Point I'd be making is it's harder to reach that point of being wrong when the group in question is actively in the process of doing, y'know, what they're accused of. It'd be pretty easy to go against transgender folks if they their leadership were trying to legislate for random violent sodomy to be legal. Not necessarily the most intellectually pure of things, but folks were asking for reasons, not perfect ones
But that's all the time. Nobody (well, not-as-manybody) hates conservatives or homosexuals because they
might try to outlaw being female or legalize sodomizing Connecticut, they hate them because they're screwing over the poor or destroying the very concept of marriage
right this minute.Otherwise there'd be nothing to discuss, much less get mad over.
You seem to be under a misconception as to what a minority is, since you apply it to geographic area as a mere population comparison. Minorities, as in actual minorities, are groups which can be extremely small in population but what primarily defines them is how they are discriminated against by those in power.
This is not a formal definition by any authority I'm familiar with. Calling them "actual minorities" is either poorly worded or fairly arrogant.
The closest match I could find was the social science designation, which refers to a group defined by the "social majority," meaning whoever or whatever holds power. This does not, in itself, require any form of discrimination.
That aside, I don't see what this has to do with my point. If Bay12 is a society that discriminates against conservatives, aren't conservatives a minority on Bay12? Can Bay12 not count as a society for some reason?
And "speaking ill" about somebody for their personal characteristics is far different than doing so for their profession (ice cream vendors?) or speaking ill of them in relation to the ideology they accept. Sure, it would be wrong to make a blanket statement that conservatives are across the board tax frauds, but calling conservatives evil based on the policies that can fairly be held as the norm within conservative circles isn't a personal attack.
Well, why not? Why is calling police officers pigs because they're commonly corrupt different from calling blacks thugs because they're commonly criminals? The usual answer is choice, but that's a slippery concept. Where do you draw the line between poor mindsets and mental illnesses? What's the difference between someone who identifies as gay, is physically able to live as a homosexual, yet chooses not to, and someone whose true calling was in hot dog stand vending, could have been a lawyer, but went ahead with the vilest of professions instead? Why is being born with one arm different from losing one in an accident, as far as calling them mean names and doing mean things to them is concerned?
If you believe there is a rational reason to be sexist, racist, homophobic, transphobic.. please go away and tell us what it is because I sure as heck can't see one.
Sexist: Women are less rational than men (sweet, recursion). Their influence on things is therefore comparable to people actively trying to make things worse.
Racist: Whites are unnatural snow mutants, far removed from where God intended Man to be, in location, spirit, and form. Their effects upon the Earth and the true races of Man are plain to see- global warming of the skies, extinction of God's flowers and beasts, tomb robbing of the histories of all, war in the Middle East, conquest in Africa.
Homophobic: Homosexual men are known to be carriers of sexually transmitted diseases far more often than the general population. It's not hard to see why "disease vector" is a bad thing.
Transphobic: Society is held together by expectations and rules. Transgenders openly violate one of the most obvious and stable of these, and therefore erode society- and its attendant benefits- far more egregiously than pornography, drugs, or even common crime. Having valuable things stolen is unfortunate and damaging, but it at least follows a certain logic. Transgenderism is literally saying white is black.
This seemed to be about conservatives at the beginning though, and it isn't now, which is interesting.
It's still about conservatives to an extent, but the conversation has generalized quite a bit. That's usually a good sign, I think.