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F Champ Receives Lifetime Ban, Racism in the FGC/USA, and Other Prevalent Social Discussions

Marinjuana

Up rock incoming, ETA 5 minutes
The people most dead set on UBI all believe it to be the first step in rolling back government-funded social aid. It's supposed to be a stab at bloat and bureaucracy by giving cash directly to people, but most use it as a cudgel to then say the government is too invasive with taxes and needs to be rolled back. You don't have to do both, but it's never enough for the libertarian weirdos and right wing nutters.
I feel like most of your criticism of ideas/etc in this thread comes from the idea that the person making the argument is disingenuous and doesn't actually support the position they offer, or has some hidden motive, often sinister. Most people aren't like that.
 

KingHippo

Alternative-Fact Checker
I feel like most of your criticism of ideas/etc in this thread comes from the idea that the person making the argument is disingenuous and doesn't actually support the position they offer, or has some hidden motive, often sinister. Most people aren't like that.
I think the people who are trying to garner electoral power, gain capital, or actually implement policy are often like this, yes, because I have lived and seen it with my own eyes. Regular people I just think are misinformed and ignorant, which I don't really think is most people's fault, because the people mentioned in the first sentence also tend to be part of the media or ruling classes that can distort information.

As an example: while I have no problem with Nick Cannon losing employment with Viacom, their self-righteous stance on trying to uphold an anti-racist structure in their company is soured when the majority shareholders, their bosses, are The Vanguard Group, who are also the majority stakeholders in a number of for-profit prisons, including detention centers where immigrants are in concentration camp-like conditions and families are separated. There is literally no bigger upholder of racist structures than prisons, and Viacom is literally owned by one of the biggest groups profiting from them lol
 
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Law Hero

There is a head on a pole behind you
As an example: while I have no problem with Nick Cannon losing employment with Viacom, their self-righteous stance on trying to uphold an anti-racist structure in their company is soured when the majority shareholders, their bosses, are The Vanguard Group, who are also the majority stakeholders in a number of for-profit prisons, including detention centers where immigrants are in concentration camp-like conditions and families are separated. There is literally no bigger upholder of racist structures than prisons, and Viacom is literally owned by one of the biggest groups profiting from them lol
That's pretty much how all big corporations are. Just like how companies such as Starbucks and Sony say they support BLM when they employ actual black slave labor in the creation of their products. Companies like these are known for abusing workers, especially children, and yet here they are claiming to care about things like BLM; additionally, you have companies like Amazon who purposefully promoted an inarticulate black man to head of the worker's union there in order to tarnish the look and reputation of the union so that they could continue to abuse their workers.

These companies could not care less about racism, injustice, or anything else that affects the poor common man. The ones that speak out against these topics the most are also usually the ones that are the most guilty, as with the above examples. Anyone that thinks these brands care about anything but their bottom line is delusional. Sadly, corporations like amazon, Sony, Starbucks, etc use whatever they can to shift the the gaze of the people away from their crimes. This year, BLM proved to be a great distraction from corporate criminal activity that makes police brutality and racism in America look like a joke by comparison, and as a result we continue to fight amongst ourselves instead of against the some of the biggest criminals in the world. White vs. black, men vs. women, heterosexual vs. homosexual, these are the battles they want us to be fighting so that they can continue to take advantage of us without fear of consequence.
 

Lt. Boxy Angelman

I WILL EAT THIS GAME
I use my experience, not my identify, of living in different countries to make comparisons. There is a difference. I rarely ever use my identity to make an argument. Unfortunately, I sometimes have to add "as an immigrant" to appease the leftists considering today's politically correct environment.
But how do see the two as seperate? I get what you mean, but isn't one's identity defined by their experience?

And why on God's green earth is EVERYTHING with you about leftists and liberals and how politically correct everything supposedly is? You are still denouncing identity politics while you're at the same time unable to resist beating the same drum in turn. But if I said that was a right-wing playbook tactic, it'd be taken as an attack instead of a fact. We are going in the same circles and it's dizzying.

