11/25/2009 2:22:07 PM
The university is not a private business. They use state funds which come out of your (well, if you live in Mississippi) pocket. They should not be allowed to censor people. If it was a private university, then HORAY! You can do whatever the fuck you want!Oh, and I happen to believe that the free market isn't the solution to every problem, especially when the "problem" is people saying things more than 50% of people don't like.[Edited on November 25, 2009 at 2:27 PM. Reason : .]
11/25/2009 2:26:16 PM
I don't give a shit if it's public, they are accepting private funds and allowed to do so. You know as well as everyone else they wouldn't be able to operate their state funded school and athletics as well without the private donations.Look at it this way: They have X money from taxes. This allows them to do A and B, which is, let's say, run their school and have a football team. Now their donor gives them Y, which allows them to do C and D, which, for the sake of argument, is better football facilities which allow them to get better recruits and to have a volleyball program.You are saying they should not listen to the guy giving the extra money and then not be able to use that money to help better their school, because it's not their rightful choice?[Edited on November 25, 2009 at 2:32 PM. Reason : as well]
11/25/2009 2:31:44 PM
I'm saying facilities funded by public monies should abide by the Constitution of the United States, regardless of how many PC fucktards are donating millions of dollars to them.Let's say that instead of making racist comments, a donor to the University is a staunch Christian and abhors the fact that people get abortions. He decides that he'll pull his money if they don't suppress any anti-abortion chants.Would that be a perfect system? The assholes with the most money have the say how we live our lives?
11/25/2009 2:39:46 PM
Maybe I missed where this was a legal issue. Have they said students will be thrown out of games for chanting?Regarding your example it would depend on how they are suppressing the chant. If they chose to say the band that we fund isn't going to play the song anymore, than I have no problem with it. I may not like it, but it's their right to not support that chant. Who says they have to play a certain song?
11/25/2009 2:48:54 PM
I enjoy the fact that it's a general consensus that our inalienable rights should only be applied and defended in court. But I digress.In the current situation at Ole Miss, no they are not actually being suppressed, because thankfully they probably know they couldn't get away with telling the students they're not allowed to chant. They are using underhanded tactics to make the students conform.The issue doesn't really have anything to do with the song, it's the chant. No, I don't have a problem with the University assigning the song curricula for their band. It's lame that they're using that as an excuse to stifle racist comments, because (and not to sound like a broken record) they're at a public university and they should be able to make racist chants, despite the limp dick donors' sensibilities.
11/25/2009 2:57:09 PM
It may be underhanded but how does that make it wrong? If you're arguing that they shouldn't have stopped playing the song, even though they want to, isn't that arguing that they are required to play the song? How is that right?And if that's what you're arguing, which you have to be as long as you're arguing they shouldn't have discontinued it, than applying that to your previous example you would also argue that if they had a song which prompted people to chant, "Abortions are glorious", they should be forced to continue playing that song.
11/25/2009 3:05:28 PM
I'm not saying they should be forced to play the stupid song. I'm saying that they should not be forced to change their song lineup because someone got offended. I'm saying that "I'm offended" is not a good enough reason for anyone (panties in a bunch student or panties in a bunch million dollar donor) to make anyone else do anything differently.And since people seem to be hung up on the legality of it, "make" doesn't necessarily mean force via government intervention or police. The university spending any time reacting to "I'm offended" is the joke.
11/25/2009 3:18:12 PM
11/25/2009 3:19:06 PM
OK, let's look at it another way then.You are the chancellor of the school. You feel that the chant that goes along with the song is in bad taste, offensive, and does nothing to help the school image. You also have faculty, students, and donors complaining about the very same thing you do not appreciate.What do you do about it?
11/25/2009 3:20:48 PM
^^That is all well and good, I totally agree with the everything quoted from that editorial. It is up to the students doing the chanting to change, not everyone else to force them to change.^I explain the situation to the people doing the chanting. I inform them of the effect their chant is having on other people. I leave it up to them to change. I do not allow my university to become a bastion for pc thoughtpolice. I probably am fired and replaced with a spineless chancelor that will bow to the donors in the name of bringing in money and go back to posting on TWW.
