Calling out behavior in smaller communities can serve useful purposes but doing it on Twitter doesn't. Also I said "pretty much all" which I hope admits rare examples where it can be useful. But tbph 99% of the "call outs" I've seen over the last decade have been entirely about virtue signaling and had nothing to do with a) cleaning up the space or b) changing hearts + minds.
― Mordy, Tuesday, 11 July 2017 17:38 (eight years ago)
personally i am extremely skeptical of the effectiveness of more "helpful" or dialogic approaches to "calling out" online. sure irl in a face to face setting you may be able to have such conversations and they may be fruitful etc. but online is just not the medium (well social media, blogging etc. emails may be more useful i suppose if you're carrying on a personal correspondence with someone).
the political and online are both inherently agonistic basically, the only alternative to "virtue signaling" is quietism
― -_- (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 17:47 (eight years ago)
(which is why people should realize that online isn't anything and if they want to be politically engaged they should do it irl)
― -_- (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 17:49 (eight years ago)
but back to ronan's point - virtue signaling is used all the time on uk internet to decry any leftist saying anything remotely left-wing - recently saw someone complain about virtue signaling when someone was bemoaning the high rate of sexual violence in glasgow for instance.
― -_- (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 17:53 (eight years ago)
fwiw, as my own contribution to the norms of this board, I think it might be a happier and more fun space if this thread remained the preserve of complaining about "yumsies" etc, and those folks who are recurrently annoyed by "political correctness" etc take it to one of the several crypto-conservative threads where these arguments have already been hashed out. but this is only my opinion.but I'm glad Mordy concedes that when he says pretty much all callout culture, he actually only means stuff he's personally seen on twitter.
― ﴿→ ☺ (Doctor Casino), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 18:02 (eight years ago)
pretty sure when the person above complained about "virtue signaling" they were complaining about people who are "recurrently annoyed by 'political correctness'" but if u include them in yr critique then i don't disagree
― Mordy, Tuesday, 11 July 2017 18:06 (eight years ago)
i just want to add one thing re this idea that these neologisms criticizing the left are fouled by their prevalent use on the right: the left in 2017 engages in a lot of bad faith, destructive and shitty behavior. a lot of it is about ostracization, thought policing, social targeting, shibboleths, and virtue signaling. some of it is useful! but a lot of it is toxic and self-destructive. getting rid of the terminology used to describe it, bc u don't like some of the ppl who criticize the left, isn't going to fix the problems. just bc the right has found a handy club with which to blunt their historical political opponents doesn't mean the club is fake.
― Mordy, Tuesday, 11 July 2017 18:10 (eight years ago)
but (sorry, that posted before I was done and probably looks a little snarkier than intended), I also don't think it's self-evident that things posted on twitter or elsewhere online don't serve any of these same useful purposes, or other ones. citation needed for that. again I think virtual communities like ILX or various video game fandoms might be totally appropriate spaces for calling shit out. would the gamergate situation have been the same, or better, if all the people criticizing harassment or speaking up for the victims had just stayed silent? since these are the real examples that come to mind maybe I do get a little touchy about this, because in that saga, the people complaining about "SJWs" and "virtue signalling" were on the side of unrestricted harassment under the pretexts of concerns about ethics in video game journalism, and the "virtue signallers" and out-callers were those trying to let the victims know they were not alone, and let the harassers know they did not define the hobby or the community. i'm not imagining you on the side of the bad guys here, to be clear, but these are my own anecdotal reference points. anyway though 99% of everything posted on the internet/twitter is crap, and I wouldn't conclude, from seeing crap music criticism on twitter, that music criticism is pretty much all rotten.
― ﴿→ ☺ (Doctor Casino), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 18:11 (eight years ago)
sorry to derail here, back to the "yumsies" but my friend just got cancelled on for a show and this was the intro text:
"Hiiiiii so I've got bad newwwwws"
uh yeah
― Unchanging Window (Ross), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 20:38 (eight years ago)
What's the difference between 'calling out' and 'criticism'? Is criticism virtue signaling?
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Wednesday, 12 July 2017 21:20 (eight years ago)
You can criticize someone in private. I think most people have found that if you want to get a positive impact from criticism you should do it in private and in very soft, kind tones. Callout culture is angry public denouncement.
― Mordy, Wednesday, 12 July 2017 21:24 (eight years ago)
as we're recycling old conversations I should point out again that every major social movement has had moderates tell them they were putting ppl off with their strident tone
― ogmor, Wednesday, 12 July 2017 21:53 (eight years ago)
has every major social movement been criticized for being nasty spiteful jerks tho?