Also, R.I.P. John Lewis.
Another Civil Rights Era general has passed on to the clearing at the end of the path.
 

Marinjuana

Up rock incoming, ETA 5 minutes
I think the people who are trying to garner electoral power, gain capital, or actually implement policy are often like this, yes, because I have lived and seen it with my own eyes. Regular people I just think are misinformed and ignorant, which I don't really think is most people's fault, because the people mentioned in the first sentence also tend to be part of the media or ruling classes that can distort information.

As an example: while I have no problem with Nick Cannon losing employment with Viacom, their self-righteous stance on trying to uphold an anti-racist structure in their company is soured when the majority shareholders, their bosses, are The Vanguard Group, who are also the majority stakeholders in a number of for-profit prisons, including detention centers where immigrants are in concentration camp-like conditions and families are separated. There is literally no bigger upholder of racist structures than prisons, and Viacom is literally owned by one of the biggest groups profiting from them lol
So everyone is misinformed and ignorant unless they are part of the elite class, in which case they are disingenuous power grabbers. With that level of cynicism, I can see how things you disagree with often morph into the sheep arguing for sake of the wolf. But just because a corrupt actor can support a position or that there's a corrupt motivation to support a position does not mean that every person with that position lacks the idealogical foundation to support it. You might as well just say, "people who hold this view are ignorant and naive", but that's not an argument that would affect any individual's view. While it's important to understand the context of ideology, it's more useful to be discussing the virtue of a view rather than the virtue of what led a person to have that view, particularly if you are trying to change someone's view.

You can list countless examples of human hypocrisy and corruption. While no one is shocked to see see public/powerful figures be examples of this, it doesn't make the world rotten.

Appreciate the response.
 

M2Dave

Zoning Master
But how do see the two as seperate? I get what you mean, but isn't one's identity defined by their experience?
Yes, but your race, ethnicity, gender, and sexual orientation should not define your identity. The fact that I am white is most definitely the most boring and most irrelevant aspect about me. My experiences are significantly more different than those of the average white guy in America anyway. I believe the same is true for every black, latino, gay, trans, etc. person.
 

jokey77

Character Loyalist
As I have mentioned before I am European. So I was quite surprised when I read through the last pages of this thread:

We seem to agree that Marxism doesn't work, because it leads to political opression and prosecution. However the left then came up with "European Socialism" as an ideal solution. Yet I believe that many of them have a wrong impression of the pros and cons of those European systems.

Let me stress a few points:

- The European Social Insurance System is expensive: A few pages ago some leftist said that insurance companies were making way too much money at the cost of the poor. It is true that we got universal healthcare and unemployment compensation in most european countries. Yet the public administrative costs are enormous. It is no secret that private sector administration is almost always more cost-efficient in the end. Although I do not want to miss our social system, I am quite convinced that a lot of money is burned.

- There is propably less social mobility in Europe: With much revenue tied up (e.g. higher taxes, social security contributions), it is probably even more difficult to accumulate wealth through one's own work in Europe. Much depends on the wealth of the parents, social mobility is hardly given. Real estate is not affordable for young people. In this respect, I believe that colored people in America have more opportunities.

- The low incomes are even lower in Europe: The very poorest are probably much better off in Europe. Besides it seems to be a common phenomenon that the middle-income level is vanishing both in Europe and in the US. However the low-income and middle-class people probably earn less in Europe than in the states. Not infrequently, these are precisely people with a migration background.

If your goal is not to accumulate wealth, Europe is a safer and more relaxed place (e.g. more holidays) to live. Also police violence is a bigger problem in the US. So in this regard Europe gives a positive example.

As a result it seems perfectly reasonable to me, when the left want to trade social mobility for social security. However it seems hypocritical to me when in the same breath there is talk of a redistribution of wealth. More wealth is propably not what the European system would generate for most people of color.

My personal opinion: I prefer living in Europe, also because I do believe in universal healthcare and social security. Yet I doubt that our system would fulfil the hopes of the left of this thread (e.g. more opportunities for coloured people to achieve prosperity).

