This guy named Ben Palmer made an "Immigration tip line" and people call it thinking he's ICE.
-
IDK he didn't tell us who she was or put her address up there. That would be kind of irresponsible since people are mad.
That leaves anyone mad about this to try to think about if they know someone like her.
And to maybe reflect on if they might have done anything similar ever.
@futurebird It can do that. It is interesting to see something like this. And know what is out there.
But I worry it can "confirm" the bias that -some- leftists have that conservatives are heartless monsters, end of story.
-
This guy named Ben Palmer made an "Immigration tip line" and people call it thinking he's ICE.
He records them and shares it with the world.
What do people sound like when reporting their neighbors, coworkers, students? Are they confident they are doing a righteous good thing?
Witness the banality of evil in these sheepish suburban voices.
@futurebird "Der größte Lump im ganzen Land,
das ist und bleibt der Denunziant." -
@futurebird It can do that. It is interesting to see something like this. And know what is out there.
But I worry it can "confirm" the bias that -some- leftists have that conservatives are heartless monsters, end of story.
@Scofisticated @futurebird racists *are* heartless monsters towards the people they are racist against. That’s how in-group vs out-group works (and why ethnic cleansing is always preceded by an uptick in dehumanizing language). Empathy only extends to the in-group, and they are probably kind enough to not be a monster. Perhaps we can hope that in-group can be expanded, but in my experience people tend to cling tightly to whatever in-group they were brought up in, unless they are neurodivergent.
-
@Scofisticated @futurebird racists *are* heartless monsters towards the people they are racist against. That’s how in-group vs out-group works (and why ethnic cleansing is always preceded by an uptick in dehumanizing language). Empathy only extends to the in-group, and they are probably kind enough to not be a monster. Perhaps we can hope that in-group can be expanded, but in my experience people tend to cling tightly to whatever in-group they were brought up in, unless they are neurodivergent.
@Frantasaur @futurebird I believe saying people are heartless is also dehumanizing. Whether or not they will change is another matter. But, assuming they cant is robbing them of the possibility and opportunity.
-
@Frantasaur @futurebird I believe saying people are heartless is also dehumanizing. Whether or not they will change is another matter. But, assuming they cant is robbing them of the possibility and opportunity.
@Scofisticated @futurebird I don’t believe making an observation about how people act towards others is dehumanizing. I would prefer to center the victims of racism, not tiptoe around being careful how to label people who are demonstrably and consistently cruel to some of their fellow human beings for no reason other than they look or sound different. These people will only change if they are censured by their in-group for such behavior, and I can’t do that by pussyfooting around this.
-
@futurebird It can do that. It is interesting to see something like this. And know what is out there.
But I worry it can "confirm" the bias that -some- leftists have that conservatives are heartless monsters, end of story.
-
@edgeofeurope @futurebird Actually the people who ran the Nazi camps were not ordinary people, they were hardcore followers. And they didn't just obeyed "superior orders", they made the decisions they rightfully assumed were required the whole nazi project. Not to say ordinary people played no part, of course. But what Arendt called "banality of evil" is quite misleading.
@ratel @edgeofeurope @futurebird
I loved my grandfather. Some years ago, he was long dead, I asked my mother 'mum, please tell me what grandfather did in WW2, I won't judge him'.
Her answer was 'don't promise that so quickly'.He had served in the SS in a special unit hunting partisans. He later said that he was no nazi (except some 'regular' patriotic feelings and a sense of 'duty for the Volk'). When he got drafted and was anyway enlisted, he heard that in the SS they received better food and a bottle of Schnaps every week. This was sufficient as a motivation.
'Hunting partisans'. That was not the death camps, but if you don'tknow how SS treated civilians suspected of supporting partisans, look it up.I am telling this here because from what I remember, he was a very normal man. No monster (of course, we rely on his narrative to know what he did and what not).
For him, 'He did just his job', which had some unpleasant parts, I guess.Also, what is happening in fascism is that there are sufficiently ordinary people 'just going on and doing their job' to make possible that some other ordinary people that need the money and stability to join ranks with obvious sadists and work as an institution like ICE.
The dude that pulls the trigger is just one piece of the machine. There is a whole army of enablers behind who would not enjoy being fascist murderers, but put a lot of unconscious effort in not thinking very much about their role in making it happen. -
@Scofisticated @futurebird I don’t believe making an observation about how people act towards others is dehumanizing. I would prefer to center the victims of racism, not tiptoe around being careful how to label people who are demonstrably and consistently cruel to some of their fellow human beings for no reason other than they look or sound different. These people will only change if they are censured by their in-group for such behavior, and I can’t do that by pussyfooting around this.
I definitly agree that the victims are the first priority. And agree that criticism of bigottry is important. Even sometimes calling out. But there is a difference between critism, call out, and dehumanization.
I want the victim saved from racism, but I also want the perpatrator saved from it to. As much as possible. That's where I stand on it.
-
@futurebird @richpuchalsky that jumped out at me too; like, on what form did the school ask for country of birth of the parents of students?!?
-
This guy named Ben Palmer made an "Immigration tip line" and people call it thinking he's ICE.
He records them and shares it with the world.
What do people sound like when reporting their neighbors, coworkers, students? Are they confident they are doing a righteous good thing?
Witness the banality of evil in these sheepish suburban voices.
@futurebird First, downoad the clips before they are taken down.
Then, somebody keep checking on Ben Palmer every once a while, so he is not disappeared.
Finally, bring him here!Having said that, start preparing for denazification of the US society. It will not be soon, it will not be nice, but there is no future for the US without the deep purge.
-
This guy named Ben Palmer made an "Immigration tip line" and people call it thinking he's ICE.
He records them and shares it with the world.
What do people sound like when reporting their neighbors, coworkers, students? Are they confident they are doing a righteous good thing?
Witness the banality of evil in these sheepish suburban voices.
@futurebird There is a playlist I made on peertube.
Let me know of any his new videos and I will add them. -
This guy named Ben Palmer made an "Immigration tip line" and people call it thinking he's ICE.
He records them and shares it with the world.
What do people sound like when reporting their neighbors, coworkers, students? Are they confident they are doing a righteous good thing?
Witness the banality of evil in these sheepish suburban voices.
"You make it sound terrible..."
When people act like rassist assholes but don' t like to be seen as what they are.
I hope that woman is hit bei Kharma hard.
What a despicable human.
-
@futurebird The Florida neighbor one is the worst. He gives her so many opportunities to not be horrid and she refuses *all of them*.
"They are using electricity"
-
"They are using electricity"
Because that's what humans do.
-
@futurebird does anyone still wonder, how the 3rd Reich was possible? With people, doing the righteous, lawful thing? With millions and millions of murder victims. Ending in a bloody global war, WWII.
Exactly. Just because your grandparents weren't tried for war crimes, doesn't mean they weren't Nazis.