Fyght4Cal said:
TIL about Kuklas Adelphon, the fraternal forerunner of Kappa Alpha, and the progenitor of Ku Klux Klan initiation rites:
Big C said:
Sickening. Here in the Bay Area, we live in a bubble. Down there, they live in their own bubble. However, all bubbles are not created equal: Ours is progressive; theirs is regressive.
While some things are more important than college football, I can't help wondering if, while we're down there this fall, maybe we could spread the word that there's a wonderful university in Northern California, where the attitude is better (and so is the weather).
As I started to read your post, I was thinking you were going to criticize my "two bubbles" post by saying that we have racism here, even in our supposedly "progressive" bubble. And that would have been a good point.BearGoggles said:Big C said:
Sickening. Here in the Bay Area, we live in a bubble. Down there, they live in their own bubble. However, all bubbles are not created equal: Ours is progressive; theirs is regressive.
While some things are more important than college football, I can't help wondering if, while we're down there this fall, maybe we could spread the word that there's a wonderful university in Northern California, where the attitude is better (and so is the weather).
This is an unfortunate combination of arrogance, condescension, naivete, and delusion. I am not defending the photo or action. However, to assume that the Bay Area (really California) and its "progressive values" is somehow unequivocally superior to other "bubbles" is simply wrong. All bubbles are bad, because they promote intolerance, division, and a lack of empathy - your post is a great example.
The Bay Area, in particular, is one of the most intolerant and least liberal (in a traditional sense) places I've encountered. And it has gotten "progressively" worse in the last 3 decades.
The group think and intolerance of peaceful dissent or alternate viewpoints is off the charts. Dissenting views that are very much in the nationwide mainstream are de-platformed, boycotted, and attacked on an an hominem basis - rarely the on the merits. Antifa and its violent intimidation tactics have been tolerated (and implicitly endorsed) for years. People with conservative views are literally denied employment, not to mention social stature.
The totalitarian (really fascist) urges of the so called CA progressives is off the charts. The bay area outlaws straws, plastic bags, e-sigs, etc. On the streets of SFO, a person can use a heroin needle (paid for and distributed by the government), dine naked, or take a dump in the street, but that same person can't use a plastic straw or puff an e-cig.
The Bay Area is one of the least affordable places to live in the world - in no small part because of progressive anti-development attitudes. Poverty in California averages 13+%, with much higher rates in urban/progressive areas like SFO and LA. https://www.ppic.org/publication/poverty-in-california/ When factoring in housing costs, California has the highest poverty rates in the Country per the census bureau. https://la.curbed.com/2018/9/14/17856870/california-poverty-rate-housing-cost-of-living
Despite its high tax rates, California has the highest debt of any state in real dollar terms and on a per capita basis, with massive unfunded liabilities (pensions) on top of that. https://smartasset.com/credit-cards/states-with-the-most-debt
Our bubble/state is far from perfect. Keep that in mind when your judging other people's.
Yeah, but one of the two bubbles condemns racism while the other promotes it, tacitly or actively. That's a pretty big deal to many of us, a bigger deal than the cost of living or high tax rates or the other things you cite. On that basis alone, most of us are comfortable with saying that one is more regressive than the other.BearGoggles said:Big C said:
Sickening. Here in the Bay Area, we live in a bubble. Down there, they live in their own bubble. However, all bubbles are not created equal: Ours is progressive; theirs is regressive.
While some things are more important than college football, I can't help wondering if, while we're down there this fall, maybe we could spread the word that there's a wonderful university in Northern California, where the attitude is better (and so is the weather).
This is an unfortunate combination of arrogance, condescension, naivete, and delusion. I am not defending the photo or action. However, to assume that the Bay Area (really California) and its "progressive values" is somehow unequivocally superior to other "bubbles" is simply wrong. All bubbles are bad, because they promote intolerance, division, and a lack of empathy - your post is a great example.
The Bay Area, in particular, is one of the most intolerant and least liberal (in a traditional sense) places I've encountered. And it has gotten "progressively" worse in the last 3 decades.
The group think and intolerance of peaceful dissent or alternate viewpoints is off the charts. Dissenting views that are very much in the nationwide mainstream are de-platformed, boycotted, and attacked on an an hominem basis - rarely the on the merits. Antifa and its violent intimidation tactics have been tolerated (and implicitly endorsed) for years. People with conservative views are literally denied employment, not to mention social stature.
The totalitarian (really fascist) urges of the so called CA progressives is off the charts. The bay area outlaws straws, plastic bags, e-sigs, etc. On the streets of SFO, a person can use a heroin needle (paid for and distributed by the government), dine naked, or take a dump in the street, but that same person can't use a plastic straw or puff an e-cig.
