PlasmaHam wrote:While I am no friend of Nazism, I don't think this is exactly good news. As a 'polite society', as another poster so put it, we should not support or justify putting people on the street just because we disagree with their opinions. This guy is still a human being, and should still be treated with respect. If he starts to actively threaten people or become a legitimate danger, then I could understand taking action. But this 'vigilante justice' shouldn't be encouraged.
I just read the NYT article this is based upon, and I really don't see the real basis for the claims that the NYT are pro-Nazi or something. But regardless, the "They are people too" argument is pretty weak. Of course Nazis are people, that doesn't make them morally righteous. This reminds me of an NPR story a few months back, where they tried to defend Antifa by claiming it's followers were just normal people 95% of the time. Either way, that argument doesn't justify any ideology.
Antiboyscout wrote:
Anyone find it ironic that the term Nazi is used to dehumanize people?
Maybe in the historical sense. Otherwise, I really don't care if people look down on actual Nazis; my beef is how loosely the term tends be be applied, as demonstrated by some of the other posts in this thread.
Draco Dracul wrote:
If he will judge me for the color of my skin, I will judge him for the content of his character.
I'd say that's fair, and I do the same.
If potential for violence is enough, then a man from an ideology that killed over 20 million people, and views ethnic cleansings as desirable is inherently suspect.
Someone to keep an eye on, but not to threaten or try to do violence against. And frankly, I'd rather these people be vocal so we can know who they are and what they're doing.
His predicament has nothing to do with vigilante justice and everything to do with the free market.
Them moving because they feel unsafe would have something to do with vigilante justice, though.
Fuzzy Necromancer wrote:
Being a Nazi IS an active threat.
No it isn't. If it was, he'd be in jail right now. He and anyone else can hold whatever vile beliefs they want as long as they don't act on any of it.
He lost his job because, guess what, a lot of companies have codes of conduct that exclude violent ideologies like "Kill all the jews". That's free market for you.
Or maybe people are harassing the business, or threatening the people who run it.
He's fleeing because suddenly he realizes his black, brown, non-christian, non-straight neighbors know that he wants to kill them.
Or because people have threatened violence against him.
This is the topsy-turvy world of modern American "politeness". Calling somebody a racist is worse than holding racist ideas. Calling somebody homophobic is worse than being homophobic.
It's more about abuse of the accusation for the vast majority of the time, not to mention the double standards when it comes to the "progressive" camp. As for the genuine article, as I've already said, I'd rather these people not be afraid to spew their shit, not because I agree with any of it, but because I want them in the open so we know who they are and what they're doing. If you make them afraid, they'll still keep spewing their shit, but where they can't be seen and heard. I find that much more concerning, personally.
Draco Dracul wrote:
Well for one, unlike Nazism, Islam and Communism don't have mass murder as an end unto itself.
Actually, yes, they do. With Islam, it's literally in their holy book, and with communism, this has been shown through the actions of actual communists, repeatedly throughout history.
For another black balling people because they are communists and/or communist sympathizers is a proud American tradition.
Communism has claimed far more lives than the Nazis ever did, and it was often against the very people they claimed to be fighting their glorious revolutions for. And say what you will about fascists, they don't go around claiming that, "oh, well that wasn't
real fascism," or otherwise making excuses for all the mass murders they've caused throughout history.