• @[email protected]
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    156 months ago

    I don’t think most people actually care. And if it doesn’t affect the reading of the book, why should they care?

    My shelves are filled with authors that have questionable views. I own some books by Marquis de Sade and Yukio Mishima and those authors are extremely controversial. I own a copy of Being and Time and Heidegger is associated with Anti-Semitism and Nazism. Agatha Christie’s novels are filled with casual orientalism and racism, and Houellebecq is criticized for being a sexist Islamophobe whose stories have far-right extremist views. My shelves are filled with pessimists and misanthropists and I’m quite sure many of them would share Rowling’s views on transgender issues, but I have no plans to get rid of those books.

    I understand why someone no longer wants to read Rowling and essentially cancels her, but at the same time I wonder if cancelling authors is any different from banning books. Should we stop reading books because their authors were not good people or is there a difference between deceased authors and modern authors who are alive to profit from booksales? Do you separate the book from the writer or is the author’s personal life relevant to you?

    • Flying Squid
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      176 months ago

      Letting parents know gives them the choice and letting people know that someone is a bigot is not ‘canceling’ them.

    • llamajester421
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      126 months ago

      Cancelling authors is not like banning books. Oppressing transgender voices is instead much like burning and banning books lists, Florida-style. People are very much aware that Martin Heidegger hailed the Nazis and they can read his work at their own risk. This is not the case with Rowling, who people think is reasonably skeptic towards a radical, dangerous idea. At least this is what Facebook, in contrast to Lemmy, would have you believe. If people are similarly aware that Rowling is a holocaust denier, an obsessive hatred monger in disagreement to all major scientific and medical bodies, an accolade of antisemitic conspiracy theories, and a supporter of trans genocide, then there might be a place for her on your fucking bookshelf. You know, when she is history, not a direct threat to democracy, human life and people’s health care and well being.

      • @[email protected]
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        6 months ago

        I don’t see how JK is suppressing transgender voices, everyone is entitled to their opinion.

        But trying to suppress JK for having opinions you don’t like IS oppression to me, and solves nothing.

        • llamajester421
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          136 months ago

          It is not her own personal opinions, but a part of an agenda, for which she is lobbying and towards which she working. It is well documented by now, see the RESIST research program for example. Also watch her chats with transphobe Helen Joyce about transgender eradication. Hate speech is harming people and should not be protected as free speech. On the contrary, bigots have reclaimed the term free speech to silence queer voices, the ones they disagree with. So unless you condemn the surge of anti-transgender legislation that also restricts free speech for queer voices, I don’t think you have much of a leg to stand on.

          • @[email protected]
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            6 months ago

            should not be protected

            A free society must give breathing space to hateful speech in order to avoid thought control and the censorship of unpopular views by the government. Instead of stifling free speech, citizens have the power to most effectively answer hateful speech through protest, mockery, debate, questioning, silence, or by simply walking away.

            Even if this leads to “what even is a free society anymore”, I think that is a more useful discussion to pivot to.

        • @Blueberrydreamer
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          96 months ago

          She’s doing exactly the same thing the dude you just accused of oppression is doing.

          The main difference is that she has billions of dollars to promote her perspective, and millions of followers that listen to what she has to say. The dude “oppressing” her in this situation is just some random nobody on a site that might as well not even exist for all the cultural power it wields.

          You had a pretty reasonable argument on the first post, but this took a hard turn into bullshit real quick.

          • @[email protected]
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            6 months ago

            billions of dollars to promote her perspective

            Am I missing something? Did the subject just change here? Are we really pulling strawmen?

            I still don’t see anyone trying to suppress opinions, which is my understanding of the topic we were discussing. I just see more disdain and unacceptance of people having dissenting opinions.

            If you disagree with her and think she is influencing people wrongly in ANY way, I think it should be more of a concern to you that so many people agree with her.

            Attacking someone for having an opinion you don’t like is not going to change anything for the better. Educate people instead and we’ll all be happier IMO.

            • nickwitha_k (he/him)
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              66 months ago

              Attacking someone for having an opinion you don’t like is not going to change anything for the better. Educate people instead and we’ll all be happier IMO.

              GTFOH with that nonsense. Opinions are for flavors of ice cream and pizza toppings, not whether people have a right to exist and have equal rights.

              • @[email protected]
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                26 months ago

                Opinions are for flavors of ice cream and pizza toppings, not whether people have a right to exist and have equal rights.

                IDK that sounds a lot like an opinion to me.

                Who is claiming someone doesn’t have a right to exist? Please cite specific examples.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    6 months ago

                    Rule 1: Attack the argument, not the person

                    An ad hominem (Latin for “to the person”) is a type of informal logical fallacy. Instead of arguing against a person’s position, an ad hominem argument attacks the person’s character or actions in an effort to discredit them.