The Bay Area is one of the least affordable places to live in the world - in no small part because of progressive anti-development attitudes. Poverty in California averages 13+%, with much higher rates in urban/progressive areas like SFO and LA. https://www.ppic.org/publication/poverty-in-california/ When factoring in housing costs, California has the highest poverty rates in the Country per the census bureau. https://la.curbed.com/2018/9/14/17856870/california-poverty-rate-housing-cost-of-living
Despite its high tax rates, California has the highest debt of any state in real dollar terms and on a per capita basis, with massive unfunded liabilities (pensions) on top of that. https://smartasset.com/credit-cards/states-with-the-most-debt
Our bubble/state is far from perfect. Keep that in mind when your judging other people's.
First of all, I assumed his intent by talking about "bubbles" is that we both live in worlds where we are not exposed to those opinions of the other. I wouldn't say all bubbles are bad. Bubbles just exist. Americans don't know what it is like to live an Bangladesh. They never will. Understanding your bubbles is good.BearGoggles said:Big C said:
Sickening. Here in the Bay Area, we live in a bubble. Down there, they live in their own bubble. However, all bubbles are not created equal: Ours is progressive; theirs is regressive.
While some things are more important than college football, I can't help wondering if, while we're down there this fall, maybe we could spread the word that there's a wonderful university in Northern California, where the attitude is better (and so is the weather).
This is an unfortunate combination of arrogance, condescension, naivete, and delusion. I am not defending the photo or action. However, to assume that the Bay Area (really California) and its "progressive values" is somehow unequivocally superior to other "bubbles" is simply wrong. All bubbles are bad, because they promote intolerance, division, and a lack of empathy - your post is a great example.
The Bay Area, in particular, is one of the most intolerant and least liberal (in a traditional sense) places I've encountered. And it has gotten "progressively" worse in the last 3 decades.
The group think and intolerance of peaceful dissent or alternate viewpoints is off the charts. Dissenting views that are very much in the nationwide mainstream are de-platformed, boycotted, and attacked on an an hominem basis - rarely the on the merits. Antifa and its violent intimidation tactics have been tolerated (and implicitly endorsed) for years. People with conservative views are literally denied employment, not to mention social stature.
The totalitarian (really fascist) urges of the so called CA progressives is off the charts. The bay area outlaws straws, plastic bags, e-sigs, etc. On the streets of SFO, a person can use a heroin needle (paid for and distributed by the government), dine naked, or take a dump in the street, but that same person can't use a plastic straw or puff an e-cig.
The Bay Area is one of the least affordable places to live in the world - in no small part because of progressive anti-development attitudes. Poverty in California averages 13+%, with much higher rates in urban/progressive areas like SFO and LA. https://www.ppic.org/publication/poverty-in-california/ When factoring in housing costs, California has the highest poverty rates in the Country per the census bureau. https://la.curbed.com/2018/9/14/17856870/california-poverty-rate-housing-cost-of-living
Despite its high tax rates, California has the highest debt of any state in real dollar terms and on a per capita basis, with massive unfunded liabilities (pensions) on top of that. https://smartasset.com/credit-cards/states-with-the-most-debt
Our bubble/state is far from perfect. Keep that in mind when your judging other people's.
There is racism in Berkeley class rooms. Just the way I saw faculty condescend to who were perceived to be football and basketball players (e.g. athletic-looking black students). Really interesting exchange when one faculty member made a snide remark to a black student about asking some of his "smarter" (meaning white) football teammates about an answer only to be to told that by the guy he wasn't on a team, and was capable of answering the question "by his f'ing self." Given how reactive the faculty was in those days, that took some balls.Big C said:As I started to read your post, I was thinking you were going to criticize my "two bubbles" post by saying that we have racism here, even in our supposedly "progressive" bubble. And that would have been a good point.BearGoggles said:Big C said:
Sickening. Here in the Bay Area, we live in a bubble. Down there, they live in their own bubble. However, all bubbles are not created equal: Ours is progressive; theirs is regressive.
While some things are more important than college football, I can't help wondering if, while we're down there this fall, maybe we could spread the word that there's a wonderful university in Northern California, where the attitude is better (and so is the weather).
This is an unfortunate combination of arrogance, condescension, naivete, and delusion. I am not defending the photo or action. However, to assume that the Bay Area (really California) and its "progressive values" is somehow unequivocally superior to other "bubbles" is simply wrong. All bubbles are bad, because they promote intolerance, division, and a lack of empathy - your post is a great example.
The Bay Area, in particular, is one of the most intolerant and least liberal (in a traditional sense) places I've encountered. And it has gotten "progressively" worse in the last 3 decades.
The group think and intolerance of peaceful dissent or alternate viewpoints is off the charts. Dissenting views that are very much in the nationwide mainstream are de-platformed, boycotted, and attacked on an an hominem basis - rarely the on the merits. Antifa and its violent intimidation tactics have been tolerated (and implicitly endorsed) for years. People with conservative views are literally denied employment, not to mention social stature.
