Sure. She's being an idiot. I just have zero sympathy for people who endorse racists.
Also this is one woman and now it's national news.
Look, I'm no fan of Donald Trump or his campaign, but you can't go around preaching that you want a space where everyone feels safe and included, and then go and threaten someone over a hat. That kind of hypocritical attitude is a major reason why Trump has support among moderates. There will always be racists and bigots, but you can't seriously claim to be in support of free speech if you mean "free speech that goes along with what I find acceptable." All that does is push people away from what is a positive message.
It agitates me when people act like bullies under the guise of social justice.
But do you randomly accost people for it? The guy is a dork, but the woman behaved inappropriately as well.
But do you randomly accost people for it? The guy is a dork, but the woman behaved inappropriately as well.
She was completely appropriate. She told him her point of view and wanted him to remove the hat. She informed him that it would be considered hate speech and he should just avoid the hassle and remove it. When someone else had enough and took the hat she actually went to retrieve it to return it.
P.S. She used the term hate speech because it is exempt from freedom of speech. I personally think the hat is a stretch to be considered hate but it is going to be offensive.
It's some people's point of view that Muslims should not wear burkas in the West. Some people argue it is patriarchal practice that reinforces harmful norms, and as a result it should not be worn.
Why you say it is appropriate for someone with this belief to approach someone wearing a Burka and telling them to take it off?
Thread title should be: Coddled Buffoon Triggered by Hat.
It's some people's point of view that Muslims should not wear burkas in the West. Some people argue it is patriarchal practice that reinforces harmful norms, and as a result it should not be worn.
Why you say it is appropriate for someone with this belief to approach someone wearing a Burka and telling them to take it off?
Or do we acknowledge that in real life it is considered fairly inappropriate to walk up to a random person and tell them about how they should dress.
"Freedom of speech" doesn't mean people don't have the right to call you an asshole.
It's some people's point of view that Muslims should not wear burkas in the West. Some people argue it is patriarchal practice that reinforces harmful norms, and as a result it should not be worn.
Why you say it is appropriate for someone with this belief to approach someone wearing a Burka and telling them to take it off?
Or do we acknowledge that in real life it is considered fairly inappropriate to walk up to a random person and tell them about how they should dress.
It's some people's point of view that Muslims should not wear burkas in the West. Some people argue it is patriarchal practice that reinforces harmful norms, and as a result it should not be worn.
Why you say it is appropriate for someone with this belief to approach someone wearing a Burka and telling them to take it off?
Or do we acknowledge that in real life it is considered fairly inappropriate to walk up to a random person and tell them about how they should dress.
She called it hate speech in an attempt to justify her actions sure. That doesn't mean much though.
But do you randomly accost people for it? The guy is a dork, but the woman behaved inappropriately as well.
You missed the whole point about it being considered hate speech you are not protected by freedom of speech in Canada to speak hate. Your comparison makes no sense. A burka is protected under freedom of religion.
If I went to school with them and I saw them on my way to class, I would say something.
The hat represents racism the other is xenophobic
Calling it hate speech is a ridiculous which is why I ignored it.
Correct, but that's not what this young woman was doing. She was saying something along the lines of "if you don't do as I say, I'll alert the authorities."
It's not ridiculous, I can see people thinking it is hateful. I tend to be on the side that it is freedom of speech and he can wear it if he wants. Everyone else has the right to tell him its offensive. The guy was looking for trouble when he put it on.
Asking him to take it off is fine. Telling him he CAN'T wear it and that you're going to contact the authorities and have them make him take it off is less fine.
It's not ridiculous, I can see people thinking it is hateful. I tend to be on the side that it is freedom of speech and he can wear it if he wants. Everyone else has the right to tell him its offensive. The guy was looking for trouble when he put it on.
How is it not ridiculous to say any political slogan of a major party in an ongoing election is hate speech simply because it is of that party.
I'm not saying she didn't have a right to do what she did. I'm just saying doing that makes you look like a jerk.
How is it not ridiculous to say any political slogan of a major party in an ongoing election is hate speech simply because it is of that party.
