Fridge chutney
Do your best.
- Joined
- Sep 11, 2016
- Messages
- 9,044
She's right, though.Bitch be triggered.
The 1930s progressives are back.
Well without reading the paper it depends what its arguing there's nothing necessarily wrong with the subject. We already practice eugenics. We allow women to abort baby's if they have down syndrome for example, do you think that's wrong? It's perfectly justifiable to think that's the case, but almost every person with who's screened with a down's syndrome baby abort it so we're very much through the looking glass as far as Eugenics is concerned.
If you could have a baby and fix any genes that would otherwise lead to certain diseases would you? Could you morally justify letting a baby be born with Huntington's disease, knowing that you could have prevented that?
Clearly the kind of forced eugenics of the past is not something up for debate, but as a subject its something that is relevant, and will be even more relevant going forward. It's something we already do, its something that will become more widespread as science improves, discussions over where the lines are drawn are important.
Reproductive choices constitute a massive intergenerational collective action problem. In nearly every developed country in the world people who are well-suited to have children have relatively low birth rates, yet future people would be better of if people with heritable traits that we value had a greater proportion of children. The collective action problem that reproductive choices create is much harder to solve than anthropogenic climate change, antibiotic resistance, and other problems with a similar structure. It is also much more dangerous to try to solve. Charles Darwin recognized the problem of dysgenic reproductive trends and the perils of possible solutions.2 His cousin Francis Galton, a polymath who founded the eugenics movement, shared Darwin’s diagnosis but was more optimistic about solutions.
...
[talking about nazis]A truly eugenic program might have encouraged Jews to breed more, not less.
...
At the turn of the twentieth century, an increasing number of infuential intellectuals sought to promote education about heredity and shape social norms so that women would be encouraged to carefully choose the fathers of their children. Some of the more fervent eugenicists, many of whom overestimated their understanding of the relevant science, began to promote statutes that would allow states to involuntarily sterilize citizens deemed unft for reproduction. The first eugenic sterilization law was passed in Indiana in 1907. By the time Virginia passed a similar law in 1924, it was following the lead of 15 other American states.
In 1927 the United States Supreme Court voted by an 8-1 margin to uphold the state of Virginia’s right to sterilize “feeble-minded” citizens. While the language of Buck v Bell may seem callous, and the evidence in the case was fimsy, the moral foundations of the decision are defensible.
...
Some authors have suggested paying some people not to reproduce, or instituting a parental licensing scheme. Francis Crick tentatively proposed both ideas at a symposium on eugenics (1963, pp. 276, 284).17 In principle, there are reasons to support policies like these.
Many people distinguish negative from positive eugenics, and coercive from noncoercive eugenics. The idea is that negative eugenics tries to sift out undesirable psychological or physical characteristics (like psychopathy or Tay Sachs disease), while positive eugenics seeks to increase the prevalence of traits that promote individual and social welfare (like creativity or a healthy immune system).14 Coercive eugenics uses force to achieve these ends, while non-coercive eugenics uses education, information, and social norms to achieve them. The distinctions are not sharp, and they do not map onto what is right or wrong in any obvious way (Gyngell and Selgelid 2016). It is best, then, to focus on the justifability of particular public policy proposals.
I don't expect this to be very popular round here but Stossel has been my favourite pundit for a long time. Well, I agree with him on basically eveything so I'm biased. Still think it's an interesting conversation.
I don't expect this to be very popular round here but Stossel has been my favourite pundit for a long time. Well, I agree with him on basically eveything so I'm biased. Still think it's an interesting conversation.
I have no idea who that clown is. But he should be ignored.
Peterson isn’t ring wing. Just because he isn’t left wing doesn’t mean he’s right. Although it does seem that there’s this ‘if you’re not with us you’re the enemy’ mentality that’s increasingly prevalent.Seen a thing showing Rubin and Peterson attending that right-wing wankathon Turning Shite USA or whatever it's called.
Totally not 'right wingers'. Just for freeze peach.
Peterson isn’t ring wing. Just because he isn’t left wing doesn’t mean he’s right. Although it does seem that there’s this ‘if you’re not with us you’re the enemy’ mentality that’s increasingly prevalent.
He used to be very active with the "left wing" party of Canada. I think before his fame he was centrist (and in the American context, Democrat) but since getting an online fan base he seems to increasingly align himself with Republican ideas and policy, at the very least backing down from positions that would go against much of his right-leaning online base.Peterson isn’t ring wing. Just because he isn’t left wing doesn’t mean he’s right. Although it does seem that there’s this ‘if you’re not with us you’re the enemy’ mentality that’s increasingly prevalent.
Certainly his ideas on religion and societal structure would indicate that he is a classic conservative these days. I don't know where he falls in the economic policy spectrum.
This doesn't surprise me, and speaks to the point I made above of Peterson being increasingly sympathetic to his right-leaning online base. He's challenged them before and backed down due to backlash.Dunno, but last video I saw of him with Rubin and Shapiro (I think?) he said that the US health care system seems to be working well.
Dude clearly sees that he has a better chance of buttering his bread if he strokes the back of the right.
This doesn't surprise me, and speaks to the point I made above of Peterson being increasingly sympathetic to his right-leaning online base. He's challenged them before and backed down due to backlash.
To his discredit, he seems incapable of calling his buddy Shapiro on any of his immoral and intellectually dishonest bullshit.
He strikes me as someone who's in between it all, wondering why the two sides are fighting tbh. He's condemned the radical left and right plenty of times, and in terms of the company he keeps, I'm sure he's said he basically talks to whoever will have him. He's been on things from across the spectrum, but it must get a bit tiresome when certain organisations on the left seem to purposely misrepresent what he's saying because they've decided he's public enemy number one. I'm sure I remember him saying on Rogan the other day that he's started to filter out certain interviews that he knows will be more of the same confrontational nonsense.I think a lot of his views/guff falls into the right-wing view of life and society - especially how much he values/protects religion. And he certainly spends most of his time having 'hang outs' with certain people that are most definitely not in the centre.
But then again, he's not the only one pretending not to be right-wing. It's quite common now.
radical left: "uh don't be racist"He strikes me as someone who's in between it all, wondering why the two sides are fighting tbh. He's condemned the radical left and right plenty of times, and in terms of the company he keeps, I'm sure he's said he basically talks to whoever will have him. He's been on things from across the spectrum, but it must get a bit tiresome when certain organisations on the left seem to purposely misrepresent what he's saying because they've decided he's public enemy number one. I'm sure I remember him saying on Rogan the other day that he's started to filter out certain interviews that he knows will be more of the same confrontational nonsense.
I didn't think you'd agree tbfradical left: "uh don't be racist"
radical right: "kill the jews and black people"
jpb: madmen to left of me madmen to the right i'm so not political
this motherfecker came to fame misrepresenting a law that gave trans people the same rights as other people in canada and continually denies climate change, his views aren't being misrepresented nor are they centre or left of centre, he's a right wing grifter who targets young middle class men with daddy issues
and the gall of his little acolytes to claim that he is being misrepresented if amazing
carl of swindon and milo getting kicked off patreonWhat is the response to?
Well, the libertarian, freedom of agency argument would be that Patreon is a private enterprise and has the right to make such decisions. If a cake shop doesn't have to make a wedding cake for a gay couple because of their personal beliefs (Peterson agrees I think) then the logical extension is that Patreon doesn't have to give people like Milo a platform.
You can't have your cake and eat it too!