― Mordy, Wednesday, 12 July 2017 22:05 (eight years ago)
On original topic - Juno probe's view of the Great Red Spot occasioned the programme director to use the atavistic "up close and personal", upon which I discovered my 90s/00s rage against that phrase is intact.
― attention vampire (MatthewK), Wednesday, 12 July 2017 22:09 (eight years ago)
xp .... almost certainly?
― ogmor, Wednesday, 12 July 2017 22:19 (eight years ago)
Yeah idk about that ducking criticism behind "we are just too great our detractors are the reactionaries of history" isn't too great a look esp when there's evidence that you suck sitting right there like jacobins don't get to say sure the pile of heads but all of history the movers get backtalk
― Mordy, Wednesday, 12 July 2017 22:22 (eight years ago)
I'm not an activist but it's still obvious to me that a lot of discourse around social change follows predictable patterns & moderates telling radicals they'd have more luck and be more persuasive if only they'd be nicer is one of them. the politics of civility is obviously fraught (cf. plenty of ilx threads about rudeness, FP &c.) partly because it is another arena in which the same old class/political antagonisms are fought out in another guise. I think there is something gross and harmful in the crude trigger-happy piety that call-out culture can be at its worst, but the real social and political gulfs that it exposes seem like the more important issues to focus on
― ogmor, Wednesday, 12 July 2017 23:06 (eight years ago)
It's probably been upthread and on other threads but I'm really sick of people using "experts" as a dirty word. It's one of the ones that bothers me the most.
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 13 July 2017 00:26 (eight years ago)
I can never take that word seriously after the experts exchange website
(it was an early google search optimized site for IT-related questions but their original domain was, no shit, expertsexchange.com)
― mh, Thursday, 13 July 2017 00:28 (eight years ago)
the politics of civility is obviously fraught (cf. plenty of ilx threads about rudeness, FP &c.)
imo, ilx discourse on rudeness and the existence of FPs has little to do with politics and everything to do with personal rudeness that rises to the level of disgusting savagery. iow, the verbal equivalent of spitting or pissing on someone, and usually over opinions that are never on the order of neo-Nazism, white supremacy or similar causes that might justify such raw abuse.
― A is for (Aimless), Thursday, 13 July 2017 00:36 (eight years ago)
xp
OK, so I'm biassed because I have (almost) consistently received highly qualified and accurate answers from E-E experts. Of those that were not quite so accurate or satisfactory, part of the blame was attributable to me not being specific enough in the way I structured my question.That brings me to my point. If you ask a question poorly, then expect a poor answer.Ask a question about horticulture in the equine care forum, and you will get pretty poor answers.
That brings me to my point. If you ask a question poorly, then expect a poor answer.
Ask a question about horticulture in the equine care forum, and you will get pretty poor answers.
― sarahell, Thursday, 13 July 2017 09:34 (eight years ago)
xp that sounds political to me! the people who oppose FP obviously do not see it just in terms of personal rudeness. etiquette and behavioural norms are politically & socially charged, that's implicit in your idea that it might be ok to break decorum for political reasons under some circumstances.
― ogmor, Thursday, 13 July 2017 12:20 (eight years ago)
Okay, but then should we not bother to post here and discuss articles in newspapers that analyse and critique government policies, etc? As in, you'd agree that there's a something else that is neither private personal criticism (agree this is the way to get a person to improve) nor public twitter callouts?
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Thursday, 13 July 2017 18:09 (eight years ago)
Yus
But also to open this one out a bit - e.g. - abolitionists would break into private property in order to free slaves; moderates of the time would criticise them for them going so far in following their ideals that they broke the law; looking back on it the slavery was clearly so bad as to more or less handwave the breaking and entering of slaver's plantations in order to end it and also it wouldn't have ended without direct action. I don't know what would be the equivalent of actually breaking into plantations to free slaves, for today's callout culture?
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Thursday, 13 July 2017 18:13 (eight years ago)
What I'm saying is, sure, almost every social movement got tone-policing from moderates, but that tone-policing looks silly in proportion to how much those movements actually achieved. Whereas if the twitter callouts don't achieve anything (I have no idea if they do! I don't know enough about it to say) then mebbe the tone critique is more valid?
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Thursday, 13 July 2017 18:15 (eight years ago)
xxpz Correct. Those are not the only two options. Criticizing powerful public figures in the press or whatever is a different beast entirely.
