agreed. but the two of you tend to get personal and combative with each other, moreso than with other people on the board. have you not noticed that? has anyone else not noticed it? i could be just seeing into things that aren't really there.Headhunter wrote:I'm not picking him apart as a person, though. Your politics, or even how you express them, are not the end all, be all of your character.zombie wrote:no, you're right that your experiences should not be the end all be all of your world view. it can be just hard to look past, with certain circumstances. jason should try. but it's not worth picking him apart as a person. i think that will just make him more embittered or more biased. and he shouldn't pick you apart as a person either, so much. i see that tendency with the both of you in particular for some reason.Headhunter wrote: Oh, sure. Your experiences in the world necessarily play a role in how your ideology develops. But that shouldn't mean limiting your worldview to a totally myopic state, where the only evidence you ever need comes from personal anecdotes. They should be a piece of the puzzle, not the whole thing. Certainly not at the expense of acknowledging hard data, research beyond your expertise etc.
Life in California
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We tolerate extreme views, assuming no actual discrimination against board-members occurs. We will let snowflakes melt from the heat.
We tolerate extreme views, assuming no actual discrimination against board-members occurs. We will let snowflakes melt from the heat.
Re: Life in California
- Jigsaw
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Re: Life in California
Well, to my knowledge, Head's a Libertarian, and Jason's a Trumpist, so both are wrong, and what they say to each other, or the level of personal attacks, means nothing to me.
For my thoughts on the horror films I've seen, please look here: https://jigsawshorrorcorner.wordpress.com/
- Headhunter
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Re: Life in California
I would say politics should be treated as being an independent entity only to be observed and analyzed in direct context when you're measuring the content of someone's character, so long as the person doesn't believe in explicitly evil shit. Some of the nicest people I know have views that I consider abhorrent.zombie wrote:maybe i'm just looking at it wrong.Headhunter wrote:I'm not picking him apart as a person, though.zombie wrote:no, you're right that your experiences should not be the end all be all of your world view. it can be just hard to look past, with certain circumstances. jason should try. but it's not worth picking him apart as a person. i think that will just make him more embittered or more biased. and he shouldn't pick you apart as a person either, so much. i see that tendency with the both of you in particular for some reason.Headhunter wrote: Oh, sure. Your experiences in the world necessarily play a role in how your ideology develops. But that shouldn't mean limiting your worldview to a totally myopic state, where the only evidence you ever need comes from personal anecdotes. They should be a piece of the puzzle, not the whole thing. Certainly not at the expense of acknowledging hard data, research beyond your expertise etc.
Not removing until John Elway is fired.
- Headhunter
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Re: Life in California
Oh, no that's definitely a reality and people would be crazy not to notice it. That doesn't mean I'm going to respond to some random chat post where he announces he's going to the movies by calling him a dumb shit.zombie wrote:agreed. but the two of you tend to get personal and combative with each other, moreso than with other people on the board. have you not noticed that? has anyone else not noticed it? i could be just seeing into things that aren't really there.Headhunter wrote:I'm not picking him apart as a person, though. Your politics, or even how you express them, are not the end all, be all of your character.zombie wrote:no, you're right that your experiences should not be the end all be all of your world view. it can be just hard to look past, with certain circumstances. jason should try. but it's not worth picking him apart as a person. i think that will just make him more embittered or more biased. and he shouldn't pick you apart as a person either, so much. i see that tendency with the both of you in particular for some reason.Headhunter wrote: Oh, sure. Your experiences in the world necessarily play a role in how your ideology develops. But that shouldn't mean limiting your worldview to a totally myopic state, where the only evidence you ever need comes from personal anecdotes. They should be a piece of the puzzle, not the whole thing. Certainly not at the expense of acknowledging hard data, research beyond your expertise etc.
Not removing until John Elway is fired.
- Headhunter
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Re: Life in California
Ex-Libertarian tbhJigsaw wrote:Well, to my knowledge, Head's a Libertarian, and Jason's a Trumpist, so both are wrong, and what they say to each other, or the level of personal attacks, means nothing to me.
Not removing until John Elway is fired.
