HKA wrote:KGS is saying "screw people who want to impose their choices in language over others, I will decide what language is respectable. (and those who are cussing in my ear about it aren't)"
At worst, what you are complaining about is that KGS chooses to treat you as you would treat others.
Apparently I didn't manage to explain my position even by repetition. I'll try one more time and if it doesn't work I think I'll be over with the topic.
What I am trying to explain is: "I don't mind about the decision, I mind about the reasons for it."
In your example, "(and those who are cussing in my ear about it aren't)" you don't even care to explain why. It's must just not be a part of the process for you. You think everyone decides whether something is respectable or not by pure will, without a reasoning behind the decision.
I am trying to tell you that is not the truth. Many people take decisions by reasoning them. And for us, the reasons are important.
If KGS decided to kick me because of my language I couldn't know whether I agree with that decision or not unless they told me the reasons for it. And if the reason is "those who are cussing in my ear about it aren't respectable", which is no reason but a mere statement, I would not agree.
Even if you don't agree with me, and I think you won't because we disagree even in the most basic way of deciding whether we agree with something or not, I would like to know if you understand my position.
speedchase wrote:If you only care about other people's feelings when you agree with them, then you really don't care about other people's feelings.
I invite you yo go read what a
"no true Scotsman fallacy" is.
speedchase wrote:I see no distinction between always ignoring someone's opinon's, and ignoring them whenever you disagree with them.
Ok. I agree with that statement.
speedchase wrote:The only substantive difference is how often you happen to agree with them, which is completely irrelevant for the purpose of this discussion.
I agree with that, but there is one more difference. It's not the "how often" it's the "why".
Why do I agree with some and not with all? What criteria did I apply? Are my criteria coherent? Are my criteria defined and comprehensible? Did I apply my criteria correctly?
The reasons to agree with someone are much more important than the act of agreeing. Those reasons are what define me. Without reasons for agreeing or not, I may as well be a coin, that respects others' feelings or not based on a random toss.
Therefore, as you correctly return to a higher point of view to contemplate the purpose of this discussion, what I'm trying to convey is "Do not argue about whether language offends, argue about the legitimacy of the reasons it does."