Quote:
Originally Posted by Rob Instigator
in response to your second question: that is enough to let me know how you feel. It does not dictate whether or not I should have said what I said, or whether I was "right" or "wrong" in doing so. That is a very slippery slope you describe.
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It does dictate your idea of how much you should concerned with other people.
It also displays a very individualistic point of view, in which your personal desire to do something should be more important to you than the consequences of this thing or how it ressonates with others. Ironically, there's no individuality in thinking that way.
Also, wrong. If you say something discriminatory, it's wrong. If you do something that invades someone's personal space, it's wrong.
If somebody speaks up asking you to stop reinforcing their opression and you ignore them, that's wrong.
No matter how much you try to sugarcoat it in some really twisted explanation of your idea of "freedom of speech" or the disturbing belief that words and messages cannot be acts of violence.