Yeah, well North Korea's full name is the Democratic People's Republic of Korea whereas South Korea is just the Republic of Korea. Checkmate, libtards.
― pomenitul, Thursday, 4 October 2018 16:15 (seven years ago)
have her explain the differences between a republic vs democracy. be prepared to cringe.
― A True White Kid that can Jump (Granny Dainger), Thursday, 4 October 2018 16:17 (seven years ago)
Well, a republic is ruled by Republicans, see . . .
― Plinka Trinka Banga Tink (Eliza D.), Thursday, 4 October 2018 16:25 (seven years ago)
Rush and josh speak wisely. There is a whole thing (some) people do where it's tough for us to accept that there is a negative view of ourselves out there anywhere. And if anyone anywhere thinks ill of us, we need to confront and combat that perception. Even if (perhaps especially if) it's futile and the healthier thing would be to make like Elsa and let it go.
It happens here on ilx. It happens in my work life. It happens in my personal relationships, including my marriage.
― Life hack: scrape your teeth and make your own tartar sauce (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 4 October 2018 16:35 (seven years ago)
ow do you even conceive of dealing with this level of crazy? (This is my mother-in-law.)
When she said this, who is she saying it to? if thats a fb post or something then its just an expression, there's nothing to respond to. Its a closer not an opener. Responding to closers is never a good idea. IF I were ever to respond, which I wouldn't, I'd try move away from the conceptual to the tangible, pick one small bit and respond to that, eg "I'd be ok with Kavanaugh, its just the perjury thing, I'm still having some trouble with it, perjury is a bit of an issue for me". In the unlikely event that I'd engage with this, that is as far as I could ever imagine going
I really try and steer clear of ANY talk on a conceptual level, particularly with my cousin - almost certainly not talking about the same things even if using the same word.
And if anyone anywhere thinks ill of us, we need to confront and combat that perception.
Letting go of this is key. The first thing I think is, well, does this particular persons perception matter? Most likely its a no (it might even be that the person matters but their perception doesn't). If the answer is yes it does matter, confront and combat are still the wrong tools. If their perception matters, it might well be that they have a point, and I need to find out what that is
― anvil, Friday, 5 October 2018 05:59 (seven years ago)
I liked the girl in the Sailor Moon outfit when she got ambushed by Infowars (at a Bernie event possibly?), and the interviewer bombarded her with "Socialism! Venezuela! eating Rats! Socialism!" in that really weird way of talking very fast at someone. And she replied "I just want free healthcare, honey"
"But I just told you they'r eating rats!"
― anvil, Friday, 5 October 2018 06:02 (seven years ago)
― anvil
This is the really tricky bit. If someone's perception matters to me, it's either because I love them, or because they have power over me (or both). Trump supporters are so extreme that the number of possible responses to them are limited. There's confrontation, capitulation, and avoidance.
I've chosen avoidance, and avoidance in a fairly extreme form. In the case of people I loved, I've concluded that someone's support of Trump necessarily changes them to the point where it is impossible for them to truly recognize and respect me as a human being, and that therefore the preconditions for a loving relationship are impossible, and so I've withdrawn strongly from them.
In the second case, I've taken active steps to remove myself from situations where Trump supporters have power over me. This is the difficult part because these steps aren't available to all people. It's extremely challenging when people who have power over you either implicitly or explicitly hate you and want to hurt you. If flight isn't an option, I guess that just leaves fight.
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Friday, 5 October 2018 14:17 (seven years ago)
Trying to understand here (good luck, I know): for GOPers, does 'mean bullying' basically = 'why are you so vehemently opposed to us making unpopular decisions on your behalf'? 'Why do you have to make such a fuss about us dismantling civil society?' 'Why do you have to so forcefully point out that I've aligned myself with increasingly-unalloyed evil?' What? I can't square it.
― Werther Down the Spiral (Old Lunch), Friday, 5 October 2018 14:29 (seven years ago)
In the case of people I loved, I've concluded that someone's support of Trump necessarily changes them to the point where it is impossible for them to truly recognize and respect me as a human being
How does this manifest? With my cousin it can be quite odd, its not even particularly clear if I am even considered one of the 'they' or not. sometimes yes but often no. Can it be that your loved ones are holding something similar, in some ways doing a form of mental gymnastics where you aren't part of the target group?