P.S.: I am talking about those European States that seem to get it right (e.g. Germany, Austria, Scandinavia). I don't talk about those many european countries who are currently experiencing enormous economic difficulties, partly because of their social system (e.g. Greece)
 

MrArcher15

Kombatant
Yes, but your race, ethnicity, gender, and sexual orientation should not define your identity. The fact that I am white is most definitely the most boring and most irrelevant aspect about me. My experiences are significantly more different than those of the average white guy in America anyway. I believe the same is true for every black, latino, gay, trans, etc. person.
race, ethnicity, gender, and sexual orientation are a list of things that DO define your identity. I understand that you think they shouldn't and in some cases it'd be awesome if it really didn't, but what you're stating is an opinion. That being said, if you're just saying that in your opinion they should not define your identity then disregard.
 
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sub_on_dubs

Online Scrub Lord
I miss the old school liberals from the 1990's and 2000's when they were all about freedom of speech and expression, but now they're all about censorship and stifling free speech. I don't know what happened to you guys. Maybe you're just going through a phase, right guys?
 

Lt. Boxy Angelman

I WILL EAT THIS GAME
I guess it's never a bad time to say a prayer for the trolls. Right, guys?

Yes, but your race, ethnicity, gender, and sexual orientation should not define your identity. The fact that I am white is most definitely the most boring and most irrelevant aspect about me. My experiences are significantly more different than those of the average white guy in America anyway. I believe the same is true for every black, latino, gay, trans, etc. person.
That doesn't make any sense, though. I see what you mean and what you're trying to say, but you shouldn't just deny those things and the parts of your makeup that seperate you from those average white men. Not saying you can't. It just usually doesn't end well.
My family is full of self-loathing Puerto Ricans who try their damndest every day to play the part of "but I'm one of you guys!", because they think their abilities to blend in with those average white guys in their respective fields are going to save them from being viewed through a racist lens. Not saying that's your experience at all, I'm speaking solely from my side of the board and what I've seen when it comes to people trying to live by circumventing who and what they are instead of just embracing it.
 

CrimsonShadow

Administrator and Community Engineer
Administrator
- The European Social Insurance System is expensive: A few pages ago some leftist said that insurance companies were making way too much money at the cost of the poor. It is true that we got universal healthcare and unemployment compensation in most european countries. Yet the public administrative costs are enormous. It is no secret that private sector administration is almost always more cost-efficient in the end. Although I do not want to miss our social system, I am quite convinced that a lot of money is burned.
It's actually the reverse. The US healthcare system is one of the most cost-inefficient in the world. I'm now sure where you got this bit of logic from, but the facts on the cost actually say the opposite.

https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/chart-collection/health-spending-u-s-compare-countries/#item-average-wealthy-countries-spend-half-much-per-person-health-u-s-spends

https://data.oecd.org/healthres/health-spending.htm

(This is the total cost of healthcare, including government spending, administration costs, etc as well as private expenditure).
 

CrimsonShadow

Administrator and Community Engineer
Administrator
- The low incomes are even lower in Europe: The very poorest are probably much better off in Europe. Besides it seems to be a common phenomenon that the middle-income level is vanishing both in Europe and in the US. However the low-income and middle-class people probably earn less in Europe than in the states. Not infrequently, these are precisely people with a migration background.
Yeah, but the issue is not how much you earn -- it's what you earn vs. what you have to spend to live your life. Your true expendable income is what's left after you subtract all of your expenses; and in this country, that means subtracting health care, education, etc.

So when you say "Yeah this person technically gets paid more, but they can't get healthcare (!!), can't afford a decent education and are drowned by basic US life expenses, have no pension/retirement etc.", then the earnings themselves don't really mean anything.
 

M2Dave

Zoning Master
I'm speaking solely from my side of the board and what I've seen when it comes to people trying to live by circumventing who and what they are instead of just embracing it.
I am proud of my Croatian origin and my German upbringing just as much as I am proud of being an American citizen. You can equally embrace all aspects of yourself without overemphasizing, de-emphasizing, or circumventing any.
 

