Hope is the denial of reality
What percentage of their time is your average person playing video games, watching movies, and listening to music? And what percentage of their time are they listening to congressmen?
Except there's absolutely no evidence that there's a connection between the two.Why not just blame Israel?
Hope is the denial of reality
There's almost certainly no connection, all evidence points to the gunman being a total loon. All the teabaggers 'shoot this, shoot that' may have influenced in that it might have made him think that shooting politicians is a great idea but there is, as you say, no evidence.
However, this does not mitigate the people who were asking for this to happen, or saying it might happen, or should happen if they don't get their way. Palin is mainly only guilty of being crass, but there are other, worse offenders.
The light that once I thought compassion still casting shadows in your action
The words you shared were cold transactions that bring me to curse what you've done
When you're up there absorbed in greatness with such success you've grown complacent
I hope you scorch your many faces when you fly too close to the sun
Sharon "second amendment solutions" Angle, John "Driehaus May Be a Dead Man" Boehner, Jesse "Remove Griffords from Office, Shoot a Fully Automatic M16" Kelly, Allan "Make the fellow scared to come out of his house" West. Any and all of the tea parters who've sent death threats to democrats.
The light that once I thought compassion still casting shadows in your action
The words you shared were cold transactions that bring me to curse what you've done
When you're up there absorbed in greatness with such success you've grown complacent
I hope you scorch your many faces when you fly too close to the sun
It's not the end of it---it's at the center of the discussion. People have been unhappy about negative campaigning and attack ads for a long time, recently more than ever, because it's gotten worse. Coupled with the 24/7 news cycle, the internet and social networks, it's in our faces constantly.
Even 'sane' people notice the tone in politics has become nasty, confrontational, inflammatory. Candidates promise to run civil campaigns and avoid personal attacks....but the negative ads get attention so they keep coming. Us vs Them, where Them and They aren't just wrong, but they're bad and evil. All those town hall meetings where folks were disruptive, the congressman yelling out "Liar" during Obama's speech on the floor, the lady yelling out "Except Obama" when the new congress read the constitution, etc.I somehow doubt anyone sane would be convinced to go out and assassinate a politician based off her remarks, and those that would are likely to have done something equally insane without her prodding. There seems to be a deep seated fear here that Tea Party members are just waiting to explode and commit treason, but I have yet to see any proof supporting that claim.
We're losing a grip on civil discourse. The atmosphere has gone beyond political disagreements, and entered a place filled with negativity, anger and bile, even hatred.![]()
The guy is mentally ill, it'd be speculation to say any one thing influenced him more than the delusions in his head. It's not far-fetched to say our general political environment influenced him; it influences everyone to a degree. (We should be talking about the number of people who recognized his strange behavior, from HS to college, and why he didn't get the help he needed.)Do you think Palin's or the Tea Parties rhetoric influenced this troubled young man to kill?
As I said, I don't think her intentions were sinister, but she and her advisors were cavalier. Not just her, or Tea Party people, but they're certainly the most vocal in using Fear to campaign. Both sides do it, it's like a race to the bottom. They should know better than to stoke fear and hate during terrible economic times, with high unemployment, heated immigration issues, and two unpopular wars....Can't say I disagree with the attention whoring, but somehow I don't see the same malevolence that many are predisposed to see. I sincerely doubt Palin wants to see the country go up in flames, just as I sincerely doubt Obama does. These are people trying to do the best they can for a country I think they love. Of course, the road to hell is paved with good intentions, but I think that's a truism that can be applied to both political parties.
and we come full circle again. with each example explained away because the person speaker wasn't a complete moron and knew how to code it just enough to skit the law. The same excuse used here could be used for anything, anyone has said ever (lets see how that works on your students?); from Beck wanting to kill Michael Moore to the youtube clips of the talking heads calling for the death of wikileaks' founder.
I don't know how much more literal you have to be when you cut the gas lines to someone's house, but whatever.
The Rules
Copper- behave toward others to elicit treatment you would like (the manipulative rule)
Gold- treat others how you would like them to treat you (the self regard rule)
Platinum - treat others the way they would like to be treated (the PC rule)
The Rules
Copper- behave toward others to elicit treatment you would like (the manipulative rule)
Gold- treat others how you would like them to treat you (the self regard rule)
Platinum - treat others the way they would like to be treated (the PC rule)
I am one of those people. I don't think discourse is as civil today is it should be. That doesn't mean I think that political discourse is responsible for this mass murder.
That's great, except it should be universally applicable. Were you waxing poetic about the dangers of the loss of civility when Bush was being compared to Hitler? When Code Pink protesters were interrupting Congress? I get the impression that people only seem to get their panties in a knot when there is vocal disagreement with people they agree with, never when it's happening to people they don't like.Even 'sane' people notice the tone in politics has become nasty, confrontational, inflammatory. Candidates promise to run civil campaigns and avoid personal attacks....but the negative ads get attention so they keep coming. Us vs Them, where Them and They aren't just wrong, but they're bad and evil. All those town hall meetings where folks were disruptive, the congressman yelling out "Liar" during Obama's speech on the floor, the lady yelling out "Except Obama" when the new congress read the constitution, etc.