Also, your avoidance - Ive read plenty of people going down this route and its definitely understandable, but Ive found 'conversation avoidance' a better tactic than 'actual avoidance'. Granted I only really have the one person that is like this, but I've viewed this like, well, I do have a choice about the topic of conversation, I don't have to if I don't want to.
As for people in a position of power over you, that is much worse, your options are so limited, thankfully I don't (currently) have to face that. I'm not sure I'd be able to cope well with that at all
― anvil, Friday, 5 October 2018 14:53 (seven years ago)
Few Republicans are actually card-carrying racists and torch waivers, in my opinion. They just have no consideration or awareness of anyone outside of their immediate circle. They can have gay family or black friends and be totally cool with both even while voting against their interests, because they are "the good ones." But they never seem to take into account that everybody has friends who are the "good ones," and there's millions and millions and millions of "good ones" out there, all of them have friends and loved ones, and just because your friends and family aren't being hurt, to the best of your limited knowledge, that does not mean there are not millions and millions of people out there who are suffering or at risk thanks to the GOP.Or maybe they're all racists, etc.
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 5 October 2018 15:23 (seven years ago)
The only success I’ve found arguing with right wing friends is Socratic inquiry. Just ask questions to try and understand what they believe and sometimes the questions force them to rethink their beliefs. “What’s the difference between a democracy and a republic and why is a republic preferable to a democracy” could be a good question. “Should we aim for representation as close to 1 person 1 vote as possible or should minority groups and elites be making the decisions for the rest of the country?” If nothing else it’ll illuminate their values. I’ve mostly had ppl walk back their craziness when we get into these kinds of questions but I’ve also had people admit that they’d prefer an authoritarian gov and no democracy at all which is a good thing to know. “I disagree that authoritarianism would be better than a democracy but I can certainly see the appeal.”
― Mordy, Friday, 5 October 2018 15:27 (seven years ago)
I'm watching Mindhunter rn and I have to say that this detailed exploration of the psychology of (almost entirely white male) serial killers, while nothing new, has been kinda revelatory at this particular political moment. Like they're really only distinguished from, say, bog standard MRA turds and conservatives in the violent manifestation of their worldview.
(Like the one killer who let a victim go because she said her dad had cancer, which reminded him of his brother's cancer. Empathy only exists when the direct mapping of someone else's lived experience onto their own allows them to briefly consider that other people might also have an interior life, hopes, dreams, fears, etc.)
― Werther Down the Spiral (Old Lunch), Friday, 5 October 2018 15:30 (seven years ago)
if you don't interact with ppl with right-wing beliefs i can see how you might think that they are psychologically indistinguishable from serial killers but i think you might find that many of them share values with you and mostly disagree about what facts are germane / what systems can best accomplish those values / etc. that has been my experience. i don't get the impression that republican voters are sociopathic.
― Mordy, Friday, 5 October 2018 15:54 (seven years ago)
true. from personal experience, they're both hateful and fearful
― Nhex, Friday, 5 October 2018 15:55 (seven years ago)
There’s a stunning disconnect that I see irl bc the several people I know who are apparently mildly-to-deeply right wing have always been perfectly respectful and decent in person. Online it’s an entirely different story — to see one of the nicest dads I know going off on NextDoor about a fifth column and shooting people who trespass, or seeing the mild-mannered dude I knew turn into an alt-right cartoonist bullying anti-women conspiracy theorist, or my quiet cousin who came out of the closet and married his bf and goes off on thinly veiled racist meme rants (his husband is from Central America!)...I think it shows how the internet can turn people who may otherwise debate in better faith into seeming monsters.
I guess the question is, has the internet actually changed them, have they always been this way, has the black and white debate style of internet discourse irreparably destroyed them (and almost everyone else?)
I only have deeply negative feelings about one of those people now tbh, due to what does seem like a deep targeted cruelty that is different from a rant or two and dumb meme sharing.
― omar little, Friday, 5 October 2018 16:06 (seven years ago)
i agree with you in that someone being polite and nice in their everyday life has nothing to do with the vile feelings and attitudes they carry inside. at least most of these right wingers i know have the sense to keep these views inside before letting it slip "accidentally" about how annoyed they are about black people are actually awful, but i also live in a fairly liberal area
― Nhex, Friday, 5 October 2018 16:18 (seven years ago)
I'm kinda at the point where I don't give a fuck how kindly and polite and gracious a conservative is with me personally. A tip of the cap and a 'howdoyoudo!' doesn't offset the measurable damage their ideology does to the wider world.
