Case (
case) wrote in
fandomsecrets2015-11-30 06:34 pm
[ SECRET POST #3253 ]
⌈ Secret Post #3253 ⌋
Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.
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[Fallout]
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[Colonel Fitzwilliam, Pride and Prejudice 1995 miniseries]
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[Master and Commander/Aubrey/Maturin series]
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[Undertale]
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[Justified]
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[Fury, Don/Boyd]
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(The Pioneer Woman/Ree Drummond)
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[Interworld]
Notes:
Secrets Left to Post: 02 pages, 038 secrets from Secret Submission Post #465.
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Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
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Re: An Opinion
(Anonymous) 2015-12-01 02:34 am (UTC)(link)Where I think they're comparable is in terms of mechanism. The argument is, in the case of the pro-life movement, that the vehemence of their words and the absoluteness of their arguments are in part responsible for the violent actions taken by specific pro-life extremists. If you think that's true in the case of the pro-life movement - if you think the kind of language that people use influences the actions that people take - then I think it also has to be true in the case of the protests against police violence.
And in this instance, what happened was that someone threatened to shoot a bunch of white people as revenge for police violence. I don't think that's an appropriate response at all. Bottom line: if you think the rhetoric of the pro-life movement plays a part in inciting extremists to violence, you have to entertain the idea that the rhetoric of the police protest movement played a part in inciting these threats.
Now of course, even in that sense, it's not an exact analogy. Threatening something is not as bad as actually killing a bunch of people. And I'm not trying to say that it is. Nor am I trying to make this an argument against the police protest movement. What I'm saying is that it's important to seriously examine the way that we talk about these things.
Re: An Opinion