they came to oppose gay marriage and homosexuality. The point still stands -- people hear lies and false information that leads them to develop bigotry.
Oh, good grief. Again with the notion that it's the person who stands up AGAINST bigotry who is the confrontational one, not all those people espousing bigotry in the first place. When a bunch of people who hate gays go around trying to stop gay marriage, THEY are the ones starting a confrontation. When that crap seeps into society, confronting it is the rational and right response.
And again, the claim that confronting them isn't going to stop them is absurd and demonstrably false. Have you just never read a history book, heard about the civil rights movement, and so on? I never said we should confront every single instance ever that ever happens everywhere, I kind of repeatedly kept having to point out that I did NOT say that, in fact. But when the lie and bigotry is bad enough, is in a context where it causes a problem, where the person is upset by it, and when it's something that happens to be among the lies and false information and bigotry that is spreading in society and/or (and OR, and OR) leading to calls for laws based on that bigotry (like the anti-gay marriage thing), then it should be confronted.
No, I'm not. I'm suggesting that SOME ignorance and bigotry, if left unchecked, leads to laws that propagate hatred and/OR (and OR, and OR) to at least continuing the spread of bigotry. And I said not JUST in modern times, but HISTORICALLY -- which is why I listed a bunch of examples from HISTORY.
Ones I explicitly mentioned, for example. Like slavery and segregation (we had passage of the Civil Rights Act and the end of legalized segregation only within the last 40 and 50 odd years, out of a national history that spans more than 230 years).
Like banning gay marriage in the modern times. Then there are examples elsewhere in the world, since I didn't limit it to just this nation. The examples of hate laws and discriminatory laws around the world is plentiful, so if you want to see them, use Google.
Well, my quote there was in response to you using "no one" so I thought you were including yourself, plus the entire point you seem to be challenging with your list of responses was about why we should still challenge lies even when we can see they are ridiculous and seem obviously false and when most people don't think the lie is really "important".
People initially treated Hitler and his thugs as a joke, didn't think they had any chance of becoming a significant social force, etc. They were pretty roundly mocked by other political groups and didn't enjoy any actually large audience for their messages for several years. Over time, however, their constant presence in society and the loudness of their message and their ability to keep disseminating it through society -- even though at first society didn't buy their crap -- eventually led them to what? Victory. But even THEN, Hitler still never won a majority himself in the elections, and in fact the Nazis started to already see a steady decrease in their electoral support in the Reichstag after a short time (before elections just stopped happening, of course).
I'm not saying I think that left unchecked everybody in the U.S. or the world will believe the Holocaust was faked. I'm saying that such a lie is one example of many that combine to influence thoughts and ideas, which breeds ignorance and bigotry, and that it doesn't take a majority or even necessarily always a large minority for such things to have a dangerous impact on society or in different nations. The combination of lots of different such lies -- including, yes, Holocaust denial -- were at the heart of the message of Austria's modern-day neo-Nazis, and over time they shocked everyone by coming to power. But prior to that, everyone tended to dismiss them as a joke and non-threat and unimportant.
You need to recognize it as what it actually is -- the Holocaust denial itself is one weapon in the arsenal of a broader movement and ideology, and it's one seed that gets put out there. It isn't meant to literally be spread to everybody, and the people espousing it aren't trying to spread it in the belief that it'll actually become the dominant viewpoint. They just want to spread it ENOUGH, and to use it as one brick in the creepy little wall they build. The depend on only SOME people falling for it, and thus becoming open to more of their messaging.
If nobody bothered to even address these claims, and these speakers, and their books and their "research", it builds into more of a cottage industry than it already is, and I don't have any trouble at all imagining that someone with little actual knowledge or schooling in the subject could see the claims and research -- a lot of which is written to appear very scholarly, and uses lots of documents and on-site inspections etc -- and actually fall for it, yes. Not a majority of people, but more than I think you'd expect.
I don't underestimate the power of a lie that feeds into other potential preconceptions or prejudices, and that provides an "out" from certain types of guilt or fear. Consider that Holocaust denial has had a particular allure in some European nations, partly no doubt due to the obvious fact that it would certainly mitigate a large amount of collective guilt and blame that some nations have felt. That seems rather obvious to me, and in recent years the rise to power of neo-Nazism in Austria and the very disturbing trend toward neo-Nazi sympathizers and actual members, as well as sentiments derived directly from neo-Nazi propaganda and pseudo-fascist parties (they can't be overtly Nazis, as it's banned there), demonstrate the dangers.
