Cajungal
Staff member
That's us.So self-censorship due to public shaming/pressure from interest groups is ok, it's just not ok when it's the government telling you you can't?
That's us.So self-censorship due to public shaming/pressure from interest groups is ok, it's just not ok when it's the government telling you you can't?
Yes.So self-censorship due to public shaming/pressure from interest groups is ok, it's just not ok when it's the government telling you you can't?
"Don Cheadle levels of overreaction"...?
It has been banned (by Amazon, eBay, Etsy), it was just banned (shunned?) by the private sector, not by the government.Exactly, these companies are exercising their freedom to not sell the flags. It hasn't been banned, nor is it against the law. Good for them.
Censorship is not always completely evil and wrong; sometimes it's common sense. The companies are free to do this. The question of motive is certainly debatable. They've been gladly selling these items up to now.[DOUBLEPOST=1435155104,1435154915][/DOUBLEPOST]So self-censorship due to public shaming/pressure from interest groups is ok, it's just not ok when it's the government telling you you can't?
My point was that it is not illegal to sell/make the flags. It is now not as easy to obtain.
It has been banned (by Amazon, eBay, Etsy), it was just banned (shunned?) by the private sector, not by the government.
--Patrick
Why shouldn't it be? If Wal-Mart stops selling confederate flag merchandise, then that just means Rednecks 'R' Us can open a kiosk in the mall, or a mail-order company, and start making money from all the sales that Wal-Mart lost.So self-censorship due to public shaming/pressure from interest groups is ok, it's just not ok when it's the government telling you you can't?
It might seem like a fine hair to split, but it isn't.So self-censorship due to public shaming/pressure from interest groups is ok, it's just not ok when it's the government telling you you can't?
It's not self-censorship. Censorship would be a company wanting to sell the flag, and the government telling them they can't. Freedom of speech includes freedom of what not to say. These are companies who are finding that they don't like being associated with this imagery, and are deciding to distance themselves from it.So self-censorship due to public shaming/pressure from interest groups is ok, it's just not ok when it's the government telling you you can't?
Or go visit one of my relatives on my dad's side of the family. Sadly. You could probably score some blue-ice too.Besides, if you want a confederate flag, just go to -any- flea market in the south.
From the Oxford Dictionaries, "self-censorship: The exercising of control over what one says and does, especially to avoid castigation"It's not self-censorship.
With a black president to protect, I'd assume the Secret Service is watching everyone who buys this flag (especially if they're picking up some white sheets from Walmart at the same time).The government isn't investigating anyone (well, maybe? Thanks Patriot Act).
I have not seen one with the flag on it in years. Even the new commercial that it is in does not have General Lee or the flag on it.
How will this affect the Brent and Cole jump sequences?
You mean copy and paste, amirite?Wouldn't it be funny if Kurtz draws it - and doesn't even notice?
Your Honor, the plaintiff asked me to ice the cake with a secessionist flag but I refused to be a party to treason.I heard someone this morning saying somebody should go around to cake shops asking them to make a cake with the confederate flag on it, and if they refuse, sue them.
As has been established in precedent, cakemakers are not allowed to exercise discretion of any kind when decorating.What celebrity? I ask again.[DOUBLEPOST=1435252309,1435252022][/DOUBLEPOST]
Your Honor, the plaintiff asked me to ice the cake with a secessionist flag but I refused to be a party to treason.
Gonna find me a hot cakemaker and make her ice the cake with a nudie pic of herself.As has been established in precedent, cakemakers are not allowed to exercise discretion of any kind when decorating.
"I'd like a cake with a picture of my junk on it please."
"Sir, I'm not familiar with your 'junk'."
*Drops it on the counter*
...
"So that would be a cupcake then?"
I'll certainly give you Che, but is Mao really a thing now? Apparently, I'm not as lefty as I thought...[DOUBLEPOST=1435266987,1435266685][/DOUBLEPOST]I don't think Tim Cook's tweet is specifically about those games, the timeline for that seems a bit off.Also I'd just like to comment about about the likelihood of the kind of people that have pictures of Chairman Mao or Che Guevara on their walls being the loudest about speaking up about how unacceptable it is to display confederate symbolism.
White House Communications Director Anita Dunn loved her some Chairman Mao. She said he was one of her favorite political philosophers.I'll certainly give you Che, but is Mao really a thing now? Apparently, I'm not as lefty as I thought...
Apparently one of the developers of a civil war themed wargame had direct contact with apple representatives, and they explicitly informed him that the game could be readmitted to the app store if they removed all the confederate flags. It's in the article I linked.I suspect that some mid-level creature decided that this was the easiest way to deal with a high-level directive to keep an extra eye out for racist content, and told their outsourced foreign app store curators to just remove everything with the following 20 symbols on it, no questions asked.
I saw that, but dealing with the app store rarely puts in touch with anyone senior at all. I'd be really surprised if it was someone with actual authority. Your app actually has to make money for Apple to take you seriously and let you talk to someone who can actually make decisions.Apparently one of the developers of a civil war themed wargame had direct contact with apple representatives, and they explicitly informed him that the game could be readmitted to the app store if they removed all the confederate flags. It's in the article I linked.
Sweeping the existence of the flag under the rug is dumb as hell. Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it, etc. And the words "eradicating racism" makes it feel like this is going to just let people once more delude themselves that racism is over and ignore the continuing problems.We've definitely crossed into "stupid" territory now.
Apple has banned all depictions of the confederate flag from its app store. No big deal, right?
Except there are no exceptions for historical accuracy, not even about apps or games explicitly about/depicting the Civil War.
http://techraptor.net/content/apple-bans-confederate-flag
Tim Cook's tweet about it being to "honor the lives and families of the SC victims" by "eradicating racism and removing the symbols that feed it" show how intellectually vapid he is - and hypocritical, given that iTunes still carries movies with the flag in it, like Gettysburg. Also, the Nazi flag is not similarly banned.
Also I'd just like to comment about about the likelihood of the kind of people that have pictures of Chairman Mao or Che Guevara on their walls being the loudest about speaking up about how unacceptable it is to display confederate symbolism.