this post was submitted on 29 Jul 2025
489 points (98.8% liked)

Not The Onion

17464 readers
1087 users here now

Welcome

We're not The Onion! Not affiliated with them in any way! Not operated by them in any way! All the news here is real!

The Rules

Posts must be:

  1. Links to news stories from...
  2. ...credible sources, with...
  3. ...their original headlines, that...
  4. ...would make people who see the headline think, “That has got to be a story from The Onion, America’s Finest News Source.”

Please also avoid duplicates.

Comments and post content must abide by the server rules for Lemmy.world and generally abstain from trollish, bigoted, or otherwise disruptive behavior that makes this community less fun for everyone.

And that’s basically it!

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] rottingleaf@lemmy.world 1 points 3 days ago

First - you are right.

Second - questioning dogma is always virtuous, even if the dogma is "people of race A are not worse or better than people of race B", the fact of questioning itself doesn't cause anything bad, while banning that from being questioned also bans the similar or associated statements, and similarity\associations are subjective.

Third - the reason our world is in such shit is that it became commonly shunned to question authority and normalized to fear authority. Because common set of moral principles is authority too. Where in 1960s (segregation and much more liberal gun laws in places like USA, no voting rights for women in places like Switzerland, former Nazis everywhere feeling nice and joking about it in public in places like Germany, literal colonial wars, normalized racism and so on) it was normal, at least in books and movies, to question any person, in suit or not, demanding anything from you, and asking for some legal substantiation. Even in the bloody USSR. In our days in TV and books and imagined universes and in reality asking "why should I do that" is treated as a mutiny.

We live in a world where it's forbidden to ask "by which right".

At least in societies pretending to be civilized this was considered a thing of the past after WWII. Not that it didn't exist. Now it's normal, people look at you with hostility for saying the obvious about preemptive obedience and such.