Way to miss the point mate...
I want to drop the You topic, because you're absolutely wrong: what I want to believe is you were tired, awake fucking late, and careless with your language, and/or worse at listening than your usual. So let me quickly say three things.
1) It's the second time you're implying* I'm stupid or don't have good understanding of english as a offhand comment. I missed the nuance? Really? I know the difference between an analogy, a comparison, or a metaphor. To be blunt, we are not discusing at such level of precision, and it's not necessary to my points. **
2) How many times do I need to ignore the 76ers? To me your bringing up the 76ers was in context, no more nor less, than you shifting the goalposts of the conversation, trying to pretend there was no moral implication or connotation in what you had said to that point, AND in what you interpreted others as saying up to that point. ***
3) In the post you replied, I said myself that I don't think you had malicious intent (now you say you were joking, I still believe you were earnest and slightly inconsiderate). I said myself you didn't make explicit comparisons, you just allowed the guilt by association to be implied from the analogies, or if you absolutely insist on the precision, implied it by the names of the hypothetical group in your analogy. *4*
So summary restatement:
My point A) yes, you have good intentions. Yes, maybe you can't understand why we are offended at you, you think you were nuanced. Yet, yes, you did actually imply guilt by association.
My point B) yes, you should stop digging yourself deeper, and either move on, or admit that "guilt" and "good", as used in the immediately preceding paragraph (and the whole back and forth I quoted extensivly already) are and were intended as having moral, ethical connotations.
Bottom line, please don't tell me you know better than me what I'm saying. Ok? I've kind of done that to you, but I respect you enough to spend the time and reference why I think so, to make an objective argument. *5*
* nuance! you didn't say, nor state.
** it is necessary to your points, which as I've implied are being cherry picked and taken out of context.
*** I'm even willing to give you the benefit of the doubt, you may believe you are not shifting the goalpoasts.
*4* I've said such things myself, but it wasn't my main part, yet you respond to the whole by repeating what I already admitted without referencing it! Another perfect example of poor listening. Me I'm ignoring what I find less important in your posts. You are ignoring what you care about in mine!
*5* Even in this latest reply of yours, let's consider the word "repulsive". Is this language appropriate to our 'badness' as players of whatever sport those 76ers play? Or is it an indication of your moral disgust? Inquiring minds would like to know... Consider where I said you're worse... at listening. It's not so hard to avoid confusion.
PS: Broadly speaking, inability or unwillingness to attempt to be objective about subjective matters, including aesthetic or ethical topics. This in a nutshell is the problem I see as root cause of a lot of intolerance and repression. I think such inability is bad (in the skill sense) and such unwillingness is bad (in the moral sense).
For examples consider: Inability or unwilligness to engage with ethics in journalism, or subjectivity in politics, or imperfect proxies of value...
Ok, now following up on post #1087. And since I started writing this yesterday, it may ignore some of what you posted in the meanwhile, though I just replied to it higher up. Obviously feel free to correct me.
Journalism The points you made in the post I'm replying to (1048) are, in order:
1) that people paid to opine (a subjective endeavour) shouldn't be held to ethical objectivity expectations. You go so far to say these expectations are aesthetical, rather than ethical.
Source:
htown1980: I don't think suggesting that people who are paid to give their opinion on things ... should be subjective is really an ethical concern. Its complaint about style.
First, there's a bit of a strawman there. Objectivity = Good, does not imply Subjectivity = Bad. When I say something should be objective, that is a relative statement. It both means more objective than they are, and it also means more objective than subjective. I think you're reading something into it that I didn't actually write. Tad ironic :)
Still to go with your point, here are the main ways I see ethical concerns with 'people paid to opine' rejecting objectivity.
a) being paid implies professional standards, and therefore ethical expectations on behavior are inherent.
b) rejecting objectivity implies* an assumption that your opinion is better**, just because it's yours.
I think this holds generically, but admittedly I am thinking in the context of journalism. In that sense objectivity kind of revolves around objective truth. It is characterized by a number of negative attributes: do not misquote, do not mischaracterize, do not assume, do not misrepresent, avoid loaded language, etc... As well by related positive aspirations: give both sides a voice, source and document facts, use neutral language, etc...
Call this style, or methodology... I think it's ethically better. I see no problem with asking objectivity from 'people paid to opine'. I don't think that's actually oppressive.
* nuance!
** both morally and regarding skill
PS: in fact the conflation of the two is precisely the inherent human problem. Meritocracy deriving ethical value from merit is tautological. IMO a democratic mechanism is ethically required, be it democratic voting or a free market of exchange, hopefully both. The journalist ethos of "afflict the comfortable, comfort the afflicted" is imo perverse in its ethical logic (a sort of affirmative action), and inherently conflicts with determining and presenting truth.
2) that suggesting indoctrination is rethorically suspect and apparently hypocritical.
Source:
htown1980: I think suggesting people who read those articles are being indoctrinated, is a tad jingoistic. It interests me that people will say, ... depictions of violence in video games do not influence gamers, but reading will indoctrinate...
Again, you are reading a bit more into it than I put there.
-We agree Indoctrination = Bad
-We agree Information = Good *
In point 1) I just detailed on linkages between objectivity and information. Rejecting objectivity is equivalent to applying a polarised filter, whereas objectivity is the method / style that has a goal to provide a holistic view, as independent of filters as possible.
Then to go with your point, a meta argument is that rethorics, in their focus on persuasion rather than information, is immediately somewhat ethically suspect, regardless of intentions to improve the audience. And regardless of whether the doctrinaire effect is achieved. **
More OT, consider this sincere and logical distinction:
-Written media is particularly suited to ideological communication (ethical).
-Visual media is particularly suited to emotional communication (aesthetical).
In my opinion, violence caused by emotional outbursts is usually individual in scale (but may be large in aggregate) and the triggers can be very varied, whereas violence caused by ideas is societal in scale (but rather exceptional) and the trigger is almost always a process of rationalization of some 'other' as immoral. ***
Shit typically hits the fan, when the ideological departs from the abstract other, to some actual other, due to emotional motives. And yes, both sides do this, usually. ****
* for the skill sense, if not morally
PS: topics of awareness are quite relevant to morals though, just consider the ubiquity of "I didn't know" as a moral defense.
** Isn't this almost objectivist philosophy? I haven't really read Ayn Rand, but if anyone can comment I'd welcome it
*** being typical, this demonization process is an excellent bottleneck to identify potential risks, and tolerance its remedy
**** if you think I have denied games influence players you are wrong.
PS: I would argue though, the influence in order of effectual importance is rather: ludic, then emotional, only then ideological. The emotional effect may trigger violence, it may also prevent it. There is no responsibility on the media. It's all the actor's responsibility and guilt, not the creator's or the media's. Unless you can actually demonstrate objectively how alienation is intended, and with games, objectively proving ideological messaging is imo a chimera. As is actually trying to create in games meaningful (ethical) narrative, rather than some tropish (emotional) caricature.
Edit: OK... too much text... I'll try and post the rest later.