The totalitarian (really fascist) urges of the so called CA progressives is off the charts. The bay area outlaws straws, plastic bags, e-sigs, etc. On the streets of SFO, a person can use a heroin needle (paid for and distributed by the government), dine naked, or take a dump in the street, but that same person can't use a plastic straw or puff an e-cig.
The Bay Area is one of the least affordable places to live in the world - in no small part because of progressive anti-development attitudes. Poverty in California averages 13+%, with much higher rates in urban/progressive areas like SFO and LA. https://www.ppic.org/publication/poverty-in-california/ When factoring in housing costs, California has the highest poverty rates in the Country per the census bureau. https://la.curbed.com/2018/9/14/17856870/california-poverty-rate-housing-cost-of-living
Despite its high tax rates, California has the highest debt of any state in real dollar terms and on a per capita basis, with massive unfunded liabilities (pensions) on top of that. https://smartasset.com/credit-cards/states-with-the-most-debt
Our bubble/state is far from perfect. Keep that in mind when your judging other people's.
Well said. Big C is exactly what he thinks he's opposing.BearGoggles said:Big C said:
Sickening. Here in the Bay Area, we live in a bubble. Down there, they live in their own bubble. However, all bubbles are not created equal: Ours is progressive; theirs is regressive.
While some things are more important than college football, I can't help wondering if, while we're down there this fall, maybe we could spread the word that there's a wonderful university in Northern California, where the attitude is better (and so is the weather).
This is an unfortunate combination of arrogance, condescension, naivete, and delusion. I am not defending the photo or action. However, to assume that the Bay Area (really California) and its "progressive values" is somehow unequivocally superior to other "bubbles" is simply wrong. All bubbles are bad, because they promote intolerance, division, and a lack of empathy - your post is a great example.
The Bay Area, in particular, is one of the most intolerant and least liberal (in a traditional sense) places I've encountered. And it has gotten "progressively" worse in the last 3 decades.
The group think and intolerance of peaceful dissent or alternate viewpoints is off the charts. Dissenting views that are very much in the nationwide mainstream are de-platformed, boycotted, and attacked on an an hominem basis - rarely the on the merits. Antifa and its violent intimidation tactics have been tolerated (and implicitly endorsed) for years. People with conservative views are literally denied employment, not to mention social stature.
The totalitarian (really fascist) urges of the so called CA progressives is off the charts. The bay area outlaws straws, plastic bags, e-sigs, etc. On the streets of SFO, a person can use a heroin needle (paid for and distributed by the government), dine naked, or take a dump in the street, but that same person can't use a plastic straw or puff an e-cig.
The Bay Area is one of the least affordable places to live in the world - in no small part because of progressive anti-development attitudes. Poverty in California averages 13+%, with much higher rates in urban/progressive areas like SFO and LA. https://www.ppic.org/publication/poverty-in-california/ When factoring in housing costs, California has the highest poverty rates in the Country per the census bureau. https://la.curbed.com/2018/9/14/17856870/california-poverty-rate-housing-cost-of-living
Despite its high tax rates, California has the highest debt of any state in real dollar terms and on a per capita basis, with massive unfunded liabilities (pensions) on top of that. https://smartasset.com/credit-cards/states-with-the-most-debt
Our bubble/state is far from perfect. Keep that in mind when your judging other people's.
Please don't presume to know what I am based on one of My Top Five-Hundred Dumbest Posts on Bear Insider.BancroftBear93 said:Well said. Big C is exactly what he thinks he's opposing.BearGoggles said:Big C said:
Sickening. Here in the Bay Area, we live in a bubble. Down there, they live in their own bubble. However, all bubbles are not created equal: Ours is progressive; theirs is regressive.
While some things are more important than college football, I can't help wondering if, while we're down there this fall, maybe we could spread the word that there's a wonderful university in Northern California, where the attitude is better (and so is the weather).
This is an unfortunate combination of arrogance, condescension, naivete, and delusion. I am not defending the photo or action. However, to assume that the Bay Area (really California) and its "progressive values" is somehow unequivocally superior to other "bubbles" is simply wrong. All bubbles are bad, because they promote intolerance, division, and a lack of empathy - your post is a great example.
The Bay Area, in particular, is one of the most intolerant and least liberal (in a traditional sense) places I've encountered. And it has gotten "progressively" worse in the last 3 decades.
The group think and intolerance of peaceful dissent or alternate viewpoints is off the charts. Dissenting views that are very much in the nationwide mainstream are de-platformed, boycotted, and attacked on an an hominem basis - rarely the on the merits. Antifa and its violent intimidation tactics have been tolerated (and implicitly endorsed) for years. People with conservative views are literally denied employment, not to mention social stature.
