Commenter Archive

Comments by Chris in reply to Jaybird*

On “Crazy people doing crazy things

He killed 6 and wounded several others with a gun. Kinda hard to do that with a baseball bat.

Just sayin'.

On “Rep. Gabrielle Giffords shot at Tucson rally

What does wussifying mean, in this context?

I have no problem with a discussion of the issue of self-censoring (or worse, official censoring) of discourse to avoid setting off some crazy people. But wussifying is where you've lost people.

On “Government and Violence

http://www.amconmag.com/article/2003/dec/15/00012/

On “A Closer Look at Jared Lee Loughner

Heidegger, the standard (from the last post) has gone from public officials criticizing "anti-government rhetoric" to people being put in jail? Forgetting for a moment that peaceful protesters were put in jail, and that law inforcement agencies actively infiltrated peaceful protest groups, you seem to have moved the goalposts. But whatever. I'm not sure why I'm responding to you anyway.

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By the way, people on the left aren't the only ones blaming the other side for this shooting:

http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/01/tea-party-group-blames-leftist-for-giffords-shooting/69153/

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So far, many on the left have been careful. Most of the blogs I read, for example, have pointed out that this guy had no obvious connection with Palin or Beck, but was just crazy. Doesn't mean that Palin and others don't need to tone things down a bit, though.

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It's gotten play. It doesn't excuse any others using violent rhetoric.

On “Government and Violence

Heidegger, start with Ashcroft, December... something... 2001 testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee. After that, you can have more.

On “Rep. Gabrielle Giffords shot at Tucson rally

Scott, you didn't say infringe upon, you said deny. That implies that they want to ban all guns. They don't even want to ban most of them. At least, this is their public position, and there's no real evidence to contradict it.

But since you've read their minds...

On “Government and Violence

Of course, we've always known that Democrats tend to eat their own.

Still, my point was simply that everybody does it, and what gets counted as anti-government tends to be highly (negatively) correlated with who's in power. I suspect Bob, like many conservatives, thinks it’s largely a left-wing/liberal phenomenon, even though he lived through the 60s (and judging by his heavy and semi-random use and abuse of Voeglin terminology and entire sentences, might have partaken of the 60s a bit) and the 00s.

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Of course, anti-government rhetoric from the "left" was stifled under the Bush administration. When it wasn’t simply disallowed (arrests, free speech zones at political speeches, etc.), it was described as treasonous, providing aid and comfort to the enemy, or even actively supporting terrorism. People on the “right” were upset a couple years ago when the government appeared to be targeting right wing groups, but they didn’t have any problem with the government under Bush targeting left wing groups.

The problem with decrying anti-government rhetoric is that over time it ultimately means decrying most dissent, because what “anti-government rhetoric” amounts to depends largely on who’s in power. And that’s probably the biggest sign that “anti-government” rhetoric as a broad category is specious and dangerous.

On “Rep. Gabrielle Giffords shot at Tucson rally

Tom, honestly, what does this comment say? That the authors of this blog should make a concerted effort to criticize liberal bloggers who say intemperate things about the right? Is that their purpose? It's never seemed to me to be that, or to make a concerted effort to criticize conservative bloggers who say intemperate things about the left. Once again, you seem to be doing little more than butting up against the edge of trolldom.

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p.s., you know what they really think but won't say, because you're psychic, or because you just read between the lines, or because you read the tea leaves, or as a result of any other method of divination, doesn't count.

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Which Democrats, by name, want to take away your right to bear arms? I don't mean which want assault weapons bans, or which want to close the gun show loophole, both of which are pretty common Democratic positions, but which want to actually take away your right to bear arms? Because I don't recall any of them actually stating that. So I wonder if you can provide some names and sources (preferably quotes, their actual websites, or voting records). I'd love to see that.

On “Limits? What Limits?

You gonna answer the question?

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Heidegger, when and where did Lee suggest that Bush had something to do with 9/11? Or is this just another of your many made-up “facts?”

On “A Sterile Constitution

Punching a police officer is significantly different from being born.

Eh, six of one...

On “An “I Told You So” Post

Mike, the "gnostic Muslims" thing is just Bob regurgitating, which is what most of what Bob says. It's a script, almost. At least Heidegger has the decency, one might even say the brain power, to spew all sorts of different kinds of nonsense.

On “A Sterile Constitution

Steve King's bill on birthright citizenship.

I guess they didn't read Section 1 of the 14th Amendment:

"All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside."

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I like that they read the Constitution out loud and then, immediately after, the first (or at least one of the first) law they propose is blatantly unconstitutional. Not “it’s a matter of interpretation” unconstitutional, but directly contradicting the language of the constitution. And the reason for doing it as a law rather than trying to amend the Constitution? Because, you know, amending it is too hard.

You can’t write comedy like the American House of Representatives (or tragedy like the American Senate).

On “An “I Told You So” Post

Robert, I like how you keep acting as though "commie-dem" were the truly offending remark, and not "Kenyan-Marxist." You haven't even mentioned that little epithet. That's particularly interesting given Jason's political orientation. Anyway, your silence on that label is much more informative than anything you've said in your replies to Jason.

Also, I wonder if you understand the difference between criticizing speech and suppressing it. Something tells me that, like Sarah Palin, you don’t.

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So your answer was "It's OK to be racist if it's eschewing pc silliness." Got ya.

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Bob, I’m not sure if you are just dodging Jason’s question, or if you answer is, “Because it ‘eschews pc silliness,’ racism is now a good thing.” Either way, nice job.

I have to say, while the Kenyan stuff is offensive and stupid, I don’t really mind the “commie dem” nonsense. It has the benefit of at the same time displaying your ignorance and making me laugh, which makes it a definite positive. I am, however, tempted to refer to Republicans/conservatives as fascist-repubs in any thread that you comment in. The label would, at the very least, be no less accurate than “commie-dems.”

On “So long, farewell, auf wiedersehn, adieu

James, this kinda sucks, because I was happy to see that you (and Jason, though he transitioned earlier, and DAT, and Jon) were going to be exposed to a larger audience by moving here. One of my favorite things about the blogging you guys do is that the vast majority of your posts, regardless of whether they’re educational, or I agree or disagree, or really what my opinion of any particular post is at all, are incredibly conducive to discussion. The number of comments you guys got once you came here is evidence of that, as is the fact that, even with significantly fewer commenters over at Positive Liberty and The One Best Way (No, That Name Really Sucks), discussions often went into the hundreds of comments and lasted days, even a week or more, which is virtually unheard of in the blogging world. I liked having you guys all collected in one place, but that was simply because it made my life easier. But at least you’ll still be blogging.

On “Aggrieved libertarians

Heidegger,
"A satellite campus of both MIT and CalTech." Man, you crack me up.

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