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I believed this for years, and in spite of all the stuff going on now, I think it still holds true.

And the trouble is, saying that "It's about class, not race" is considered problematic in recent books like White Fragility. So this opinion, which can be debated and talked about and discussed in debt, is now considered wrong, taboo and even a 'dog whistle' to say you're actually racist.

And I want to acknowledge that there is a difference in lived experience. A poor white person may not get followed around in a store by security like a non-poor black person. There are some things we have difficulty understanding because we don't have the lived experience.

But we're in danger of closing off the conversation before we even get to the topic of those lived experiences, and we're told that if we can't have those lived experiences, our opinions are also invalid.




There are two issues. First, I don't think it's one or the other: race privilege exists, and class privilege exists too.

Second there are actual dog-whistles disguised as reasonable viewpoints, and it's incredibly hard to distinguish them. Suppose you're talking to a random person, with no context on who they are, probably on a site where a comment took five minutes to write and doesn't fully develop the ideas. First time you find that, you might think it's just someone with a different opinion. But as time goes on and you notice that certain arguments are used not to promote debate but to derail conversations, you get suspicious and start seeing everything as dog-whistles.

In other words, public debate is degraded by people that don't present arguments honestly and by people who are either way too worried or not worried at all about those dishonest people


You are starting to get to the root of it. For years, people with liberal or progressive viewpoints tried to have good-faith discussions and debates with conservatives only to get back absolute garbage. Arguments like:

"If you let gay people marry, what's next allowing adults to marry children?" or "You never complain when black people kill each other, so you are just pretending to care about police brutality"

These are undeniably bad faith arguments - all strawmen, slippery slopes, and other ugly rhetorical devices. In most cases this was all you would get back in return for trying to have a good faith debate with conservatives.

So yes, after a while, we started to assume that people who disagreed with us were acting in bad faith and were essentially trolls.

This is extremely unfortunate. It is harmful to the discourse. It casts a wide net that catches the honestly curious or unorthodox thinkers (people that I may think are incorrect but arguing from a position of good faith). But, it has also been extremely effective. In one generation, the relatively brutal tactics have helped us make real progress on gay rights and drug-decriminalization in the United States.

Cancellation tactics work as an effective tool for combating bad faith arguments and trolls, so until conservatives want to come to the table for real discussion and debate, that is how things will continue to be. I look forward to a time when this is not necessary.

To be clear though, the well of intellectual discourse was poisoned long ago by Rush Limbaugh, Fox News, Sean Hannity, et al, and a million internet trolls. The only part of this they don't like is that now they are losing the horrible game they invented.


Yeah, this. I would go further back to when Christians got co-opted into politics in a big way in the 80's.

As far as the current "cancel culture" goes I was thinking about this the other day and I think that it's not that people don't want to hear counter-arguments, it's that we don't want to hear them again, after they have been put down so many times.

The "what about black-on-black crime?" question is one of my pet peeves: someone always has to trot out that undead zombie chestnut. Enough already.

(edit: while i was typing the above somebody has already trotted out the dead horse and started beating it in a sib comment.)


Why are those “garbage”? It’s true that gay rights have led towards the push for other things like trans rights. And it’s true that liberal media will run front page stories on (relatively rare) police brutality against black people but don’t run stories on (relatively common) black on black violence.


> It’s true that gay rights have led towards the push for other things like trans rights

I fail to see the equivalence between trans rights and "adults marrying children"-rights. What you're saying is closer to "it's true that abolishing slavery has led towards the push for other things like voting rights for everyone". Which is technically true but is also the way things should be going in order to have a more just society.

> And it’s true that liberal media will run front page stories on (relatively rare) police brutality against black people but don’t run stories on (relatively common) black on black violence.

One is a crime committed by law enforcement. The other is just regular crime. You figure out which one is more newsworthy or in the public interest (not that most media care about the latter).

Also if "all lives matter" we shouldn't be talking about "black-on-black" or "x-on-y" crimes. Crimes are crimes and the skin color of the perpetrator or victim is irrelevant (unless it's specifically a hate crime, for which there are legal definitions).


Wait, you’re giving your opinion as if it’s fact. Some people disagree that trans rights will make society better.

And if what you’re saying is true, that these stories are only notable because they involve police brutality, why don’t we get front page news articles when a black cop shoots a black guy? You’re blind if you don’t see that news publishers have an agenda.


> Some people disagree that trans rights will make society better.

Trans rights are human rights.

> why don’t we get front page news articles when a black cop shoots a black guy?

They don't exclusively front-page "white cop shoots black civilian" stories. Here's some prominent counter-examples just off the top of my head.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/jun/07/justine-damo...

https://www.vox.com/2016/7/7/12116288/minnesota-police-shoot... (Cop was Latino)

News publishers do have an agenda, but it doesn't go too far beyond "get clicks, make money". They publish whatever kinds of stories will get traffic from their readers. And they know the preconceived notions and biases of their readers. News publishing is a tough business these days unfortunately. There are news orgs that do good investigative journalism and uncover important stories but even they need money to survive.


I will assume good faith and bite, even though I am skeptical.

Because murder for money, passion, etc. is unfortunately extremely common in the US, but abuse of power by civil servants is much more newsworthy, and honestly more disturbing.

If the head of the FBI was caught taking bribes from drug dealers, wouldn't that be far more newsworthy than a common drug bust? Of course it would be. Abuse of government power is a real threat to civil society.


But it was never just about “abuse of power”, the narrative was that “black people are being killed unjustly by police officers”. From the beginning a motto of the protests was “black lives matter”.


> the narrative was that “black people are being killed unjustly by police officers”.

And was that narrative false? Or is it a problem because it's "liberal media" that's pushing the narrative? I'm not seeing your actual issue here.


It’s not a “dog whistle” if it’s a true fact that is relevant to the discussion. Doesn’t matter what types of people use it. Facts are facts.


Facts can be maliciously used to derail conversations and debates on purpose, or be used without proper context to push a certain view. Not everything is black or white.


Your comment makes a good point. There really needs to be a renewed openness to consider alternative viewpoints as coming from a spirit of good faith.

A grammar fix: it is "discussed in depth", not "in debt."




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