Re: Life in California
do those nicest people try to make other people share their abhorrent views? do they try to take away rights or freedoms of people that don't share their views? (abhorrent or not) i think that is ultimately the show of a person's character, rather than what they believe politically.Headhunter wrote:I would say politics should be treated as being an independent entity only to be observed and analyzed in direct context when you're measuring the content of someone's character, so long as the person doesn't believe in explicitly evil shit. Some of the nicest people I know have views that I consider abhorrent.zombie wrote:maybe i'm just looking at it wrong.Headhunter wrote:I'm not picking him apart as a person, though.zombie wrote:no, you're right that your experiences should not be the end all be all of your world view. it can be just hard to look past, with certain circumstances. jason should try. but it's not worth picking him apart as a person. i think that will just make him more embittered or more biased. and he shouldn't pick you apart as a person either, so much. i see that tendency with the both of you in particular for some reason.Headhunter wrote: Oh, sure. Your experiences in the world necessarily play a role in how your ideology develops. But that shouldn't mean limiting your worldview to a totally myopic state, where the only evidence you ever need comes from personal anecdotes. They should be a piece of the puzzle, not the whole thing. Certainly not at the expense of acknowledging hard data, research beyond your expertise etc.
Re: Life in California
no, and he won't to you either. it comes first out of political disagreement.Headhunter wrote:Oh, no that's definitely a reality and people would be crazy not to notice it. That doesn't mean I'm going to respond to some random chat post where he announces he's going to the movies by calling him a dumb shit.zombie wrote:agreed. but the two of you tend to get personal and combative with each other, moreso than with other people on the board. have you not noticed that? has anyone else not noticed it? i could be just seeing into things that aren't really there.Headhunter wrote:I'm not picking him apart as a person, though. Your politics, or even how you express them, are not the end all, be all of your character.zombie wrote:no, you're right that your experiences should not be the end all be all of your world view. it can be just hard to look past, with certain circumstances. jason should try. but it's not worth picking him apart as a person. i think that will just make him more embittered or more biased. and he shouldn't pick you apart as a person either, so much. i see that tendency with the both of you in particular for some reason.Headhunter wrote: Oh, sure. Your experiences in the world necessarily play a role in how your ideology develops. But that shouldn't mean limiting your worldview to a totally myopic state, where the only evidence you ever need comes from personal anecdotes. They should be a piece of the puzzle, not the whole thing. Certainly not at the expense of acknowledging hard data, research beyond your expertise etc.
- Headhunter
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Re: Life in California
They are good company to be around and do good things for other people. That's what counts to me.zombie wrote:do those nicest people try to make other people share their abhorrent views? do they try to take away rights or freedoms of people that don't share their views? (abhorrent or not) i think that is ultimately the show of a person's character, rather than what they believe politically.Headhunter wrote:I would say politics should be treated as being an independent entity only to be observed and analyzed in direct context when you're measuring the content of someone's character, so long as the person doesn't believe in explicitly evil shit. Some of the nicest people I know have views that I consider abhorrent.zombie wrote:maybe i'm just looking at it wrong.Headhunter wrote:I'm not picking him apart as a person, though.zombie wrote:no, you're right that your experiences should not be the end all be all of your world view. it can be just hard to look past, with certain circumstances. jason should try. but it's not worth picking him apart as a person. i think that will just make him more embittered or more biased. and he shouldn't pick you apart as a person either, so much. i see that tendency with the both of you in particular for some reason.Headhunter wrote: Oh, sure. Your experiences in the world necessarily play a role in how your ideology develops. But that shouldn't mean limiting your worldview to a totally myopic state, where the only evidence you ever need comes from personal anecdotes. They should be a piece of the puzzle, not the whole thing. Certainly not at the expense of acknowledging hard data, research beyond your expertise etc.
Not removing until John Elway is fired.
Re: Life in California
what changed?Headhunter wrote:Ex-Libertarian tbhJigsaw wrote:Well, to my knowledge, Head's a Libertarian, and Jason's a Trumpist, so both are wrong, and what they say to each other, or the level of personal attacks, means nothing to me.
- Headhunter
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Re: Life in California
Me.zombie wrote:what changed?Headhunter wrote:Ex-Libertarian tbhJigsaw wrote:Well, to my knowledge, Head's a Libertarian, and Jason's a Trumpist, so both are wrong, and what they say to each other, or the level of personal attacks, means nothing to me.
Not removing until John Elway is fired.
Re: Life in California
good company and good to other people. (as long as it's all other people, or not bad to some other people at least) is pretty much the best you can ask for.Headhunter wrote: They are good company to be around and do good things for other people. That's what counts to me.
Re: Life in California
I used to be more liberal than Jiggy. One of the reasons I am so fond of him.
