Have you see these comments from Orson Scott Card?

The catch-all forum for general topics and debates. Minimal moderation. Rated PG to PG-13.
Post Reply
_The Nehor
_Emeritus
Posts: 11832
Joined: Mon Apr 30, 2007 2:05 am

Re: Have you see these comments from Orson Scott Card?

Post by _The Nehor »

Ray A wrote:
Droopy wrote:
No Seth, it is you who is both loony and unhinged, morally as well as intellectually. Homosexuality, whatever else it is, is a perversion; a distortion and violation of natural psycho-sexual development and inclinations, both psychologically and physiologically.


Did God create Gay Animals?

Or did they just become perverted by choice?


Often it's an accident. Sometimes it comes from confusion. This happens to humans too sometimes as this video demonstrates: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R0UT2MpdWnc
"Surely he knows that DCP, The Nehor, Lamanite, and other key apologists..." -Scratch clarifying my status in apologetics
"I admit it; I'm a petty, petty man." -Some Schmo
_Droopy
_Emeritus
Posts: 9826
Joined: Mon May 12, 2008 4:06 pm

Re: Have you see these comments from Orson Scott Card?

Post by _Droopy »

The HREOC, in my opinion, has made Australia a better and more tolerant country.
Under the current laws, Mormons are also protected. Public religious vilification (of a particular religion) or religious discrimination is a crime.

I'm not always happy with the "thought police", but I believe it has made Australian society more civil. Peoplethink three times before uttering racist comments, for example.



You see, the road to serfdom (and finally to outright slavery) is paved, one compliant sheep at a time.

Ray, though he does not appear to know it, is actually not a fit subject for a free society. He values neither freedom or the personal integrity that can come only with the ability to openly and freely dissent from the ideas, claims, and institutional assumptions of others, whether that dissent be scholarly, philosophically rigorous, or raucously polemical, it makes no difference.

Australian society is not, and can never be made more "civil" in this manner. Al such heavy handed nanny state moral and social supervision will accomplish, beyond infantilizing the population, is to drive people's real thoughts, perceptions, and passions underground, where they will fester and eventually reemerge in pathological forms. Without an open and free public marketplace of ideas, and the ability to air ideological dissent without fear of institutional reprisal, resentments, disagreements, and ideological opposition will fester and bloom in the dark.

At the very least, a people who must be protected from the speech and criticism of others regarding politics or religion, inherently deserve no respect regarding their views of either.

In a free, healthy society, there is a right to free speech (with limitations of the "fighting words" and fire in a crowded theater sort), but no right to be free of the speech of others or to be heard by others who do not want to hear.

I propose that people so intellectually and psychologically weak that the state must protect them from the dissenting opinions, disagreements, criticisms, ridicule, or insults of others (not actionable slander or liable) do not deserve the freedoms they have and will get precisely the government they do deserve in time.

The next step in Australia, given time, will be the criminalization of criticism of public servants and sitting politicians.

That is wear this always leads, if allowed to run its course.

Ray, good little sheeple that he is, sits in his safe, secure, sound proof government crib and cheers on the commissars in their project of turning Australia into one big happy, criticism and offense free Romper Room

This absolutely gags me, and its ugly, really ugly, to meet it, not in a book, but in a real person blessed with the liberties and freedoms of constitutional self government, a truly rare jewel in human history, only to toss it away without a care in the name of "sensitivity".

This absolutely and utterly gags me.
Last edited by Guest on Wed Aug 13, 2008 1:17 am, edited 5 times in total.
Nothing is going to startle us more when we pass through the veil to the other side than to realize how well we know our Father [in Heaven] and how familiar his face is to us

- President Ezra Taft Benson


I am so old that I can remember when most of the people promoting race hate were white.

- Thomas Sowell
_Droopy
_Emeritus
Posts: 9826
Joined: Mon May 12, 2008 4:06 pm

Re: Have you see these comments from Orson Scott Card?

Post by _Droopy »

Conservatives that I knew growing up, made the exact same argument of the Court overstepping its boundaries in the Brown v. Board of Education decision that spelled the end to desegregation.




Which is logically irrelevant to the augment at hand. You really need to read Bork's The Tempting of America where he analyzes this.

Brown indeed involved some very dicey legal reasoning, but no one would change the decision because the outcome was clearly appropriate.

