Nate (post: 1479612) wrote:I agree with political correctness 100%.
We are called to love our neighbors. If your only response to someone saying "Hey, that hurts me and I find it insulting" is "Suck it up and get over it" or "You don't have the right to not be offended," that doesn't seem like a Christian attitude to have.
People who are against political correctness (as far as I can see) only want to be able to say hurtful and insulting things without having to take responsibility for the pain they cause to others. I'm open to hearing about situations where this is not the case, however.
Cognitive Gear (post: 1479613) wrote:As far as I am concerned, "political correctness" is what allows us to build those bridges of communication. After all, it's very difficult to have a rational conversation with someone if they are insulting you the entire time.
Jaden Mental (post: 1479618) wrote:To a degree it can be acceptable, but when it appeases people who get offended by christmas trees, or when anti-swear laws come into play then it has frankly goes too far.
MomentOfInertia wrote:The problem with political correctness is just that, its political!
Political correctness is always worrying whether the things you do might offend someone, somewhere, somehow.
MomentOfInertia (post: 1479621) wrote:The problem with political correctness is just that, its political!
That Dude (post: 1479628) wrote:This is in regards to Nate's original post.
I will default to Jesus and Paul for my argument.
If you know anything about Jesus, you know that Love defined everything he did. So that includes him telling people that they were "fools" (Luke 11:39-40), him telling them that their daddy was Satan (John 8:44)...He also calls them dirty tombs, bags of snakes, hypocrites...Jesus never shied away from hurting feelings, but he always did it in love.
Paul in Phillipians 3:8 he says he counts worldliness as rubbish which in the original Greek is the equivalent of s**t in our language. Paul also says about the Judiazers who were saying you needed to be circumsized to be saved "I wish they would cut off their junk rather than preach that" (Galatians 5:12).
Also, if you believe God is love you can't overlook the fact that many times he mocks people and nations. Such as Psalm 59:8, 2:4, 37:13, Proverbs 1:23-27...And this is not to mention his mocking of people in Isaiah, Hosea and other places.
God uses frankness and mockery perfectly and lovingly. Sometimes the most loving thing that we can do is talk frankly to someone in order to bring them closer to God. I mean if that's the model Jesus used, why shouldn't we. We just need to remember to never do it from derision, but only for their personal well-being.
Nate (post: 1479626) wrote:How is this a bad thing? Should we not be concerned about hurting people? Should we only care if we have hurt someone after the fact, or is it better to prevent someone from being hurt in the first place?
They say an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. It's great to have strong, competent firefighters, but isn't the better situation to keep your home safe from accidental fires in the first place? And if the answer is yes, why is hurting people any different?
That Dude (post: 1479628) wrote:This is in regards to Nate's original post.
I will default to Jesus and Paul for my argument.
If you know anything about Jesus, you know that Love defined everything he did. So that includes him telling people that they were "fools" (Luke 11:39-40), him telling them that their daddy was Satan (John 8:44)...He also calls them dirty tombs, bags of snakes, hypocrites...Jesus never shied away from hurting feelings, but he always did it in love.
Nate (post: 1479634) wrote:That's not really what political correctness is about though.
Political correctness (as I've seen it used) is if someone says "That's retarded," and someone else goes "Hey that offends me, I have a cousin who's mentally handicapped," and the first person goes "Oh don't be so politically correct." To use an example related to another current thread.
It's not about telling someone they're wrong about something, it's about trying to belittle people or use language that hurts them, trying to marginalize them. Things like racial slurs, sexist jokes, things like that. And no one is saying to outlaw things like that (because that would be censorship, which I am completely against), but that people should think more and be careful not to hurt and be insulting to others in their speech. Especially us as Christians, for we are called to love others.
Cognitive Gear (post: 1479625) wrote:I suppose that I don't see these things as political correctness. Generally speaking I think that political correctness only covers exclusionary things, like racism, sexism, agism, etc. The Christmas tree is a secular celebration, and anti-swear laws are censorship.
Regardless, though, I think that the very term "politically correct" is loaded and only functions to divide people these days. I am sure that the large majority of people can agree that we should be polite and ensure that we aren't being intentionally insulting.
MomentOfInertia wrote:2) through construction using flame-retardant materials (accepting a certain amount of jerk-ishness in ones fellow man)
Well that depends who you ask.
I think norms and words develop just fine socially, rather than having a few elites pick out words or having words removed because group X or Y is discontent with them.
Nate (post: 1479649) wrote:To tear down that analogy a bit, using flame-retardant materials is not really prevention, but rather a limiter on the potential damage. Nobody thinks flame-retardant materials will prevent fires, but rather prevent fires from getting too out of control once they occur.
Prevention, as it is defined, is to not allow something to occur in the first place. If there is no fire, flame-retardant materials serve no purpose, because flame-protardant (is that a word?) materials would work just as well. As you said in the other thread, "retard" as a verb means to slow down. You can't slow down something that doesn't exist at the moment.
It's only when there is already a fire that fire-retardant materials serve a useful purpose, and in that case, it would be akin to someone already saying something insulting. Flame-retardant material would be analogous to "I'm not feeling well, I spoke without thinking," in an attempt to limit the hurt and damage caused by the already existent insult.
So no, there is no need to accept "jerkishness" on the side of anyone, nor is it a two-way street...unless the person who caused offense truly apologizes, in which case, the offended person should forgive...and if they don't, then they are being unreasonable.
I think this analogy has been driven to the point of uselessness now, though.
