So I was reading
(and the cited article - I only skimmed the cited article )
and wanted to discuss it. I even would like to welcome BK to give his opinion on it. Please give what you think you are.
I (and to a lesser extant my wife) probably fall under progressive liberals (That is not a class, I just am not sure if I fall under Passive Liberals or Progressive Activists). I am generally in favor of PC, my wife is generally opposed (my wife is probably more Moderate).
She prefers a nation where people openly say racist things (South Africa) but where people are honest/know where each other stands (and she is very disgusted by the white racists of SA) and she thinks the American way (PCism) ends up with the racism hidden, pernicious and just as damaging. A relative of hers who is now law enforcement in the US (and had been in law enforcement in SA) expressed it something like "every group is biased, what is important is to have law enforcement be made up of different groups so that law enforcement is biased against every group and not just one".
I think that by making more harmonious interactions, that society becomes more harmonious and less racist. For example, I don't remember any racism in my family towards African Americans growing up... and personally have little explicit racism now (and even less when I left my poor, rural, white/hispanic community ~20 years ago). However, when I return to talk to with my family and extended family I see explicit racism and both explicit and implicit biases. Some of this is that my eyes have been opened, both by living in an African American community during graduation school (and attending an African American church) and by the politics/news of the last ~5 years. Some of this also maybe that they have been influenced by a steady diet of Fox News and talk radio. But some of it may be that they always had such views but didn't express them... and now do. My point being that in part because of PCism (and in part because of being part of one of the most diverse Christian denominations) my extended family produced someone less racist than they were.
As far as breakdowns, I think it is interesting to compare PA/DC which are 8/6 of the population and PA+TL/DC+TC which are 19/25. I think that the latter is what has given us Trump and the former is what has given us PC culture in academia and Hollywood. It is also interesting where they break things down (although they note that DC+TC do not have all that much in common with M), and that PA+TL+PL/DC+TC+M are 34/40.
So discussion thesis:
" PCism is bad for political discourse, disliked by most conservatives, moderates and liberals and divides more than it unites"
Do I need to change my mind?
JM
(My wife would probably disagree with some points in my presentation of her view. So take the presented view more as one that I have constructed from my discussions with her as an alternative and less as her view.)
(and the cited article - I only skimmed the cited article )
and wanted to discuss it. I even would like to welcome BK to give his opinion on it. Please give what you think you are.
I (and to a lesser extant my wife) probably fall under progressive liberals (That is not a class, I just am not sure if I fall under Passive Liberals or Progressive Activists). I am generally in favor of PC, my wife is generally opposed (my wife is probably more Moderate).
She prefers a nation where people openly say racist things (South Africa) but where people are honest/know where each other stands (and she is very disgusted by the white racists of SA) and she thinks the American way (PCism) ends up with the racism hidden, pernicious and just as damaging. A relative of hers who is now law enforcement in the US (and had been in law enforcement in SA) expressed it something like "every group is biased, what is important is to have law enforcement be made up of different groups so that law enforcement is biased against every group and not just one".
I think that by making more harmonious interactions, that society becomes more harmonious and less racist. For example, I don't remember any racism in my family towards African Americans growing up... and personally have little explicit racism now (and even less when I left my poor, rural, white/hispanic community ~20 years ago). However, when I return to talk to with my family and extended family I see explicit racism and both explicit and implicit biases. Some of this is that my eyes have been opened, both by living in an African American community during graduation school (and attending an African American church) and by the politics/news of the last ~5 years. Some of this also maybe that they have been influenced by a steady diet of Fox News and talk radio. But some of it may be that they always had such views but didn't express them... and now do. My point being that in part because of PCism (and in part because of being part of one of the most diverse Christian denominations) my extended family produced someone less racist than they were.
As far as breakdowns, I think it is interesting to compare PA/DC which are 8/6 of the population and PA+TL/DC+TC which are 19/25. I think that the latter is what has given us Trump and the former is what has given us PC culture in academia and Hollywood. It is also interesting where they break things down (although they note that DC+TC do not have all that much in common with M), and that PA+TL+PL/DC+TC+M are 34/40.
So discussion thesis:
" PCism is bad for political discourse, disliked by most conservatives, moderates and liberals and divides more than it unites"
Do I need to change my mind?
JM
(My wife would probably disagree with some points in my presentation of her view. So take the presented view more as one that I have constructed from my discussions with her as an alternative and less as her view.)
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