― Mordy, Thursday, 13 July 2017 18:18 (eight years ago)
Shot, chaser
― flappy bird, Thursday, 13 July 2017 18:19 (eight years ago)
I... worked on this story for a year... and he... he just tweeted it out
Sooooo, I wrote a thing :)
I'm thinking now that a lot of the problem with some of this terminology today is that it's not specific enough, maybe doesn't have enough additions and variants.
You get people essentially saying
"It's only political correctness when I don't like it"
Or
"It's not cultural appropriation when I think it's okay"
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 13 July 2017 20:37 (eight years ago)
"tone police"
Essentially anything that means "it's ok when I do it"
― jk rowling obituary thread (darraghmac), Thursday, 13 July 2017 21:46 (eight years ago)
flappy bird getting back to the core, the heart usage
― ﴿→ ☺ (Doctor Casino), Thursday, 13 July 2017 23:02 (eight years ago)
Yeah 'Tone policing' may be a loaded term itself I guess.
Overall, feels like having good control of tone is a great skill, definitely something to try and get locked down if you want to achieve anything, but also maybe something that can be very difficult, considering the varied nature of the 'audience' even when the audience is just another person face to face, and more so when the audience is online (millions of readers all with their own tendencies); and so the expectation that people express themselves with precision and an ear for how it's going to go over may sometimes be questionable imo
All that said I don't disagree that an awful lot of twitter callouts (that I've seen around anyway) have been pretty cloth-eared
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Friday, 14 July 2017 14:03 (eight years ago)
(Although the large number of people who with great reliability come out with reactions such as 'Black lives matter? What about white lives, why are you saying white lives don't matter???' 'Women's rights, what, don't men have rights???' are themselves heading into supremely cloth-eared territory, no?)
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Friday, 14 July 2017 14:05 (eight years ago)
they always stick me in the appendix because they don't think i'm the pretty one
― flappy bird, Friday, 14 July 2017 17:02 (eight years ago)
"My arms and wrists are numb." God would people just shut the fuck up already?
― billstevejim, Saturday, 15 July 2017 05:44 (eight years ago)
Thats a phrase?
― Stoop Crone (Trayce), Saturday, 15 July 2017 08:13 (eight years ago)
Don't forget "my face and lips are numb."
― A is for (Aimless), Saturday, 15 July 2017 17:17 (eight years ago)
i'm old and am sick of political neologisms in the first place. oh, if we use new words maybe people won't notice that they're the same fucking ideas and we don't have to address the problematic implications of those ideas!
more political discourse should be framed in reference to issues surrounding the defenestration of prague. and that's my uncool conservative idea.
― The Saga of Rodney Stooksbury (rushomancy), Saturday, 15 July 2017 17:34 (eight years ago)
my mouth is drymy face is numbfucked up and spun out in my roomon my own, here we go
― assawoman bay (harbl), Saturday, 15 July 2017 17:34 (eight years ago)
How much is Twitter responsible for the current political terminology? I wish people would only use it for links and signal boosting because I hate trying to work out if people are complaining about white women or Wonder Woman (WW acronym).
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 15 July 2017 19:22 (eight years ago)
it all comes from Twitter
― flappy bird, Sunday, 16 July 2017 02:22 (eight years ago)
an abridged collection:
BOOM!#NotTheOnionShot; chaserI'm just going to leave this here...(((if you're Jewish)))SighYour long read for the day:
― flappy bird, Sunday, 16 July 2017 02:29 (eight years ago)
BOOM!Shot; chaser
What do these mean? Is the first one just for humorous dramatic effect?
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Sunday, 16 July 2017 03:25 (eight years ago)
yes, "humor"
― flappy bird, Sunday, 16 July 2017 03:28 (eight years ago)
at least an attempt at it
― flappy bird, Sunday, 16 July 2017 03:29 (eight years ago)
"nothing burger"
― Number None, Sunday, 16 July 2017 06:08 (eight years ago)
that one is bizarre because it came out of a specific cable news channel, MSNBC iirc. their attempt to "get on the same page" like Fox does with every issue & talking point...
― flappy bird, Sunday, 16 July 2017 20:21 (eight years ago)
I'm at the point where I cant follow what is being said sometimes - and I'm someone who is on the internet 94/7 - but because I dont fuck with Twitter/Insta I think i'm missing this weird "thing becomes a saying after 5.2 seconds" idea.
― Stoop Crone (Trayce), Sunday, 16 July 2017 23:40 (eight years ago)
lol i love "94/7" intended or not. gonna use that one if you don't mind
― flappy bird, Monday, 17 July 2017 01:32 (eight years ago)