The question is not did so and so oppose some court ruling in which the outcome was good, but whether the same outcome could have been arrived at using better reasoning. Some very good court decisions and legislative victories have resulted in horrendously negative precedents, legal and political corruption, and unintended consequences.
Nothing is going to startle us more when we pass through the veil to the other side than to realize how well we know our Father [in Heaven] and how familiar his face is to us

- President Ezra Taft Benson


I am so old that I can remember when most of the people promoting race hate were white.

- Thomas Sowell
_antishock8
_Emeritus
Posts: 2425
Joined: Sun Jan 27, 2008 2:02 am

Re: Have you see these comments from Orson Scott Card?

Post by _antishock8 »

Droopy wrote: Blah blah blah...


What is fascism? I cannot possibly understand how someone like Droopy comes from an organization like the Mormon church. At all. It's... Well, it's stupefying.

1. Powerful and continuing expressions of nationalism,
2. Disdain for the importance of human rights,
3. Identification of enemies/scapegoats as a unifying cause,
4. The supremacy of the military/avid militarism,
5. Rampant sexism,
6. A controlled mass media,
7. Obsession with national security,
8. Religion and ruling elite tied together,
9. Power of corporations protected,
10. Power of labor suppressed or eliminated,
11. Disdain and suppression of intellectuals and the arts,
12. Obsession with crime and punishment,
13. Rampant cronyism and corruption, and
14. Fraudulent elections.
You can’t trust adults to tell you the truth.

Scream the lie, whisper the retraction.- The Left
_Droopy
_Emeritus
Posts: 9826
Joined: Mon May 12, 2008 4:06 pm

Re: Have you see these comments from Orson Scott Card?

Post by _Droopy »

Oh boy, more fun from the our resident Kos Kid.

What is fascism? I cannot possibly understand how someone like Droopy comes from an organization like the Mormon church. At all. It's... Well, it's stupefying.

1. Powerful and continuing expressions of nationalism,


Lie number one. Mormons express, as they should, deep
and grateful patriotism, but not nationalism which is a very different thing.

2. Disdain for the importance of human rights,


Bold lie number two. Michael Moore, to the back of the class...

3. Identification of enemies/scapegoats as a unifying cause

Our unifying cause is the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Our enemies are Satan and those in this world who support him and his cause. Now, by a show of hands...

4. The supremacy of the military/avid militarism,


stark stairing lie number three. Keep going...

5. Rampant sexism,



Fantastic lie number four. Keep going...

6. A controlled mass media,


All media is controlled. Meaningless observation number one...

7. Obsession with national security,


Uh huh...

8. Religion and ruling elite tied together,


This might make sense if it...made sense.

9. Power of corporations protected,


Fascist Italy and the fascist elements in Nazi Germany "protected" corporations by utterly controlling them, and this control was exercised on the behalf of the state and in Italy, the producers at the expense of consumers (Syndicalism). And, what this has to do with the Church is anybody's guess.

10. Power of labor suppressed or eliminated


Shock takes his next deep toke...

11. Disdain and suppression of intellectuals and the arts,


And then another, deeper, longer toke...

12. Obsession with crime and punishment,


I think you have the Mormon Church confused with Michael Foucault and some of his old friends in San Francisco...

13. Rampant cronyism and corruption, and


Two bold lies in one phrase.

14. Fraudulent elections.


GAs aren't elected.

Finish your bowl shock.
Nothing is going to startle us more when we pass through the veil to the other side than to realize how well we know our Father [in Heaven] and how familiar his face is to us

- President Ezra Taft Benson


I am so old that I can remember when most of the people promoting race hate were white.

- Thomas Sowell
_Ray A

Re: Have you see these comments from Orson Scott Card?

Post by _Ray A »

Droopy wrote:
You see, the road to serfdom (and finally to outright slavery) is paved, one compliant sheep at a time.

Ray, though he does not appear to know it, is actually not a fit subject for a free society. He values neither freedom or the personal integrity that can come only with the ability to openly and freely dissent from the ideas, claims, and institutional assumptions of others, whether that dissent be scholarly, philosophically rigorous, or raucously polemical, it makes no difference.


So you think there is no dissent in Australia? Do you understand the difference between dissent, vilification, and discrimination?

Droopy wrote:Australian society is not, and can never be made more "civil" in this manner. Al such heavy handed nanny state moral and social supervision will accomplish, beyond infantilizing the population, is to drive people's real thoughts, perceptions, and passions underground, where they will fester and eventually reemerge in pathological forms. Without an open and free public marketplace of ideas, and the ability to air ideological dissent without fear of institutional reprisal, resentments, disagreements, and ideological opposition will fester and bloom in the dark.


