Originally posted by Felch
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
VW actually wants to unionize its American factory; Republicans freak out.
Collapse
X
-
-
Kentonio is back, and now he's explaining to Americans how our country actually is, because he knows better from an ocean away than we do right here. Apparently the BBC told him that Idaho is full of white people because of Jim Crow.Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
"Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!
Comment
-
Originally posted by Aeson View PostEuphemisms are a code. Euphemisms also are meant to protect the meaning from a specific sort of comprehension, and they actually work that way.
A code is supposed to be impossible for someone not privy to the code to interpret at all.If there is no sound in space, how come you can hear the lasers?
){ :|:& };:
Comment
-
Originally posted by Aeson View PostTrying to pretend there's a set ratio of people:dogs to qualify using a dog whistle is stupid. The mechanics are the same. The dogs can hear it, the people don't register it the same way. Doesn't matter if you have a thousand dogs and one person, or one dog and a thousand people... it's dog whistle politics to use the dog whistle.
We as human beings assume that a dog whistle is silent. But we know that dogs (not us) hear it. The metaphor is from a human perspective. Otherwise we would call it "color" and assume that the thousand dogs can't see it, but one human can. And that metaphor would be stupid and make no sense because we're people, silly.John Brown did nothing wrong.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Hauldren Collider View PostIt can't be a code unless it's meant to obfuscate meaning to a third party. Euphemisms are intended to impute meaning, not obfuscate it. "Pro late term abortion" has a fairly negative emotional charge to it. By going around calling yourself pro-choice, you're not making any secret of what you believe, yet the way you say it imputes the notion that you view it favorably and others should too.
The problem with "dog whistles" is that there's no way to actually produce such a code in American politics. There isn't some underground Closet Racist Convention where they all get together and say "okay, Voter ID Law is how we're gonna say 'black people need to be hanged' without everyone knowing! Muahahaha!"
Comment
-
Originally posted by Felch View PostIt does matter if you have a thousand dogs and one person because then the metaphor doesn't make any fucking sense.
(Since in the analogy, the person is the group you don't want understanding the message.)
Comment
-
Originally posted by kentonio View PostSometimes having some distance from a situation is absolutely the best way to see it in context, because you're not bound up in the issues personally. A lot of Americans have a real naivety in their beliefs about racism, and a lot of those beliefs are very easily dismissed by an unemotional view of your political and social discourse.
I've lost count of the amount of times race has been brought up here by white folks saying racism is scarcely an issue any more, and then when they're shown quotes by prominent black leaders and writers pointing out just how much of a problem it is the inevitable response is "well they're just saying that to stir up tension so they can stay relevant!". It's pretty depressing really.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Patroklos View Post
Why do you put the desires of the union ahead of that of the workers themselves Oerdin?
I cannot for the life of me understand anti-union idiocy. It usually comes from people who have no vested interest in management's interest. It's not like you would get any more money personally if some corporate executives squeeze more out of workers.
It's absolute mental retardation.To us, it is the BEAST.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Sava View PostAt the very least, some of the union's desires will actually "trickle" down to workers... as opposed to letting management bend everyone over.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Ben Kenobi View PostHow are pro choice people 'pro choice', when they support the individual mandate portion of Obamacare? If they were truly 'pro choice', wouldn't they support waivers for everyone who opposes abortion?
Originally posted by Felch View PostI think it's clear that he's just not getting the metaphor.
Comment
Comment