I'm still going to respond to brimstone though.

Ok, but it also makes it wrong to call a person with anxiety a coward like you were suggesting before.brimstoneSalad wrote:Then when somebody says something like "suicide is cowardly", you should reply with something like "Maybe, but don't you agree that seeking treatment for depression is brave?".
If you just negate what the person says, then not only are you likely wrong on a factual point, but he or she will just continue to say it without understanding how to qualify it to be more helpful.
Blah, whatever. People define it in different ways, and it really doesn't matter anymore.brimstoneSalad wrote:Not all people who identify as Emo are all about that stuff.
Oh, I think I see what you're saying.brimstoneSalad wrote:People are afraid to seek treatment because it means admitting they have depression and seeing a therapist, and if people with depression are stigmatized -- or people seeing therapists are stigmatized -- they don't want to be put in that box and be subject to being stigmatized.
The part about clarifying things to people? I don't see how that explains it.brimstoneSalad wrote:See the top of this post.
Perhaps in a very small amount of cases, but usually it's pretty obvious.brimstoneSalad wrote:Then it's he said she said. Did you intend to attack him? No. Did she intent to attack you? Yes. One says yes, one says no. Just a big misunderstanding.
...Rumors and calling people fat, out of concern?brimstoneSalad wrote:What if it was done out of concern? What if it's legitimate criticism?
There's a huge difference between criticizing a person for being immoral and criticizing someone in a way that is obviously intended to hurt that person just to hurt that person.brimstoneSalad wrote:If people are torturing a cat in front of you, you'd better not call them mean or suggest they are cruel to animals, since it might hurt their feelings. Right?
There are legitimate reasons to criticize people. And some your teachers might not agree with.
What situations are you thinking of in which there could be confusion whether or not something is expressing concern or bullying?brimstoneSalad wrote:It's because there's no way to limit that without restricting legitimately important speech -- like criticizing people for their actions, or expressing concern for a peer.
What things?brimstoneSalad wrote:There are things that I would say, without it being the intent to bully but rather persuade, that would be banned under any such provision.
Invent a provision that will allow me to say anything I might legitimately need to say while effectively squashing mean spirited bullying, and I'll be behind it.
'Informing' somebody?brimstoneSalad wrote:Religion is empirically and logically false.
Informing somebody that he or she is overweight can be empirically true.
I don't think that can work in practice. If we can ban those ideas, why can't we ban other ideas deemed wrong by those in power?brimstoneSalad wrote:You have to rely on an authority with a scientific world view. Science is the most objective and bias free standard you will find, which is the only reason I'd trust it.
Ok, in certain cases, it can be less clear, but it's often very obvious.brimstoneSalad wrote:Nope, quite the opposite: It's much more subjective. There is no formal logic which will prove it on paper, and there is no instrument available to measure it.
This is why in Christian schools, for example, Christian teachers allow Christian students to bully atheist students by telling them they're going to hell, etc. but will discipline an atheist student severely for saying anything in reply.
You see that kind of bias on forums too, when the prevailing mindset is interrupted; lots of one-sided moderation (not intentional, but as a result of a bias in perception).
As an atheist, you may have experienced that on other forums, where you have to walk on egg shells, but the theists can let it all out at you. If not, you should probably have a try, and see how one sided it gets even when the moderators think they're upholding an impartial position and being even handed -- they will see things you say as attacks when they are not, and they will see things theists say in attack as just poorly worded but well-intentioned.
It's not obvious, and the judges are highly subject to bias on these issues. This has been my experience throughout life, and it's a big problem in research on psychology (evaluation being so subject to bias). Minorities need fear bias.
I don't have time at the moment, but try to look up some studies on bias in psychology when it comes to attitude or tone/interpretation of what people say.
The 'litigation jihad' doesn't seem like a real threat. It's just some radical group calling for radicalism, but it's not really getting anywhere. I can't find any recent articles about it, and a lot of the stuff I am finding about it is related to Pamela Geller, who's crazy.brimstoneSalad wrote:Looks at the litigation Jihad, and the political over-sensitivity to Muslims generally in the liberal media.
I'm not convinced that this is the case.brimstoneSalad wrote:I won't want to allow it, but we must because we can't stop it without interfering with more important things (and I don't think mechanisms in place trying to stop it are useful).
