This very moment Jay is somewhere eating a bucket of chicken upset that his town doesn't have sewers.
Thanks again for banning him Ken.
Thanks again for banning him Ken.
And less alternative opinions on this forum, how wonderful. Didn't entirely agree with everything Jay had to say, but I feel he should not have been banned.SuperJail Warden wrote:
This very moment Jay is somewhere eating a bucket of chicken upset that his town doesn't have sewers.
Thanks again for banning him Ken.
The problem I have now is that every news report seems like an Onion article and I have to check that it isn't.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Yeah that was my take. "It can't be real, but it's so damn plausible."
SuperJail Warden wrote:
Thanks again for banning him Ken.
I banned him, and for two weeks, for this post. Feel free to PM me.War Man wrote:
I feel he should not have been banned.
You have been banned by tazz.. Reason:
"'Flaming' (personal attacks) are not well received on these forums.
While some users may exhibit traits of being an ass, there is always a line. You crossed that line."
This is a temporary ban and will expire 2017-02-19 21:26:40.
Last edited by uziq (2017-02-18 04:18:16)
he's just a troll that for some reason people started paying attention to. Hopefully he just fades away.DesertFox- wrote:
Isn't he essentially just a Twitter troll or does he have actual thoughts? Probably not worth paying attention to, in any case.
This is too funny.uziq wrote:
he said in an interview a few years ago, in a rare moment of candour, that he felt in his mid-20s like he didn't really like who he was so he decided to start acting like this fake, brash, troll persona.
Protesting him and forcing universities to disinvite him is infringing on other people's freedom of association too. It works both ways. Would you be upset if right wingers protested and burned shit if a BLM member came to campus to speak? You'd probably call them racists.SuperJail Warden wrote:
What I hate most about Milo is how he reinforced this broad idea of freedom of speech that has never existed. Freedom of speech means the government can't censor you. But you have another generation of young people who think freedom of speech means you are entitled to a platform. Media groups shunning Milo isn't censorship. It is private individuals and groups exercising their freedom of association.
People like him undermine freedom of speech the most. When the 1st amendment is invoked to defend his smut, people become a lot more skeptical of its utility.
You know Milo spoke about a lot more than sad white people issues, right? He also talked a ton of shit about women and gays. The protest had more to do with women and gays than it did with black people's feelings. As if middle class college kids care about black people's feelings.Jay wrote:
Generally, not in reference to Milo, what a lot of (white) people take issue with is that when a minority group advocates the destruction of the white race, or calls for reparations, or the expansion of affirmative action so that they can take power based on the color of their skin, it's treated as just them venting frustration and not a threat. If a white person were to do it, it would be an outrage and we'd have protest marches etc. Yes, I understand that the power dynamic is not equal, but it doesn't make it any less hateful.
People on the right look at the left as being exclusionary. They're incredibly focused on racial and minority status, with any combination not of the majority elevated above the majority. This is a problem. If you watched the election, Clinton spent a lot of her time talking about policy. If you read right wing news, they didn't care about policy, they spent their time scaring white people into not giving power to the loonies on campus who want to put white males in chains. It played a huge role in why the democrats lost. Milo getting banned from speaking on campuses played directly into that narrative and gave it teeth.
I'm saying that it would be better to ignore him instead of giving him a platform to play the victim. He only became a household name after they started banning him from speaking on campus.SuperJail Warden wrote:
You know Milo spoke about a lot more than sad white people issues, right? He also talked a ton of shit about women and gays. The protest had more to do with women and gays than it did with black people's feelings. As if middle class college kids care about black people's feelings.Jay wrote:
Generally, not in reference to Milo, what a lot of (white) people take issue with is that when a minority group advocates the destruction of the white race, or calls for reparations, or the expansion of affirmative action so that they can take power based on the color of their skin, it's treated as just them venting frustration and not a threat. If a white person were to do it, it would be an outrage and we'd have protest marches etc. Yes, I understand that the power dynamic is not equal, but it doesn't make it any less hateful.
People on the right look at the left as being exclusionary. They're incredibly focused on racial and minority status, with any combination not of the majority elevated above the majority. This is a problem. If you watched the election, Clinton spent a lot of her time talking about policy. If you read right wing news, they didn't care about policy, they spent their time scaring white people into not giving power to the loonies on campus who want to put white males in chains. It played a huge role in why the democrats lost. Milo getting banned from speaking on campuses played directly into that narrative and gave it teeth.
I don't understand your point. Should I somehow defend Milo because there are sad white people in Michigan? There has to be better defenders of white or um western culture than a flamboyant troll. He hurts that movement and should be shunned by the right too.
Identity politics of both the right and left persuasions make me ill.uziq wrote:
the right whine so much about exclusion, it's funny.
Last edited by uziq (2017-02-24 10:05:05)