I'm not saying she didn't have a right to do what she did. I'm just saying doing that makes you look like a jerk.
Its Canada and people outside the US do not have the same view as inside. The guy is considered completely offensive, especially by that generation. She is a keener no doubt about it, but Universities are full of them.
It's not really of the party. It's of Donald Trump, whose movement is at least 80% founded on, at a bare minimum, continuing to ignore systemic problems that exist largely on demographic lines. To say that that is inherently hateful is incorrect, but to say that it is irresponsible and destructive, which is arguably only slightly better than hateful in that at least not all of them explicitly want to fuck others over just for being capital-O Others, is correct.
Look, I'm no fan of Donald Trump or his campaign, but you can't go around preaching that you want a space where everyone feels safe and included, and then go and threaten someone over a hat. That kind of hypocritical attitude is a major reason why Trump has support among moderates. There will always be racists and bigots, but you can't seriously claim to be in support of free speech if you mean "free speech that goes along with what I find acceptable." All that does is push people away from what is a positive message.
It agitates me when people act like bullies under the guise of social justice.
Asking him to take it off is fine. Telling him he CAN'T wear it and that you're going to contact the authorities and have them make him take it off is less fine.
A burka doesn't affect anyone outside of the person choosing to wear it. You can have issues with what it represents or how some families adopt it, and that's perfectly valid, but someone wearing it ultimately doesn't affect anyone around them.It's some people's point of view that Muslims should not wear burkas in the West. Some people argue it is patriarchal practice that reinforces harmful norms, and as a result it should not be worn.
Why you say it is appropriate for someone with this belief to approach someone wearing a Burka and telling them to take it off?
Or do we acknowledge that in real life it is considered fairly inappropriate to walk up to a random person and tell them about how they should dress.
She called it hate speech in an attempt to justify her actions sure. That doesn't mean much though.
I'm aware that places outside the US are not the same as the US. I also didn't say it wasn't offensive. Just that it isn't hate speech which I is reasonably well defined in Canadian law.
Meh who cares it's a toothless threat.
I agree it isn't hate speech but I feel it is an acceptable argument to make especially at university. It's not outside the realm of possibility that she wins that argument but she is an underdog for sure.
A burka doesn't affect anyone outside of the person choosing to wear it. You can have issues with what it represents or how some families adopt it, and that's perfectly valid, but someone wearing it ultimately doesn't affect anyone around them.
That symbol represents the rising xenophobia that has only put members of the muslim community in genuine fucking danger.
It isn't though. Hate speech has a definition and a reasonable person would not suggest that a hat that says "Make America Great Again" is going to incite violence against a specific group.
See the beauty of a discussion is they have two sides and there is grey area in the middle. Its not just as simply as you are wrong I am right. It is a debatable point.
A burka doesn't affect anyone outside of the person choosing to wear it. You can have issues with what it represents or how some families adopt it, and that's perfectly valid, but someone wearing it ultimately doesn't affect anyone around them.
I went to MRU, this very same university and walked down those very same halls. There are plenty of muslim students attending there. If they see that hat supporting a campaign that is utterly inseparable from racism and fear-mongering, what message do you think it sends to them? That symbol represents the rising xenophobia that has only put members of the muslim community in genuine fucking danger.
There is an idea in common law countries of the reasonable person that is relevant here. A reasonable person would not agree at the bare minimum that it incites anything "against a specific group".
nah but its okay cause FREEDOMSSS
He is campaigning directly against Muslims and throwing minorities out of the country. It's a debatable point. I'm heading out so I'm done for today.
Dude wore the hat to get this exact reaction.
He's allowed to wear whatever the hell he wants. He's allowed to identify himself as a republican supporter.
Most likely just a attention seeking troll though.
I care in that it's emblematic of a militant, anti-freedom-if-it-impinges-on-our-goals side of the left that has grown in recent years. I started off as a libertarian, and while I had the economic side of that thoroughly beaten out of me, I'm still basically philosophically libertarian.
Indeed. Get a grip, people.Thread title should be: Coddled Buffoon Triggered by Hat.
It's literally one person with no systemic power.