Alt-righter plows into crowd of anti-racists in Charlottesville

WizardofOz

New member
It depends on whether their violence was in defense or instigation. I don't approve of instigating violence.

Does instigating violence make that person a bad guy?

Let's say we're talking about some who instigated it. I'm still less settled on them than I am on the Nazis. Why? Because I don't know their motivation. It could be that we're talking about the great grandson of an Auschwitz survivor who is just enraged. Or the grandson of someone who was victimized by the Klan. To them, striking against the Klan or Nazis might be like hitting the Brownshirts BEFORE they had enough power in Germany, or the Klan before it starting making dark fruit. If they're that I'll disagree with them and prosecute them, but with regret, because they've chosen the wrong way to oppose an evil. It wouldn't necessarily put them in the service of another evil.

I think this is the issue kmoney was taking with you. Your mind is made up regarding the other side. They are all bad people. But for the counter protesters, 'well maybe their hate is justified'. You're playing both sides of the same argument.

Do you think the antifa has a higher moral ground? I'll gladly call both sides out and not make any excuses for their hate and violence.

If they're just people who believe in violence as an expression of who they are, as a tool of intimidation, etc. then they're indistinguishable from the Nazi and I feel exactly the same about them.
What, exactly, do you feel was different this time around? Why don't all Klan or Nazi rallies end in violence and death? Obviously elements from both sides believe in violence as an expression of who they are.

Did every person involved engage in violence? Of course not. Could they have? Of course.

I not only haven't said that everyone on the other side of that question is nefarious, I've identified myself as someone who for a very long time held a similar (and I'd say errant) position, largely as the result of my cultural blinkers and projection. That is, I was sold the noble South myth and, knowing myself to not be a racist never went further in feeling solid about supporting the monuments as a tribute to sacrifice until I came face to face with a different perspective that made me challenge my assumptions and see an argument my bias had precluded.

Instead of going from 'keep the monuments' to 'all monuments should come down', have you considered a middle ground? As in, perhaps the people who live there can decide? How does a confederate monument that you'll never lay eyes on pick your pocket if the people who live there want to keep it?

I don't believe protesting the removal of Confederate memorials is about free speech, though it's certainly an exercise in it. Are you asking if some people showed up to defend the Nazi's right to speak? That would or should be the police's job. I'm not aware of groups doing that, are you?

What about the ‘free speech’ rally and counter-protests on Boston Common? The 'antifa' won't even allow legal, organized public speeches to take place. The small group that organized had to be given police escort away from the area as to not be attacked.

I wouldn't say standing up against and/or debating them is rubbing elbows.

No, you've misunderstood. I am saying standing with them to defend their right. Yet, you see no reason why any decent person would do so. Anyone standing with them are 'bad guys'. I can understand why people who vehemently disagree with their message would stand beside them, because free speech is under assault.

Otherwise your earlier quote is an empty platitude.

It's fundamental, but it's not what this is about. And I don't have to stand shoulder to shoulder with the Klan to support that right.

'First they came for...and there was no one left to speak for me.' I feel this is bigger and more important than simplistically 'defending Nazi's'.

Unlike you guys then, I find it highly unlikely that there were good guys standing with Nazis for the reasons given prior. There's no necessity and nothing to be gained by it. And I have no knowledge and haven't read anything about groups joining the Nazis over speech rights. From what I know about those attending you had the hate groups and, I suppose (but don't know) some who were there for the original protest only. I can't imagine (for the reasons given prior and touched upon here) why anyone who thought they had a legitimate grievance would allow it to be co-opted by Nazis, etc. Better to withdraw and make a separate protest and clarify the distinctions.

Is it possible? Sure. Is it likely? I don't see it, reasonably.

But standing with the antifa, there's plenty of wriggle room and rationalization for that brand of hate. They hate a lot more than just Nazi's or the 'alt-right'.
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
Does instigating violence make that person a bad guy?
It can. It doesn't always. That's why the doctrine of fighting words is still around and why I noted the hypotheticals that would alter my sympathy on the point, even if I couldn't condone it.

Your mind is made up regarding the other side.
You seem pretty adamant yourself, WoZ.