The totalitarian (really fascist) urges of the so called CA progressives is off the charts. The bay area outlaws straws, plastic bags, e-sigs, etc. On the streets of SFO, a person can use a heroin needle (paid for and distributed by the government), dine naked, or take a dump in the street, but that same person can't use a plastic straw or puff an e-cig.
The Bay Area is one of the least affordable places to live in the world - in no small part because of progressive anti-development attitudes. Poverty in California averages 13+%, with much higher rates in urban/progressive areas like SFO and LA. https://www.ppic.org/publication/poverty-in-california/ When factoring in housing costs, California has the highest poverty rates in the Country per the census bureau. https://la.curbed.com/2018/9/14/17856870/california-poverty-rate-housing-cost-of-living
Despite its high tax rates, California has the highest debt of any state in real dollar terms and on a per capita basis, with massive unfunded liabilities (pensions) on top of that. https://smartasset.com/credit-cards/states-with-the-most-debt
Our bubble/state is far from perfect. Keep that in mind when your judging other people's.
For me to venture an opinion I have to make some assumptions about your life and how you think based on the numerous posts you've made on the boards. I apologize for that assumption, but I think there are some things for you to consider if my observations are even close to true.BearGoggles said:Big C said:
Sickening. Here in the Bay Area, we live in a bubble. Down there, they live in their own bubble. However, all bubbles are not created equal: Ours is progressive; theirs is regressive.
While some things are more important than college football, I can't help wondering if, while we're down there this fall, maybe we could spread the word that there's a wonderful university in Northern California, where the attitude is better (and so is the weather).
This is an unfortunate combination of arrogance, condescension, naivete, and delusion. I am not defending the photo or action. However, to assume that the Bay Area (really California) and its "progressive values" is somehow unequivocally superior to other "bubbles" is simply wrong. All bubbles are bad, because they promote intolerance, division, and a lack of empathy - your post is a great example.
The Bay Area, in particular, is one of the most intolerant and least liberal (in a traditional sense) places I've encountered. And it has gotten "progressively" worse in the last 3 decades.
The group think and intolerance of peaceful dissent or alternate viewpoints is off the charts. Dissenting views that are very much in the nationwide mainstream are de-platformed, boycotted, and attacked on an an hominem basis - rarely the on the merits. Antifa and its violent intimidation tactics have been tolerated (and implicitly endorsed) for years. People with conservative views are literally denied employment, not to mention social stature.
The totalitarian (really fascist) urges of the so called CA progressives is off the charts. The bay area outlaws straws, plastic bags, e-sigs, etc. On the streets of SFO, a person can use a heroin needle (paid for and distributed by the government), dine naked, or take a dump in the street, but that same person can't use a plastic straw or puff an e-cig.
The Bay Area is one of the least affordable places to live in the world - in no small part because of progressive anti-development attitudes. Poverty in California averages 13+%, with much higher rates in urban/progressive areas like SFO and LA. https://www.ppic.org/publication/poverty-in-california/ When factoring in housing costs, California has the highest poverty rates in the Country per the census bureau. https://la.curbed.com/2018/9/14/17856870/california-poverty-rate-housing-cost-of-living
Despite its high tax rates, California has the highest debt of any state in real dollar terms and on a per capita basis, with massive unfunded liabilities (pensions) on top of that. https://smartasset.com/credit-cards/states-with-the-most-debt
Our bubble/state is far from perfect. Keep that in mind when your judging other people's.
blungld said:For me to venture an opinion I have to make some assumptions about your life and how you think based on the numerous posts you've made on the boards. I apologize for that assumption, but I think there are some things for you to consider if my observations are even close to true.BearGoggles said:Big C said:
Sickening. Here in the Bay Area, we live in a bubble. Down there, they live in their own bubble. However, all bubbles are not created equal: Ours is progressive; theirs is regressive.
While some things are more important than college football, I can't help wondering if, while we're down there this fall, maybe we could spread the word that there's a wonderful university in Northern California, where the attitude is better (and so is the weather).
This is an unfortunate combination of arrogance, condescension, naivete, and delusion. I am not defending the photo or action. However, to assume that the Bay Area (really California) and its "progressive values" is somehow unequivocally superior to other "bubbles" is simply wrong. All bubbles are bad, because they promote intolerance, division, and a lack of empathy - your post is a great example.
The Bay Area, in particular, is one of the most intolerant and least liberal (in a traditional sense) places I've encountered. And it has gotten "progressively" worse in the last 3 decades.
The group think and intolerance of peaceful dissent or alternate viewpoints is off the charts. Dissenting views that are very much in the nationwide mainstream are de-platformed, boycotted, and attacked on an an hominem basis - rarely the on the merits. Antifa and its violent intimidation tactics have been tolerated (and implicitly endorsed) for years. People with conservative views are literally denied employment, not to mention social stature.