It has nothing to do with "ideological dissent". If that were the case, we'd have Robert Mugabe running the country instead of a parliamentary democracy. You're still not getting it.

Droopy wrote:At the very least, a people who must be protected from the speech and criticism of others regarding politics or religion, inherently deserve no respect regarding their views of either.


There is no prohibition on criticism of religion. But if you come to me for a job, and I say "I'm not employing you because you're a Mormon", or if I start a website called "Mormons are Racist Pigs and Wife Stealers!", you have the right to prosecute for discrimination and/or vilification. No one is going to be prosecuted until someone lodges a complaint. You're free to say what you want to say, but if someone feels you have publicly vilified and lied about their religion, they have the right to prosecute. This actually happened to a Christian who started an anti-Muslim website with the intention of dubbing all Muslims as terrorists. He was ordered to take it down or face prosecution.

Droopy wrote:In a free, healthy society, there is a right to free speech (with limitations of the "fighting words" and fire in a crowded theater sort), but no right to be free of the speech of others or to be heard by others who do not want to hear.

I propose that people so intellectually and psychologically weak that the state must protect them from the dissenting opinions, disagreements, criticisms, ridicule, or insults of others (not actionable slander or liable) do not deserve the freedoms they have and will get precisely the government they do deserve in time.

The next step in Australia, given time, will be the criminalization of criticism of public servants and sitting politicians.

That is wear this always leads, if allowed to run its course.


The HREOC has been operating since 1986. It's like the police, when they book you, you complain, but when someone robs you and they arrest them, you praise them. It cuts both ways. You can't have it all your way. To have a civil society there has to be laws, and we've just gone a bit further than you have. Christians are actually one group complaining the most, because they can no longer vilify Gays. And that's what you'd really like to be able to do, isn't it? You just want your freedom to shout " perverted faggot!!" Right?

Droopy wrote:Ray, good little sheeple that he is, sits in his safe, secure, sound proof government crib and cheers on the commissars in their project of turning Australia into one big happy, criticism and offence free Romper Room

This absolutely gags me, and its ugly, really ugly, to meet it, not in a book, but in a real person blessed with the liberties and freedoms of constitutional self government, a truly rare jewel in human history, only to toss it away without a care in the name of "sensitivity".

This absolutely and utterly gags me.


And I trust you have been to Australia? Dan Peterson has. Ask him what he thinks of our wretched dictatorship.
_Droopy
_Emeritus
Posts: 9826
Joined: Mon May 12, 2008 4:06 pm

Re: Have you see these comments from Orson Scott Card?

Post by _Droopy »

There is no prohibition on criticism of religion. But if you come to me for a job, and I say "I'm not employing you because you're a Mormon", or if I start a website called "Mormons are Racist Pigs and Wife Stealers!", you have the right to prosecute for discrimination and/or vilification.


The first instance is in a very gray and dangerous area in a free, democratic society (forcing one to hire, work with - associate with - someone one does not like, for any reason, is walking a very thin and indistinct line, as to fundamental unalienable rights. It sounds really good, until the devil hiding in the details is scrutinized at a deeper level.

The second example, a website that hurls insults and ad hominem attacks at my religion, is the province of a police state, at which point we part company
severely. A morally and politically legitimate government has no business protecting you from insults, abuse, or even what you may consider slander, if such claims are sincerely believed by the one hurling the attacks to be true. The bar for slander and liable are so high here precisely because the area in which slander and liable intersect personal opinion is so fuzzy. In your ideal society, anyone who upsets you emotionally can be sanctioned and punished by the force of the state.

No one is going to be prosecuted until someone lodges a complaint.


This doesn't soften the fact that you are supporting thought crime here, not the prosecution of actual behavior that could harm or lessen your own civil rights.


You're free to say what you want to say, but if someone feels you have publicly vilified and lied about their religion, they have the right to prosecute.


If they feel? Sorry, but I prefer America, where we can still vilify and lie about each other's religion on messege boards and in public debates without fearing civil or criminal prosecution for expressing our opinions (how on earth would you prove that I "lied' if I claimed that Mormons were "wife stealers" if I don't believe that I'm lying but that I'm telling the truth; that is, that I'm expressing my opinion. My opinion may be stupid, bigoted, and ridiculous, but to lie one must know one is lying, and to liable or slander, one must know one is maliciously claiming things he knows not to be true, or at least potentially not true. The point is, how do you tell the expression of an opinion, no matter how flagrantly obnoxious or wrong, from a willful attempt to defame?