Anyway, made up about the Klan, Nazis, and white supremacists, yes. I have a problem with the judgment of anyone standing with them, but I can't put them in the same camp automatically. Like I said a couple of times, I've been there in terms of the monument issue (not standing with Nazis). I don't know with a certainty that anyone from the former stayed with the other element. I hope they went another way with it.

But for the counter protesters, 'well maybe their hate is justified'.
I don't know who you're quoting, but it isn't me. Now tell me, would you find the grandson of a man who died in a gas chamber attacking a Nazi shouting out his creed, the creed that led to that death, morally equivalent to the Nazi striking someone who opposed his creed?

You're playing both sides of the same argument.
No, I'm not, which would come out in actually addressing the hypothetical I used to illustrate the why of it.

Do you think the antifa has a higher moral ground?
I think it's an impossible question to answer given the absence of a Mein Kampf and the disjointed splinters we see with them. I don't have an absolute bead on them yet. But I know what the people they were fighting stand for.

And really taking the moral high ground from Nazi's isn't saying much. It's a pretty low mound.

I'll gladly call both sides out and not make any excuses for their hate and violence.
I'd say gladly call out violence by either side, but don't stop there. Articulate that while unprovoked violence from anyone is wrong, there is no moral equivalence between the majority of peaceful opposition to Nazis and even the most peace loving Nazi imaginable.

Instead of going from 'keep the monuments' to 'all monuments should come down', have you considered a middle ground?
Should we have left some of the Nazi emblems in place in Germany? Either it's objectionable or it isn't. The middle ground on that has always served the oppressor and that sentiment is part of what helped make possible a continued harm against blacks in this nation for a hundred years following their emancipation. It may be noble in aspiration but it rarely ends nobly in application.

As in, perhaps the people who live there can decide?
I said as much earlier to dr...part of me says that if a people are dumb enough to want that to represent them then it tells the rest of us where to avoid spending our vacation money, and where not to send our kids to college, that sort of thing. But then I think, "How hard is it for a white guy to accept that?" If I was a man whose family held a living memory of the damage that give a little ground to the memory of the Confederacy and its after effect caused it might not be so easy. And maybe it shouldn't be so easy for us either.

How does a confederate monument that you'll never lay eyes on pick your pocket if the people who live there want to keep it?
Is that the litmus? I don't think you believe it should be.

Otherwise, it depends on who gets to decide the question. If you want a vote among the black community to decide the point I'd say okay. The people who stand to be offended by it and who were historically harmed by it should get to decide it, community by community.

What about the ‘free speech’ rally and counter-protests on Boston Common? The 'antifa' won't even allow legal, organized public speeches to take place. The small group that organized had to be given police escort away from the area as to not be attacked.
I'm going to keep giving you that same answer, no matter how many ways you ask it. I am and have always been a supporter of free speech. Antifa should exercise their right to protest peacefully, to object without attacking the right. And if they don't the police should take the necessary steps.

I'd support the police and the rule of law, both personally and as an officer of the court who actually took an oath on the point.

No, you've misunderstood. I am saying standing with them to defend their right.
Then I'd say I will never stand with a Nazi. I will support their or anyone's right to speak, but I don't have to stand beside them to do that. It's a false dilemma.

'First they came for...and there was no one left to speak for me.' I feel this is bigger and more important than simplistically 'defending Nazi's'.
You can speak out and against without standing next to Nazis. Again, it's a false dilemma. You can defend the right to speak any number of ways that don't involve standing in a crowd with Nazis.

But standing with the antifa, there's plenty of wriggle room and rationalization for that brand of hate.
Rather, it's irrational to consider the act without considering the motivation. It's important and distinguishes the quality of acts. That's why the law must consider it and we should too.
 

Tambora

Get your armor ready!
LIFETIME MEMBER
Hall of Fame
Does instigating violence make that person a bad guy?



I think this is the issue kmoney was taking with you. Your mind is made up regarding the other side. They are all bad people. But for the counter protesters, 'well maybe their hate is justified'. You're playing both sides of the same argument.

Do you think the antifa has a higher moral ground? I'll gladly call both sides out and not make any excuses for their hate and violence.