I'm not saying it's the only thing that ended it. It is a PART of ending bigotry. But if you think it was just a small part of it, then you'd be grossly mistaken. I know the history of the Civil Rights Movement, of Abolition, of Apartheid, of WWII, etc, and I know the roll that speaking out and confronting it -- or remaining silent -- played.
Let's flip it around -- you really think that IGNORING and NON-confrontation of bigotry and lies was a big part of the Civil Rights Movement, Abolition, etc?
I didn't say that confronting it changes it or changed it overnight. And if you think that the bus boycotts, the lawsuits, the sit-ins at counters, the protest at which the nation saw cops attacking Civil Rights marchers and supporters with hoses and dogs, were not instrumental in the successes the movement achieved, then you are very right to ask "But what do I know?"
That's a reverse example I was making there, and I realize I wasn't clear enough about that, so sorry for not explaining it better. In that instance, I meant first of all that the failure to confront and fight against Nazi propaganda in the early years before they took power was a huge mistake, and that once they won elections and got seats in the Reichstag (not a majority, though) their views still were not confronted even though in fact many other political parties (who together had a much larger following than the Nazis) opposed the Nazi rhetoric against Jews, for example.
Once Hitler did take power, other nations scrambled in the early years to invest in Germany, to make deals with them, and overall really liked what Nazism meant for corporate investment. They hosted the Olympics, and were nice enough to take down the "no jews" signs, and every other nation was nice enough to let the removal of the signs be enough and not raise a bigger fuss over the rampant discrimination.
Lots of political people and military people -- and even some people who JOINED and funded the Nazis in their early years and initial rise to power -- called the hatred of Jews "silly" and opposed it, but tolerated it and didn't speak up because they didn't think it was important and certainly didn't realize where it would lead.
They did. It was explicitly stated in other posts that you can't/don't fight bigotry by confronting lies and people who hold bigoted views you disagree with. As for your own comments, the discussion and plenty of what you responded to were not simply about the context of familial settings, but were about broader issues and situations and the basic concept of confronting bigotry by also confronting the lies and distortions etc that help fuel and spread bigotry.
You've made multiple comments challenging and disagreeing with that notion, in the broader sense, not just in the familial one. So if I'm saying that I think that in some cases, depending on what is said, that it can be important to confront lies like Holocaust denial, and you step in to debate me and keep challenging my stated viewpoint, it's reasonable to assume you must disagree with my viewpoint or you wouldn't be arguing with me about it.
And I think it's pretty clear -- since I've said it repeatedly -- that I don't think EVERY instance in a familial setting should be challenged, that it depends on the who, what, where, and when. Whereas your comment right there, and the comments throughout the debate from the opposing viewpoint, HAVE most of the time (MOST OF THE TIME, so please don't take it/claim it as saying all of the time) said that it just should not be done in family settings at all. You're first sentence there DID say it just like that. You follow it up by saying it's okay at the "fight time, and in the right way" -- well, yeah, which is what I've said over and over.
Seems to me that you and a few other people must feel pretty strongly that it is at least "usually" if not "most of the time" (or perhaps even "all of the time") a bad idea to challenge family bigotry even when it's expressed directly to you personally, and even when it's something as extreme as endorsing Hitler as a great leader while also denying the Holocaust happened and thinking it's a Jewish plot to get sympathy. That's not just your typical sort of "granddad made a racist remark" situation, that's espousing a string of claims and views that are among the most fundamental aspects of modern neo-Nazi propaganda. And it has been very hurtful to his wife over the years, and disturbs Billy as well, and he was motivated to post about it.
You think that's all something that's not worth arguing with him about because that would make Billy -- rather than the dude repeatedly quoting neo-Nazi propaganda -- the "confrontational one", and could cause a big family melt-down or something. Despite the fact that Billy said he's argued with the guy about it before and they didn't disown Billy's wife or ban Billy from the house. But the guy DID ask a specific question -- "where's the evidence?" -- and Billy's response to my suggested presenting of evidence was a belief that the guy would probably not listen to it, which suggests Billy HASN'T included an actual response to "where's the evidence" among his arguments with the guy.
I think the guy's comments, the fact that Billy and his wife are still welcome in the dad's home, and the ease of supplying evidence in response to the guy's unanswered question in a way that's polite and even suggests the guy just didn't realize it, is not some crazed outlandish concept that's going to cause a big family problem, which is what my belief has been treated like. I'm not proposing a new, strange concept, nor am I conflating things -- I think suggesting it could be a major catastrophe for the family is what qualifies as overstating the situation, personally.
In this instance, with these facts, the who, what, where, when, and why add up to a situation where I think it would be worthwhile to wait for the guy to say it again and then respond not by arguing, but by answering his question politely. That's rational, reasonable, and one of the ways to confront lies and bigotry. If anyone still disagrees with that, I just don't know what to say anymore, because it's like we're talking in different languages.
