chinup
Bluelighter
i mean ones that are not sacrificed in the face of extreme hardship.
they do exist, cos i'll give some examples:
i left a job at no notice, with nothing to go to, when asked to behave unethically
many people i know are sharing their homes with ukranian refugees indefinitely
JK Rowling defending her beliefs in the fact of death and rape threats to her and her family, both online and by people coming to her house
even working your fucking ass off to get a decent job seems alien to people these days. at uni when i wasn't profoundly mentally ill, i was working at least 8 hours a day in the week, 4-5 on the weekend (barring the odd heavy one). i know there is a privilege element to this but i see young people who want similar jobs to me who baulk at the idea of putting that much work in, through undergrad and postgrad, then even longer hours at the start of my career. unless they're excetionally bright (which only goes so far) or buck up quick, they've failed before they're even half way through studies.
last time i posted on here it was made very clar by the person replying that they didn't understand why having a strongly held value was worthy of respect. that example was about a guy who'd be a millionaire at the age of 30 if he wasn't so committed to free speech and keeping the internet a place where all views can be shared. he accepts the negative corollaries of free speech, that a lot of people want to say nasty things (he draws the line at breaking the law).
people who've thought their positions through and hold them strongly understand that there will be some nasty conosequences and accept those as better than the alternative. there isn't a perfect belief system, all have bad consequences, so its lazy to go after those imo, more importantly is whether people's actions back up their beliefs.
i dunno, i just feel like in most places online, morality and ethics has devolved to performative wishy washy nonsense delivered in social media friendly soundbites for and by people who'se attention span doesn't go much further than a tweet or a tiktok. maybe i'm just getting fucking old.
there's a lot of old fuckers in EADD so just wondering if your guys perception is the same or if you can help me figure out where i'm going wrong?
they do exist, cos i'll give some examples:
i left a job at no notice, with nothing to go to, when asked to behave unethically
many people i know are sharing their homes with ukranian refugees indefinitely
JK Rowling defending her beliefs in the fact of death and rape threats to her and her family, both online and by people coming to her house
even working your fucking ass off to get a decent job seems alien to people these days. at uni when i wasn't profoundly mentally ill, i was working at least 8 hours a day in the week, 4-5 on the weekend (barring the odd heavy one). i know there is a privilege element to this but i see young people who want similar jobs to me who baulk at the idea of putting that much work in, through undergrad and postgrad, then even longer hours at the start of my career. unless they're excetionally bright (which only goes so far) or buck up quick, they've failed before they're even half way through studies.
last time i posted on here it was made very clar by the person replying that they didn't understand why having a strongly held value was worthy of respect. that example was about a guy who'd be a millionaire at the age of 30 if he wasn't so committed to free speech and keeping the internet a place where all views can be shared. he accepts the negative corollaries of free speech, that a lot of people want to say nasty things (he draws the line at breaking the law).
people who've thought their positions through and hold them strongly understand that there will be some nasty conosequences and accept those as better than the alternative. there isn't a perfect belief system, all have bad consequences, so its lazy to go after those imo, more importantly is whether people's actions back up their beliefs.
i dunno, i just feel like in most places online, morality and ethics has devolved to performative wishy washy nonsense delivered in social media friendly soundbites for and by people who'se attention span doesn't go much further than a tweet or a tiktok. maybe i'm just getting fucking old.
there's a lot of old fuckers in EADD so just wondering if your guys perception is the same or if you can help me figure out where i'm going wrong?