What, exactly, do you feel was different this time around? Why don't all Klan or Nazi rallies end in violence and death? Obviously elements from both sides believe in violence as an expression of who they are.

Did every person involved engage in violence? Of course not. Could they have? Of course.



Instead of going from 'keep the monuments' to 'all monuments should come down', have you considered a middle ground? As in, perhaps the people who live there can decide? How does a confederate monument that you'll never lay eyes on pick your pocket if the people who live there want to keep it?



What about the ‘free speech’ rally and counter-protests on Boston Common? The 'antifa' won't even allow legal, organized public speeches to take place. The small group that organized had to be given police escort away from the area as to not be attacked.



No, you've misunderstood. I am saying standing with them to defend their right. Yet, you see no reason why any decent person would do so. Anyone standing with them are 'bad guys'. I can understand why people who vehemently disagree with their message would stand beside them, because free speech is under assault.

Otherwise your earlier quote is an empty platitude.



'First they came for...and there was no one left to speak for me.' I feel this is bigger and more important than simplistically 'defending Nazi's'.



But standing with the antifa, there's plenty of wriggle room and rationalization for that brand of hate. They hate a lot more than just Nazi's or the 'alt-right'.
Well said.
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
Well said.
How you didn't manage to work a heh-heh into that juggernaut of praise I'll never know. :plain:

WoZ is usually well spoken. He's also wrong on my position and, I think, mistaken on important points. But he stands in front of you and speaks like an adult, so that ain't hay in my book.
 

Tambora

Get your armor ready!
LIFETIME MEMBER
Hall of Fame
If it comes down to one side suppressing speech entirely and another group fighting to spread a message I completely disagree with, I'll defend the right to the speech every time. If that means that I might someday find myself on the 'side' of neo-Nazis, then so be it. Because that right needs to be protected at all costs against those trying to silence the right to speak freely.

Spoiler
5132643461_a4e1336db1_o.jpg


654efd7490f21cd39dce5f51c9f9cd42--churchill-quotes-winston-churchill.jpg


ae0f090eb053385ebdd42376d0fb49cc--freedom-of-speech-quotes-bill-hicks-quotes.jpg
:thumb:
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
So...the last two bits of conversation I've been having with WoZ on this thread I started about Charlottesville involves my position concerning the factions who clashed there. I think it's a good conversation to have and points are made worth considering.

Kmo had some interesting points as well and I'll add them to this later and, if need be, move the whole thing up the line, which won't be difficult now that I have this much arranged.

:cheers:

Part I
Spoiler
It goes back to your conversation with kmoney. Let me start by asking whether you think all the counter-protesters were bad people. Were they all violent antifa or BLM or were some of them decent folks, in your opinion?
It depends on whether their violence was in defense or instigation. I don't approve of instigating violence.

Let's say we're talking about some who instigated it. I'm still less settled on them than I am on the Nazis. Why? Because I don't know their motivation. It could be that we're talking about the great grandson of an Auschwitz survivor who is just enraged. Or the grandson of someone who was victimized by the Klan. To them, striking against the Klan or Nazis might be like hitting the Brownshirts BEFORE they had enough power in Germany, or the Klan before it starting making dark fruit. If they're that I'll disagree with them and prosecute them, but with regret, because they've chosen the wrong way to oppose an evil. It wouldn't necessarily put them in the service of another evil.

If they're just people who believe in violence as an expression of who they are, as a tool of intimidation, etc. then they're indistinguishable from the Nazi and I feel exactly the same about them.

Now, why do you feel that the entire group that was originally set to protest racist, white nationalist, neo-nazis?
It feels like there's something missing in that. If I understand you, I've never said that the entire group set to originally protest the removal of Confederate memorials were racist, etc. I differed with the original protest, but that's another matter.

Do you think it's possible that some (or even many) of the people that were set to protest were there to A) protest the removal of the statue for non-nefarious reasons
I not only haven't said that everyone on the other side of that question is nefarious, I've identified myself as someone who for a very long time held a similar (and I'd say errant) position, largely as the result of my cultural blinkers and projection. That is, I was sold the noble South myth and, knowing myself to not be a racist never went further in feeling solid about supporting the monuments as a tribute to sacrifice until I came face to face with a different perspective that made me challenge my assumptions and see an argument my bias had precluded.

or B) some people were there simply to protect the rights of these people to speak freely no matter how disgusting they find the message?
I don't believe protesting the removal of Confederate memorials is about free speech, though it's certainly an exercise in it. Are you asking if some people showed up to defend the Nazi's right to speak? That would or should be the police's job. I'm not aware of groups doing that, are you?