― Werther Down the Spiral (Old Lunch), Friday, 5 October 2018 16:20 (seven years ago)
Some of you guys seem to have neverending tolerance for absolute bullshit people in your lives. Congrats? I am still completely in the shame and shun operating procedure. So far, no regrets and awesome perk that I no longer have to travel home for the holidays (or funerals).
― Yerac, Friday, 5 October 2018 16:25 (seven years ago)
believe me, if i was anywhere close to affording it i'd get away from my family. but escape is not an option, so tolerance is required
― Nhex, Friday, 5 October 2018 16:38 (seven years ago)
I think Mordy's generally otm here, the biggest hurdle (in my experience) is getting them to engage in that kind of Socratic dialogue in the first place. Like that "democracy vs. republic" line gives you an avenue to pursue, but sometimes it's hard to dig past a bunch of bs rhetoric to get at larger, underlying issues.
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 October 2018 16:43 (seven years ago)
mind you i don't actually really think my cousin is a fully decent human being, but i also empathize w/his genuine pain when he came out (at age 35) to his right wing folks and his very anti-gay mom (who is now very pro-gay, what a country), and his husband is afaict pretty damned left wing, which makes it all pretty strange as a situation, him being such a pro-Trump guy in very selective ways. we spent time with my aunt and uncle and other cousin (not him) and i think he was on duty and couldn't make it. we see them all once every several years. it's family, i don't really feel like shunning them. my son likes them all, idk.
this dad i know, his daughter is friends with my son. never even knew he leaned hard right til he discovered social media and one night my w1fe asked, "have you seen....anyone we know posting...."interesting" things on NextDoor?" And here I only thought the guy got worked up over WW2 books and grilling burgers. eh I don't know if he even likes Trump. Probably. I know he's also friends with a vv liberal lesbian couple, not to mention all their other liberal friends. People are complicated, maybe they can also change?
mostly i feel like leading by ingratiating, tolerant example sometimes does work maybe very incrementally and even if it doesn't work, i don't think it turns someone *more* right wing.
― omar little, Friday, 5 October 2018 17:03 (seven years ago)
I've happily cut off all my family who espouse this shit (while keeping around one aunt who believes it but keeps her mouth shut; and TBH i don't know what my mother thinks, she used to be super liberal, became an alcoholic and then kind of conservative as she got closer to catholic church again, then I sensed a drift and now I think she doesn't know what to believe); I just can't get over the urge to recontact some of them and argue. that's my problem
― akm, Friday, 5 October 2018 17:29 (seven years ago)
I don't think my life or the world will be enriched in any way by my cutting out people who disagree w/ my politics. As long as they aren't explicitly advocating for genocide I can deal with most abhorrent political beliefs and they certainly won't evolve / change their minds if I ignore them. There are Republicans in my life who I've been interacting with for years who I can see in demonstrable ways that they've modulated and changed their opinions on things because they've interacted with me in cool, rational exchanges over and over again.
― Mordy, Friday, 5 October 2018 17:47 (seven years ago)
I admire your patience, Mordy.
― Zach Same (Tom D.), Friday, 5 October 2018 17:50 (seven years ago)
I haven't got the energy tbh.
Well they aren't "politics" friends. They're people who I socialize with in my community - I eat meals with them, I pray with them, I play board games with them, our kids play together, sometimes we work together. And sometimes politics comes up as it does. It doesn't define our relationship. If it did I'd probably be less interested in socializing with them. And I prefer socializing with people who share my politics bc it's just easier. But I gain enough from these relationships that have nothing obvious/explicit to do with politics.
― Mordy, Friday, 5 October 2018 17:53 (seven years ago)
The vicissitudes of federal service require that I regularly interact with both small-c conservatives and big-R Republicans in a professional context and I’m thankful that they leave their brain worms at home, although sometimes the water cooler chumminess with ideological foes who apparently hate everything I believe in can create a stressful dissonance when I’m away from work and have time to reflect. Right now I’m in school with a bunch of career military folks who seem like they could definitely be insufferable right wing assholes if the uniform didn’t demand that they not identify with any party. I respect their dedication to being unaffiliated but sometimes their bothsidesism and barely-concealed libertarian tendencies make me sad.Separately - I estranged myself from my family for totally not political reasons. I have a hard time imagining putting myself through the emotional wringer of being, like, famous ILX poster and Twitch streamer Karl Malone, basically.
