Paul Farquhar
Legend
Before the internet the free expression to insult anyone we like was constrained by something called good manners.It seems we are moving too far away from valuing free expression,
Before the internet the free expression to insult anyone we like was constrained by something called good manners.It seems we are moving too far away from valuing free expression,
Before the internet the free expression to insult anyone we like was constrained by something called good manners.
If you have the right free expression, then clearly the right to insult anyone we like is a consequence of that.Then the problem isn't free expression, it's either the insult or the internet.
My point isn't that we should make actively offensive content, it is that what is offensive isn't a settled matter and it isn't as simple or black and white as a lot of people are making it out to be. There is a whole thread on whether orcs are a racist and colonialist trope that attests to this disagreement. I am also saying, some of the solutions being offered, seem like like they make things worse rather than better. It seems we are moving too far away from valuing free expression, and too far in the direction of being perched and ready to take offense. That is the problem I have with much of this. There are things I would find offensive in a game and not buy them over. But there are also a lot of instances where it feels like folks are overreacting. The satanic panic was an overreaction. I feel like we are in another period of over reaction.
I think this is where intentionality comes in, right?
You look at Lucifer, and I don't think the intent is to offend Christians.
However, if you look at South Park their intent is to offend! (As is the intent of a lot of satire.)
So when we look at works like OA, what is the intention? I don't think the original authors were purposefully offensive. However, reducing many varied, historied cultures to a homogenized package to sell to a Western audience that has historically homogenized and stereotyped those cultures is definitely offensive.
So if the intention was not to be offensive, and the result is offensive, then that's a call to action for the publisher.
But if you are not Asian you simply are not qualified to say that. People should not be required to justify their feelings to a more powerful social group.I found some of the critiques were valid, some really, really seemed to be a stretch.
The internet removes the ability of the insulted person to respond by giving the insulter a black eye. The consequence is people no longer exercise the self-censorship we call good manners.
You clearly did not grow up in Liverpool.You didn't used to get a black eye for saying something a person disagreed with or found insulting.
But if you are not Asian you simply are not qualified to say that. People should not be required to justify their feelings to a more powerful social group.
You clearly did not grow up in Liverpool.