I brought up your past quote because I always figured you'd be one that would support the right to free speech regardless.
You were right. I absolutely do.

And if you support that right unconditionally, it might mean rubbing elbows with folks whose message you find revolting.
I wouldn't say standing up against and/or debating them is rubbing elbows.

It's the fight for the right to speak that is important.
It's fundamental, but it's not what this is about. And I don't have to stand shoulder to shoulder with the Klan to support that right.

Like kmoney, I find it highly unlikely that all who were there to protest were bad people just as I doubt all the counter protesters were bad people.
Unlike you guys then, I find it highly unlikely that there were good guys standing with Nazis for the reasons given prior. There's no necessity and nothing to be gained by it. And I have no knowledge and haven't read anything about groups joining the Nazis over speech rights. From what I know about those attending you had the hate groups and, I suppose (but don't know) some who were there for the original protest only. I can't imagine (for the reasons given prior and touched upon here) why anyone who thought they had a legitimate grievance would allow it to be co-opted by Nazis, etc. Better to withdraw and make a separate protest and clarify the distinctions.

Is it possible? Sure. Is it likely? I don't see it, reasonably.

If it comes down to one side suppressing speech entirely and another group fighting to spread a message I completely disagree with, I'll defend the right to the speech every time.
Sure. But I don't believe that should be the choice here. :cheers:


And here:

Part II
Spoiler
Does instigating violence make that person a bad guy?
It can. It doesn't always. That's why the doctrine of fighting words is still around and why I noted the hypotheticals that would alter my sympathy on the point, even if I couldn't condone it.

Your mind is made up regarding the other side.
You seem pretty adamant yourself, WoZ.

Anyway, made up about the Klan, Nazis, and white supremacists, yes. I have a problem with the judgment of anyone standing with them, but I can't put them in the same camp automatically. Like I said a couple of times, I've been there in terms of the monument issue (not standing with Nazis). I don't know with a certainty that anyone from the former stayed with the other element. I hope they went another way with it.

But for the counter protesters, 'well maybe their hate is justified'.
I don't know who you're quoting, but it isn't me. Now tell me, would you find the grandson of a man who died in a gas chamber attacking a Nazi shouting out his creed, the creed that led to that death, morally equivalent to the Nazi striking someone who opposed his creed?

You're playing both sides of the same argument.
No, I'm not, which would come out in actually addressing the hypothetical I used to illustrate the why of it.

Do you think the antifa has a higher moral ground?
I think it's an impossible question to answer given the absence of a Mein Kampf and the disjointed splinters we see with them. I don't have an absolute bead on them yet. But I know what the people they were fighting stand for.

And really taking the moral high ground from Nazi's isn't saying much. It's a pretty low mound.

I'll gladly call both sides out and not make any excuses for their hate and violence.
I'd say gladly call out violence by either side, but don't stop there. Articulate that while unprovoked violence from anyone is wrong, there is no moral equivalence between the majority of peaceful opposition to Nazis and even the most peace loving Nazi imaginable.

Instead of going from 'keep the monuments' to 'all monuments should come down', have you considered a middle ground?
Should we have left some of the Nazi emblems in place in Germany? Either it's objectionable or it isn't. The middle ground on that has always served the oppressor and that sentiment is part of what helped make possible a continued harm against blacks in this nation for a hundred years following their emancipation. It may be noble in aspiration but it rarely ends nobly in application.

As in, perhaps the people who live there can decide?
I said as much earlier to dr...part of me says that if a people are dumb enough to want that to represent them then it tells the rest of us where to avoid spending our vacation money, and where not to send our kids to college, that sort of thing. But then I think, "How hard is it for a white guy to accept that?" If I was a man whose family held a living memory of the damage that give a little ground to the memory of the Confederacy and its after effect caused it might not be so easy. And maybe it shouldn't be so easy for us either.