11/25/2009 3:24:57 PM
Sometimes people don't change, like in this situation. The problem was explained to the students and it didn't change.Integration was explained to George Wallace, but some people just don't get it and don't care, so you have to take other measures.**Please note here I am not likening this situation to integration, because I know someone will try and jump on this...it is just an analogy in which everyone should agree that action beyond explanation was necessary**I see no infringing on freedom of speech whatsoever to make it clear to the outside world that your school does not support the chant, and the best way to show this is to stop playing the song that allows the chant to be heard.
11/25/2009 3:32:18 PM
Yeah, but honestly it's not the university or anyone else's responsibility to make them change and asshole donors shouldn't be threatening to take their funding from a university because an admitted minority of its students are racist.It's a fundamental freedom of speech issue. If everyone, including the donors, respected freedom of speech more than freedom of not being offended, then there wouldn't be a problem. Hell, if the "south shall rise again" fucktards got no response from anyone, they'd probably go away on their own.
11/25/2009 3:37:25 PM
You act like in order to support freedom of speech you aren't allowed to be offended by anything.If I have a son who goes outside and screams "I hate niggers" I'll do my best to make him understand he shouldn't be saying that, but I'll still fight like hell to make sure he can't be arrested or thrown out of a public place for saying it.A press release and continuing the song is not enough. I can hang a flag outside my door with a picture of a black person in a noose with a note under it saying, "I am not racist, this is just a tradition" and I should still be held accountable for it.Other than the press release that they had SUGGESTING that the students stop the chant, the school has done nothing to make anyone think that students aren't ALLOWED to chant. They have only taken steps to make it understood that SUGGEST the students stop. There has been no line crossed where any freedom of speech has been taken away.
11/25/2009 3:48:18 PM
11/25/2009 4:04:43 PM
Guess we're going to have to agree to disagree then. I think you should be allowed to
11/25/2009 4:05:58 PM
stop chanting or we'll stop playing a song isn't exactly the threat heard round the world.I would liken that to me telling my son stop saying something or I stop giving you candy.It's a massive reach to claim this is infringing on someone's right to free speech.
11/25/2009 4:13:12 PM
It's not directly an infringement of their freedom, yet.However, if the University, the offended students, alumni, and the donors gave a shit about the concept of freedom of speech, then they wouldn't take the time to try to convince someone to stop chanting racist bullshit. Just because you aren't getting the police to stop them doesn't mean you aren't trying to stop them.Your analogy to your son is apt, but the University/other students/alumni/donors is not the students' father and is not responsible for the shit that comes out of their mouths.
11/25/2009 4:34:49 PM
the only thing more annoying than jesse jackson and al sharpton are the idiots who constantly bring up jesse jackson and al sharpton.quit using these two examples to rationalize your bigotry.how anyone can find any type of controversy or issue with this movement by the student body, donors, and prominent alum and faculty is beyond me. the entire argument people are using to defend this hinges on the notion of free speech, which is not an issue because there is no legislative body trying to curb the behavior. it's as grass roots as you could possibly get.the chant is nothing more than social litter. people are trying to clean it up. if you lived in a neighborhood where everyone else kept their homes clean and in good shape, and a few idiots constantly left trash and burning crosses on their lawn, the rest of the community would be within their right to voice their opposition to the behavior, and it would even be likely that they could alter their actions in order to curb the unwanted behavior. so what's the controversy?and seriously. what do these guys mean when they say, "the south shall rise again?" i would like to hear just one person defend the statement and give a definition that the university, students, and alumni and faculty could be proud of.[Edited on November 25, 2009 at 5:33 PM. Reason : ]
11/25/2009 5:23:28 PM
11/25/2009 6:23:24 PM
Show me the implicit or explicit rules against calling blacks negros, or telling women they aren't smart enough to vote. There are plenty of people out there who do the things above and it is a precept of our society to let them say such things.The PC police don't vouch for the entirety of society, thankfully.
11/25/2009 8:04:08 PM
11/25/2009 10:33:07 PM
11/25/2009 11:06:56 PM
11/25/2009 11:25:22 PM
It's one thing to specifically mention race/creed/etc. It's another to say "The South shall rise again", which, in and of itself, has nothing to do with race/creed/etc. I'll be the first to admit that it has been used in some pretty horrible contexts. I would never use that phrase myself. However, there is nothing inherently evil about that phrase. It's not inherently "pro-confederacy" or "anti-black". It all depends on context; on circumstances. Even a sushi-eating, carpet-bagging, overly-sensitive, born-and-bred New England liberal such as myself can admit that.That said, there is nothing wrong with the University making a PR decision to stop facilitating the chant with a song. [Edited on November 25, 2009 at 11:28 PM. Reason : .]
