I sometimes troll more obscure topics but I don't dangle out a hook to catch a racist by the toe. I just notice them and /ignore. There's no need to say anything.HelpingHand wrote: »ferzalrwb17_ESO wrote: »Personally, I prefer that people speak their mind so that a racist idiot isn't hiding their true nature out of fear of what they perceive to be the "pc elite".
That way I can ignore them immediately.
^^fishing^^
Not necessarily true. Picture this; someone in zone chat starts spewing vitriol at a random race/religion they dislike. Maybe they were provoked by someone else. Maybe they just enjoy insulting strangers online. Doesn't matter. The OP sees it and as a member of said race/religion, feels insulted. Overreaction maybe, we should all know better than to take such things personally, but it's still understandable.HelpingHand wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Not really. I see it quite often in ESO (and many other MMOs). There's a plethora of disruptive players who spew some pretty rotten words just for the sake of doing it. They're not waiting for somebody to say "Hey! I'm a <insert relgioun here> faithful" before they run at the mouth. More often than not, it's somebody raging because something in game stoked their anger (missed out on chest loot, died repeatedly from a boss, had a bad dungeon run, bugged quest, etc..) and say something stupid in zone chat like "This @ game is %@#$ me off! Just like those @%$@!ing <insert religious faith, race, sexual orientation>"
Happens all the time. And nobody went fishing for those opinions.
You missed the point entirely where the OP said someone was attacking 'his' beliefs. The only way people know 'his' beliefs is if he stated them. Just stop before you hurt yourself. We aren't defending discrimination. We are offering a solution to the problem. Don't tell people you don't know your personal beliefs, and you don't have the OPs problem. #facts.
nerevarine1138 wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »nerevarine1138 wrote: »Your faith is a personal choice and belief system that you embrace. If you choose to bring it up in chat, you don't get to complain when it's attacked.
Oh I dunno about that.
If somebody says something along the lines of "All @#$%!! <insert religious faction here> are the @#^$ing bane of the earth and all deserve to hang any their @#$#! for their %@#$!ing evil ways! <insert more explicit vulgarities here in any random order>"
Then yeah... I do believe they are allowed to complain.
Yes, for the profanity. But since most religious debates between people of faith pretty much come down to "[X] is going to burn for all eternity for their beliefs," the rest is to be expected when you bring up faith in a computer game.
HelpingHand wrote: »You missed the point entirely where the OP said someone was attacking 'his' beliefs. The only way people know 'his' beliefs is if he stated them. Just stop before you hurt yourself. We aren't defending discrimination. We are offering a solution to the problem. Don't tell people you don't know your personal beliefs, and you don't have the OPs problem. #facts.
HelpingHand wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Not really. I see it quite often in ESO (and many other MMOs). There's a plethora of disruptive players who spew some pretty rotten words just for the sake of doing it. They're not waiting for somebody to say "Hey! I'm a <insert relgioun here> faithful" before they run at the mouth. More often than not, it's somebody raging because something in game stoked their anger (missed out on chest loot, died repeatedly from a boss, had a bad dungeon run, bugged quest, etc..) and say something stupid in zone chat like "This @ game is %@#$ me off! Just like those @%$@!ing <insert religious faith, race, sexual orientation>"
Happens all the time. And nobody went fishing for those opinions.
You missed the point entirely where the OP said someone was attacking 'his' beliefs. The only way people know 'his' beliefs is if he stated them. Just stop before you hurt yourself. We aren't defending discrimination. We are offering a solution to the problem. Don't tell people you don't know your personal beliefs, and you don't have the OPs problem. #facts.
Not necessarily true. Picture this; someone in zone chat starts spewing vitriol at a random race/religion they dislike. Maybe they were provoked by someone else. Maybe they just enjoy insulting strangers online. Doesn't matter. The OP sees it and as a member of said race/religion, feels insulted. Overreaction maybe, we should all know better than to take such things personally, but it's still understandable.
DenverRalphy wrote: »You're still hung up that they were specifically attacking him personally. Are you somehow under the impression that when anybody randomly makes a slur against Black, White, Jewish, Muslim, Bhuddist, Gay, Christian, American, Chinese, or whatever else you can think of, that there's no chance anybody would be offended? C'mon, seriously...