How does a confederate monument that you'll never lay eyes on pick your pocket if the people who live there want to keep it?
Is that the litmus? I don't think you believe it should be.

Otherwise, it depends on who gets to decide the question. If you want a vote among the black community to decide the point I'd say okay. The people who stand to be offended by it and who were historically harmed by it should get to decide it, community by community.

What about the ‘free speech’ rally and counter-protests on Boston Common? The 'antifa' won't even allow legal, organized public speeches to take place. The small group that organized had to be given police escort away from the area as to not be attacked.
I'm going to keep giving you that same answer, no matter how many ways you ask it. I am and have always been a supporter of free speech. Antifa should exercise their right to protest peacefully, to object without attacking the right. And if they don't the police should take the necessary steps.

I'd support the police and the rule of law, both personally and as an officer of the court who actually took an oath on the point.

No, you've misunderstood. I am saying standing with them to defend their right.
Then I'd say I will never stand with a Nazi. I will support their or anyone's right to speak, but I don't have to stand beside them to do that. It's a false dilemma.

'First they came for...and there was no one left to speak for me.' I feel this is bigger and more important than simplistically 'defending Nazi's'.
You can speak out and against without standing next to Nazis. Again, it's a false dilemma. You can defend the right to speak any number of ways that don't involve standing in a crowd with Nazis.

But standing with the antifa, there's plenty of wriggle room and rationalization for that brand of hate.
Rather, it's irrational to consider the act without considering the motivation. It's important and distinguishes the quality of acts. That's why the law must consider it and we should too.
 

Tambora

Get your armor ready!
LIFETIME MEMBER
Hall of Fame
:plain: You are to substantive discourse what Colonel Sanders was to fine dining.

But I guess if she's going to insist on burying one side of the argument I'll just have to start reposting the answers.

How you didn't manage to work a heh-heh into that juggernaut of praise I'll never know. :plain:

WoZ is usually well spoken. He's also wrong on my position and, I think, mistaken on important points. But he stands in front of you and speaks like an adult, so that ain't hay in my book.

Trash mouth me all you want to, Town.
I'm used to it from you.
 

Tambora

Get your armor ready!
LIFETIME MEMBER
Hall of Fame
More fair than to assume motives and purposes. I don't think the reasons for being there are as straight forward as you do. It wasn't originally a neo-nazi event. Maybe some people wanted to still go so they could show that not everyone supporting the statue was a nazi. Certainly you'd want to differentiate yourself in some way, but perhaps you still go. Try to prevent the nazis from completely taking over the event.

Bottom line, I try to avoid assumptions and I see no need to pass judgment over every person there who was in support of the statue. I don't see a reason to do that except that it allows you to more easily condemn Trump and score some extra points. I have no desire to do that.
thhi5.gif~c200
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
KFC is fine dining at my house, you snob.
Aww, I bet you say that to anyone not pushing for a heart attack by fifty. :D

This could be a great scene in a movie though. Guy visits a grave, brings a bucket of KFC instead of flowers and pours gravy near the headstone.


Trash mouth me all you want to, Town.
I'm used to it from you.
Oh shush. It's clear enough by now you're a masochist, so stop whining about what you ask for.

When is the last time I stopped by a thread of yours to tee-hee and atta boy? :chuckle: Doofi.
 

Traditio

BANNED
Banned
Town Heretic said:
there is no moral equivalence between the majority of peaceful opposition to Nazis and even the most peace loving Nazi imaginable.

This is so stupid.

First and foremost, Donald Trump was not drawing an "equivalence" between peaceful Antifa protestors and peaceful Nazis. That is evident from what he said.

Second, antifa are anarcho-communists. Is anarcho-communism really all that much better than whatever it is that Richard Spencer believes?
 

patrick jane

BANNED
Banned
How you didn't manage to work a heh-heh into that juggernaut of praise I'll never know. :plain:

WoZ is usually well spoken. He's also wrong on my position and, I think, mistaken on important points. But he stands in front of you and speaks like an adult, so that ain't hay in my book.
Nobody Beats The Wiz
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
This is so stupid.
Too early to tell but it's a post on race by you so odds are...