This actually happened to a Christian who started an anti-Muslim website with the intention of dubbing all Muslims as terrorists. He was ordered to take it down or face prosecution.


Then Australia is dabbling with the features of a police state and those doing the dabbling have no respect for the concept of free speech. The answer to such speech, is still, at the end of the day, more free speech. Muslims who feel the need to be protected by the national nanny from such claims have no inherent right to complain at all. Let Muslim clerics and spokesmen defend themselves in the marketplace of ideas, but let's keep the cultural commissars and self anointed arbiters of cultural rectitude out of the proceedings. Those commissars are there to pick cultural winners and losers using the naked power of the state. I'll say it again those who are willing to transfer control of and responsibility for their speech from themselves and the open marketplace of ideas to the police powers of the political class and the judiciary deserve what they shall in time receive.

The HREOC has been operating since 1986. It's like the police, when they book you, you complain, but when someone robs you and they arrest them, you praise them. It cuts both ways. You can't have it all your way. To have a civil society there has to be laws, and we've just gone a bit further than you have. Christians are actually one group complaining the most, because they can no longer vilify Gays. And that's what you'd really like to be able to do, isn't it? You just want your freedom to shout " perverted faggot!!" Right?


You are a totalitarian Ray; a little despot without any real power yourself, but cheering on those who do have it and wield it in your name in silencing dissent and criticism of aspects of your society which you support and accept. You believe in free speech for all, but then, it turns out that some speech is more free than other speech, and some members of Australian society are more equal than others (and in any case, the protection of Muslims there vis-a-vis hate crimes laws, like that here, in Canada, and much of Western Europe, is nothing but the same old incipient creeping western dhimmitude - the intellectual and moral disarmament of much of the western intelligentsia (and population, unfortunately) by the doctrine of multiculturalism, and its born of cultural self doubt and fear, not moral or cultural enlightenment).


And I trust you have been to Australia? Dan Peterson has. Ask him what he thinks of our wretched dictatorship?


The road to serfdom is a road, and it takes time. Its the very slow, incremental nature of the process that makes it so insidious.
Nothing is going to startle us more when we pass through the veil to the other side than to realize how well we know our Father [in Heaven] and how familiar his face is to us

- President Ezra Taft Benson


I am so old that I can remember when most of the people promoting race hate were white.

- Thomas Sowell
_Ray A

Re: Have you see these comments from Orson Scott Card?

Post by _Ray A »

Droopy wrote:The first instance is in a very gray and dangerous area in a free, democratic society (forcing one to hire, work with - associate with - someone one does not like, for any reason, is walking a very thin and indistinct line, as to fundamental unalienable rights. It sounds really good, until the devil hiding in the details is scrutinized at a deeper level.


Inalienable rights for whom? So you think every employer should be able to say "only pretty women need apply. Old bags not wanted"? Or, "Darkies need not apply"?

You don't get it, do you?

Droopy wrote:The second example, a website that hurls insults and ad hominem attacks at my religion, is the province of a police state, at which point we part company
severely. A morally and politically legitimate government has no business protecting you from insults, abuse, or even what you may consider slander, if such claims are sincerely believed by the one hurling the attacks to be true. The bar for slander and liable are so high here precisely because the area in which slander and liable intersect personal opinion is so fuzzy. In your ideal society, anyone who upsets you emotionally can be sanctioned and punished by the force of the state.


No, that's very silly exaggeration, and it's not how the law works. I think I'll start a website on Droopy, reveal his real name, publish his banking details, where he lives, where he buys his grog, and as much as I can about his personal life. None of this need be true, however, as long as the public believes it.

You okay with that? Even when someone rocks your house? Or bullies your kids?

Droopy wrote:If they feel? Sorry, but I prefer America, where we can still vilify and lie about each other's religion on messege boards and in public debates without fearing civil or criminal prosecution for expressing our opinions (how on earth would you prove that I "lied' if I claimed that Mormons were "wife stealers" if I don't believe that I'm lying but that I'm telling the truth; that is, that I'm expressing my opinion. My opinion may be stupid, bigoted, and ridiculous, but to lie one must know one is lying, and to liable or slander, one must know one is maliciously claiming things he knows not to be true, or at least potentially not true. The point is, how do you tell the expression of an opinion, no matter how flagrantly obnoxious or wrong, from a willful attempt to defame?


