Such anger is not healthy and sports are supposed to take us to a place of common ground. There is no place for politics on an athletic board and most of these issues seem to go much deeper than just this board. Herd Fans are already a small group compared to many "power" schools and fighting amongst ourselves over things we have no control is crazy. Can someone tell me a scouting report on our kicking game and stop talking about this other trash? All I hear from these posts is personal pride, which will always take us down a bad! CNN and Fox don't bash each other this bad and I turn to sports to escape that crap.
What's crazy is
not that people disagree (about politics or about sports or about whatever)...
But
how they disagree, and
how far they'll go in order to try to silence those with whom they'll disagree, even to the point of personal attack... and in my case, even to the point of personal attack campaigning, aka whining.
I note in that thread that I was complimented for never belittling others. (I'd like to think it's "never," but I probably slipped a handful of times.)
I was not complimented for never belittling others' conclusions and/or the support/argument they used to justify their conclusions... because, in fact, I see nothing at all wrong with that. I don't find any rules against it.
It's when you see people resorting to
personal attack, and when you see people finding
other things to criticize that have nothing actually to-do with the substance and meat of the discussion ... yes, like word count (never found a rule in that regard either, btw)... that you can be sure that you're
too persuasive... that you can be sure they feel their conclusion/position
can't stand up to critical thought and scrutiny...
It's all they can do, so that's what they do... resort to those things... oblivious to the fact that the character assassination performed comes with a price of a black mark on their integrity... and/or oblivious to the fact that their diversion away from the actual topic under discussion makes them look weak, if not incompetent, to anyone with logical skills enough to have passed a high school algebra class.
THAT is what is sad.
We all, me included, invest our egos to some degree in what we argue (politics or sports or whatever).
But only some of us and maybe even a very few of us who have frequented this particular board... me included again, but notably also MUther who I once tried to compliment for this... have demonstrated the maturity to back down and humble oneself and admit when s/he's discovered s/he was wrong. And then, it tells the story of how enraged and malicious and determined those without the capacity to humble themselves can become that that attempt to compliment MUther--and it was absolutely positively a compliment purely and with no hint of sarcasm intended nor expressed-- was what sent the admins over the edge. How dare I do such a thing, right? *sigh*
That is what is sad indeed.
The Bible says... for those of us who care what the Bible says... be angry and sin not. Right? Similarly, I believe it could have been said... disagree and sin not.
Anger sometimes is not just acceptable, but the right thing to have... you see a child who is mistreated by an adult, it is right to be angry. That's an extreme, but it illustrates a point that is valid for a variety of situations.
Disagreement also, can be not only justified but is even healthy. Healthier than the alternative.
Our forefathers cooked up a whole political process that is built on the idea that we WILL disagree, but yet we WON'T go to war, but rather, will have a process set-up that allows for positions to be voiced, and from that "marketplace of ideas" for the best ideas to win out... and do something more positive than if we were governed by a king or queen or dictator.
So, just as
capitalism takes what is ordinarily perceived as a negative...
selfishness and the pursuit of money... and turns it into a positive for all humanity by virtue of all of the innovation that occurs as a result of it... same that
civilized democratic structure (aka our Constitution) takes what is ordinarily perceived as a negative...
disagreement... and turns it into a positive by virtue of the fact that sometimes the minority position is the morally right one, and if given the opportunity in that marketplace of ideas to breathe, it eventually grows to become voted on and validated as public policy.
Who of us would say it is healthy for people to keep quiet... or that they should be made to keep quiet... when they see something isn't right, or that something is being argued that isn't right?
That's un-American, but taking the nationalism out of it... more than that... all of the free world has come to realize that's immoral.
Disagreement is healthy.
It just takes maturity on our individual parts for it to be the positive it should be...
And if people aren't mature enough within themselves, then like a good parent, if you are the authority over a situation, then you have to provide sufficient boundaries and consistent enforcement of those boundaries until they might eventually get there.
Am I right about that? Sure I am. And it's not right because I'm saying it, it's right because it's just putting into words what is the state of play because we're all intelligent human beings.
But understand, that's dangerous talk around here. At least in recent times. People regularly seem to interject into the authorities here some kind of deity status... at least, those who post regularly here. Well, no, when in your right mind, you know they're just flawed human beings like you or me. (Those who don't post as regularly, and for sure the subset with whom I've been corresponding lately seem to get that, though.)
The redemption is that most of them have shown in the past that they have a conscience. They know what I've said in this post is altogether not only correct, but right. Morally right.
Or at least, they used to know it. More recently, they've self-evidently given in to the dark side that pleads for everyone to agree all the time, and as a result, given into to the idea that certain people should have higher preference and influence as to what everyone should agree on.
That, of course, is how tyranny works.
And in the short term, tyranny can work.
But in the long-term, as our forefathers who engineered our Constitution realized,
civilized, mature, intelligent disagreement is better. West Virginians often are characterized as being ignorant and unreasonable, and for those of us who grew up there, it's an unfortunate stereotype with a long history.
So from where I sit, the best way to corrode that stereotype is to act and behave in ways completely opposite of that stereotype when and where ever possible.