Well, I think bullying is dangerous to child development.brimstoneSalad wrote:I think it's dangerous to child development to employ the methods desired to stop bullying, and I don't think it would work either.
That would still create bias though, and that's not fair. It doesn't matter if they disagree with reasonable positions; they should still be able to share their ideas. You can't oppress the free exchange of ideas without building resentment.brimstoneSalad wrote:Now if all of the teachers and administrative staff were atheists and vegans, then I'd probably be fine with whatever policy you wanted in place, since the bias would only be against the carnist and theist kids, and nobody sharing good ideas or providing legitimate criticism would be stifled; although it may still destroy the potential for important education on critical thinking by creating an echo chamber.
Like I said, there are two ways to see it, depending on how the person identifies and reacts to it. It can be identified with and be considered existential cowardice, OR it can be seen as a disease (something other than the person) that the person is brave to seek treatment for.EquALLity wrote: Ok, but it also makes it wrong to call a person with anxiety a coward like you were suggesting before.
A stigma on denial of the disease, and on not seeking treatment.EquALLity wrote: What stigma are you advocating for exactly?
I don't know what this is about anymore.EquALLity wrote:The part about clarifying things to people? I don't see how that explains it.brimstoneSalad wrote:See the top of this post.
It may seem obvious to you, but you have biases too when you look on these situations; you can easily misread them.EquALLity wrote: Perhaps in a very small amount of cases, but usually it's pretty obvious.
It wasn't an insult, it was a badly worded friendly jab by mistake. It wasn't deliberately knocking over books, it was an accident. It wasn't glaring, it was staring off into space and thinking about math. It wasn't starting rumors, it was a miscommunication.EquALLity wrote: If it's an insult/knocking over books/glaring/rumors it's obviously meant to attack, for example.
What's a situation you would find unclear?
Yes. Wasn't it you talking about your friend's association with a gang? That could easily turn into a nasty rumor somehow, and unintentionally.EquALLity wrote: ...Rumors and calling people fat, out of concern?
It can be constructive criticism, or an insult. Depends on the intent. And since you can't read people's minds, and people are frequently offending each other by accident even with good intentions (have you NEVER in your life accidentally offended somebody?) so you can't rely on the recipient either, it's impossible to really know which it was.EquALLity wrote: Calling people 'fat' isn't constructive criticism. It's just being an asshole.
It's rarely obvious. As soon as you ban overt insults, kids adapt and start using more veiled insults and condescension to hurt each other.EquALLity wrote:There's a huge difference between criticizing a person for being immoral and criticizing someone in a way that is obviously intended to hurt that person just to hurt that person.
That's what it is. I said if you have a way to stop it that would work and wouldn't have other serious negative consequences to development, that would be fine.EquALLity wrote:And it seems pretty dismissive to diminish bullying to 'hurting peoples' feelings'.
A better method is to address that, and provide more counselors for kids, and give them the tools to fight back against bullies, and learn more innate self esteem to help them survive the assaults.EquALLity wrote:This is a real and serious issue. Bullying has clear links to mental health issues.
That's pretty benign. When you ALLOW personal attacks, they become more trite, repetitive, and easier to ignore. You know who your enemies are, and everything is out in the open.EquALLity wrote:What situations are you thinking of in which there could be confusion whether or not something is expressing concern or bullying?
"Goddamn fat bitch!"
"What, what did I do?! I was just expressing concern!"
Saying that certain beliefs and actions make somebody a bad person in some respect, for example.EquALLity wrote: What things?
"Hi, wasn't your name..."EquALLity wrote:'Informing' somebody?
If those who are in power are scientists, then you're doing pretty well. But that restricts their ability to judge right and wrong ideas to those which are making scientific claims. That's the key point here, and the theme of both of these discussions. There have to be lines, and you can't ban things based on opinions which are subject to bias.EquALLity wrote:I don't think that can work in practice. If we can ban those ideas, why can't we ban other ideas deemed wrong by those in power?
The only reason it's obvious in your school is because the students are not reliably punished for making is obvious. As soon as you punish obvious attacks, they evolve, and become much less obvious, but often much more cruel too.EquALLity wrote:Ok, in certain cases, it can be less clear, but it's often very obvious.