See above. It's not too difficult to tell, most of the time. When someone pigeonholes a whole religion as terrorists or potential terrorists, Blind Freddy can see it's vilification. But some people still believe it, and it incites unwarranted prejudice.

Droopy wrote:Then Australia is dabbling with the features of a police state and those doing the dabbling have no respect for the concept of free speech. The answer to such speech, is still, at the end of the day, more free speech. Muslims who feel the need to be protected by the national nanny from such claims have no inherent right to complain at all. Let Muslim clerics and spokesmen defend themselves in the marketplace of ideas, but let's keep the cultural commissars and self anointed arbiters of cultural rectitude out of the proceedings. Those commissars are there to pick cultural winners and losers using the naked power of the state. I'll say it again those who are willing to transfer control of and responsibility for their speech from themselves and the open marketplace of ideas to the police powers of the political class and the judiciary deserve what they shall in time receive.


So you have no problem with a minority being abused by the majority? Are you aware that Muslim women in Australia have been spat on? To be fair, Australian women have also been called "whores" by some Muslim men.

And Droopy is fine with all of this, in the name of "free speech". It is ideas, thoughts, prejudices, often falsely implanted, that make people do these things. But Droopy is fine with Australian women being called "whores", and Muslim women being spat on, and "fags" being beaten up, all because of false stereotypes.

Way to go.


Droopy wrote:You are a totalitarian Ray; a little despot without any real power yourself, but cheering on those who do have it and wield it in your name in silencing dissent and criticism of aspects of your society which you support and accept. You believe in free speech for all, but then, it turns out that some speech is more free than other speech, and some members of Australian society are more equal than others (and in any case, the protection of Muslims there is, like that here, in Canada, and much of Western Europe, nothing but incipient western dhimmitude - the intellectual and moral disarmament of much of the western intelligentsia by the doctrine of multiculturalism, and its born of cultural self doubt and fear, not moral or cultural enlightenment).


Maybe you should start asking why other countries are going the same way as Australia. Maybe you're fine with Muslims being discriminated against, lied about, and subject to employment discrimination, in which they effectively become aliens in a so-called "democratic society", which is supposed to protect the Rights of all. But you only want rights for yourself, without considering that others less powerful than white males like yourself also need rights and protection from bullies like you.

Droopy wrote:The road to serfdom is a road, and it takes time. Its the very slow, incremental nature of the process that makes it so insidious.


It's not happening. Oh, voting is also compulsory in Australia. No vote, and you'll be fined. No doubt that's the nail in the coffin, as far as Droopy is concerned.

But we manage. I've voted both conservative and "liberal", but I think what we call conservative here you'd call "left wing". Compulsory contrbutions to universal health care is another sign that we are "Marxist", even though Hilary Clinton came here to make a serious study of the health care system, to see what could be improved in - America. I don't pay to go to a doctor, and I don't have to pay to have a hospital bed.

Communist Australia, Arise! :)
_Ray A

Re: Have you see these comments from Orson Scott Card?

Post by _Ray A »

I don't usually look at RFM, and haven't for a couple of months, but decided to bookmark it on my new PC. I came across This thread during a quick browse (I'm supposed to be at work but the car has a few problems at the moment).

I noted the complaint about there being a place for Gordon B. Hinckley on the Anne Frank Memorial, but here's the caption attributed to Pres. Hinckley (according to the poster):

We simply must work unitedly to remove from our hearts and to drive from our society all elements of hatred, bigotry, racism, and other divisive actions and words that limit a person's ability to progress, learn, and be fully accepted.


How ironic I should come across this during this thread.
_krose
_Emeritus
Posts: 2555
Joined: Tue Dec 04, 2007 1:18 pm

Re: Have you see these comments from Orson Scott Card?

Post by _krose »

Does anyone know when secular governments started getting involved in sanctioning marriages in the first place?

In my opinion, the easiest solution to the problem is for governments to stay out of that business entirely. If religious groups want to sanction only certain relationships, let them. Also, any two (or more) consenting adults who want to form a legal partnership can do so.

That's a Libertarian viewpoint, by the way.
"The DNA of fictional populations appears to be the most susceptible to extinction." - Simon Southerton
Post Reply