It's not far fetched to say that he watched a violent movie, played a violent video game, or read a violent book and that's what caused it, is it?The guy is mentally ill, it'd be speculation to say any one thing influenced him more than the delusions in his head. It's not far-fetched to say our general political environment influenced him; it influences everyone to a degree. (We should be talking about the number of people who recognized his strange behavior, from HS to college, and why he didn't get the help he needed.)
You are playing a semantic shell game. You are setting yourself up to determine who is and isn't sane based on who or what they like. You aren't behaving any more rationally or sensibly than the people you are attacking. You are just as much a part of the problem as they are, but nobody is willing to admit that.
People can advertise their views too, and I'm quite happy about it. Even reprehensible views that I disdain. You are aware of that, aren't you?holding ≠ advertising
Do like the choice of words however, since censurable is a synonym of reprehensible![]()
Er, yes? Did you have a point?
Free speech in my book definitely allows speaking out against violence. I, personally would like to take this opportunity to speak out against political violence, repression, and the failing of basic civilities in this country. I'm really not sure what you are getting at, but I don't think that strawman can take the kind of abuse you are throwing at him.Then again, I find it funny that free speech in your book allows to propose violence but not speaking out against advertising violence. Maybe you should take a long look at your statements and the implications thereof.
Last edited by Enoch the Red; 01-10-2011 at 06:30 PM.
Yep, and it's a sad commentary when congress has to worry about the safety of their families, spouses, kids in their own homes. As well as cyber threats, package bombs, anthrax mail. Or people who feel it's acceptable to physically confront candidates during Town Hall meetings. Will they all need body guards now?![]()
I didn't say political discourse is responsible for murder. I think the environment, in general, has escalated to a tipping point, a bad place. Multi-factorial, like most things.
I hope I've been consistent in complaining about radical extremism, on both sides. I don't think anyone should make verbal outbursts from the gallery during congressional sessions. I thought it was in poor taste for a supreme court judge to show disdain during a presidential speech, and Boehner to do his Hell No You Can't rant in congress, too.That's great, except it should be universally applicable. Were you waxing poetic about the dangers of the loss of civility when Bush was being compared to Hitler? When Code Pink protesters were interrupting Congress? I get the impression that people only seem to get their panties in a knot when there is vocal disagreement with people they agree with, never when it's happening to people they don't like.
Not sure there's anything 'wrong' with wearing the color pink in the audience of committee hearings, though. I'd rather the chair not allow signs held up behind whoever's testifying at the mic / on camera, or those things intended as photo-op or youtube moments.
Caused what, his mental illness?It's not far fetched to say that he watched a violent movie, played a violent video game, or read a violent book and that's what caused it, is it?![]()
I'm saying it's not far-fetched for our socio-political / media-saturated environment to impact everyone, to one degree or another. It's practically inescapable, with live-stream news feeds on big screen TVs in airports and McDonald's, breaking news on smart phones, millions of cell phone cameras uploading to youtube, everyone and their brother blogging, Facebooking, twittering.....
And Keith Olbermann, Michael Moore, et al? Have they once been the target of your ire?
Quietly sitting in the galley wearing pink was not exactly what I was referring to.Not sure there's anything 'wrong' with wearing the color pink in the audience of committee hearings, though. I'd rather the chair not allow signs held up behind whoever's testifying at the mic / on camera, or those things intended as photo-op or youtube moments.
Certainly watching a violent movie, reading a violent book, or playing a violent video game would have as much, if not more of an impact on such a fragile, deranged mind, no?Caused what, his mental illness?![]()
No, I don't think it's equivalent to violence in video games and film. I think figurative speech has a far weaker effect on our brains than watching violent scenes in a Tarantino movie, or taking head-shots in Splinter Cell or Halo. What was it the then-Minority Leader said? "Steve Driehaus. . . may be a dead man. He can't go home to the west side of Cinncinatti. The Catholics will run him out of town." Yeah, that solidly raises mental imagery of shooting someone. So do the lines Allen West said immediately after "afraid to come out of his house" about putting pressure on him and letting him know he can't be a distant ruling elite. Does our entertainment ever raise imagery of shooting someone? Yeah it does, when it literally displays imagery of shooting someone.
This whole thread is three or four posters telling the rest of you to stop being idiots by taking the latest version of "it means death-panels for the elderly" political manipulation at face value.
Last night as I lay in bed, looking up at the stars, I thought, “Where the hell is my ceiling?"
I'm not doing that but I think you're wrong. If your platform goes something like: "we need stricter gun control because it's too easy for crazy people to get guns and shoot a bunch of people" then when a crazy person easily gets a gun and shoots a bunch of people is about the perfect time to push. Do you disagree?