― El Tomboto, Friday, 5 October 2018 18:08 (seven years ago)
My parents, brother in law, and cousins are wonderful people around whom politics is a tripwire. They don't bring it up anymore. Yet when I visit these days I have to relax. At its worst my anticipating of a crisis that won't happen reminds me of my pre-out days.
― You like queer? I like queer. Still like queer. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 5 October 2018 18:11 (seven years ago)
Our family fight enough about stuff we basically agree on I can't imagine what it would be like if they were actually Tories.
― Zach Same (Tom D.), Friday, 5 October 2018 18:15 (seven years ago)
Also I want to make a differentiation that it's not differing 'politics' that I have a problem with. I hate using that word as a standin when it's really, like, peoples' daily lives that we are talking about.
― Yerac, Friday, 5 October 2018 18:15 (seven years ago)
I shouldn’t leave out the fact that hacker and cybersecurity circles are chock full of gun-collecting fedora’d “individualists” dressed in all black tactical gear, shoulder to shoulder with transgender feminists and innumerable categories of hippie.
― El Tomboto, Friday, 5 October 2018 18:16 (seven years ago)
As I said, if they openly advocate for genocide I would disassociate from them. But if they believe in policy X and I think policy X will lead to people dying, but they don't think it'll lead to people dying, then what we disagree with is the consequence of the policy, not whether it's okay to do things that kill people.
― Mordy, Friday, 5 October 2018 18:21 (seven years ago)
And as long as none of you have to interact with these Schroedinger’s People, well then it’s just impossible to say?
― Andrew Farrell, Friday, 5 October 2018 18:29 (seven years ago)
I'm pretty ice cold on anything impacting women or poc. It's absolutely not acceptable to me.
― Yerac, Friday, 5 October 2018 18:30 (seven years ago)
Once you bring up consequences they just revert to their barbershop versions of deontology or virtue ethics. It’s a jello squeezing exercise.
― El Tomboto, Friday, 5 October 2018 18:32 (seven years ago)
Never forget that most political attitudes are strictly tribal and a little bit emotional.
― El Tomboto, Friday, 5 October 2018 18:33 (seven years ago)
Yeah, the guys in my barbershop are always going on and on about deontology and virtue ethics.
I try to change the subject to, like, the categorical imperative or to eudaimonism, but they won't let me.
― Yah Mo B. Hawkins (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 5 October 2018 19:40 (seven years ago)
mine are mostly shavians
― difficult listening hour, Friday, 5 October 2018 20:07 (seven years ago)
Like that "democracy vs. republic" line gives you an avenue to pursue, but sometimes it's hard to dig past a bunch of bs rhetoric to get at larger, underlying issues.
I can't even get to the BS rhetoric because people who say this are fundamentally incapable of knowing what words mean.
― louise ck (milo z), Friday, 5 October 2018 20:39 (seven years ago)
Also in order to have a conversation about values, you often are expected to have 1000x facts at your disposal to prove or disprove whatever tangent your conversational partner goes off on. I don't currently have to have this conversation bc today's politics have forced some ppl I know to really distinguish what they believe, but in previous family discussions it has been like, Them: "I vote Republican because of the national debt--they believe in balancing the books. You can't spend money you don't have." Me: "You know that's not a thing, right? [Insert a water-tight explanation of modern monetary theory and all the reasons national debt is not like house-hold spending.][Which in real life I am not knowledgeable about.]"
― There's more Italy than necessary. (in orbit), Friday, 5 October 2018 21:06 (seven years ago)
At that point I ask them if they paid cash for their house and cars.
― WmC, Friday, 5 October 2018 21:39 (seven years ago)
That seems like a non-starter because it's too clear to them that they are in a process of paying that debt down. The kind of thing that's hard to explain is why it's not undesirable for a nation to carry debt, that it's not comparable to household debt which we're always told is "bad." Etc. Anyway like I said this is not my area of expertise but it's the sort of situation where in order to get them to wrestle with the moral qualities they're going to need you to refute 100 things first. It's exhausting.
