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classicman2 04-11-06 01:15 PM

Be honest now - what is the most memorable post that has been made on the Politics Forum? It wasn't a 12 paragraph, 'reasoned' response, laced with a little fustianism.

It was a rather simple post - You'll never know how close we came to nuking Iraq.

That can't be topped, so don't try.

Some might call that post levity.

I not only thought it was terribly funny - I thought it was a great post - etched in my memory.

:)

wendersfan 04-11-06 01:33 PM

Based on today's proceedings, someone will have to go a long way to try and convince me that anything is getting better in <b>Politics</b>. The same stupid, partisan crap. The same pointless, "I have nothing to add, but I'm going to slam the other side" mentality. The same old bullshit.

Myster X 04-11-06 02:23 PM


Originally Posted by Groucho
Straw man. I haven't seen one person, in this thread or elsewhere, say that they weren't reading the forum because it leaned one way or the other politically.

check the forum again

Josh H 04-11-06 02:37 PM


Originally Posted by wendersfan
Based on today's proceedings, someone will have to go a long way to try and convince me that anything is getting better in <b>Politics</b>.

I saw one thread with any problems, and it has been closed. Looks like it's working.

No one said it was fixed, just that things are getting better in some people's opinion as the mods begin to enforce the new rules.

Like I said, it might not work in the long run, and if so I'd just support axing the forum and letting those interested find another politics board. It's a luxury on a DVD site, and if it can't be held to the same standards of respectful conversation in the rest of the areas, then it has no place here IMO.

Josh H 04-11-06 02:39 PM


Originally Posted by Vandelay_Inds
Any form of meaningful commentary regarding history is a generalization. One couldn't engage in any branch of the social studies without abstracting from individuals and attempting to give meaning to social, political, economic, cultural, and religious trends as a whole.

This objection to "generalizations" is a particularly childish complain of people who cannot find more idoneous ways of invalidating a statement they disagree with. You'll find little mention of individuals in most advanced books in sociology and philosophy, but instead plenty of discussion regarding abstract forces that encompass a society or group as a whole, and which would have probably earned Weber, Elias or Habermas a suspension from this forum on the basis of engaging in "gross generalizations".

You're overstretching. The only types of generalizations that are likely to be dealt with are going to be gross party bashing. Essentially just trolling and flamebaiting where people are bashing a party just to piss others off, rather than to make any kind of point.

There haven't been any drastic changes thus far, just the mods cracking down on blatant rule violations.

nemein 04-11-06 02:52 PM


Originally Posted by classicman2
Be honest now - what is the most memorable post that has been made on the Politics Forum? It wasn't a 12 paragraph, 'reasoned' response, laced with a little fustianism.

It was a rather simple post - You'll never know how close we came to nuking Iraq.

That can't be topped, so don't try.

Some might call that post levity.

I not only thought it was terribly funny - I thought it was a great post - etched in my memory.

:)

It also would still have been allowed under the current rules. We aren't trying to kill levity, only trolling and party bashing.

wendersfan 04-11-06 03:06 PM


Originally Posted by Vandelay_Inds
This objection to "generalizations" is a particularly childish complain of people who cannot find more idoneous ways of invalidating a statement they disagree with.

Um, well no.

There's nothing wrong with generalizations as a concept, as in "Republicans, as a party, tend to oppose abortion and gay rights, which is why they do better in the South and Midwest", or "As a rule, the major left-wing parties in Western Europe are much more socialist in ideology than the major left-wing parties in North America or Oceania." Both statements attempt to encapsulate a large amount of data into a simple, easy to explain and understand way. <i>They are also value-neutral.</i> Neither sentence states explicitly, nor implies, that Republicans are "more evil" or that Western European left-wing parties are "more stupid". They are nothing more than rules-of-thumb to facilitate understanding and/or discussion. They aren't "cheap shots". This is the primary difference.

You can name-drop Habermas as much as you like, but it doesn't make what you say any more correct.

Gallant Pig 04-11-06 04:22 PM

There's a difference between:

<i>Republicans are always such pathetic losers.</i>

and

<i>Republicans are always thrifty spenders</i>

I think any generalizations which are opinionated and derogatory are the problem. Not the more harmless generalizations which have a source in the truth.

classicman2 04-11-06 04:28 PM

If you're going to try and remove partisanship (even rank partisanship) from the Politics Forum, you just as well do away with the forum altogether.

That is the backbone of any discussion of politics.

Another point: Does anyone, except apparently for the moderators, believe the posts I made which brought about my exile are anything but levity?

tonyc3742 04-11-06 05:10 PM

"Partisanship" is "calling names and trolling"?

To say that partisanship is the 'backbone' of the politics evidences your personal viewpoint, ie, that partisanship rules above all. There are some out there who can find agreement with members of other parties on certain issues.

A generalization, like a stereotype, is or was originally based somewhat in truth, and as such, isn't inherently good or bad, as long as one realizes there are exceptions to every stereotype, which some apparently cannot. Saying "The African-American vote has historically gone predominately Democrat" is a factual generalization, that most would probably agree with.
Even V_Inds's comment that ""Left-wing policies have produced little economic growth, huge unemployment, and most damaging, a society that views economic life as an estamental rather than a rational activity. Thus, left-wing policies should be condemned and avoided by any society that values economic growth, freshness and inventiveness" is similar, because one assumes they are based in fact, at least according to the poster. The same idea/opinion can be pitched in an inflammatory way, which I think the rules are trying to do away with, which I support.
Sort of like the difference between these:


Originally Posted by classicman2
If you're going to try and remove partisanship (even rank partisanship) from the Politics Forum, you just as well do away with the forum altogether.

