A
aclausen
Guest
Indeed. How are blasphemy laws anything else but an attempt to enforce political correctness?PC is kinda subjective.
Most Christians will not be PC about weird LGBT stuff etc. We don’t consider that a matter of PC but a matter of logical facts of nature.
On the flip side many Christians expect their version of PC. As many will run away screaming of the persons evils who says F word or tells a dirty joke.
To answer your question about good/bad PC… I think maybe a dash of PC is good, but the extremes of Liberal and Christian PC are absurd and counter to truths and facts.
I think there’s a middle ground, where you find a way to express yourself that doesn’t involve hostility and attacks upon other people. Often times what I see as complaints against political correctness are complaints “How come I can’t say homosexuals are sinners in the lunchroom?”, as if somehow that’s something that one should be able to say in front of mixed company without any kind of social ramifications.
I feel it’s your right to say what you want, but you cannot imagine that your freedom of expression is always freedom from repercussions. If a CEO of a large corporation who has at least some gay employees declares “Homosexuals are committing vile acts and sinning against God!”, there seems to be this idea that the Board and the shareholders should ignore how that is going to affect gay employees, not to mention the potential impact on business (after all, gay people are also shareholders, board members, CEOs of potential partnering agencies or acquisitions).
I just wonder if sometimes some people are just intentionally provocative in some ham fisted attempt to make a point. “You see, I was attacked by the PC crowd!”, when in fact, they were just being rude and hostile. Surely one can have religious beliefs, even ones that are not necessarily shared by wider society, and find a way to express yourself that doesn’t make you look like a complete jerk.