Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:I'm baffled that you'd use, lolol, slaveholders and probably a rapist salveholder (Jefferson), as someone who could be magically transformed into egalitarians once they were, uh, briefed up on the situation.
This last week I was listening to a discussion on NPR regarding book awards and categories. It turned at one point to a discussion of H.P. Lovecraft and why he showed up on a list despite being an extreme and open racist. As is the fashion these days, the discussion took turns decrying everything about Lovecraft but ultimately arriving at his influence on the field of science fiction being such that it is, his inclusion was unavoidable since he essentially invented a genre of science fiction. One must hold one's noses when one speaks of science fiction because his genius was so deeply interwoven in, one can't ignore him without unraveling the history of science fiction.
Maybe it's because I spent too much time as a believing Mormon and for ill or good developed a view of human beings as neither monsters or saints that to me these kinds of conversations are like overhearing kids playing at being adults. But it's the language of the extremists who would see every slight transgression used to bring people down. It's the language of the people Jordan Peterson is constantly decrying in his public appearances, and is the language of the people who you agreed in your post to ceebs were behind the extreme left in agreement with Peterson. Maybe you don't agree with that when it's pointed out so explicitly, or perhaps more likely, you are just trying to ju jitsu a minor issue to score points against someone you feel butthurt towards from a past discussion rather than engage in discussion about the major points currently before us. Either way, it comes across as muddying up your views.
So, my view of Jefferson is as a product of his time, yes, but within that context his argument WAS the most optimistic towards humanity. I'm not interested in defending his slaveholding nor attacking it because that isn't the world we are living in today. In the context of people working out the best means for a society to organize a government that represented their ideals they believed best for humanity, his view was in favor of the common citizen rather than a ruling elite. Madison being pragmatic and optimized compromise-oriented, is far more responsible for the Constitution than any other single person as we inherited it. In the light of those discussions, those central values were present then in their ultimate aims for achieving success as a nation that was largely looked at globally as doomed to fail. In fact, we had failed up to that point as the Articles of Confederation were not leading to a successful form of self-governance and the Constitutional Convention was done in secret to hide the fact the founders were not just trying to patch the Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez back together but instead rewriting the script entirely.
You want to argue my comment about a speculative 21 C. version of those events would be undone by their having been patriarchy-loving, privileged slave owning rapist, ok that's your view of things. Wrapping yourself up in the costume of identity politics to try and score a point about a minor item in a much broader post to do so? You might consider thinking more about that.