If somebody makes a racial or faith based slur in game, regardless the faith or race targeted, they know very well that somebody in game will probably be offended. The chances that the OP's faith was randomly slurred is actually quite high (and I state this without even needing to know his beliefs). So yes, "his beliefs" were attacked, but to suggest that he brought it on himself is just ludicrous.
alexandru987eb17_ESO wrote: »Saying the "n" word once is fine, he might now know... saying multiple racial words on purpose and so on then yea ban his ass.
HelpingHand wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Not really. I see it quite often in ESO (and many other MMOs). There's a plethora of disruptive players who spew some pretty rotten words just for the sake of doing it. They're not waiting for somebody to say "Hey! I'm a <insert relgioun here> faithful" before they run at the mouth. More often than not, it's somebody raging because something in game stoked their anger (missed out on chest loot, died repeatedly from a boss, had a bad dungeon run, bugged quest, etc..) and say something stupid in zone chat like "This @ game is %@#$ me off! Just like those @%$@!ing <insert religious faith, race, sexual orientation>"
Happens all the time. And nobody went fishing for those opinions.
You missed the point entirely where the OP said someone was attacking 'his' beliefs. The only way people know 'his' beliefs is if he stated them. Just stop before you hurt yourself. We aren't defending discrimination. We are offering a solution to the problem. Don't tell people you don't know your personal beliefs, and you don't have the OPs problem. #facts.
thomas.k.grayb14_ESO wrote: »
We live in a society too caught up in silencing people under the guise of political correctness. Words are hurtful and will always be hurtful if you allow them to be. No amount of policing is ever going to change that.
thomas.k.grayb14_ESO wrote: »
We live in a society too caught up in silencing people under the guise of political correctness. Words are hurtful and will always be hurtful if you allow them to be. No amount of policing is ever going to change that.
Agreed. While words are often indicative of mindset/societal paradigm, censoring the words does nothing to change the mentality. It can actually do more harm in the long run, as suppressed hatred tends to surface in other ways....kind of like plugging a volcano.
DenverRalphy wrote: »alexandru987eb17_ESO wrote: »Saying the "n" word once is fine, he might now know... saying multiple racial words on purpose and so on then yea ban his ass.
Saying the "n" word once, is never fine. Nor would any derogatory word with a negative connotation towards any race be okay to ever say... not even once.
FrauPerchta wrote: »Unless I am in a group I pretty much ignore chat.
I disagree with this sentiment on its basis. For one, you should not stratify hate speech where some is not okay, and other is open game. If that was the case, I would reverse the two personally. I didn't choose my race, and I find slurs against it an amusement at worst. A set of beliefs, however, are developed over a life of experience and shape/are shaped by your core being.Blackwidow wrote: »I just want to say that anyone who makes racist comments/jokes should be banned or severely warned. Hate talk of any kind really should not be put up with.
However, I think making fun of religion should be open game.
If you don't have a sense of humor about your own religion, you need to lighten up.
driosketch wrote: »For one, you should not stratify hate speech where some is not okay, and other is open game.
End of story.
ShedsHisTail wrote: »Those Tribunal-worshipping Dunmer are the worst.
You didn't say jokes, you said making fun of. But now that you highlight the distinction, on your last line, you tell people to have a sense of humor when you're laughing with them, not laughing at them. That's just stupid.Blackwidow wrote: »driosketch wrote: »For one, you should not stratify hate speech where some is not okay, and other is open game.
Yes, I said "Hate talk of any kind really should not be put up with."
However, jokes about religion in my personal view is not hate speech.
Of course almost any jokes can be argued that it is hate speech, if you choose to look at it that way. I don't.End of story.
It's usually people who end their posts with "End of story." that might need to lighten up a little.
HelpingHand wrote: »Learn to leave faith out of conversation in an online video game, where people of all sorts of beliefs will exist, and you won't have this problem. If you bring up faith in a conversation and then you can't handle peoples responses, learn to leave it out.