The totalitarian (really fascist) urges of the so called CA progressives is off the charts. The bay area outlaws straws, plastic bags, e-sigs, etc. On the streets of SFO, a person can use a heroin needle (paid for and distributed by the government), dine naked, or take a dump in the street, but that same person can't use a plastic straw or puff an e-cig.
The Bay Area is one of the least affordable places to live in the world - in no small part because of progressive anti-development attitudes. Poverty in California averages 13+%, with much higher rates in urban/progressive areas like SFO and LA. https://www.ppic.org/publication/poverty-in-california/ When factoring in housing costs, California has the highest poverty rates in the Country per the census bureau. https://la.curbed.com/2018/9/14/17856870/california-poverty-rate-housing-cost-of-living
Despite its high tax rates, California has the highest debt of any state in real dollar terms and on a per capita basis, with massive unfunded liabilities (pensions) on top of that. https://smartasset.com/credit-cards/states-with-the-most-debt
Our bubble/state is far from perfect. Keep that in mind when your judging other people's.
Through your lens, you see progressive politics and liberals as fascists and participating in group think and vilifying you and conservatives like you. That is a lens. Your disagreement with opposing policy and beliefs have pushed you to a place where you see the "other side" as doing the things you listed, but some of that is projection. Sitting outside of you and reading your posts I see a lot of cognitive dissonance; misusing or selective re-defining of words; and ongoing false equivalencies. I am not saying that to be pejorative, I am stating it for you to consider.
I would guess that your reaction will be to turn around and accuse me of the same, or dig into your oppositional positions and feel attacked, seeing this as proof of Liberal judgement, hypocrisy, and intolerance. To be outraged at the accusation.
I believe you have adopted a lens that keeps re-asserting defenses and is a feedback loop of self-belief. It's easy to see from the outside and probably really annoying and patronizing for it to be pointed out to you. But there are objective truths. There are meanings to words. There are truths. There are ethics and values that can be judged against one another and are not simply matters of opinion. There is also an overall human evolution and a way in which we line up the best and worst traits of mankind and civilization. There is progression and regression. And we can identify these things and make real comparisons outside of our own subjective view or tribal think. Many of the positions you hold fail by these comparisons, and are at the very least not equal to the things you compare them against.
There is nothing magic, perfect, righteous or even monolithic about the "Left." Liberal groups, the Democrats, and progressive policy/words/actions are completely open to criticism and debate. They are often stupid and wrong--but they are not evil. They are not propagandized attacks and mischaracterizations like "intolerance to peaceful dissent." You can't play coy with language and intent and try and attach that phrase to persons standing up to abuse, threats, and bigotry. When an oppressed or offended or controlled people stand up to power, they are not being intolerant or uppity or disrespectful. The scenario does NOT become "good people on both sides" just because there are two sides, or a simple exercise of free speech when one side is advocating unequal results or rights over another group (or violence). For example, hippies protesting on Berkeley in the 60s for peace, who threw a rock at riot police because they are being beaten and their civil rights are being trampled for demonstrating against the state--do not suddenly become a violent mob, or just as bad. I do not advocate throwing rocks, but these things are not equal, and the two sides of the conflict have very different intentions and working morality (one of which is predicated on avoiding and stopping conflict and was only pushed to violence in response to forces that use violence systematically).
My main point is this though. Other than irking you that people you might not like, or who have an appearance you don't like, or represent a lifestyle that you don't approve of, or say words that you don't like, or who it would bug you if they felt they had "won" the culture war, that anger aside, isn't what these people fighting for generally good?
You might quibble on policy or execution or practicality or best approach, but ultimately what they want is a world where people are accepted; where people have equal power within the system; where government serves the interest of people over corporations and a small elite class; on the whole it is a noble outlook.
And yet, somehow you have warped that into THEY as the intolerant group that is out destroy America and who are arrogant and just as bad as racists. So the end game of this "progressive bubble" is an ATTEMPT to be fair to all people. Meanwhile the end game of the conservatives you defend and champion is law by corporations driven almost entirely by profit, with income inequality, and the securing of white normative Christian behavior. You have a narrow prescription for who wins in our world and a protection of a very specific type of person and ideology while vilifying a broad swath of diverse people with various ideologies. And yet you have the audacity to think it is the other side that more closely resembles fascism? The modern conservative is an exercise in control and orthodoxy and intolerance--this is a far more fascist, totalitarian world view.