All teachers are biased. They favor the teacher's pet, or the students they like, whose constructive criticism they will interpret as well-intentioned (whether it was or not), and whose adversaries' words they will view as attacks (whether they are or not).EquALLity wrote:What you're talking about with Christian teachers is merely an issue of extreme teacher bias, though.
The stuff Sam Harries criticizes with regard to its apologia for Islam, and cry of Islamophobia.EquALLity wrote:What are you referring to when you say 'liberal media'?
You don't need to be. And I don't need to be. We should agree to not do it because there is no evidence of it being more effective than harmful.EquALLity wrote:I'm not convinced that this is the case.
It's a bit of a sink or swim life lesson. We could do a lot better. But people who survive bullying can develop life skills that help them cope with conflict later in life. The sad thing is that not everybody survives.EquALLity wrote:Well, I think bullying is dangerous to child development.
You can't protect them forever. And unfortunately, we don't have many better systems in place to teach people to deal with bullies in the real world beyond letting bullies teach them in the slightly safer environment of a school.EquALLity wrote:How are the methods desired to stop bullying damaging to child development?
Yes, it would be a bias. But I don't care about it being "fair" (that's subjective, and I don't think it has much meaning), I just want it to have good outcomes. I'm fine with a bias against religion and meat eating if it might discourage those practices.EquALLity wrote:That would still create bias though, and that's not fair.
How is that useful, aside from promoting critical thinking (as I said)?EquALLity wrote:It doesn't matter if they disagree with reasonable positions; they should still be able to share their ideas.
Then how do you stop bullying without just making it worse?EquALLity wrote:You can't oppress the free exchange of ideas without building resentment.
So it is your position that a person trying to fix a mental illness is not at fault for it, and only that a person who refuses is?brimstoneSalad wrote:Like I said, there are two ways to see it, depending on how the person identifies and reacts to it. It can be identified with and be considered existential cowardice, OR it can be seen as a disease (something other than the person) that the person is brave to seek treatment for.
Oh, ok. I'm not sure if I agree with that.brimstoneSalad wrote:A stigma on denial of the disease, and on not seeking treatment.
I know I take a long time to reply sometimes, but you could just re-read that small section...brimstoneSalad wrote:I don't know what this is about anymore.
Everyone has bias to an extent, but as a teacher, you are supposed to fight your bias.brimstoneSalad wrote:It may seem obvious to you, but you have biases too when you look on these situations; you can easily misread them.
Perhaps if something questionable happens once, it can be let go.brimstoneSalad wrote:It wasn't an insult, it was a badly worded friendly jab by mistake. It wasn't deliberately knocking over books, it was an accident. It wasn't glaring, it was staring off into space and thinking about math. It wasn't starting rumors, it was a miscommunication.
Nothing outside of mathematics and rigorous logic is so obvious that it is not open to interpretation.
Saying the meaning of human interactions is clear or obvious is like saying the "true" meaning of the bible is obvious too; yet people will probably never agree on it.
I see how rumors can accidentally happen, ok. But I think other forms of bullying are more clear.brimstoneSalad wrote:Yes. Wasn't it you talking about your friend's association with a gang? That could easily turn into a nasty rumor somehow, and unintentionally.
It's easy to express legitimate concern for somebody's weight, health, or diet. It's also easy to veil an insult in feigned concern. It's impossible for an observer to reliably tell them apart.
There's a difference between what something actually is and what that something is intended to be.brimstoneSalad wrote:It can be constructive criticism, or an insult. Depends on the intent. And since you can't read people's minds, and people are frequently offending each other by accident even with good intentions (have you NEVER in your life accidentally offended somebody?) so you can't rely on the recipient either, it's impossible to really know which it was.
I see no reason to believe that bullying has serious negative consequences to development.brimstoneSalad wrote:That's what it is. I said if you have a way to stop it that would work and wouldn't have other serious negative consequences to development, that would be fine.
I think that's a good idea too, but you still can't just let the bullies go unchecked.brimstoneSalad wrote:A better method is to address that, and provide more counselors for kids, and give them the tools to fight back against bullies, and learn more innate self esteem to help them survive the assaults.
