the white man is the most repressed person in history.War Man wrote:
I'm white and I feel we are being oppressed, currently. Where is "White History"?
Tu Stultus Es
the white man is the most repressed person in history.War Man wrote:
I'm white and I feel we are being oppressed, currently. Where is "White History"?
No, being gay is no more a class of people than being fat. and whatever historically relevant accomplishments that were made was not made BECAUSE they were gay. Their sexual preference is NOT historically relevant. Black accomplishments are historically relevant because so much of our nations history was driven by the oppression of blacks, and any accomplishments made by blacks was done in spite of that oppression.AussieReaper wrote:
It is a class of people. Why do you think they were denied the right to marry? That was based on the classification of gay.lowing wrote:
Gay is not a class of people. It is not a race and being gay has nothing to do with their accomplishments in history. Bullshit like this is the same thing as teaching the "fat people history" Highlighting the accomplishments of fat people, when their weight has nothing to do with their accomplishments of finding a cure for polio or inventing the light bulb.
Secondly, the have accomplishments when you look at the challenge for equal rights. Same as the struggle for equal rights for blacks. And before that, for women.
You're really on a roll lately with ignorant posts.
No, you can not stand up to inequality by fighting for special preference, recognition, rights etc.....Shocking wrote:
I prefer to steer clear of any equal rights / racism / oppression argument tbh. If you disagree people are going to label you as being intolerant / racist and so on, it's a quagmire. People want their special day? Let them.
eleven bravo wrote:
richard the lion heart was a gay
Last edited by Shocking (2011-07-06 08:43:06)
Wrong attitude, because special right, privileges etc. comes from somewhere and if someone is getting MORE rights and freedoms, then that means someone else is getting less and one day that could be you.Shocking wrote:
oh I agree, but arguing with people who advocate them is absolutely pointless.
Granted this specific case in the original post is over the top and I think it's wrong. But as long as the needs for special rights don't affect me or anything of value I'll let everyone have their way.
We're not exactly living in Animal Farm here, there is no scheme to put one group in a privileged position. Almost all 'equal rights' initiatives are harmless.lowing wrote:
Wrong attitude, because special right, privileges etc. comes from somewhere and if someone is getting MORE rights and freedoms, then that means someone else is getting less and one day that could be you.
If they do actually have a negative effect on others I'll consider participating in the discussion. Gay pride parades, feminist parades, special history months are all fine by me.Shocking wrote:
as long as the needs for special rights don't affect me or anything of value I'll let everyone have their way.
Maybe harmless to YOU, but if it is important to the ones getting special treatment to actually care about it, chances are it is important to some else who isn't.Shocking wrote:
We're not exactly living in Animal Farm here, there is no scheme to put one group in a privileged position. Almost all 'equal rights' initiatives are harmless.lowing wrote:
Wrong attitude, because special right, privileges etc. comes from somewhere and if someone is getting MORE rights and freedoms, then that means someone else is getting less and one day that could be you.If they do actually have a negative effect on others I'll consider participating in the discussion. Gay pride parades, feminist parades, special history months are all fine by me.Shocking wrote:
as long as the needs for special rights don't affect me or anything of value I'll let everyone have their way.
Last edited by Uzique (2011-07-06 09:31:30)
I never had a history course, either in high school or college, that went much past World War II. Considered too controversial.Uzique wrote:
lowing it's just another module, essentially, to history and sociology. it's just trying to incorporate recent social progressions and historical movements into the official syllabus of history teaching. what's the problem? some of the most definitive social change of the 20th century have been for civil rights of the individual. do you have a problem teaching about black rights in school? the fact is, whether or not you like it, that most of the cultural change and academic 'progress' since the 1960's onwards has been in the disciplines of feminism and homosexuality. i see no problem in trying to address the historical 'black hole' from the 1950's onwards (or the decline of the official civil rights movement) to acknowledge that, yes, what has actually been happening has been a smaller and quiter revolution in sexuality. what's the problem? are you opposed to teaching history as it stands and as it factually is, or are you offended because much of later 20th century western social history concerns queers? i suspect it's the latter, old man.
we are constantly revising our account of history according to current social norms, views and expectations - constantly looking backwards to review what has happened through a different, shifting perspective. just as most historians were keen to view everything through the lenses of marxist criticism when it enjoyed a left-wing academic vogue, so now people are keen to look back at gender politics and the influence of sexuality on history. i see absolutely no problem with looking at history through a varied method of different critical perspectives. no one account of history is necessarily any more important or right than the other-- it's all a matter of application.
it's pretty easy to talk about 19th century literature without wilde.DesertFox- wrote:
You already learn about the Ancient Greeks in school.
There's no problem with this as long as they carry it out well so you won't even notice. My APUSH book was written in such a sense that they shoehorned the accomplishments of women in every single event to the extent that it became a running joke in the class. The law seems a bit strange though, because there's always people who get screwed out of history by whatever reason. I reckon you can't talk about the Bletchley Park operation without mentioning Alan Turing and, like someone said, discuss 19th century literature without Wilde.
don't forget frederick douglasseleven bravo wrote:
and the only black people that are mentioned are crispus attucks, george washington carver, martin luther king and bill cosby
Last edited by Uzique (2011-07-06 09:39:46)
Because wether or not George Washington was gay has absolutely no bearing regarding his contributions to history. I do not care, nor does history, what Lincoln did in the bedroom as straight guy, but if he were gay, NOW it is historically relevant and we are supposed to consider that? Yeah right.Uzique wrote:
lowing it's just another module, essentially, to history and sociology. it's just trying to incorporate recent social progressions and historical movements into the official syllabus of history teaching. what's the problem? some of the most definitive social change of the 20th century have been for civil rights of the individual. do you have a problem teaching about black rights in school? the fact is, whether or not you like it, that most of the cultural change and academic 'progress' since the 1960's onwards has been in the disciplines of feminism and homosexuality. i see no problem in trying to address the historical 'black hole' from the 1950's onwards (or the decline of the official civil rights movement) to acknowledge that, yes, what has actually been happening has been a smaller and quiter revolution in sexuality. what's the problem? are you opposed to teaching history as it stands and as it factually is, or are you offended because much of later 20th century western social history concerns queers? i suspect it's the latter, old man.
we are constantly revising our account of history according to current social norms, views and expectations - constantly looking backwards to review what has happened through a different, shifting perspective. just as most historians were keen to view everything through the lenses of marxist criticism when it enjoyed a left-wing academic vogue, so now people are keen to look back at gender politics and the influence of sexuality on history. i see absolutely no problem with looking at history through a varied method of different critical perspectives. no one account of history is necessarily any more important or right than the other-- it's all a matter of application.
Last edited by lowing (2011-07-06 10:29:36)