More liberal censorship

Granite

New member
Hall of Fame
American history teaches us that our citizens have a deep strain of anti-corporate DNA in our genes.

In 1773 in Boston Harbor, a group of colonists made a non-violent protest against the East India Tea Company, the closest thing to a global corporation at the time. The company was selling tea at a reduced price which was interfering with the colonists' own tea shops. Being small businessmen, they couldn't make a living any longer because of the "free market" practices.

No regulations. Uh, right. Imagine the sports that would result.
Imagine the deaths from botulism in corporate canned goods.
Think about the pollution of our water by companies who could care less about God, but care more about mammon.

The overwhelming majority of Jesus's teachings was about poverty.

I have seen over and over and over again at just how much Jesus actually disturbs you folks. When Meshak posted examples of Jesus's teachings about the rich and the poor, posters came down like a plague of locusts. And they made fun of her hat!

When I point out that Jesus never considered himself divine, the passages and verses I offer for proof are never really considered and seem not to register with folks at all.

Very curious.

One of the easiest ways to infuriate a Christian is pointing out what they say and do is so at odds with Christ.
 

Stripe

Teenage Adaptive Ninja Turtle
LIFETIME MEMBER
Hall of Fame
One of the easiest ways to infuriate a Christian is pointing out what they say and do is so at odds with Christ.

Hey, coward. If you disagree with what I say, step out from behind your plaster wall and face me like a man.

Hypocrite. :loser:
 

rexlunae

New member
I simply disagree.


cen·sor·ship
ˈsensərˌSHip/Submit
noun
the practice of officially examining books, movies, etc., and suppressing unacceptable parts.
"details of the visit were subject to military censorship"


https://www.google.com/#q=censorship

Seems to fit the definition to me, since official isn't a synonym with government. The Wikipedia article even lists media organizations and "other groups" explicitly as potential censors.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Censorship

That doesn't mean it's inappropriate or undesirable in all cases. In fact, I would argue that interfering with the right of a publisher to choose what they publish is, in itself censorship.

A coffee shop encouraging folks not to use foul language isn't "censoring," in my book.

Do you think the FCC "censoring" those same words on public airways is censorship? What if a town tried to ban them on public streets?

Nor is a library when it shushes a loud mouth.

Well, I agree, but not for the reasons that you'd probably suggest. Limiting based on the volume isn't a content-based restriction, so it doesn't meet the definition of censorship. This is the reason that your town can have a noise ordinance but can't ban KKK rallies.

When someone comes in and takes a book off the shelf and prevents others from reading it? Yeah, different story.

I think I'd agree, there.

Anyway, I don't want to get too nick-picky, but I figured I might as well flesh out where I think we differ. I think Facebook is well within their rights, and even acting responsibly by banning certain harmful content from their pages. But I also think it's perfectly fair to call this censorship, and to note that in other contexts, the same level of power that FB and other social media entities like Twitter can wield is a little terrifying. It's important to remember that they aren't free and open marketplaces of ideas like the Internet often is assumed to be, and that they have their own business and marketing agendas, as well as the occasional editorial ones. TOL is, of course, exactly the same way, only to a much greater degree, and it is a bit hypocritical for its mods to complain about how Facebook acts in this area as they claim for themselves the right to exercise even greater levels of control on their domains.
 

Granite

New member
Hall of Fame
Do you think the FCC "censoring" those same words on public airways is censorship? What if a town tried to ban them on public streets?

Yes, and yes.

Well, I agree, but not for the reasons that you'd probably suggest. Limiting based on the volume isn't a content-based restriction, so it doesn't meet the definition of censorship. This is the reason that your town can have a noise ordinance but can't ban KKK rallies.

I'll think of a better example for next time.:chew:

Anyway, I don't want to get too nick-picky, but I figured I might as well flesh out where I think we differ. I think Facebook is well within their rights, and even acting responsibly by banning certain harmful content from their pages. But I also think it's perfectly fair to call this censorship, and to note that in other contexts, the same level of power that FB and other social media entities like Twitter can wield is a little terrifying.

It's voluntary, and we allow them to operate as they have (and will). If anything's scary about Twitter or FB's success it's the extent to which people will share their lives with pretty much anybody.

It's important to remember that they aren't free and open marketplaces of ideas like the Internet often is assumed to be, and that they have their own business and marketing agendas, as well as the occasional editorial ones.

Correct. I joke occasionally that Twitter (I mean: seriously) and Facebook are where ideas go to die.:chuckle:
 

rexlunae

New member
Yes, and yes.


It's voluntary, and we allow them to operate as they have (and will). If anything's scary about Twitter or FB's success it's the extent to which people will share their lives with pretty much anybody.

Most things can be described as voluntary to some extent. No one forces you to open a Twitter or Facebook account, but there's an awful lot of professional and social pressure to do so. Meanwhile, you can choose where you live, although sometimes it's rather hard to call it a completely free choice. In the US, we broadly have the expectation that any organization that wields governmental power will refrain from most forms of censorship, but they are often allowed to place restrictions on time and place. For instance, your town is required to permit a public KKK rally, but they aren't required to allow it at a publicly-sanctioned farmers' market or a public library.

