"Do you think I don't see things that annoy me? That I don't feel insulted now and then?
But one develops a shield to deal with these things, thats what you do in a free society, because you are inevitably confronted with things you don't like.
The religious are especially bad at this, because they tend to believe they have a monopoly on the truth."
- Hans Teeuwen (comedian)
I've noticed that there is a trend of individuals being unable to distinguish between someone taking offense as a rightful response to someones blatant intention to slander, defame and discriminate, and someone taking offense as a result of his own inability to shield his weak self against opinions that don't match his own.
I say this practice promotes a culture of weakness, where people are motivated to victimize themselves instead of maturely approaching topics where opinions greatly diverge.
Although the quote names religious characters in particular, (because that happened to be the context), I think it can be applied to almost any topic where opinions are held in a comparably passionate fashion. Modern day radical feminism comes to mind, where offense gets circulated like a holy grail of moral high ground. Like a privilege, that entitles the person that got offended to propagate his/her own values without resistance from anyone.
But our society needs the opposite of that, for protecting this mindset is equal to creating an alleyway for stagnation and regression. If open conversation between directly antithetical camps is not possible, conflict ensues. A culture of offense is putting a stop to conversation and invites people to be childish instead of making up their minds to understand different viewpoints.
Discuss, give your own experiences etc.
But one develops a shield to deal with these things, thats what you do in a free society, because you are inevitably confronted with things you don't like.
The religious are especially bad at this, because they tend to believe they have a monopoly on the truth."
- Hans Teeuwen (comedian)
I've noticed that there is a trend of individuals being unable to distinguish between someone taking offense as a rightful response to someones blatant intention to slander, defame and discriminate, and someone taking offense as a result of his own inability to shield his weak self against opinions that don't match his own.
I say this practice promotes a culture of weakness, where people are motivated to victimize themselves instead of maturely approaching topics where opinions greatly diverge.
Although the quote names religious characters in particular, (because that happened to be the context), I think it can be applied to almost any topic where opinions are held in a comparably passionate fashion. Modern day radical feminism comes to mind, where offense gets circulated like a holy grail of moral high ground. Like a privilege, that entitles the person that got offended to propagate his/her own values without resistance from anyone.
But our society needs the opposite of that, for protecting this mindset is equal to creating an alleyway for stagnation and regression. If open conversation between directly antithetical camps is not possible, conflict ensues. A culture of offense is putting a stop to conversation and invites people to be childish instead of making up their minds to understand different viewpoints.
Discuss, give your own experiences etc.