People can still be creative if you allow personal attacks.brimstoneSalad wrote:That's pretty benign. When you ALLOW personal attacks, they become more trite, repetitive, and easier to ignore. You know who your enemies are, and everything is out in the open.
As soon as you force the bullies to be more creative, the attacks become much more personal and nasty, and hit much harder.
When people are cruel under the guise of being nice, it can cut so much deeper.
It might sometimes be useful to do that, but the slight positive that comes out of that is insignificant compared to the harm that comes from bullying.brimstoneSalad wrote:Saying that certain beliefs and actions make somebody a bad person in some respect, for example.
Teens who call people fat are overwhelmingly not trying to help the person they are insulting.brimstoneSalad wrote:"Hi, wasn't your name..."
"Julie"
"Right, sorry. We haven't talked much before, can I sit here?"
"...Sure" (happy)
"You seem like a sweet person, I hope we can be friends."
"I... yes, I'd love that" (so happy)
"That's great. As your friend, I hope I can be honest with you."
"I guess"
"You know, I'm worried about you. I think maybe you have been misled. The "healthy at any weight" thing is a myth, you know?"
"..."
"Yeah, obesity is really terrible for you. I can tell by looking, your BMI is really unhealthy, you need to stop eating so much. The only way to lose weight it calories in vs. calories out. I'd say you could do some exercise, but you know how people will judge you if they see your exercising... so terrible. You just have to have some self control. Stop eating all of those cooking and ice cream, you know? Take care of yourself"
"It's my genes"
"That's a myth too. Anybody can be thin if they just have some self control. Anyway, all of that food you're eating is also wasteful. There are people starving on the streets, and you're eating enough for two or three people. How can you call yourself a good person when you're being so wasteful, and the only result is to make you more obese and less healthy? You're going to die soon, you're wasting your life, and the lives of others who are dying so you can be morbidly obese."
Read that with a tone of sarcasm and condescension, or with compassion. Where's the line?
And a slight rewording in either direction would still be just as blurry, but could cut MUCH harder, or soften the blow and add encouragement.
The republicans don't even believe in science!brimstoneSalad wrote: If those who are in power are scientists, then you're doing pretty well. But that restricts their ability to judge right and wrong ideas to those which are making scientific claims. That's the key point here, and the theme of both of these discussions. There have to be lines, and you can't ban things based on opinions which are subject to bias.
Actually, I don't really see that stuff in my school. My school is pretty nice, and very anti-bullying, seeing as we have clubs that promote tolerance and we watch documentaries about bullying in health class and have discussions about it.brimstoneSalad wrote: The only reason it's obvious in your school is because the students are not reliably punished for making is obvious. As soon as you punish obvious attacks, they evolve, and become much less obvious, but often much more cruel too.
I've never heard of students pretending they were constructively criticizing someone like you seem to be suggesting happens often.brimstoneSalad wrote:All teachers are biased. They favor the teacher's pet, or the students they like, whose constructive criticism they will interpret as well-intentioned (whether it was or not), and whose adversaries' words they will view as attacks (whether they are or not).
It goes beyond that, too, to various degrees of bias across gender, race, religion, academic performance, etc.
The only teachers who wouldn't be biased are robots.
If you want to put robots in control, then we may have something, but then the task is in coming up with computer software that can detect insults and distinguish them from non-insults. This is non-trivial.
I'm not very familiar with what Sam Harris has been saying about that. What media are you referencing?brimstoneSalad wrote:The stuff Sam Harries criticizes with regard to its apologia for Islam, and cry of Islamophobia.
What resources are being expended on bullying, other than educational parts of courses (like documentaries) that don't restrict free speech?brimstoneSalad wrote:You don't need to be. And I don't need to be. We should agree to not do it because there is no evidence of it being more effective than harmful.
When it comes to policy, the burden of proof usually lies on the people making the argument that we should enact a certain policy (expend resources).
If there's no evidence for this yet, there are many other things we can do with those resources that have evidence (after school programs for at risk youth, etc.).
We should err on the side of non-intervention when we're not pretty sure what we're doing will have good results and be cost effective.