Nate (post: 1479649) wrote:And if they're discontent with them, why shouldn't we tell people not to use those words? If it hurts or offends them, it should be discouraged and looked down upon. What you're saying seems to be a more complex way of saying "You don't have the right to not be offended, if I'm hurting you that's your problem, get over it," which again, seems pretty contradictory to the Christian life, since we should love others as ourselves. If you're hurting someone by your speech and you don't care and think they're the ones who have the problem, or you just don't want to stop because you like that word or something, that's being selfish and putting yourself above others, which again seems very contradictory to Christianity.
MomentOfInertia wrote:Man is fallen, broken. He is not perfect and will inevitably fail. so yes there is a need to accept that no mater how hard people try they will still screw up.
Jaden wrote:I don't care if it would offend the pope, priest or all the scientists in the world. I am still going to use targeting all day long on my professional basis just as I did in my non-offensive intended past.
Nate (post: 1479672) wrote:I think we're clashing on different views of "accept." I think you're using "accept" in the sense of "admitting that it exists," whereas I thought you were using it in the sense of "allowing it to exist."
I agree that we need to admit people will be jerks, and mistakes will be made. However, we should not allow them to be jerks, and should call them out when they are being rude, insulting, or unreasonable. In that sense, no, we should not accept that people are jerks, any more than we should accept that we are not perfect and will fail (the whole even though we know we will sin, we should still try not to bit).
And that is the problem, is that in the past when people who were marginalized and discriminated against were insulted, they would accept it. This is why it took so long for women to gain say, the right to vote, because women just accepted men being jerks about it. Until a few women finally decided, no, we're not going to accept it, we're going to stand up for ourselves and demand we stop being hurt and insulted.
So again, I think I was misunderstanding your use of "accept," and that's why I said what I did. Curse you English language for being so complex!
Yes, English is a complex and yet vague language.Nate (post: 1479672) wrote:I think we're clashing on different views of "accept." I think you're using "accept" in the sense of "admitting that it exists," whereas I thought you were using it in the sense of "allowing it to exist."
I agree that we need to admit people will be jerks, and mistakes will be made. However, we should not allow them to be jerks, and should call them out when they are being rude, insulting, or unreasonable. In that sense, no, we should not accept that people are jerks, any more than we should accept that we are not perfect and will fail (the whole even though we know we will sin, we should still try not to bit).
And that is the problem, is that in the past when people who were marginalized and discriminated against were insulted, they would accept it. This is why it took so long for women to gain say, the right to vote, because women just accepted men being jerks about it. Until a few women finally decided, no, we're not going to accept it, we're going to stand up for ourselves and demand we stop being hurt and insulted.
So again, I think I was misunderstanding your use of "accept," and that's why I said what I did. Curse you English language for being so complex!
EDIT:
And to me, that seems arrogant and self-centered...which are not qualities that are particularly positive or lauded in Christianity. You don't care about hurting others, you only care that you get to do what you want. This seems extremely against what Christianity teaches, which is to deny the self and look to others and love them.
While offending others can be a positive thing (as noted with the example of Paul), it's not a matter of "Well if I'm offending something I'm doing something right," which is false logic, nor is it okay to say that offending people is fine no matter what.
As far as I'm concerned, unless someone is offended because you're doing what God says, you're doing something wrong.
Nate (post: 1479626) wrote:How is this a bad thing? Should we not be concerned about hurting people?
ClosetOtaku wrote:Back in the late '80s/early '90s, it was a philosophy, espoused principally on campuses, which tried to regulate speech. Specifically, it targeted speech (and those speakers) who insisted on the existence of any sort of absolute or superior system of opinion or belief
It seemed strange that an environment which supposedly encouraged diversity would single out those who disagreed with the 'norm' established through the standard of politically correct speech.
At one time, the whole PC concept was quite controversial, and some scars over it run very deep.
MomentOfInertia wrote:I'm getting more stubbornness in the face of shifting standards, jargon that was standard in the industry when he started is now considered incorrect. a rather abrupt shift it must have been too.
if they get hurt we'll its as much our job to apologize as it is theirs to get over it.
And someone getting a bit upset because I used this word, or this phrase, or made X statement is not really my problem, it's theirs. Disagree if you will, this is how I see it
That Dude (post: 1479628) wrote:This is in regards to Nate's original post.
I will default to Jesus and Paul for my argument.
If you know anything about Jesus, you know that Love defined everything he did. So that includes him telling people that they were "fools" (Luke 11:39-40), him telling them that their daddy was Satan (John 8:44)...He also calls them dirty tombs, bags of snakes, hypocrites...Jesus never shied away from hurting feelings, but he always did it in love.
Paul in Phillipians 3:8 he says he counts worldliness as rubbish which in the original Greek is the equivalent of s**t in our language. Paul also says about the Judiazers who were saying you needed to be circumsized to be saved "I wish they would cut off their junk rather than preach that" (Galatians 5:12).
Also, if you believe God is love you can't overlook the fact that many times he mocks people and nations. Such as Psalm 59:8, 2:4, 37:13, Proverbs 1:23-27...And this is not to mention his mocking of people in Isaiah, Hosea and other places.
God uses frankness and mockery perfectly and lovingly. Sometimes the most loving thing that we can do is talk frankly to someone in order to bring them closer to God. I mean if that's the model Jesus used, why shouldn't we. We just need to remember to never do it from derision, but only for their personal well-being.
Matthew 23:27-28 wrote:“Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You are like whitewashed tombs, which look beautiful on the outside but on the inside are full of dead men’s bones and everything unclean. 28In the same way, on the outside you appear to people as righteous but on the inside you are full of hypocrisy and wickedness.
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