Master of Applied Cuntery, Level 7 Misanthrope, and Social Injustice Warrior

  • 5 Posts
  • 114 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 1st, 2023

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  • _cnt0@feddit.detoMemes@lemmy.mlbread of wisdom
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    11 months ago

    As 99.99% of people here, I spent some time on reddit. So, yes I could have made this comment on reddit, or on a phpBB forum, or here, or anywhere else. Beyond being clear from the context that your comment is meant as some sort of criticism on what I said, I have absolutely no idea what you are trying to convey. Care to elaborate?


  • _cnt0@feddit.detoMemes@lemmy.mlbread of wisdom
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    11 months ago

    That stance is fair enough. Though I’d like to point out that language can shape perception. And using terms like “trans rights” suggests that trans people are sufficiently different from “normal” humans that they require special rights. But, in my humble opinion, it would be so easy to formulate human/basic rights in a way that no subset specific rights are required, that the entire notion of X rights seems alien to me. Let’s assume we have four tiers of laws (true for some nations): constitutional law, common law, policy, and judicial precedence. Imagine the following subset of constitutional law:

    • Constitutional law applies to all humans residing in the jurisdiction of the nation.

    • Nobody has a right for unhurt feelings.

    • Nobody shall perform an act solely for the purpose of hurting someone else’s feelings.

    • Everybody has a right for individual bodily autonomy.

    There’s no mention of race, religion, gender, … Yet, I’d argue that, for example, trans people are fully covered and protected by the wording. Required exceptions, for example limited accountability for minors, can easily be put into common law. If it becomes evident that some minority is factually disadvantaged, that could be addressed in policy without any need to extend the law because that is neutral and all-encompassing.

    I feel like “we” (politicians/societies) are talking way too much about special laws for trans people, women, … when we should fix the root causes of overly specific laws/constitutions.

    TL;DR: humans are humans, and imho human law should be for all humans and avoid special treatment of any subset, but be worded in a way that any special need is met as best as possible.


  • _cnt0@feddit.detoMemes@lemmy.mlbread of wisdom
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    11 months ago

    The only thing that bothers me about terms like “trans rights”, “women rights”, … is that there should be no need to prefix “rights” with anything but “human”. And human rights should apply to all humans indiscriminately, obviating the need to label any subset of human rights that shouldn’t exist. In my book, the slice of bread should read:

    Humans have human rights. Trans people are humans.

    And in a better world every bit of that should be so obvious that it wouldn’t need mentioning at all.
















  • Ich mag seinen Stil nicht und in dem Video war für mich nichts fundamental Neues, aber ich hab mir die Tonspur einfach mal parallel zur Hausarbeit angehört: Ich würde sagen es ist sehr bodenständig, sachlich und ausgewogen. Eine art der Betrachtung die leider sehr rar ist. Der enthaltene Appell zum defensiven Umgang mit “jungen” Informationen aus allen Quellen hat mir sehr gut gefallen. Es schadet auf jeden Fall nicht sich das mal anzuhören.

    Ob man ihn mag oder nicht, ich halte die Down Votes am Post für unangebracht.