The Rules
Copper- behave toward others to elicit treatment you would like (the manipulative rule)
Gold- treat others how you would like them to treat you (the self regard rule)
Platinum - treat others the way they would like to be treated (the PC rule)
You mean her "go shooting with me" fundraiser, in her campaign for Giffords' seat? Yeah, I can see how that raises concerns. After all, when Cheney did that sort of fundraiser, he put some birdshot in a lawyer. This is a cultural and social disconnect. You don't like it, but people are allowed to own guns in the US. That Guardian article earlier in the thread got one thing right, there is a gun culture, particularly though hardly exclusively strong on the Right. A natural corollary is that gun terms and gun imagery are easily comprehensible. As a consequence they're as common as sports metaphors. That doesn't make them advocacy for violence.
Last night as I lay in bed, looking up at the stars, I thought, “Where the hell is my ceiling?"
Yeah, at one time or another. (I'm critical of practically everyone for something, ya know)
But I'm not commenting on this one guy in particular, but our social tone in general. There's civil unrest all over the world, with political connections, angry protestors, vandalism, violence....IMO everyone with a leadership role or high visibility in media has a responsibility to at least acknowledge what they say goes viral, and has impact.Quietly sitting in the galley wearing pink was not exactly what I was referring to.
Certainly watching a violent movie, reading a violent book, or playing a violent video game would have as much, if not more of an impact on such a fragile, deranged mind, no?
I heard Palin has removed the scope-sites from her web page. True or rumor?
So, it was what? A metaphor?
Yes, but there's a question of volume.And believe it or not, politicians on both sides of the aisle get death threats.
Well, yes, it does.
Yes, by making him afraid to come out of his house. How are they going to make him afraid to come out of his house? Not necessarily by shooting him, but surely some form of harassment.So do the lines Allen West said immediately after "afraid to come out of his house" about putting pressure on him and letting him know he can't be a distant ruling elite. Does our entertainment ever raise imagery of shooting someone? Yeah it does, when it literally displays imagery of shooting someone.
No, it's three or four posters desperately trying to explain away the blatantly obvious because of some misguided adherence to the middle ground. Why do I get the feeling that if I could go and find quotes of democrats saying similar things about Republicans, you'd then be perfectly ok with calling the Republican quotes what they are: threats. intimidation etc? Because then, in criticizing both sides equally, we are not "partisan".This whole thread is three or four posters telling the rest of you to stop being idiots by taking the latest version of "it means death-panels for the elderly" political manipulation at face value.
Look, here's a picture of a democrat one with bullseyes. Bullseyes aren't quite the same as rifle crosshairs, but it's close enough, right?
See! They're both as bad as each other! Now can we condemn intimidation of political enemies?
No, Fuzzy, the part about using a photo of her opponent's face as a target.
I already agreed the Palin thing is stupid.That Guardian article earlier in the thread got one thing right, there is a gun culture, particularly though hardly exclusively strong on the Right. A natural corollary is that gun terms and gun imagery are easily comprehensible. As a consequence they're as common as sports metaphors. That doesn't make them advocacy for violence.
The light that once I thought compassion still casting shadows in your action
The words you shared were cold transactions that bring me to curse what you've done
When you're up there absorbed in greatness with such success you've grown complacent
I hope you scorch your many faces when you fly too close to the sun
All of it is stupid with the semi-exception of your gripe about the person talking about 2nd amendment solutions. "He may be dead' was an assessment of Dreihaus's political career if he bucked the pro-life Catholics in his district. "The Catholics will run him out of town" is not a gun reference, it's a reference to a Colonial-era punishment, and Boehner almost certainly isn't even aware of that much *considering the crappy state of US history education* it's just another bog-common bit of figurative speech. Show me any comment I've made, anywhere, which suggests this is about me being partisan, that I give a rats ass whether the rhetoric comes from a Republican, a Democrat or anyone else in the American political spectrum. You all are taking idiom literally.
edit: Screw it. There is absolutely no way to demonstrate figurative and idiomatic speech to people who refuse to look at language that way. Falstaff literally thought Prince Hal was a canine. Fine, we're about to become engulfed in a wave of political violence because people in the US don't share your immediate culturo-lingual background. Gifford's was just the first sign.
Last edited by LittleFuzzy; 01-10-2011 at 09:24 PM.
Last night as I lay in bed, looking up at the stars, I thought, “Where the hell is my ceiling?"
A few images from the UK, do they make you think that the person who made these wanted the person in the picture murdered? I didn't and that's not what was meant. Having a "target" and even the expression of having someone "in your scopes" is standard political discourse, not violence.
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All of it is stupid? What's that supposed to mean?
A very sad, bad thing happened in Tucson. We're talking about it, fleshing things out. Congress is being advised to remove car license plates that identify them as legislators, they've cancelled business on the Hill, they're concerned about security for their families, the future of our political climate where they meet with constituents in public.....
Geez, some of you make it sound like we're just whining about something unimportant or inconsequential.
What is that attitude all about?
Talking about security etc is one thing, trying to use a tragedy to score cheap, petty, political points is something else.
Last night as I lay in bed, looking up at the stars, I thought, “Where the hell is my ceiling?"