Anyways, have you ever considered being a politician?
Quote from: Not Comms Officer on May 05, 2015, 08:50:10 AMAnyways, have you ever considered being a politician? Yes.
There are a large number of social issues in the west.
The fact gay marriage is still not a thing in most of America is ridiculous.
The growing wealth gap and power of the rich over politics is a very serious issue.
Discrimination based on race, gender, sexuality, etc. is still a thing. The list goes on.
Quote from: Naoto on May 05, 2015, 09:24:10 AMThere are a large number of social issues in the west.Sure. QuoteThe fact gay marriage is still not a thing in most of America is ridiculous.Of course. I was talking about cultures/races/sexes for the most part. QuoteThe growing wealth gap and power of the rich over politics is a very serious issue.The wealth gap? Not so much. Social mobility? Absolutely. Although I do completely agree that the marriage between government and business is abhorrent. QuoteDiscrimination based on race, gender, sexuality, etc. is still a thing. The list goes on.Of course, there will never not be discrimination. My contention is that it's not institutionalised or systemic--or even widespread enough--to the point of collectively holding down blacks, Puerto Ricans and other "disadvantaged" groups.
Then I don't really get the idea of pushing 'social justice' as bullshit.
But wanting equality in the eyes of the law falls under the definition of 'social justice'.
Social justice is "justice in terms of the distribution of wealth, opportunities, and privileges within a society".
Quote from: Naoto on May 05, 2015, 09:34:47 AMBut wanting equality in the eyes of the law falls under the definition of 'social justice'.Which is another problem with "social justice". It's a non-term; apart from the most bigoted dipshits, who doesn't want equality under the law. For the most part, we have equality under the law apart from a few remaining bastions like gay marriage. I mean, come on: QuoteSocial justice is "justice in terms of the distribution of wealth, opportunities, and privileges within a society".It's so vague as to be essentially meaningless. The content is so ridiculously variable and hard to pin down that the only concrete forms of social justice are the ones which can be easily discredited. Your "equality under the law" definition could fulfil the terms of opportunity and privilege, but they are nowhere near the full story when the term is often deployed.
The term has had a well known and historic meaning.
Quote from: Karjala takaisin on May 09, 2015, 04:31:09 PMloaded questiondo you really EARN what you earn
The idea that no culture is really better than any other; that they're all just equally valid perspectives. Not only does this disregard the fact that the Chinese have historically been objectively better in matters of technology and government--and the Southern Europeans in philosophy and art--but it just seems unbelievable except on the basis of pure dogma. The idea that economic disparities are mainly the result of discrimination--or the unjust agency of some other group--simply doesn't stand the test of time.
Objectively better?
Oh my fucking god, what a stupid question to ask. Of course you do, there's no "earning on merit" bullshit like you seem to want to flop around.
Quote from: ////\\\\ on May 09, 2015, 05:38:32 PMOh my fucking god, what a stupid question to ask. Of course you do, there's no "earning on merit" bullshit like you seem to want to flop around.prove it
People often ask why Africa is so poor, and immediately assume the legacies of imperialism and colonialism are to blame despite the fact that the wheel hadn't even been invented in some parts of Africa by the 1880s.
now try proving it without citing something completely dysfunctional and evil by design