The FCC's authority to ban certain words and images is similar, based upon the premise that it's reasonable to set up a space that is safe from certain types of content for people who are sensitive to it, as long as they don't completely block those messages. I don't entirely agree with how they do this in practice, because they haven't been required to also make a space for people who don't want that protection in the public airwaves, and also because I don't think banning words that you will encounter spray-painted on the sides of buildings is really very effective, but I think that the approach is broadly reasonable, ignoring some of the particulars.

Correct. I joke occasionally that Twitter (I mean: seriously) and Facebook are where ideas go to die.:chuckle:

The things that really worries me is the subtle way Facebook et al control discussion. What they present as your news-feed, while it may be informed by choices that you make about what to follow, ultimately, they choose what you'll see using an algorithm that is secret, and you are likely mostly unaware of. I don't think most people are able to give informed consent to that level of subtle influence. By tweaking the algorithm one way or another, entire issues get vanished or greatly amplified for millions of people around the world, and none of them fully realize it. It's almost like giving someone control over not only what you read, but what writing you become aware of.

This isn't entirely new. The large media companies have done the same thing to generations of people. But the scale, and the consolidation is fairly new, and it seems to me like it's enabling people to live in curated bubbles their whole lives.

I've spent some time trying to design an alternative, something distributed, perhaps using a set of blockchains like BitCoin, where the software that makes the important decisions is open source and transparent and feeds are discovered via your network of peers without being influenced by a central administrator. I haven't figured out entirely how it would work, but I'd love to have enough time to do it eventually.
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
They should. Conservatives got fed up with the liberal bias in Wikipedia so they created Conservapedia. I don't like that name though. The lefties didn't create "LiberalPedia" or "CommiePedia" or "PinkoPedia" or "SocialistPedia" or "LeftyPedia."

Nope, they're too slick for that. They gave it some neutral sounding name so that the unwary public will be deceived into thinking they are accessing some politically neutral info-bank. The folks at Conservapedia should have done the same thing. They should have called it something like "Infopedia" or "InfobankPedia" so that the public would be deceived into thinking they were accessing a politically neutral site.

But the only way that would have happened was if they first consulted a Christian who is also a deceiving shark. There aren't many of us around.

As Luke 16:8 says, "...the sons of this world are more shrewd in their generation than the sons of light."

Conservapedia's a complete joke...
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
I'm sure some points have merit, but on the whole incomes across as conservatives crying foul when someone states something that isn't there version of the truth.

Foe example claiming a description of Pinochet as a dictator as a proof of biase makes the whole article laughable.

Essentially 'Conservapedia' is only 'useful' for far right wing zealous fundamentalist Christians who don't mind being spoon fed whatever they're probably accustomed to believing anyway I would posit. As a proper encyclopaedia it's practically next to useless. I tried testing a fairly neutral subject on the composer Stravinsky and here is Conservapedias entry:

http://www.conservapedia.com/Igor_Stravinsky

And here is Wikipedias:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igor_Stravinsky

One is entirely informative, and the other...well...:plain:

As a supposed answer to Wiki, Conservapedia may as well just be a right wing blog site...which it probably is already come to think on it.

:eek:
 

aikido7

BANNED
Banned
And being a fundamentalist, I am trained to spot the ubiquitous logical fallacy that undergirds every argument from a liberal. The thing with a logical fallacy — the straw man fallacy, in this case — is that it renders everything else you say useless.

Fundamentalists do not uphold "no regulations." And if you had read what I wrote, you would not have assumed that I did.

Now you have to start over. Try better this time. :up:

Remember, it is your liberal agenda that has created the world we live in.
I have no agenda except to disturb that agenda.
Jesus disturbed the agenda of his day and ours so completely that Christians have thought it wise just to ignore him.
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
And being a fundamentalist, I am trained to spot the ubiquitous logical fallacy that undergirds every argument from a liberal. The thing with a logical fallacy — the straw man fallacy, in this case — is that it renders everything else you say useless.

Fundamentalists do not uphold "no regulations." And if you had read what I wrote, you would not have assumed that I did.

Now you have to start over. Try better this time. :up:

Remember, it is your liberal agenda that has created the world we live in.

Who trained you? Adoy?

Beware one should be ... of pompous supercilious cranks...and possibly rogue X wing fighters...
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
Liberals hate liberty.

You mean like the liberty to have equal rights? Not to be persecuted under any felonious means et al? The rights for freedom of speech etc? Make your case as to why the "average" liberal would deny you the rights to spout off as you do Stripe. Let's hear it. :)

Or at least, read it...

:plain:
 

aikido7

BANNED
Banned
Right. Your sole aim is to obscure the truth and add spam.
Give up mind-reading and guessing at someone else's motives. You're lousy at it. And it reflects on the parents who raised you.

Ah, so that's why you call yourself a Christian. :rolleyes:
I have accepted Jesus into my life. That's all I can tell you.
 
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