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posted by n1 on Sunday April 13 2014, @06:12PM   Printer-friendly
from the anyone-who-disagrees-will-be-shot dept.

It has been a little while now that this fledgling community has been around and it remains one of my favorite stories about communities. A splinter of a much larger community took it upon themselves to challenge the rest and make a move to a new home. Shedding the shackles that were being placed on them was a bold move, but one that has been fantastic.

The community here is great, but here is my question. Overall, we are amazingly tolerant of others, of the choices they make, and of their beliefs. I would then be curious, if we are such a tolerant group, how do we address intolerance in our ranks? I recently came across what I can only say filled me with pity and sadness. I find it saddening that in this day and age, and especially in this group, there are still such hate-filled people.

But this poses a question: how does a group that is tolerant deal with intolerance within it's ranks? Does our acceptance of others extend to accepting someone that has thoughts and beliefs which are far from the norm within this community, or is there a limit placed on how far from our own values a member of the community may be?

 
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  • (Score: 2, Interesting) by q.kontinuum on Monday April 14 2014, @04:59AM

    by q.kontinuum (532) on Monday April 14 2014, @04:59AM (#31155) Journal

    Generally speaking, first and foremost do not call attention to such things. They thrive on attention, and the more they get - positive or negative - is actually reinforcement.

    That's trolls you are thinking about, not racist haters. The typical racist hater thinks his opinion is what everybody thinks secretly and is just shy to say in public. They will see silence as silent agreement. Also, the object of their hatred deserves the feeling that someone speaks up for them. Hate-speech is not only between speaker and audience.

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    Registered IRC nick on chat.soylentnews.org: qkontinuum
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