Über wrote:Well I be damned...Not only am I glad to see you HL65 (Holy Shit!), we may actually be about to have a discussion. One more person (I'm talking especially to Buffmaster :p) and we'll have a party...Seriously, glad to see you HL65, long absences worry me...Hope all has been well..! I missed you man...
Good to be here! Real life has been busy. My last job had us jumping through hoops to move to Utah and then laid me off just before the move. It's all good though. I got a better job that pays more than the bonus I would have gotten to move, and I get to work from home. .......Enough about me though.
Über wrote:For the sake of argument, HL65, and I mean this in a purely hypothetical situation...Would you feel the same way if I said, "I like going to the public pool and watching little white girls asses in their swimsuits?" If I were anyone, let alone an elected official...
I would not feel any different. I don't have to like what you say or your opinions. I also have the right to not be your friend, not support you by buying your products (or sponsored products), not elect you to an office, and I can voice my opinions against you. WITHOUT fear of going to jail or being put into financial ruin.
Über wrote:Why do you feel it's wrong to punish people in a public way for an opinion? Shouldn't we as a society have some sort of social boundaries? Do we want kids growing up thinking they can say what they want, just because it's their opinion and it's not breaking any laws? Should I just be allowed to say, "My goodness, you have amazingly huge buck teeth," point and laugh and not have someone say, "Hey man, that's not cool," etc?
Our constitution gives us the right to have unpopular opinions. It also gives us the right to say, "Hey man, that's not cool." The problem here is that the media isn't just reporting what is happening, they are leading the public to take actions that provide more media to report for their own benefit. If you said, "That African American gentleman was quite unpleasant." but the media reported that they had a source who overheard, from a distance, you saying, "That N....... is an asshole like the rest of them." Their version will get more air time than your rebuttal of what was really said. And, if that incorrect negative publicity lost you your income and future prospects of income, where would you stand on this issue then?
I know! That is not what happened here this guy admitted to saying what he did, however, that distinction does not change the fact we are a nation of laws. If we allow mob rule instead of rule by laws, we are all doomed. If this guy did not break any laws, and he did not break any conditions of his employment contract (which he may have done) then he can't be punished by being forced to resign.
I want my children to be able to voice their opinions, but I try to make them understand that there are boundaries to HOW they express them. Social media is a great outlet for the individual to have unpopular opinions. You'll get comments and dislikes and other things, and some people thrive on that kind of attention. What I have tried to teach my children is that they should write, post, and speak in a way that expresses their personality in a way they want the world to see them.
At one point I posted on my own FB, "Why do all my children's posts make me want to beat them with the keyboard?" So, you see my lessons don't always sink in.
Note: He is not a police officer that can arrest people, he is a police commissioner elected to a desk job to push paper. He is a decision maker in the county, but only for 'do we buy more copy paper or save for a new patrol car'.