Swindle

Philanthropist & Asshole
Two questions:
One, on the subject of Marxism...Have we been referencing Richard Marx or Marx Wahlberg? I have two lengthy posts to add, depending on which Marx’s political/social stylings we are referring to.
And secondly, I’m actually in full support of the #BlackLivesMatter folks joining forces with the #FreeTheNipple people. A rising tide raises all ships, as they say. I have some rudimentary mock-ups of potential Logos if anyone is interested.
 

KingHippo

Alternative-Fact Checker
I am proud of my Croatian origin and my German upbringing just as much as I am proud of being an American citizen. You can equally embrace all aspects of yourself without overemphasizing, de-emphasizing, or circumventing any.
Many would like to do the same, but they cannot, as they are treated as political footballs just to score points. Trans rights have seen a rapid degradation under the Trump regime, to the point that there is a bill being passed around that would suggest homeless shelters can "inspect" women going into their shelters to see if they're biological women. They're also not allowed to participate in the military, and the government has already rolled back protections that would see trans people safe from discrimination by medical professionals.

Similarly, when black people took to the streets for their rights, defended themselves under the Constitution and tried to uplift their communities, Hoover's FBI enacted a years' long sabotage campaign that saw to depict them as violent insurrectionists and had one of their most prominent voices killed.

The pride aspect comes from existing in a country that is so intensely hostile to one's asking for basic civil rights. I'm sure most activists would like to live a quiet life where living wasn't a political act, but that's not the country we live in
 

Lt. Boxy Angelman

I WILL EAT THIS GAME
I am proud of my Croatian origin and my German upbringing just as much as I am proud of being an American citizen. You can equally embrace all aspects of yourself without overemphasizing, de-emphasizing, or circumventing any.
That's fair. Thank you for making that make sense. Total agreement.

Many would like to do the same, but they cannot, as they are treated as political footballs just to score points. Trans rights have seen a rapid degradation under the Trump regime, to the point that there is a bill being passed around that would suggest homeless shelters can "inspect" women going into their shelters to see if they're biological women. They're also not allowed to participate in the military, and the government has already rolled back protections that would see trans people safe from discrimination by medical professionals.

Similarly, when black people took to the streets for their rights, defended themselves under the Constitution and tried to uplift their communities, Hoover's FBI enacted a years' long sabotage campaign that saw to depict them as violent insurrectionists and had one of their most prominent voices killed.

The pride aspect comes from existing in a country that is so intensely hostile to one's asking for basic civil rights. I'm sure most activists would like to live a quiet life where living wasn't a political act, but that's not the country we live in
All of this, I also fully agree with.
 

jokey77

Character Loyalist
@CrimsonShadow : For once we seem to agree more than you are propably aware of! ;)

As I said: In Europe healthcare systems are getting reformed at regular intervals. E.g. this was the case in Germany a few years ago and most recently in Austria. The intention is always to make inefficient administration more cost-effective.

But yes, after seeing the numbers in your post: your health care system seems to be quite a mess. Propably even more inefficient. I can't judge that though and didn't mean to in my original post. I was just saying that public administration is usually less efficient than private administration.

You'll be a better judge of that: Do you think that if the (chaotic) American health care system were suddenly administered purely by the state, that it would be more efficient?

My gut feeling would be that there is no universal health care system that is also efficient. Thus I like to stick with the European way, when it comes to universal healthcare. More so now that I have seen the numbers that you posted, even though those bring up a few questions.

I'm with you on the bottom line: In Europe, real hardship cases (e.g. sick people) are offered more social security. Recently, there was a case in my homecountry in which a sick child needed and received a drug costing millions. I prefer systems in which the health insurance (of the parents) is not asked about, but simply where in such cases help is provided quickly and without bureaucracy. And yes, all other tax payers have to to come up for said drug. Be it.

The downside of such a system is simply that it offers less social mobility. If you are aware of this, then we go d'accord.

My impression is that the COVID crisis in particular shows the hardness of the American economic system, which is still a touch more neoliberal.

But I don't want to offend anyone. I know too little about the American crisis management and health care system to be able to contribute more than a vague personal impression.
 

