The Culture of Perpetual Outrage

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,889
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When I first read the OP title I thought it said "The Culture of Perpetual Orange". Booze was good that day.
 

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
30,245
99
48
Alberta
The Left-wing minority have always been whingeing and whining and complaining about slightest little things - minor things that the majority of people don't bat an eyelid at or don't see as a problem - but it's only in the last ten years or so, since the advent of Facebook and Twitter (another two awful things that those bloody Yanks have given us), that these complaints have been known to the wider world. In the old days they just made their complaints to their pals at Islington dinner parties or at Liberal Democrat conferences, so not many people heard the complaints. But these days they take to Twitter and vent their grievances over men wearing shirts with pictures of women on or a woman saying nasty things about the Sweaties on Twitter. Now their grevances are out there in the public arena, so it gives the impression that people are complaining more about the slightest things and that there is a "culture of perpetual outrage" but there isn't.

You should quit whining.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
If George Carlin was alive today, you know what he'd be doing? That's right--scratching at the roof of his coffin.

(Sorry George--but you would have laughed, admit it.)


Coffins have covers.
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
6,348
4,041
113
Edmonton



This is silly! I have never had a problem asking someone to move over so that I could take a seat. This "man spread" issue is much ado about nothing as far as I'm concerned.


More often than not, it's people putting their brief cases or back packs on seats that's an issue as far as I can see. They see that the bus is "standing room only" and they need to be asked to remove the offending article so someone (usually an older person) can sit down. That to me is plain ignorance and nothing else. The tsk or sigh when they have to move it irks me as though they're doing you a favour.


We seem to have lost plain old courtesy. It's ridiculous!


JMHO
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
5
36
London, Ontario
Everything’s offensive: Since when did we become a society of politically correct Nazis?

May 13, 2014

A Dr. Seuss book is seen as children play during a press preview of an interactive exhibition dedicated to Dr. Seuss at the Children's Museum of Manhattan on July 6, 2004 in New York City.



Most people have heard about the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, but it seems to have escaped the notice of the people who run Instagram (the same people who run Facebook).
Especially this bit —Section 2(b): “Everyone has the following fundamental freedoms: Freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression, including freedom of the press and other media of communication.”
Like, Instagram?
With exquisite timing, just before Mother’s Day, Instagram shut down Heather Bays’ account because it featured pictures of her breastfeeding her 20-month old daughter. Heather, who’s originally from Winnipeg and now lives in Toronto, may have thought she was sharing a beautiful picture celebrating motherhood with her community, but Instagram apparently thought she was trafficking in child pornography.
Seriously. One photo showed her daughter’s bare torso, and another one exposed a full breast and someone took offence and complained.
Let’s remember that Heather Bays is a maternity photographer. Unlike millions of moronic selfies, her photos are actually good.
Meanwhile, over in Vancouver, people are trying to get Dr. Seuss banned again. This time, it’s If I Ran the Zoo, because there’s a line about zoo helpers who “all wear their eyes at a slant” alongside illustrations of Asian stereotypes. While this was all viewed as perfectly acceptable back in 1950, it is offensive through a 2014 lens.
The Vancouver Public Library is resisting the call for the ban, wisely recognizing that if they ban Dr. Seuss, they would have to ban half the world’s literature, from Sophocles to the Arabian Nights.
At one time or another, everything and everyone offends. These days, everyone is offended. I don’t envy the gatekeepers. When everything is offensive, what do you do?
If you ask me, it’s simple. Just remember the Nazis. They loved to find things offensive. They burned books and banned works of art because they were decadent or written by Jews. The Nazis weren’t interested in freedom of thought, belief, etc. In fact, they loathed and opposed such things.
Good thing we’re not like the Nazis, eh?
Look. As far as I’m concerned, lots of things are offensive. There are times when I wish country music, Hallmark greeting cards and cat videos were ruthlessly suppressed. But then I come to my senses.
We need to remember the great value of freedom. Right now in Nigeria, hundreds of schoolgirls have been kidnapped by narrow-minded extremists to prevent them from being exposed to western education. This is the logical dead end of censorship. Freedom is messy, rude and annoying, but it beats oppression and slavery every time.
So let’s cut everyone a little slack. As far as I know, the Charter of Rights and Freedoms doesn’t protect your right to be offended.
At least not yet.



Everything’s offensive: Since when did we become a society of politically correct Nazis? | Metro
 

Tonington

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 27, 2006
15,441
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SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
5
36
London, Ontario
The meninists got a little upset at a Superbowl commercial...

Addicting Info – ‘Meninists’ Threatened by Super Bowl Ad, Respond Like The Wusses They Are (IMAGES)
During Sunday’s Super Bowl game, an ad ran which featured an empowering message for girls. The #likeagirl ad was well received by everyone. Everyone except the little boys who make up the “meninist” movement.
Then they took to the mobile rage network with their own clever hashtag...#LikeABoy :lol:

Mankind is doomed.

Might as well bring on the polio.