- Headhunter
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Re: Life in California
Nothing wrong with your politics evolving in lockstep with your priorities. I moved from center-right to center-left. I may end up far left in 10 years, we'll see where life takes me.Foo wrote:I used to be more liberal than Jiggy. One of the reasons I am so fond of him.
Not removing until John Elway is fired.
Re: Life in California
Everyone does this, me and you included. It is part of being in a society.zombie wrote:
do those nicest people try to make other people share their abhorrent views? do they try to take away rights or freedoms of people that don't share their views? (abhorrent or not) i think that is ultimately the show of a person's character, rather than what they believe politically.
- Headhunter
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- Joined: Sun May 21, 2017 11:06 am
Re: Life in California
I would say the idealism has been all but sapped out of my system, so I can't in good conscience live in a Libertarian fantasy world anymore even though the ideas themselves are noble. I am pretty much a total pragmatist at this point and am more willing to swallow ideological objections.
Not removing until John Elway is fired.
Re: Life in California
You know the analogy about the political spectrum being a horseshoe rather than a straight line? As long as you stay out of the gap, it is all good.Headhunter wrote:Nothing wrong with your politics evolving in lockstep with your priorities. I moved from center-right to center-left. I may end up far left in 10 years, we'll see where life takes me.Foo wrote:I used to be more liberal than Jiggy. One of the reasons I am so fond of him.
Re: Life in California
i don't really try to push my views onto you, and i would never take away rights or freedoms from you because you don't share all or any of my views.Foo wrote:Everyone does this, me and you included. It is part of being in a society.zombie wrote:
do those nicest people try to make other people share their abhorrent views? do they try to take away rights or freedoms of people that don't share their views? (abhorrent or not) i think that is ultimately the show of a person's character, rather than what they believe politically.
i do try to get you to be more understanding of other people and their views and rights/freedoms though, when i feel like you're not. (perhaps wrongly so)
Re: Life in California
Would you ever vote for or advocate for any sort of tax increase? At some point in our lives, we have all pontificated that something "ought to be illegal".zombie wrote:i don't really try to push my views onto you, and i would never take away rights or freedoms from you because you don't share all or any of my views.Foo wrote:Everyone does this, me and you included. It is part of being in a society.zombie wrote:
do those nicest people try to make other people share their abhorrent views? do they try to take away rights or freedoms of people that don't share their views? (abhorrent or not) i think that is ultimately the show of a person's character, rather than what they believe politically.
i do try to get you to be more understanding of other people and their views and rights/freedoms though, when i feel like you're not. (perhaps wrongly so)
- Headhunter
- Charter Member
- Posts: 10963
- Joined: Sun May 21, 2017 11:06 am
Re: Life in California
True, and I really shouldn't frame it as "far left", what I'm really describing is just solidly left. I think the natural assumption is that all your beliefs aligning with either liberal or conservative ideas makes you "far right/left", it really just means you're solidly in one base or the other. It's the extreme solutions and desire for some totalitarian controlling force that makes you an extremist, and those people are pretty weird.Foo wrote:You know the analogy about the political spectrum being a horseshoe rather than a straight line? As long as you stay out of the gap, it is all good.Headhunter wrote:Nothing wrong with your politics evolving in lockstep with your priorities. I moved from center-right to center-left. I may end up far left in 10 years, we'll see where life takes me.Foo wrote:I used to be more liberal than Jiggy. One of the reasons I am so fond of him.
Not removing until John Elway is fired.
Re: Life in California
maybe, i guess. if you want to count voting as infringing on someone else's rights, or even taking them away, then how can you possibly object to people protesting or even rioting against that infringement? how can you object to "not my president" or taking the knee at a game. etc, if you really feel that you are working to take rights or freedoms from those people, by your vote?Foo wrote:Would you ever vote for or advocate for any sort of tax increase? At some point in our lives, we have all pontificated that something "ought to be illegal".zombie wrote:i don't really try to push my views onto you, and i would never take away rights or freedoms from you because you don't share all or any of my views.Foo wrote:Everyone does this, me and you included. It is part of being in a society.zombie wrote:
do those nicest people try to make other people share their abhorrent views? do they try to take away rights or freedoms of people that don't share their views? (abhorrent or not) i think that is ultimately the show of a person's character, rather than what they believe politically.
i do try to get you to be more understanding of other people and their views and rights/freedoms though, when i feel like you're not. (perhaps wrongly so)