Oh really?
Seems you are happy for the law to take a back seat to moral outrage.
It does seem like you are saying if you think they are morally right they can live by a different set of standards? Morally being the subjective bit here. If I were of the Nazi persuasion then I'd think I was morally right - the law is there to set the standard everyone must adhere to.
I meant in the terms of our exchange. I am not talking about the legalities of this. I am simply saying I can sympathise with the actions of those that opposed the white supremacist march.
Put it this way.
Do you agree that what Rosa Parks did in 1955 was correct? Perhaps not. Understandable, as she broke the law.
Do you sympathise with the reasons for her doing what she did? I hope so.
Our moral compass is defined by our upbringing and our experiences.There should be no subjectiveness to racism being wrong.
What you don't get though is not everyone has your view - I know what you are saying but I'm sure those on the other side will have similar view how they have been wronged etc.
your basic argument is "I'm right so I can act differently because I am and everyone will understand"
No, I don't agree. How did you get from me saying "That's [a protest against freedom of speech] exactly what it was. The presence of useful idiots is irrelevant, regardless of how many of them there were." to me agreeing that "it evolved into something far greater"?
It was a protest against freedom of speech. That's what it was. That's what it was intended to be. That's what it remained. It was very successful in suppressing freedom of speech, which was its goal. It never evolved into anything else - it started as a protest against freedom of speech, it continued to be a protest against freedom of speech, it remained a protest against freedom of speech, it finished as a protest against freedom of speech, it succeeded as a protest against freedom of speech. It wasn't anything else and didn't become anything else. The presence of some useful idiots who campaigned against freedom of speech without realising what they were doing is irrelevant.
Have I made my disagreement clear enough?
You seem to be thinking that calling them Nazis is an emotional label given to them, despite there being people wearing Nazi arm bands, waving Nazi flags and chanting 'seig heil'.
It is also a completely odd hypothetical to even approach. Quite obviously just blocking a white male going about his day from crossing a public park for no reason would be wrong.
Well perhaps, as the UN have pointed out, the US needs to reconsider this -
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...eo-nazis-kkk-anastasia-crickley-a7907876.html
"Under its "early warning and urgent action" procedure, the committee also called on the US to ensure the rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly are "not exercised with the aim of destroying or denying the rights and freedoms of others.It asked the US government to provide guarantees such rights are not misused to promote racist hate speech and racist crimes."
A much better response from Trump would have been to completely and utterly condemn the Nazis/white supremacists and then say however that vigilantism and violence is not the answer and that the US government will be sure to clamp down and stop marches inciting hatred and violence.
One is arbitrarily blocking white males from something for seemingly no good reason (which was discriminatory).
The other is a community trying to stop a hate filled rally shouting racist and anti-semitic comments containing people dressed up as nazi's from entering one of their public parks.
If you had read the account properly as well, they forced their way through a group of people who had simply locked arms (not antifa) with shields and batons:
"It was basically impossible to miss the antifa for the group of us who were on the steps of Emancipation Park in an effort to block the Nazis and alt-righters from entering. Soon after we got to the steps and linked arms, a group of white supremacists—I’m guessing somewhere between 20-45 of them—came up with their shields and batons and bats and shoved through us. We tried not to break the line, but they got through some of us—it was terrifying, to say the least—shoving forcefully with their shields and knocking a few folks over. We strengthened our resolve and committed to not break the line again. Some of the anarchists and anti-fascist folks came up to us and asked why we let them through and asked what they could do to help."
It is a completely different set of circumstances and I can totally sympathise with those (remember, these were not antifa) who do not want people dressed as Nazi's marching through their communities preaching racism and hate.
The irony of it all is if these weren't Nazis, but someone with the views of Abu Hamza or similar, many in this very thread would be spitting blood that the police didn't stop them and allowed the protest.
Im pretty certain Trump would have been up all night tweeting bile at them and praising "Antifa" for their actions.
As with pretty much everything in this thread "both sides are just as bad as each other", yet so many people refuse to see that when it's on the "other side".
That doesn't really work If people are condemning 'both sides' with regards to the violence then they logically are condemning, erm, both sides - it doesn't matter which way around this was - whether it was Nazis counter protesting antifa or antifa counter protesting Nazis or some other groups involved... fact is two groups of people were violent here and condemning violence on both sides can't really be flipped around to be something else.
The irony perhaps is that some of the antifa crowd who supposedly hate fascism are, at least in Europe, happy to march alongside islamists.
It wasn't a comment on the violence, rather the free speech argument.
That's a bit odd, most people condemning both sides are mainly doing so in terms of the violence. The Nazis are quite clearly beyond the pale ideologically whereas among the counter protestors ordinary people protesting their presence in their town aren't necessarily being condemned from that perspective just antifa and their communist flags.
There's also a free speech discussion going on as well, hence why I quoted Jonos post, which was discussing access to public spaces and free speech.
Racism is wrong, but there are circumstances where a normal person might reasonably end up with racist viewpoints. I won't attempt to justify racism as I don't agree with it. I'm just saying morality is coloured by your life experiences.
as far as the US is concerned free speech is pretty broad, I'm not quite sure what double standards you're referring to?
Why do you assume a supernatural ability to state someone else's position and tell them their own description is not their position, it is literally the position I laid out in the post you first replied to me on!No it isn't and that isn't your position anyway.
No which is why that is nothing like my posts, Rallying alongside Nazi's throwing Hitler salutes is apologist, failing to condemn Nazi's and those on a Rally with Nazi's who go on to commit terrorist murder is apologist!Do you really believe that "My position is against violence, hatred, irrational prejudices, authoritarianism, etc." is Nazism? Seriously, that's really what you believe?
Hear hear on positions against violence hatred and authoritarianism, see above though for apologists who wont condemn those Rallying under the banner and motions to salute those who historically did exactly those things.Also, I've never been within a thousand miles of Charlottesville so you're wrong about that too. But that's a minor detail in comparison to believing that "My position is against violence, hatred, irrational prejudices, authoritarianism, etc." is Nazism.
Can you show where I said anything like the above? Clearly Trump doesn't consider himself a Nazi but seems pretty definitional to Radical Authoritarian Nationalism, the list of styles of fascist leaders is long!I've yet to agree with you that the only two possibilities are two slightly different varieties of fascism. Since you're apparently convinced that those are the only two possibilities, you can't understand me being opposed to both.
Oh so youve changed from telling me what my position is to asking questions alongside 2+ 2 = 5 assumptions!Or are you arguing that Nazism isn't fascist, that it isn't authoritarian, that it isn't based on irrational prejudices and hatred and that it is opposed to violence? Since you're claiming that condemning those things is being a Nazi apologist, it follows that you think that Nazism is about condeming all those things. Of course, that would require your position to be even internally consistent and I certainly wouldn't assume that it is.
No that's where Dowie first responded not you, you came in suggesting republicans who call on others to walk away from Rallying Nazis are wrong, that is Nazi apologist!That subthread started when you linked genocide to the idea that authoritarianism, irrational prejudice and discrimination are not justice and went on to make wild and unsubstantiated claims about who is advocating genocide.
Quite possibly. Your insistence that only the two farthest extremes exist and that everyone who opposes all forms of fascism is Nazi apologist a is bizarre.