Nah, its all good. My debates tend to come off as combative myself, and I want to make it clear that while I do strongly disagree with her point of view, to the point of being genuinely angry, I dont want to seem that I was angry at you. I did notice you were extremely civil and I appreciate it.
I do see your point, and I can empathise(see what I did there?) with where you are coming from, but I do think that celebrating people who have changed their views for the better during their adult life is somewhat downplaying the harm that they have done. I view it in the same light as the US taking in nazi scientists after ww2 in exchange for clemency(I definitely recognise that the situations are not at all similar, but they both strike me as unjust). Or drug users who get clean later in life being celebrated while there are no celebrations for those who never got addicted in the first place.(That one is way different since they are generally only hurting themselves, and as such i dont really care what they do)
I suppose I view it as there being a baseline level of humanity, and reaching that baseline is nothing to be impressed by. Going beyond that baseline is. If we start to celebrate people simply moving towards that baseline, it effectively lowers the baseline on what a “decent” human should be.
I do not get pinged for edits, and I wasnt going to mention it bc it wasnt relevant, but just so you know to quote someone the command is > not [
just so you know to quote someone the command is > not [
Thanks, hopefully I’ll remember that
Or drug users who get clean later in life being celebrated while there are no celebrations for those who never got addicted in the first place.(That one is way different since they are generally only hurting themselves, and as such i dont really care what they do)
This one is also different due to genetics, upbringing, environment, id say it probably doesn’t have a spot in most of this discussion, but there’s some overlap I can see.
reaching that baseline is nothing to be impressed by
Idk if impressed is the word id use for how I feel about it. But I would say it’s commendable for sure, and something to have respect for. Especially with what humanity’s baseline actually is vs. what we want it to be.
I don’t think it takes away from the baseline, and I don’t think it’s downplaying the harm either. The harm is real, and it’s hurtful, but this is still a win. It’s definitely not a perfect win, but I think this may be a case of letting perfection get in the way of progress. This woman’s actions are going to echo and hopefully help other people grow as well.
Children are sponges, adults are too, just less so. It sounds like you grew up absorbing empathy from whoever it was that you grew up with, or whatever you grew up with (books, media, etc.) these people absorbed hate, and for them it was celebrated and too often still is.
I think that this is a problem that cannot be solved by family or in some cases only introspecting without adding viewpoints of people that understand empathy. It’s going to take community. That’s what this woman was given on the worst day of her life, and it paid off. Unfortunately we can’t know what happened before that, but you can probably take an accurate guess based on people you know that are deeply embedded in a lot of different Christianity sects.
Made an edit to my other comment on there and just wanted to make sure you saw it, I don’t know if you get pinged for those or not
Nah, its all good. My debates tend to come off as combative myself, and I want to make it clear that while I do strongly disagree with her point of view, to the point of being genuinely angry, I dont want to seem that I was angry at you. I did notice you were extremely civil and I appreciate it.
I do see your point, and I can empathise(see what I did there?) with where you are coming from, but I do think that celebrating people who have changed their views for the better during their adult life is somewhat downplaying the harm that they have done. I view it in the same light as the US taking in nazi scientists after ww2 in exchange for clemency(I definitely recognise that the situations are not at all similar, but they both strike me as unjust). Or drug users who get clean later in life being celebrated while there are no celebrations for those who never got addicted in the first place.(That one is way different since they are generally only hurting themselves, and as such i dont really care what they do)
I suppose I view it as there being a baseline level of humanity, and reaching that baseline is nothing to be impressed by. Going beyond that baseline is. If we start to celebrate people simply moving towards that baseline, it effectively lowers the baseline on what a “decent” human should be.
I do not get pinged for edits, and I wasnt going to mention it bc it wasnt relevant, but just so you know to quote someone the command is > not [
Thanks, hopefully I’ll remember that
This one is also different due to genetics, upbringing, environment, id say it probably doesn’t have a spot in most of this discussion, but there’s some overlap I can see.
Idk if impressed is the word id use for how I feel about it. But I would say it’s commendable for sure, and something to have respect for. Especially with what humanity’s baseline actually is vs. what we want it to be.
I don’t think it takes away from the baseline, and I don’t think it’s downplaying the harm either. The harm is real, and it’s hurtful, but this is still a win. It’s definitely not a perfect win, but I think this may be a case of letting perfection get in the way of progress. This woman’s actions are going to echo and hopefully help other people grow as well.
Children are sponges, adults are too, just less so. It sounds like you grew up absorbing empathy from whoever it was that you grew up with, or whatever you grew up with (books, media, etc.) these people absorbed hate, and for them it was celebrated and too often still is.
I think that this is a problem that cannot be solved by family or in some cases only introspecting without adding viewpoints of people that understand empathy. It’s going to take community. That’s what this woman was given on the worst day of her life, and it paid off. Unfortunately we can’t know what happened before that, but you can probably take an accurate guess based on people you know that are deeply embedded in a lot of different Christianity sects.