Do you ever really stop to consider that it is you who is that person in a film you watch who refuses to open their eyes and see what is really going on, who is duped by the powers that be, is regurgitating lies, and who has sided with the bad guys? You are the person refusing to say the emperor has no clothes? If this were Star Wars you would have no problem seeing from outside your lens and being able to identify the progressives and conservatives as either Empire or Rebellion. Do you REALLY think the progressives are the Empire in this analogy? I know that no one thinks they are on the wrong side, but in crude terms one of the sides is deluded--and it's not the people avoiding FOX and Breitbart and who are clearly able to see those sources as state propaganda serving power and lizard brain regressive emotions.
Sit in private where there is no ego involved. Make an honest list of the logical endgame of the two bubbles you said were the same (even suggesting the Bay Area progressives are worst). Don't use any buzz words or programmed responses, actually make a list of the world that the two are aiming to create. There is no way you can conclude that they are the same, and it is not arrogant to notice; it's just being invested in the outcome and advocating.
And, for arguments sake, if the two possible worlds are equally likely to come to pass, shouldn't you err on the side of trying to protect and ensure for the one that is more just and fair, even while shaping it through debate, rather than denouncing it all together in straw man screeds and instead hoisting up a much worse outcome and a set of beliefs that the human endeavor has been attempting to evolve from? That is regression.
Banning free black people was huge debate in the formation of California. Among the issues that derailed the effort were the presence of Latinos of African descent, including the Afro-Spaniard Californios; and the sudden racist obsession with Chinese immigration.Another Bear said:
Honestly, this is why I never considered going to Ole' Miss for a game or any reason really. I don't want to go down there to enjoy something I like, and have to skirt around the obvious history and pretend how it's all a-okay now with the shrouded smiles and hospitality of the New South.
In any case, yes the Bay Area has racism and racists, past and present. The thing is, racism doesn't dominate the culture and history of the region the same way. Instead of mockery of a historic civil rights monument with the subtext of violence (why have guns?), it's more who gets hired and who has access to capital, housing and lack of integration, etc. But yes, the Bay Area has Barbecue Betty and random fools...but not a whole culture of it. Also without the ever present legacy of slavery in California, discrimination simply went towards other groups: Asians, Latinos. Anti-immigration laws for Asians, Juan Crow for Latinos in SoCal. Both still have strong roots however...you never really have to look that hard.
That said, at least California has moved forward on racism that comes with immigration...which is where much of California's racism has centered historically (again this pesky Asians and Latinos) It rejected Prop 187. It rejected draconian measures like mass ICE deportations. Californians are still racists...it's just different and balanced by a majority who don't buy into it and a culture (and economy) that's different. People have realized immigration brings good stuff too and it changes the culture.
Californians on the whole have accepted change like this. It's why California is BLUE and the South is not.
Antifa (and other anarchist) groups have been tolerated (and therefore implicitly endorsed) in Berkeley since at least the 1980s. Until they recently were sued, UC and the Berkeley police stood by and did nothing while these types of groups rioted, destroyed property, and most importantly de-platformed people. Those same people would not have stood by had conservatives been acting in that fashion and attacking liberals. Other people on the left have similarly endorsed violence (punch them in the face) and other tactics involving physical intimidation - Maxine Waters, etc. And for the record, no less than Chris Cuomo and Don Lemon on CNN defended/rationalized (partly) Antifa and its tactics. Are Antifa defenders widespread - no, I never said that. But they do exist disproportionately in the Bay area and other left bubbles.OaktownBear said:First of all, I assumed his intent by talking about "bubbles" is that we both live in worlds where we are not exposed to those opinions of the other. I wouldn't say all bubbles are bad. Bubbles just exist. Americans don't know what it is like to live an Bangladesh. They never will. Understanding your bubbles is good.BearGoggles said:Big C said:
Sickening. Here in the Bay Area, we live in a bubble. Down there, they live in their own bubble. However, all bubbles are not created equal: Ours is progressive; theirs is regressive.
While some things are more important than college football, I can't help wondering if, while we're down there this fall, maybe we could spread the word that there's a wonderful university in Northern California, where the attitude is better (and so is the weather).
This is an unfortunate combination of arrogance, condescension, naivete, and delusion. I am not defending the photo or action. However, to assume that the Bay Area (really California) and its "progressive values" is somehow unequivocally superior to other "bubbles" is simply wrong. All bubbles are bad, because they promote intolerance, division, and a lack of empathy - your post is a great example.
The Bay Area, in particular, is one of the most intolerant and least liberal (in a traditional sense) places I've encountered. And it has gotten "progressively" worse in the last 3 decades.
The group think and intolerance of peaceful dissent or alternate viewpoints is off the charts. Dissenting views that are very much in the nationwide mainstream are de-platformed, boycotted, and attacked on an an hominem basis - rarely the on the merits. Antifa and its violent intimidation tactics have been tolerated (and implicitly endorsed) for years. People with conservative views are literally denied employment, not to mention social stature.
