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Originally Posted by Ghostwriter
Interesting that when you disagree with someone you resort to name calling. Typical.
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Using "troll" as a verb (on the internet) is name-calling? Come on.
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Let me make sure I understand you my "Kappa Sigma brother". Someone who disagrees with a you and/or other liberals is labeled an "anti-intellectual"?
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Anybody who plays the "Yawn I guess I'm just not as smart as you, mister big smarts who doesn't get the real issues up on Alabaster Mountain, you smarty smart-smart!" card is being anti-intellectual. You were sarcastically playing dumb (which is no less of a "name-calling" move than claiming you're trolling, by the by) - is that not what you were getting at?
And I'm far from a liberal, but hey - whatever pushes your narrative.
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Have you ever considered that it just might be the other way around? It's the "intellectuals" like you who desire an "anything goes society" that will push us or maybe even drag us right over the cliff and down the slope.
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I have considered this - and I considered it again, now that you've brought it up.
I reject it for a few reasons, the most pressing of which are:
1 - The notion of "less government interference" is implicitly a
conservative notion - applying it to personal lives seems like a natural segue. AThat makes the notion universal, lending credence to its validity.
2 - There's absolutely no chance that "equal rights for gays" is equivalent to "anything goes" - on face, you've started with a faulty premise. In no way do I want "anything goes" - just "nobody is discriminated against on basis of sexuality."
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Try a better source next time than an article in Wikipedia that has numerous issues with it and no citations. How one can examine a specious article like the one referenced and say that this proves their point is beyond me. BTW - Kind of neat that you were able to click "anti-intellectualism" within the article for an immediate buzz word to use as part of your attack. It was really quite lazy of you.
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I used the Wikipedia citation as an overview, so you understood I wasn't referring to "slippery slope" as some sort of colloquialism, but rather the actual line of argumentation (which I assumed you were, as well, but that could well be wrong). What, exactly, would you prefer instead? Journal sources on argumentation?
Regardless of my lazy citation, it's incumbent upon YOU to provide the details to prove your point here - prove for me, in any way you can, how this is the start of a slippery slope. Prove the causation between gay marriage and the downfall of public morality (right after you justify your definition of "public morality"). Because I absolutely reject that anything further will happen as a result - just like cats didn't start voting when women did.
Or just tilt at this particular internet windmill - really, it's up to you.
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As our society continues its rapid decay many of us "anti-intellectuals" will lean back and say "I told you so" but, as history has shown us time and again, it may just be too late. I hope not.
"I have spoken my piece and counted to three". Penny Wharvey McGill.
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Yes, yes - history has shown time and again that good ol' "Way It's Always Been" individuals (such as those who decried women's suffrage, or freeing slaves, and so on) have ALWAYS been in the right, once we look back on it.
Or never. I actually can't think of a single time. Japanese internment, treatment of Native Americans, "No Irish Need Apply", phrenology, real coca in the cola, and so on ...