Six people were arrested in New York City in protests over the firm’s alleged work building a massive new surveillance apparatus for President Donald Trump
I don’t think that if I blew up your home while you and your loved ones were out that you would consider this to be a peaceful act merely because no one you cared about was physically harmed.
Corporations aren’t people, my esteemed internet peer.
“But people’s livelihoods!” - Sure, but a not-evil company will cover that, right? Especially a multi-million dollar one. Rebuild or relocate.
Those who are resentful cogs forced to labor under them for a paycheck are not the issue.
My hypothetical is singular property damage for a multi-million dollar corp that amounts to pocket change for those who own it and are making sweeping policy changes that infringe on people’s rights in an unprecedented way. This is not a mom-and-pop or singular franchisee targeted for immutable traits.
The analogue to your suggestion would be doxxing those billionaires and blowing up their homes. That’s different.
Who’s arguing for peaceful protest here? And why is the binary of “peaceful/not peaceful” important to you? Are you trying to make the point that protests aren’t valid or effective unless they’re “peaceful?”
Apparently no one here, though I think (possibly incorrectly) that the protestors in the article were intending to be peaceful.
And why is the binary of “peaceful/not peaceful” important to you?
I would ask why it seems to be so important to everyone else, given that there was so much resistance to the idea that blowing up buildings is not “peaceful”.
Are you trying to make the point that protests aren’t valid or effective unless they’re “peaceful?”
It depends on what the goal of a given protest is.
For example, this protest had the goal of interfering with a developer conference in order to disrupt the recruitment of new talent, and it would seem that they were very effective in this because there was evidence that the event was shut down. However, in the long run I am not sure how much this will help because I suspect that the event will just be rescheduled, and I suspect that the people attending the event probably felt intimidated as a result of all the people banging on the windows rather than guilty for attending the event. (Just to be clear, I am not saying that therefore this was wasted time on their part; I am just saying that celebrating might be premature.)
Regardless, if nothing else, the protest succeeded very well in being very visible and unignorable, and I think that there is a lot of value in that. Certainly I would rather that they do this kind of thing than that they be casually blowing up buildings as many here would prefer.
Hmmmm. You smell like a troll trying to muddy the waters by arguing over minutia. You’re writing a lot about something only tangentially related to the topic.
I can understand that, but keep in mind that, from my perspective, my original comment,
I think that you might not get to claim the mantle of peaceful protest when you start blowing things up yourself.
was intended to be perfectly innocuous (if a bit wry). After all, the article was about a largely peaceful protest, and introducing demolition into the mix seems like it would be going against the spirit of that.
Regarding, “only tangentially related to the topic”, I think that you will note that the paragraph I wrote just now analyzing the effect of the protest on the developer conference and the likely effect it had on recruitment in the long term is more than anyone else in this post has said about what actually happened in this particular protest, rather than various fantasies of Palantir’s destruction. I actually would have loved to have more interesting discussion along those lines (because my analysis is not the only valid one!), but there is not much evidence that anyone else here read more than just the title…
What a dumbass take, are you trying to be obtuse? Who would make an argument that exploding anything is peaceful?
I’m saying “peace” is not the ultimate moral value you seem to think it is. Fuck being peaceful towards those who want the very worst for us. There’s no moral high ground in peacefully letting fascists do fascism, actually the morality of the situation points in the exact opposite direction. I’m guessing you don’t actually know very much about Palantir.
Actually I criticized your comparison to blowing up the place a family lives, and I also said your argument is unserious, and I also implied that the way that company behaves and its intentions change the calculations, fundamentally, about the value of peace. But of course you’re not engaging with any of that, just making bad faith takes that deliberately miss the point.
I don’t think that if I blew up your home while you and your loved ones were out that you would consider this to be a peaceful act merely because no one you cared about was physically harmed.
Corporations aren’t people, my esteemed internet peer.