The totalitarian (really fascist) urges of the so called CA progressives is off the charts. The bay area outlaws straws, plastic bags, e-sigs, etc. On the streets of SFO, a person can use a heroin needle (paid for and distributed by the government), dine naked, or take a dump in the street, but that same person can't use a plastic straw or puff an e-cig.
The Bay Area is one of the least affordable places to live in the world - in no small part because of progressive anti-development attitudes. Poverty in California averages 13+%, with much higher rates in urban/progressive areas like SFO and LA. https://www.ppic.org/publication/poverty-in-california/ When factoring in housing costs, California has the highest poverty rates in the Country per the census bureau. https://la.curbed.com/2018/9/14/17856870/california-poverty-rate-housing-cost-of-living
Despite its high tax rates, California has the highest debt of any state in real dollar terms and on a per capita basis, with massive unfunded liabilities (pensions) on top of that. https://smartasset.com/credit-cards/states-with-the-most-debt
Our bubble/state is far from perfect. Keep that in mind when your judging other people's.
I absolutely support freedom of expression. I absolutely think that people should be able to have their political views without fear of reprisal. I think people of all political persuasions can go too far in drawing lines against other political views. I think some in the Bay Area certainly do that. Would love to have that conversation. Unfortunately, you just posted a bunch of bullshyte.
Antifa is not endorsed implicitly or otherwise by any large number of the liberal population. Try getting off conservative media outlets once in a while. Are there liberal nutjobs who like them? Yes. Are their conservative nutjobs who like White Supremacists? yes. There are good people on both sides right? I would say that liberals certainly question the right's concerns about Antifa when the right doesn't seem to be nearly as concerned with White Supremacy and racist violence on their side, but very few are supporting Antifa in any way.
As for "most intolerant places you've encountered" I'd just say to you that maybe your judgment of intolerance is impacted by how close you feel to the traits that are "not tolerated". How many people like you have been murdered here for who you compared to members of the LGBTQ community? How many people like you have been murdered because of their race. Or because they talked a certain way to a member of another ethnicity. How many people like you have been murdered for their religious views or their political view? How many of your churches have been shot up? How many times have you been pulled over by a cop for no reason? How many times have you been not waited on or had a member of another race taken first when you were next in line. Or hassled for ID. Or followed by store security. Please. Let's add up the score on intolerance. I'm sorry you don't get to use a plastic bag. Some of your complaints are justified. Comparing your the pittance of intolerance you may have to face to intolerance of others elsewhere is utterly ridiculous. Straight up, I would much rather be a straight, staunchly conservative, white male in the Bay Area than a liberal black man in the Bay Area when it comes to dealing with crap on a regular basis. (I'd rather be a liberal, white male, truth be told). Your crying about the horrible intolerance you suffer in the Bay Area is so beyond the pale ridiculous compared to what other people face. To be clear, you say their is intolerance here and we should get our house in order, I'm with you. You say this is one of the most intolerant places you have encountered, you need to be called on it.
Let's be clear on a couple of things, shooting up heroin is illegal and people get cited for it even if in some locations the police don't try very hard. Taking a dump in the street is not legal. No idea on dining naked, but I've never encountered the practice. You are allowed to use a plastic straw if you bring your own. Stores can't give you one. And there are perfectly reasonable alternatives. As for either plastic straws or plastic bags, that is no different than not allowing a hog rendering plant in the city. The people of these communities have decided that plastic straws and bags are harmful to the environment and they have banned them while giving people perfectly reasonable alternatives. You don't think it's important. Hard cheese. That is not a tolerance issue any more than I am intolerant of my neighbor playing loud music at 2 in the morning.
I might be sympathetic to people being refused jobs for political views, but 99% of the time I see conservatives make this claim, the "political view" leading to the refused or lost job was something on the order of LGBTQ or minorities or women they would work with being inferior or getting jobs they aren't qualified for. When I see a lot of people losing jobs over issues that don't involve respecting the people they work with, I'll be a lot more concerned.
And I'll tell you what, the next time a 14 year old white kid is murdered for talking to a black woman in the Bay Area and a memorial is put up for the kid and people shoot it up and a bunch of black Cal kids go to the memorial and pose laughing with guns in front of it, make your point. Fact is there are several steps in that process that you can't even envision happening here.
But really, I'm truly sorry you have to use a paper straw. Bummer. #strawlivesmatter.
This is a bizarre post where you make a lot of wrong assumptions of my beliefs, not to mention mischaracterize what i said, mixed in with a lot of psychobabble. I made no relative judgment weighing the relative evils of racism vs other things. I also never said all liberals were fascists or that progressives are evil. I never said anyone was out to destroy america. I never said that all conservatives (or the Orange Man) are good.blungld said:
For me to venture an opinion I have to make some assumptions about your life and how you think based on the numerous posts you've made on the boards. I apologize for that assumption, but I think there are some things for you to consider if my observations are even close to true.