Lt. Boxy Angelman

I WILL EAT THIS GAME
Just throwing this out there: Fox News poll has Biden ahead by seven points, while the Washington Post has him up by fifteen. Most sources on the subject say the same thing: whatever chance he had to salvage re-election has been obliterated by his mishandling of the pandemic, with his strategy essentially being to pretend the problem isn't as bad as it is.

I'm not happy that Joe Biden has to become President in order to restore any sort of normalcy. But I will be happy if and when this election takes place, this cancerous excuse for a human being and his shitty mafia administration are voted out, and the anemic and misled flock of sheep that is his base get to hold that L for the rest of their lives.
 
D

Deleted member 5032

Guest
Just throwing this out there: Fox News poll has Biden ahead by seven points, while the Washington Post has him up by fifteen. Most sources on the subject say the same thing: whatever chance he had to salvage re-election has been obliterated by his mishandling of the pandemic, with his strategy essentially being to pretend the problem isn't as bad as it is.

I'm not happy that Joe Biden has to become President in order to restore any sort of normalcy. But I will be happy if and when this election takes place, this cancerous excuse for a human being and his shitty mafia administration are voted out, and the anemic and misled flock of sheep that is his base get to hold that L for the rest of their lives.
This is where we were in 2016, though. Every poll had Hillary up; no sane person thought Donald "grab em by the pussy" Trump had a snowball's chance in hell. Then nobody showed up to vote and here we are. All these polls are making me nervous that people will get overconfident again and not vote because they assume he'll lose. We're also already seeing blatant voter suppression and election interference. The post office is now controlled by a Trump goon and unidentified agents are hauling away people in unmarked vans. This shit ain't over til it's over.
 

Lt. Boxy Angelman

I WILL EAT THIS GAME
This is where we were in 2016, though. Every poll had Hillary up; no sane person thought Donald "grab em by the pussy" Trump had a snowball's chance in hell. Then nobody showed up to vote and here we are. All these polls are making me nervous that people will get overconfident again and not vote because they assume he'll lose. We're also already seeing blatant voter suppression and election interference. The post office is now controlled by a Trump goon and unidentified agents are hauling away people in unmarked vans. This shit ain't over til it's over.
That's all facts.
What gives me hope is looking back at the 2018 midterms, which of I remember right was the biggest defeat and highest voter turnout in the history of midterm elections. The entire world has seen him for what he really is, and so his only hope for victory is voter suppression and shady shit on a massive scale, which I do not believe the men with the money who actually run the world would let happen in a big enough way for him to succeed. He does not have the numbers to win otherwise. Fuck, he technically didn't have the numbers in 2016 when he was at his peak of popularity and still lost by 2.8 million votes, and those states in the Midwest that he pulled the electoral college with have all been in constant turmoil ever since. OHIO is starting to turn in Biden's favor, and there is no way in any hell that he's getting re-elected without Ohio. His element of surprise is gone, and most of the country has been tuned in and paying attention on a scale never before reached in modern history because of Covid. His literal only hope is the pandemic getting bad enough to throw wrenches into the voting wheels and get voting stations shut down. It kinda makes one think about why he's so comfortable blowing this off and instigating things into getting worse. Beyond that possibility, it's going to be a beating of Reagan VS Mondale proportions. He went the tunnel vision route in 2018 by fear-mongering over the caravan, and it cost the GOP the House of Representatives in a landslide defeat across the board. And that was before everything he and Mitch McConnell in the Senate have screwed up since.
 
D

Deleted member 5032

Guest
Wait what??
Google "unmarked van" and you can find a ton of sources. Unidentified agents are straight kidnapping protestors in Portland and other locations. Here is an actual video of it happening:
https://www.reddit.com/r/PublicFreakout/comments/gx9gkj In that incident, real police at least seemed to be present, but there have been other incidents where no real police were present.

According to Business Insider, the gear the agents are wearing is available on Ebay (https://www.businessinsider.com/federal-officers-wearing-in-portland-wearing-gear-available-online-2020-7).
 
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