Just responding to your irrationality in kind. Don't write nasty jabs at me, if you don't expect to take it in return.Exi5tentialist wrote:I object to being called "dimwitted" as I do not think it shows rational approach to discussion. You are welcome to continue but frankly your posts for the time being will receive a low priority from me.Coito ergo sum wrote:You're very dimwitted, it seems, since you have extreme difficulty comprehending basic English and simple concepts, and you continually invent things. I talked of escorting people out. I didn't advocate violence.
You could always ask me whether I mean what you think I mean. I can tell you this: I am very explicit in setting forth what I mean, and I pick my words carefully. In serious discussions, I say what I mean.Exi5tentialist wrote:Just because you don't state something explicitly is no reason not to infer your meaning.Coito ergo sum wrote:Whatever. Your first step should be to take your own advice and stop turning my argument into something I didn't write. If we start there, then maybe we'd get somewhere.
Your allegation against me was that I advocated violence in the first instance. I did not. Asking hecklers to leave or escorting them out is not violence.Exi5tentialist wrote: For example, you repeatedly talk about the correctness of hecklers being "escorted" from the meeting. Correct me if I'm wrong, but if hecklers refuse to be "escorted" voluntarily then it is a reasonable inference that you would support the position that they be "escorted" forcefully (i.e. violently).
And, no I generally don't advocate violence as a means to escort a refusing heckler out. I advocate notifying him that he is required to leave, and upon refusal, summon the authorities. If the heckler is lawfully being asked to leave, then the police will escort him out.
See? Perhaps you should "ask" instead of "infer."
I have corrected you. You are now and always were wrong.Exi5tentialist wrote:
You didn't write that, of course, and you are free to correct me if I have misinterpreted you.
You are free to do anything you want. However, drawing an unwarranted inference is rude, and it usually creates a straw man fallacy. You do it all the time. You make one of your "inferences" and then you argue against your inference. In a discussion or debate, I'm entitled to make my own argument, and it is fallacious reasoning on your part to infer something else and then argue against that. That's sophistry.Exi5tentialist wrote: However, I am also free to draw the inference,
Your inferences are self-serving, purposeful diversions, evasions, and spurious chicanery.Exi5tentialist wrote: and I have done so on the basis of an intelligent assessment of your opinions generally. Therefore no, I will not "stop" drawing inferences from your views, if that's what you mean.
I don't know. You seem to acknowledge that removal of the heckler is on the table. You just don't think it's appropriate based on one word shouted out. I tend to agree, but then again, it is up to the property owner or the people organizing an event. If a person shouted out one thing, I would first tell the person to quiet down and allow the audience to hear the speech or presentation they came to hear. If, however, Obama is speaking at the Kiwanis Club, and some group of folks continually shouts out blurbs and insults, and they won't quiet down when asked, then I'd ask them to leave. If they wouldn't leave, I'd call the police and have them removed.Exi5tentialist wrote:
Finally, I think it is fair to say we differ about the appropriate response to heckling in political meetings.
I've not done that once, let alone repeatedly. Link to the post where I did that, please, or withdraw your scurrilous allegation.Exi5tentialist wrote:
I have noted your repeated attempts to portray my position as being the same as yours.
That depends where they're located, and I don't favor stopping them in their tracks. I've said only that the people organizing the events and property owners have the right to control what goes on at their events to the same extent that the local theater putting on a play can throw out hecklers who are ruining the show for everyone.Exi5tentialist wrote:
It isn't, it's different - I value the freedom to heckle in meetings like the Labour Conference and Fundraising Events, you want to stop it in its tracks,
Absolutely I don't value students wasting time on religion in state schools. That would be ridiculous.Exi5tentialist wrote: I value giving students the opportunity to hear diverse religious views at school, you don't. That is a difference of substance.