Through your lens, you see progressive politics and liberals as fascists and participating in group think and vilifying you and conservatives like you. That is a lens. Your disagreement with opposing policy and beliefs have pushed you to a place where you see the "other side" as doing the things you listed, but some of that is projection. Sitting outside of you and reading your posts I see a lot of cognitive dissonance; misusing or selective re-defining of words; and ongoing false equivalencies. I am not saying that to be pejorative, I am stating it for you to consider.
I would guess that your reaction will be to turn around and accuse me of the same, or dig into your oppositional positions and feel attacked, seeing this as proof of Liberal judgement, hypocrisy, and intolerance. To be outraged at the accusation.
I believe you have adopted a lens that keeps re-asserting defenses and is a feedback loop of self-belief. It's easy to see from the outside and probably really annoying and patronizing for it to be pointed out to you. But there are objective truths. There are meanings to words. There are truths. There are ethics and values that can be judged against one another and are not simply matters of opinion. There is also an overall human evolution and a way in which we line up the best and worst traits of mankind and civilization. There is progression and regression. And we can identify these things and make real comparisons outside of our own subjective view or tribal think. Many of the positions you hold fail by these comparisons, and are at the very least not equal to the things you compare them against.
There is nothing magic, perfect, righteous or even monolithic about the "Left." Liberal groups, the Democrats, and progressive policy/words/actions are completely open to criticism and debate. They are often stupid and wrong--but they are not evil. They are not propagandized attacks and mischaracterizations like "intolerance to peaceful dissent." You can't play coy with language and intent and try and attach that phrase to persons standing up to abuse, threats, and bigotry. When an oppressed or offended or controlled people stand up to power, they are not being intolerant or uppity or disrespectful. The scenario does NOT become "good people on both sides" just because there are two sides, or a simple exercise of free speech when one side is advocating unequal results or rights over another group (or violence). For example, hippies protesting on Berkeley in the 60s for peace, who threw a rock at riot police because they are being beaten and their civil rights are being trampled for demonstrating against the state--do not suddenly become a violent mob, or just as bad. I do not advocate throwing rocks, but these things are not equal, and the two sides of the conflict have very different intentions and working morality (one of which is predicated on avoiding and stopping conflict and was only pushed to violence in response to forces that use violence systematically).
My main point is this though. Other than irking you that people you might not like, or who have an appearance you don't like, or represent a lifestyle that you don't approve of, or say words that you don't like, or who it would bug you if they felt they had "won" the culture war, that anger aside, isn't what these people fighting for generally good?
You might quibble on policy or execution or practicality or best approach, but ultimately what they want is a world where people are accepted; where people have equal power within the system; where government serves the interest of people over corporations and a small elite class; on the whole it is a noble outlook.
And yet, somehow you have warped that into THEY as the intolerant group that is out destroy America and who are arrogant and just as bad as racists. So the end game of this "progressive bubble" is an ATTEMPT to be fair to all people. Meanwhile the end game of the conservatives you defend and champion is law by corporations driven almost entirely by profit, with income inequality, and the securing of white normative Christian behavior. You have a narrow prescription for who wins in our world and a protection of a very specific type of person and ideology while vilifying a broad swath of diverse people with various ideologies. And yet you have the audacity to think it is the other side that more closely resembles fascism? The modern conservative is an exercise in control and orthodoxy and intolerance--this is a far more fascist, totalitarian world view.
Do you ever really stop to consider that it is you who is that person in a film you watch who refuses to open their eyes and see what is really going on, who is duped by the powers that be, is regurgitating lies, and who has sided with the bad guys? You are the person refusing to say the emperor has no clothes? If this were Star Wars you would have no problem seeing from outside your lens and being able to identify the progressives and conservatives as either Empire or Rebellion. Do you REALLY think the progressives are the Empire in this analogy? I know that no one thinks they are on the wrong side, but in crude terms one of the sides is deluded--and it's not the people avoiding FOX and Breitbart and who are clearly able to see those sources as state propaganda serving power and lizard brain regressive emotions.
Sit in private where there is no ego involved. Make an honest list of the logical endgame of the two bubbles you said were the same (even suggesting the Bay Area progressives are worst). Don't use any buzz words or programmed responses, actually make a list of the world that the two are aiming to create. There is no way you can conclude that they are the same, and it is not arrogant to notice; it's just being invested in the outcome and advocating.
And, for arguments sake, if the two possible worlds are equally likely to come to pass, shouldn't you err on the side of trying to protect and ensure for the one that is more just and fair, even while shaping it through debate, rather than denouncing it all together in straw man screeds and instead hoisting up a much worse outcome and a set of beliefs that the human endeavor has been attempting to evolve from? That is regression.