“But people’s livelihoods!” - Sure, but a not-evil company will cover that, right? Especially a multi-million dollar one. Rebuild or relocate.
Those who are resentful cogs forced to labor under them for a paycheck are not the issue.
My hypothetical is singular property damage for a multi-million dollar corp that amounts to pocket change for those who own it and are making sweeping policy changes that infringe on people’s rights in an unprecedented way. This is not a mom-and-pop or singular franchisee targeted for immutable traits.
The analogue to your suggestion would be doxxing those billionaires and blowing up their homes. That’s different.
So property destruction is inherently peaceful as long as the property did not belong to a human being?
Who’s arguing for peaceful protest here? And why is the binary of “peaceful/not peaceful” important to you? Are you trying to make the point that protests aren’t valid or effective unless they’re “peaceful?”
Apparently no one here, though I think (possibly incorrectly) that the protestors in the article were intending to be peaceful.
I would ask why it seems to be so important to everyone else, given that there was so much resistance to the idea that blowing up buildings is not “peaceful”.
It depends on what the goal of a given protest is.
For example, this protest had the goal of interfering with a developer conference in order to disrupt the recruitment of new talent, and it would seem that they were very effective in this because there was evidence that the event was shut down. However, in the long run I am not sure how much this will help because I suspect that the event will just be rescheduled, and I suspect that the people attending the event probably felt intimidated as a result of all the people banging on the windows rather than guilty for attending the event. (Just to be clear, I am not saying that therefore this was wasted time on their part; I am just saying that celebrating might be premature.)
Regardless, if nothing else, the protest succeeded very well in being very visible and unignorable, and I think that there is a lot of value in that. Certainly I would rather that they do this kind of thing than that they be casually blowing up buildings as many here would prefer.
Hmmmm. You smell like a troll trying to muddy the waters by arguing over minutia. You’re writing a lot about something only tangentially related to the topic.
I can understand that, but keep in mind that, from my perspective, my original comment,
was intended to be perfectly innocuous (if a bit wry). After all, the article was about a largely peaceful protest, and introducing demolition into the mix seems like it would be going against the spirit of that.
Regarding, “only tangentially related to the topic”, I think that you will note that the paragraph I wrote just now analyzing the effect of the protest on the developer conference and the likely effect it had on recruitment in the long term is more than anyone else in this post has said about what actually happened in this particular protest, rather than various fantasies of Palantir’s destruction. I actually would have loved to have more interesting discussion along those lines (because my analysis is not the only valid one!), but there is not much evidence that anyone else here read more than just the title…
Nothing Palantir does has peace in mind. And they for damn sure aren’t someone’s home. Get a grip.
So, just to be clear, you are claiming that blowing up Palantir would be an inherently peaceful act?
What a dumbass take, are you trying to be obtuse? Who would make an argument that exploding anything is peaceful?
I’m saying “peace” is not the ultimate moral value you seem to think it is. Fuck being peaceful towards those who want the very worst for us. There’s no moral high ground in peacefully letting fascists do fascism, actually the morality of the situation points in the exact opposite direction. I’m guessing you don’t actually know very much about Palantir.
You, by posting a comment disagreeing with my original comment pointing out demolition crosses the line into not being peaceful.
For your own sake, I strongly recommend forgetting about this thread
I genuinely appreciate your concern, but you do not have to worry about me. 😀
Actually I criticized your comparison to blowing up the place a family lives, and I also said your argument is unserious, and I also implied that the way that company behaves and its intentions change the calculations, fundamentally, about the value of peace. But of course you’re not engaging with any of that, just making bad faith takes that deliberately miss the point.
Later dork.
I mean, if you are not going to engage with the things I actually said, then there is only so much I can in response. 😃
Enjoy your “later dork” Parthian shot.
This is hilarious. Are we sure this isn’t a bit?
Sorry, I am confused by what “Are we sure this isn’t a bit?” is supposed to mean.