I would love to be able to take credit for this but I cannot. I will post the meme below as it states things succintly and clearly.
However, I remember the first time I saw this. It was a few days after a discussion here on CF highlighted the idea for me:
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Sadly, this didn't solve any kind of problems for me in my head. It was comforting to know that it was "a thing" but it didn't help me create an appropriate approach for dealing with intolerant people.
I realized though (after reading the meme below) that maybe we need to not be looking at tolerance as a moral construct. And really, why should it be a moral construct? There's nothing INHERENTLY moral about being tolerant any "everything". Not only that but tolerating something truly awful can very easily put ourselves in morally compromised positions. So maybe it isn't a moral construct...But then what is it....
And then.....
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Thoughts?
Concerning Popper, I am mainly familiar with his philosophy of science and his philosophy of history, both of which were critiqued by the late Professor Burleigh T. Wilkins of the University of California in
Has History Any Meaning? The title of the book I would note is obviously intended to be answered in the affirmative, as Wilkins was by no means a Nihilist, indeed an opposition to crypto-Nihilism seems to permeate those works of his I have read.
I read the aforementioned critique of Popper’s philosophy of history after being enthralled by Wilkins articles in opposition to the NATO intervention in Kosovo, or rather how that intervention was conducted, which were generally supportive of my view, which is that the intervention had the effect of inadvertently causing an “ethnic cleansing” of Serbian Orthodox Christians from their ancestral homeland in Kosovo while seeking to prevent the sinister formerly Communist Yugoslavian dictator Slobodan Milosevic from “ethnically cleansing” the Albanian Muslims in Kosovo. The values of civilization compel us to oppose all ethnic cleansing, which at best is a substitute for genocide facilitated by deportation (for example, the forced population exchange between Greece and Turkey after WWI, and later, the forced population exchange between Cyprus and Turkish-controlled Northern Cyprus, and at worst, a cover for actual genocides, for example, what happened to the Kurds in Iraq or the Bosnians in Srpska in the early 1990s, or what is now happening to the Christians of the Middle East, as well as other religious minorities such as the Alevis, Bektasis and Mevlevis of Turkey, and of course what also happened in 2013-2018 to the Yazidis of Sinjar in the Nineveh Plains, and what many report is happening to the Rohingya Muslims of Burma and the Uighurs of China.
Professor Wilkins also wrote an interesting and rather edgy book which touches on these subjects in the early 1990s, with the rather provocative title
Terrorism and Collective Responsibility, although the work is by no means an apology for or justification of terrorism. Also I am told that at conferences Wilkins would frequently joke, on the subject of smaller states breaking away from larger states, “If at first you don’t secede, try, try again.”
Essentially his philosophy was classically liberal in the tradition of John Rawls, with the addition of a deep skepticism about certain entities tasked with upholding the tenuous and at times ethereal yet in many cases literally vitally important framework that constitutes International Law.
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