... What really set me off about Wierd's post is the part where incarceration was suggested as a solution. That was stupid.
Agreed. I don't think the prison system has been a good solution to any problem, besides absolute monsters like serial killers.
Since you've taken the effort to call me out directly, I owe you a response.
1) "Burying this discussion" was not in reference to you. It was in to reference to anyone who might have been bothered by the fact that I told an anecdote where race played a major role. For daring to make the claim that sometimes oppressed minorities can be mistaken and take things too far.
2) I wouldn't call it
hypersensitivity. That girl deliberately tried to cancel me during my first day of a week-long group commitment. If she had successfully turned that group against me, it would have turned into a week-long hell. I had every reason to be afraid, especially since the white guy usually loses in these types of situations. Are you perhaps one of those people who believes cancel culture doesn't exist by any chance?
3) That's just basic assertiveness though. If you're so concerned about other people's feelings that you never speak up, then you essentially doom yourself to become a second-class citizen by always putting others above you.
I think I'm about to confuse you, so I want to make something clear.
I don't disagree your point that we all embody these traits a little bit. Experiences with my father made into a person who genuinely tries to avoid confrontation (trait 1, agreeableness), I have a bad habit of taking certain slights against me personally when that wasn't the intention (trait 2, fragility), and I enjoy edgy jokes sometimes (trait 3, lack of empathy).
What you're failing to understand is that Wierd wasn't talking about traits, he was talking about full-blown archetypes of people. An agreeable person is not problem until they let serious evil go unchecked (censorship, racism, sexual harrasment, etc.). A fragile person is not a problem, until they start plotting to ruin the lives of innocent people (RIP Lindsay Ellis). An unemphatic person is not a problem, until they start to revel in the suffering they cause to others.
Where to draw the line has a little bit of wiggle-room, but not as much as you think. There's no need to split hairs.
Ninja:To be fair, I was meaning it (incarceration) for the people that do the thing purposefully, joyfully, and knowingly, and do so with copious and ribald abandon.
You know, the people that think white nationalism is A-OK-SUPER. et al.
Not the person who constantly slips "ma'am" at either men, or transmen, because they are used to dealing with a certain occupational class. (Happens to me at work all the time. Constantly called Ma'am, because nursing is a 99% female employee vocation)
No, the prescription was for people who use the N word, and get off on using it. It for people who get told "Please call me miss", and then gets in the person's face, and says "Sir" with a grotesque smile.
And, again, only after extensively verifying that the person is indeed, that kind of person.
What is your opinion on assholes whose douchebaggery lacks a political dimension? The people who bully just because? Do we give regular harassment a pass just because it isn't sexual harassment?
If you still feel like imprisoning douchebags, then I respect your conviction, but as a society we've agreed that prison is a bit too extreme of a punishment for that. Something definitely should be done, but why do you believe it has to be so harsh?