First and foremost, Donald Trump was not drawing an "equivalence" between peaceful Antifa protestors and peaceful Nazis. That is evident from what he said.
First and foremost I wasn't speaking to Trump with that, but noting a moral truth that needs to be advanced along with the recognition that violence should not be a part of political discourse in this country. That said, Trump's failure to do that coupled with his actual note was entirely an instrument of equivalency.

Second, antifa are anarcho-communists.
Many. And socialists too. But mostly it's a number of unaffiliated groups with a unifying disdain for fascism. Among the communist faction (and true of most American communist movements) is a disdain and repudiation of Stalin and his version of the model, while Nazis uniformly praise and take instruction for their expression from Hitler. I only note it because that's what most Americans dial in when discourse on communism begins. Differ with their aim (and I do) but don't confuse that aim with Russia's sad experiment. They aren't angling to repeat that mistake. They aim to make a new, gentler mistake about human nature. What this minority within a minority are vocalizing is a desire for the old Marxist sentiment of need and ability. It will never happen for any number of understandable reasons. It just isn't who people are and how they're motivated.

What their cause isn't though is a call for dividing people by race and gender. The Nazis and a great deal of the Alt Right follow is precisely that.


Is anarcho-communism really all that much better than whatever it is that Richard Spencer believes?
Anarchist communism stresses egalitarianism and the abolition of social hierarchy and class distinctions that arise from unequal wealth distribution, the abolition of capitalism and money, and the collective production and distribution of wealth by means of voluntary associations. In anarchist communism, the state and property no longer exist. Each individual and group is free to contribute to production and to satisfy their needs based on their own choice. Systems of production and distribution are managed by their participants.

If that's what it boils down to, then yes. They're infinitely better than Nazis and white supremacists. Misguided, I'd say. Naive and mistaken in their aim, which is simply not a reflection of human nature and its motivations. Now people who try to attain this state by violent means or oppose peaceful protest with violence are wrong and, absent a demonstration of some particular in mitigation, indistinguishable as a practical matter from anyone conducting themselves similarly for any reason.


Nobody Beats The Wiz
You mean when he appears to agree with your side of a thing for a moment. :plain: Let him unload on Trump or take umbrage and your opinion will change like a windsock in a hurricane.
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
Nope, the Wiz is at least honest about Trump,

Which you believe because:

he even says good things once in awhile, he's not scared.
Again, he says good things about Trump. That translates to your opinion. I'm not denigrating WoZ, I'm just noting that if he felt differently you would too, which is why your negatives are singularly reserved for those who share a low opinion of the president.

That's just how it is, nope notwithstanding. That or produce your admiration in the wake of a criticism. I'll wait while that literally never happens.

The scared bit was just an illustration of how far down that rabbit hole your rationality has disappeared on the point, PJ.
 

Rusha

LIFETIME MEMBER
LIFETIME MEMBER
Hall of Fame
Which you believe because:


Again, he says good things about Trump. That translates to your opinion. I'm not denigrating WoZ, I'm just noting that if he felt differently you would too, which is why your negatives are singularly reserved for those who share a low opinion of the president.

That's just how it is, nope notwithstanding. That or produce your admiration in the wake of a criticism. I'll wait while that literally never happens.

The scared bit was just an illustration of how far down that rabbit hole your rationality has disappeared on the point, PJ.

The difference is ... WoZ will not follow any candidate blindly and dismiss anything negative about the one he supported just ... because he likes him. He's objective and fair. Even when he disagrees with me, he is consistent and reasonable. No hypocrisy.

Example: You don't hear him screaming "FAKE NEWS"! Nor has he ever driveled insults my way based on the fact that I offer fair criticism towards Trump.
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
The difference is ... WoZ will not follow any candidate blindly and dismiss anything negative about the one he supported just ... because he likes him. He's objective and fair. Even when he disagrees with me, he is consistent and reasonable. No hypocrisy.

Example: You don't hear him screaming "FAKE NEWS"! Nor has he ever driveled insults my way based on the fact that I offer fair criticism towards Trump.
Completely agree. Even when I want to pull my or his hair out on a point. :) He's a good egg. Kmo too.
 
Top