11/25/2009 11:27:49 PM
So...it appears that there is one remaining person who has a problem with the loss of this song:disco_stuAnd he isn't even a fan of the song or the region. He just has some business about free speech for drunk, white twenty year-old males despite everybody else's rights to protest the fuck out of the bullshit.WHAT'S THE FEAR HERE? SERIOUSLY, STUART OF DICSO, WHO IS HOLDING YOU BACK?
11/27/2009 3:01:48 AM
^^ I don’t let people with short, black curly hair into my house… but i’m not racist!
11/27/2009 3:07:04 AM
11/27/2009 11:40:13 AM
just had to throw in 'welfare seeking'
11/27/2009 5:00:45 PM
I did b.c i knew it would push some proactive liberal pricks hot button
11/27/2009 6:02:08 PM
latent racism: because you can't say the N word in public, anymore
11/27/2009 6:25:11 PM
the civil war was fought over state rights.i'm ready to secede and start killing nazi liberals. inglourious basterds style. which one of you bastards can i scalp first
11/27/2009 11:52:41 PM
so are you communicating threats of violence against specific individuals in this forum, based on their political philosophy?or are you communicating threats of violence against non-specific individuals in this forum, based on their political philosophy?[Edited on November 28, 2009 at 1:39 AM. Reason : ]
11/28/2009 1:28:45 AM
11/28/2009 12:42:36 PM
^^ you are missing the larger point that the nature of a democracy creates personal culpability for one's philosophy.
11/28/2009 2:22:11 PM
Did you mean diffuses? Because that seems to be more what it does.
11/28/2009 4:25:27 PM
absolutely not. to the contrary, democracy concentrates as much as possible, rather than diffuses, the personal responsibility that each person bears for holding a particular political philosophy.
11/28/2009 4:50:38 PM
11/28/2009 4:57:34 PM
^yeaaa....because most of those plantation owners would have gladly traded in their slaves for states rights. the two were in no way intertwined. nope. never. no way. only states rights. slaves? can take 'em or leave 'em.i find it quite amusing that in this last page alone, you've managed to defend the saying of "the south shall rise again," claim that the civil war was not fought over the issue of slavery, hint that there is a federal conspiracy against the south, accuse detractors as being "welfare seekers" and attack al sharpton when completely unprovoked.bravo man, bravo.now if you can just mention that you have plenty of black friends, i might win this round of "racist bingo"[Edited on November 28, 2009 at 5:35 PM. Reason : ]
11/28/2009 5:17:10 PM
11/28/2009 7:56:47 PM
11/28/2009 10:08:00 PM
Okay, you fucking middle schoolers, i know you're all feeling clever about this "states' rights revelation" of yours, so lets just get it out of the way now.YES, the Civil War was "about" States' Rights. Specifically, it was about the southern states' right to legalize the institution of slavery.end of story. now move on to something more interesting.
11/29/2009 12:08:30 AM
11/29/2009 11:47:47 AM
^ you think you have credibility enough to say "you're wrong" and not back it up? all you've contributed here is that you want to kill "nazi liberals." GTFO.
11/29/2009 11:51:24 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-L8bOb5_sQ[Edited on November 29, 2009 at 11:59 AM. Reason : ]
11/29/2009 11:57:19 AM
11/29/2009 12:41:40 PM
It was over states' rights to preserve slaveryIt was over territory expansion and whether new territories should be free or slaveIt was over tariffs which upset the South's cotton economyIt was over party politics over the slavery issue
11/29/2009 12:47:34 PM
Considering a majority of the soliders that died fighting for the confederacy did NOT even have slaves, I beg to differ.[Edited on November 29, 2009 at 1:36 PM. Reason : a]
11/29/2009 1:36:22 PM
The majority of people who oppose the estate tax are not millionaires. What's your point?
11/29/2009 1:48:09 PM
The majority of Nazis didn’t actually kill any Jew.
11/29/2009 6:34:38 PM