That is the backbone of any discussion of politics.

"I disagree, I feel the discussion of politics is not served at all with rank partisanship and blind faith to ideology."

Disagreement with respect and reason.

Or

"You're full of shit, you blindly partisan leftist wacko."

One of those examples might be allowed and can serve to foster discussion; the other pretty much calls it to a close.

classicman2 04-11-06 05:43 PM

Partisans (Bushites) have an entirely different view from partisans (non-Bushites) on a multitude of things - the latest CIA leak fiasco is an example.

You can rationally discuss the issue all you want. Nothing will change. The Bushites are going to defend Bush no matter what and the non-Bushites are going to be critical of him no matter what. That's now politics work.

The absolutely certainty of how I know people (the frequent posters on the Politics Forum) are going to respond is the most enjoyable aspect of this forum for me.

But again, I don't don't take this forum as seriously as some seem to.

wendersfan 04-11-06 06:00 PM


Originally Posted by Vandelay_Inds
Did you pull that "value neutral" rule out of your hat? Why can't one establish general principles A, B, and C, and then proceed to derive value judgement D out of them?

One can, of course, but not everyone shares the same values. For some, higher taxation might be acceptable as long as it means low infant mortality or universal health coverage. For others, the concurrent disencentive to save, invest, etc. would make it less palatable.

Like, "Left-wing policies have produced little economic growth, huge unemployment, and most damaging, a society that views economic life as an estamental rather than a rational activity. Thus, left-wing policies should be condemned and avoided by any society that values economic growth, freshness and inventiveness."
The first part of your statement is descriptive, and can easily be demonstrated as true or false with a simple examination of data (it's false, BTW). The problem is that you included it with the normative second half of your sentence, which is where you really got into trouble. :)

You can then proceed to invalidate either the premise or the conclusion. Or simply cry "generalizations" and avoid reflecting altogether. :shrug:
The thing is, some statements or generalizations are so ludicrous or insulting that they really don't deserve a response at all.

movielib 04-11-06 06:06 PM


Originally Posted by Gallant Pig
Since it seems pretty out in the open, I'm wondering if our local & vocal Libertarian crew was offended by C-Man's comments.

As one who often knowingly takes classicman's libertarian-bait it has to be more substantive than those two posts. And I'm never "offended" by him.

BTW, I was wondering where c-man was in the political forum. I only just now tracked this down. I can be out of touch.

C-man, certainly you can't let that last line just sit there? ;)

LurkerDan 04-11-06 06:10 PM


Originally Posted by dtcarson
"I disagree, I feel the discussion of politics is not served at all with rank partisanship and blind faith to ideology."

Disagreement with respect and reason.

Or

"You're full of shit, you blindly partisan leftist wacko."

One of those examples might be allowed and can serve to foster discussion; the other pretty much calls it to a close.

Or

"Hogwash!"

Which one is this closer to?

classicman2 04-11-06 06:38 PM


Originally Posted by LurkerDan
Or

"Hogwash!"

Which one is this closer to?

Hogwash is the perfect response to some of the non-sensical crap that is spouted on this forum.

classicman2 04-11-06 06:42 PM

Another one - it seems to be o.k. to call someone a liar on the politics forum; but, it's an absolute no-no to call someone a right-winger. Makes perfect sense to me. :rolleyes:

Josh H 04-11-06 07:37 PM


Originally Posted by classicman2
Hogwash is the perfect response to some of the non-sensical crap that is spouted on this forum.

As I said earlier, if a post is really that bad, don't give them the satisfaction of the response.

No point in showing disagreement if you aren't going to elaborate on why, and again if it's not worth elaborating on, it's not worth responding to in the first place. :notrolls:

Josh H 04-11-06 07:38 PM


Originally Posted by classicman2
Another one - it seems to be o.k. to call someone a liar on the politics forum; but, it's an absolute no-no to call someone a right-winger. Makes perfect sense to me. :rolleyes:

Maybe the liar posts just aren't reported to the mods? Or the person really was lying? Any examples?

nemein 04-11-06 08:13 PM


Originally Posted by classicman2
Hogwash is the perfect response to some of the non-sensical crap that is spouted on this forum.

If you follow it up w/ the reason as to why you think it is "non-sensical crap" I would agree. Frankly if all you have to offer is "hogwash" though you might as well leave the comment to yourself IMHO.

What I want to know is, if you have such a negative opinion of what we are doing w/ the forum, why do you keep coming back?

classicman2 04-11-06 09:32 PM

What I want to know is why this rush to change? If it ain't broken, don't fix it. The Politics Forum is not broken.

BTW: Do you agree with my suggestion that a little bit more political idealogical balance among the moderators (the ones who actually moderate - a couple of the more liberal moderators don't moderate any longer) might be a good thing for the forum?

Ranger 04-11-06 09:40 PM

I think the moderating is fine, but it couldn't hurt to add a couple liberal moderators. But who's going to volunteer?

nemein 04-11-06 10:19 PM


What I want to know is why this rush to change? If it ain't broken, don't fix it. The Politics Forum is not broken.
Typical c-man... never answers direct questions but expects everyone else to answer his -ohbfrank-

According to the reports/complaints we were getting people did consider the forum to be broken so steps were taken to try and correct that.


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