― There's more Italy than necessary. (in orbit), Friday, 5 October 2018 21:45 (seven years ago)
it doesn't usually manifest! that's the destructive thing, that's why i adopt radical avoidance, because most of the time, at least for me as a white and male-presenting person, one can get along with these people, pretend that the systemic prejudices and hatreds don't exist. god knows i did it for years and years, and if i'm thankful for anything about the current situation it's that it's finally given me the motivation i needed to stop doing it. i spent decades excusing and accomodating abusers, and if it was still possible for me to do it, i would.
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Saturday, 6 October 2018 00:47 (seven years ago)
I was beat up by an alt-righter and it seemed the way it manifested with him was past failures with women, leading to a bitter view of feminism gone too far and (I wasn't sure how the next part formed) but a frustration with transgender politics. With my good friend, as mentioned previously it seems to have started with infowars-alex jones years back, then a youtube full of auto-suggestions that led him on a path that was similar, all the while he would claim it was objective..
― montoya (Ross), Saturday, 6 October 2018 00:58 (seven years ago)
oh yeah I was beat up because I didn't agree with him, I just sat silently and he could TELL I didn't agree. Given that he almost killed me it was pretty fucking lame
― montoya (Ross), Saturday, 6 October 2018 00:59 (seven years ago)
― omar little
for what it's worth i think trump supporters have changed, continue to change, as a result of their support of trump. partly this is because i see how majorly i've changed over the past two years, but i think affiliation, sociality (i'm not going to say "internet", that seems too imprecise, it's just as much the churches) work in a way that we become more like who we associate with. yeah, i think trump has made republicans more hateful and more racist than they already were.
i don't blanket-hate them because a lot of them, _particularly_ women, are caught in that trap of victims defending their abusers. which makes me sad, but i recognize there's nothing i can do about that.
"Separately - I estranged myself from my family for totally not political reasons.
― El Tomboto"
the encouraging thing about right now is that the political being so deeply personal is leading to an atmosphere of more personal accountability. i think back a lot to the way weinstein insisted that he was one of the "good guys" because he voted for democrats. it doesn't work that way anymore, thank god. now it's only the republicans making the excuses for these assholes, but it used to be everybody. the people i've stopped talking to as a result of all this aren't just republicans; it's given me the strength to get myself away from people who, regardless of shared political ideals, have seriously fucked up my life.
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Saturday, 6 October 2018 01:01 (seven years ago)
My mother is definitely is NOT one of these people, however one trait she does share is credulousness, takes most things at face value and isn't that great at seeing through things or questioning - though thankfully she is also aware that this is the case. She read an article on Corbyn recently and said "Even I could see through that one!" (I think the gist was that a) he loves to go round playing to all these crowds and soaking up all the adulation and its gone to his head, but also b) no one likes him and there are no crowds), so she acknowledges that she doesnt always notice and it jumped out at her when she did notice
In some ways its actually quite good, she is genuinely open minded, but I can see how easy it can be to tell someone something and just have it accepted unquestioningly. Like my cousin, she can accept a piece that says "some people are doing some thing somewhere", but unlike my cousin if I ask anything about specifics she doesn't then cling harder to the story but goes "oh yea, good point, it wasn't that clear". Some conversations can start out similar.
"They are...""Wait, who's 'they'?"
but it isn't the same at that point. I think the similiarity is that she can be quite muddled but its not walled off. She will examine things, but its almost like she doesn't quite know how - even though the desire to is there
― anvil, Saturday, 6 October 2018 03:05 (seven years ago)
The GOP and their supporters have become such mindless ghouls that one can't even express solidarity about basic human/civil rights without it being labeled as partisan.
― Yerac, Saturday, 6 October 2018 03:27 (seven years ago)
many of them share values with you and mostly disagree about what facts are germane / what systems can best accomplish those values / etc. that has been my experience.
All I can say, Mordy, is that you apparently interact with people who have an unusual ability to temper emotion with reason.
― A is for (Aimless), Saturday, 6 October 2018 03:53 (seven years ago)
i mean, at this point if you’re a republican you’re aligning yourself with people who seem to ultimately want to lock me (female hetero-agnostic journalist), my sister (lesbian who works in a higher ed program targeted by devos), and her wife (lesbian who emigrated here from poland as a teen) up, and probably my nephew by extension. so they can all fuck off honestly.
― maura, Saturday, 6 October 2018 13:42 (seven years ago)