FraserRonald said:
Saying that our statements were “stupid” or “ignorant” makes me believe that a certain amount of offense was taken, as well as being offensive in and of themselves. I have difficulty with criticism couched in those terms, hence my initial reply. But I think I understand better to what you are referring, so I'd like to address this.
[nit]I did caveat that with "for myself, that portion of the podcast struck me as"[/nit]
And no. I actually wasn't offended, but simply wanted to call attention to the way it came across
to me. And I'm glad you understand better where I'm coming from. As a pagan, however, it's in my mind how these things come across. In real life, I have to deal with people thinking that adherents of my religion are neo-Nazis because of the symbolism used by the Nazis, thus it is usually in my mind, and it's a near-constant battle. I only want you to realize where I'm coming from. I'm honestly not offended, but I'd rather err on the side of combatting ignorance than spreading it. I discussed this very subject with another author I edit for, while editing his product. I didn't consider it a "huge uproar" then, and nor do I now. And honestly, including any demographic in your game is your prerogative. Gods know I've done things in game that would be pretty controversial in a conversation or public broadcast, and thus I'm not in any way confused as to the separation between gaming and reality. The only real point there is when you put your words out for public dissemination, someone is likely to either take offense, or call you to task on something. There's quite simply no pleasing everyone.
You didn't mishear anything. We were after all, discussing a movie that had a clan of neo-pagans threatening innocents. Were we discussing “Kingdom of Heaven,” I might have said the same thing about Christians, and I likely would have used a similar statement: “Well what about the theme of a community of Christians threatening good honest folk? Would you put that in your campaign?” And I would imagine the answer would have been pretty much the same, based on the approach of the movie.
Which would also irritate, honestly.
I think there's one word that could make the whole thing correct.
"Extremist"
Believe it or not, my goal is not being a jerk or anything like that. It's more to educate on how easy it is to mean one thing and say something completely different. I've been on both sides of that problem, myself. I would be quite hesitant to talk about a community of people threatening good honest folk, unless they were definitely bad guys in toto. KKK, Black Panthers, Aztlan, Stormfront, Al-Qaeda, etc... for real world types. I wouldn't hesitate to discuss extremists of any group because there's no question that you're talking about the lunatic fringe, but when the contrasting antagonist/protagonist demographics are neo-Pagans and good honest folk.... well... I honestly hope you can see the problem from my perspective.
It might be a pet peeve of yours, but terms like “incredibly stupid, or at the very least stereotypically ignorant” aren't going to help foster dispassionate discussion.
Perhaps not, but they do let you know exactly how I feel about it.
Part of the problem is that the term “pagan” is very non-specific, I would say generic. I didn't say “Well what about the theme of a community of Wiccans threatening good honest folk?” or “What about the theme of a community of Taara Religionists threatening good honest folk?” or “What about the theme of a community of Unitarian Universalists threatening good honest folk?”
Certainly. But, as I said, I also wouldn't contrast Christians with good honest folk, or Jews with good honest folk, or Muslims with good honest folk. That contrast is what furthers the ignorant stereotype. Most adherents of all those religions ARE good honest folk. It's the extremists that are the problem. Honestly, as you're a Christian, would you want folks thinking of all Christians as book burning, bible thumping, snake handling, clinic bombing extremists who cause all those around them a great deal of discomfort by their very presence? As Paganism of any stripe is only just coming back out of the shadows, relatively speaking, we (Pagans) need to nip the negative stereotypes in the bud whenever we encounter them.
The term pagan simply means a non-Abrahamic religion (meaning not following the shared traditions of the Jews, Christians, and Muslims), and therefore does include the Sikhs (as well as Hindus and, technically, even Buddhists!). So rather than relating neo-pagan to Islam, it would be closer to saying “monotheists.” That's why I wasn't particularly careful about its use (other than trying to point to a less than serious approach by including the term “good honest folk,” which I didn't think anyone could take seriously).
Enh... I could go into the definition(s) of Paganism but as a modern interpretation, I'll take it as you've put it. Though, really, in the modern sense, a Pagan is a polytheist, normally which would exclude most Buddhists and Sikhs that I've known. But that's a whole other discussion. As for the "good honest folk" portion, it's that very contrast that is the real root of my problem with the whole thing.
Would I use a similar statement if we were talking about “the Siege?” Yeah, I likely would, but I think our approach would have been more careful. But if I had said “What about the theme of a community of monotheists threatening good honest folk?” I don't think we would have felt restrained in any way.
Why more careful if you were talking about "The Siege"?
As a Christian, I am part of a demographic that is regularly ridiculed or stereotyped in the media. But, see, Christian is a pretty wide term. While possibly numerically superior in adherents, Christianity as a term does not cover the wide variety and disparate practices that the term Pagan does. Still, if someone in their game podcast mentioned the theme of a group of apocalyptic Christian survivalists threatening good honest folk, I can't say that I would be offended. While the podcasters might be pushing a stereotype of weird or scary fringe Christians, I think that could make a viable game.
Ah. But there's the rub. There's a difference between:
"A community of Christians threatening good honest folk."
And:
"A community of apocalyptic Christian survivalists threatening good honest folk."
I'm certain you can see it.
One denotes your average everyday Christian and the other denotes the lunatic fringe.
Really.. if you'd said, "Well, what about the theme of a community of separatist neo-Pagan survivalists...." or "... extremist neo-Pagan separatists..." or any of a number of other caveats... there would have been no question in anyone's mind.
I certainly hope words have an impact. I'm a writer after all. Still, I don't believe our discussion of using generic neo-Pagans matches the utterances to which you refer.
Only because Pagans are not a politically vocal force, and the podcast wasn't broadcast or discussed in the kind of circulation that the other folks' were.
Basically, any discussion of any villain is going to impact on some individuals.
Now you've gotten my point. To a point.
Any discussion of any villain based on real world average folks is going to have an impact on some individuals. Neat thing about discussing the lunatic fringe of any group, though, is that few people (if any) in those groups consider themselves the lunatic fringe.
I guess it boils down to you believe that any mention of bad pagans furthers discrimination against all religions that might be considered under that term, and I believe that using umbrella terms like pagan, monotheistic, or even totalitarian doesn't increase the discrimination against religions or individuals that might or might not be considered by some to be covered by those terms. I would add that I would hope our audience is smart enough to make the differentiation between evil pagans in games and normal followers of those religions that would be covered by the term pagan.
I don't consider any mention of bad pagans to be discrimination by any stretch of the imagination. I do consider contrasting neo-Pagans to good honest folk to be a marginalization of good honest Pagans (and not the lunatic fringe... they deserve all the bad press they bring upon themselves).
Finally, I would say that if there is any group on the face of the planet outside of adherents of paganism that would not fall into stereotyping paganism, it would be gamers. I've actually only met individuals who have self-identified as pagans through gaming.
While I have not a single doubt that's true, I know many Pagans who wouldn't knowingly be caught dead in the same room as a gaming book because of the negative stereotype, but then, I'm active in that community and thus my experience with them covers a very broad spectrum ranging from the average good honest Pagan, to the lunatic neo-Nazi, to the lunatic eco-Nazi, from the ultra-conservative to the ultra-liberal and all shades between.