Originally posted by Anthony K. S.
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(FYI : If anybody here follows that link to read that thread, bear in mind that it was written almost a year ago. Also, some of the page links in it are invalid by now.)
Originally posted by Anthony K. S.
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Originally posted by Anthony K. S.
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Originally posted by mjr
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One of Carlson's guests, David Silverman, the president of American Atheists, argued that the holiday season belongs to everyone, not just Christians alone. He said that there was no wrong way to celebrate the holiday, and added that "Christianity stole the season from the Solstice."
The Governor of Florida, Rick Scott, a Republican, approved the construction of the Festivus Pole, along with the Christmas display, in a public area at the Florida State Capitol Building. I don't know what his personal feelings were on the Festivus Pole, but the reality is that he probably couldn't have refused it even if he wanted to. Once his office authorized the Christmas display, they basically opened the door to any kind of religious or non-religious holiday display in that designated area. Refusing to approve the Festivus Pole would have undoubtedly landed Governor Scott in court.
Now, I will say that, in my opinion, constructing the Festivus Pole out of beer cans was really tacky. In subsequent years, the artist designed the Pole in rainbow colors, as a tribute to Gay Pride and the legalization of same-sex marriage. Much better, much more tasteful.
Originally posted by Anthony K. S.
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Originally posted by mjr
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When those three firefighters raised that flag, they were acting on behalf of all of the people of New York, all of the people of the United States. I think that the decision to depict the three firefighters in the painting as racially diverse (one white, one black, and one Hispanic) was intended to symbolize that the three firefighters themselves were representatives of all of the American people. However, not everyone saw it that way. There was a firestorm of protest (the phrase "political correctness gone mad" was used quite a lot) that ultimately led to the plan being scrapped. I don't necessarily agree or disagree with the decision. I do understand the feelings on both sides.
Originally posted by s_stabeler
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With that said, I think Anthony was referring to people being encouraged to examine the ways in which they are privileged in society and try to understand the viewpoints of others who are not so fortunate, not to the way that people abuse the idea of "privilege" to shut down other people's arguments or dismiss their viewpoints, which I certainly do agree is wrong.
Originally posted by D_Yeti_Esquire
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Now, I give neither praise nor condemnation to companies like Paypal, whose supposedly principled support of the LGBT community compels them to boycott North Carolina, and yet doesn't seem to prohibit them from doing business with 25 countries where homosexuality is illegal, including 5 countries where it is punishable by death.
What does concern me about Paypal's pulling out of North Carolina is that it will deny hundreds of jobs to the people of Charlotte, which is the very city whose attempts to protect the rights of the LGBT community were what sparked all of this in the first place. And there are at least two other major organizations that are pulling out of Charlotte because of HB2, despite the fact that Charlotte was the city that was trying to fight against discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.
It gets worse. I have read that, ironically, the areas of North Carolina that are being hardest hit by the backlash against HB2 are actually progressive, left-leaning cities that tend to be friendly to the LGBT community. Apparently, according to some observers, this was part of the Republicans' political calculus.
The GOP legislators who passed HB2 don't care about the backlash against North Carolina, because it mainly hurts people who don't support the Republicans, anyway.
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