There were people who don't necessarily personally care for homosexuality, but who might not want actual laws discriminating against them. Believe it or not, there are people in the world who don't think everything they dislike should be illegal. Then they saw commercials claiming it would be mandatory to teach it in schools, and they were stupid enough/naive enough to believe it, and it was the thing that tipped the scales to make them go out and vote against it.I find it very hard to believe that most people who didn't vote against it to begin with simply didn't already feel homosexuality is wrong, or that two men or two women shouldn't marry. Otherwise, why would they give a damn about it being taught in schools?
And I refuse to believe you're psychic, so there we are.I refuse to believe that everyone who voted against it were FOR gay marriage before the "school ads".
Wow, and that's what I've said all along, that beliefs are learned -- and taught. The main ways that bigoted beliefs are learned is through lies and false information. And I'm not going to get into a debate over relativity of "lies", we're discussing specific instances where we are talking about lies and deception.Of course I don't think they just oppose it without any actual beliefs.
Beliefs have to be learned.
"Lies" and "false information" are somewhat relative.
And of course, I never said everyone becomes a bigot, or that everyone who thinks something is wrong is a bigot. Otherwise people who think bigotry is wrong would be bigots for thinking bigotry is wrong. But if you single out a segment of the population (like gays or Jews) for discrimination and hatred, then yes you're a bigot.Not everyone becomes a bigot, and not everyone who thinks something is wrong is a bigot.
Yeah, but you only seem to get worked up about one of those so-called "wrongs". The one I don't think is "wrong" in the first place. This is the weak kind of argument that doesn't hold up. You're comparing a truthful response to a lie that instigates the exchange in the first place, as if there is some sort of parity involved. It's not an equal situation, and responding to a confrontational lie by "confronting" it with the truth is not the same thing at all. I can't even take that argument seriously.Two wrongs don't make a right and all that.
Then stop misstating my comments, and stop responding in obtuse manners and with disingenuous questions. If you want to use condescending remarks to me and others, don't get pissy about it coming back your way. THAT'S childish and a waste of my time to read. Talk to me with respect, and you'll get the same measure back. Get smarmy and smart@** and talk down to me, and you'll find out pretty fast that I can give as good as I get. You don't get to speak down to other folks and demand a free-pass yourself.Do me a favor. Stop with the nonsense like "Have you ever read a history book"? You're far too intelligent to need to resort to veiled insults to make a point. It's childish, and it's a waste of your time to type, and my time to read.
Why doesn't anybody ever talk about the good things the Nazi's did?
/Devil's Advocate.
There were people who don't necessarily personally care for homosexuality, but who might not want actual laws discriminating against them. Believe it or not, there are people in the world who don't think everything they dislike should be illegal. Then they saw commercials claiming it would be mandatory to teach it in schools, and they were stupid enough/naive enough to believe it, and it was the thing that tipped the scales to make them go out and vote against it.
Then stop misstating my comments, and stop responding in obtuse manners and with disingenuous questions. If you want to use condescending remarks to me and others, don't get pissy about it coming back your way. THAT'S childish and a waste of my time to read. Talk to me with respect, and you'll get the same measure back. Get smarmy and smart@** and talk down to me, and you'll find out pretty fast that I can give as good as I get. You don't get to speak down to other folks and demand a free-pass yourself.
Wow, and that's what I've said all along, that beliefs are learned -- and taught. The main ways that bigoted beliefs are learned is through lies and false information. And I'm not going to get into a debate over relativity of "lies", we're discussing specific instances where we are talking about lies and deception.
(b) If you fail to see how banning gay marriage is hateful on any level, then I suspect you support banning gay marriage. And I think that's a bigoted view. If I told you I think interracial marriage should be banned, you'd probably -- and rightly -- call that bigoted.
It's not simply denial of a right to enter into contracts based solely on not liking gay people, it is an attempt to deny gay couples access to one of the social institutions that is among the primary recognized symbols of love and family. Denying gay people the right to marry is about preventing a step that would legitimize their relationships and their love as acceptable and valid.
The symbolism of wanting marriage to be between a man and woman, as it has historically been?The symbolism is the overriding factor, and opposition to gay people achieving access to that symbol is based on nothing, NOTHING, but ignorant hatred against gay people. And that ignorant hatred leads to the ignorant hateful banning of gay marriage. And it's bigotry, and supporting it and believing it makes someone a bigot.
I got to that quote from you, and with a quick scan I confirmed that most of the rest of your post is either just more condescension or overt obtuseness.
Some examples:And where have I talked down to you, or been condescending in the least?