Now, that said, I would be fine with instituting these policies in some schools with the intention of collecting data and performing a social experiment, since the information itself is a good that can come out of it. Kind of like Think About This's thread on the lamb.
Perhaps they *can*, but seeing as it has such strong links to mental illnesses, it's still overall extremely negative.brimstoneSalad wrote:It's a bit of a sink or swim life lesson. We could do a lot better. But people who survive bullying can develop life skills that help them cope with conflict later in life. The sad thing is that not everybody survives.
Bullying prevention is harmful because... bullying is actually good?brimstoneSalad wrote:You can't protect them forever. And unfortunately, we don't have many better systems in place to teach people to deal with bullies in the real world beyond letting bullies teach them in the slightly safer environment of a school.
How is fairness subjective?brimstoneSalad wrote:Yes, it would be a bias. But I don't care about it being "fair" (that's subjective, and I don't think it has much meaning), I just want it to have good outcomes. I'm fine with a bias against religion and meat eating if it might discourage those practices.
Because that, and because the free exchange of ideas leads to societal progress.brimstoneSalad wrote:How is that useful, aside from promoting critical thinking (as I said)?
Bullying is not the free exchange of ideas. It's being a jerk with the intent of being a jerk.brimstoneSalad wrote:Then how do you stop bullying without just making it worse?
Anyway, of course you can. That's how religion has worked for thousands of years. When Islam took over a region, it stamped out everything else. There aren't meaningful secret pockets of extinct religions surviving in little bubbles resenting the new one.
The problem, as I see it, is dogma, and a lack of critical thinking, which is dangerous in its own way.
Sort of. If a person says "I don't have a mental illness, I'm just a sad person: it's part of who I am, don't try to change me!" then that person has identified with the quality, and is fully at fault for it because it's an inherent part of the person's existential self.EquALLity wrote: So it is your position that a person trying to fix a mental illness is not at fault for it, and only that a person who refuses is?
As far as I know, that has always been my position. Not sure what you're seeing as contradictory. This is why my argument about what disease really is was so important.EquALLity wrote: I think that this contradicts other things that you've stated, but if that's your position now, then ok.
Carrot and stick. Sure, encourage them to get help, but any encouragement is implicit condemnation if they don't take the advice.EquALLity wrote: Instead of stigmatizing people who already have mental issues, we should just encourage them to get help.
Where do you draw the line between coward and non-coward? Is there a line?EquALLity wrote: I asked if you were suggesting that, prior to trying to heal, that people with anxiety are automatically cowards. Not cowardly (as in they are more cowardly than they would be if they were getting treatment), but actual cowards.
Supposed to, maybe, but they rarely do, and probably never succeed. Fighting biases outside a scientific context where there are proper controls to eliminate them is bound to fail.EquALLity wrote: Everyone has bias to an extent, but as a teacher, you are supposed to fight your bias.
Then it becomes randomly or erratically enforced. Or some kind of unfair "three strikes" policy.EquALLity wrote: Perhaps if something questionable happens once, it can be let go.
Or, that student is lying, or provoking it, possibly doing the same thing in return and not reporting that. Who exactly do we trust?EquALLity wrote: But after a student reports that a specific person has been doing questionable acts consistently, it's not so open to interpretation anymore.
Physical contact can be more clear. Punching, kicking, fights, dunking a student's head in a toilet. That's why we have laws against assault, but not against offending somebody.EquALLity wrote: I see how rumors can accidentally happen, ok. But I think other forms of bullying are more clear.
That's not the kind of example I gave, but who is going to decide that? Do you decide based on whether the person is offended?EquALLity wrote: A person might be trying to give constructive criticism by calling someone a fat bitch, but in reality, that person is just being a douche-bag.
What? I didn't say it did.EquALLity wrote: I see no reason to believe that bullying has serious negative consequences to development.
You can stop most of the physical assault.EquALLity wrote: I think that's a good idea too, but you still can't just let the bullies go unchecked.
Sure, but they're lazy and often don't feel the need to. Restrictions teach creativity as a matter of necessity.EquALLity wrote: People can still be creative if you allow personal attacks.
Not necessarily, if they have easier options like just making irritating noises or calling somebody "fat bitch". You're giving kids too much credit for being nefarious; they'll generally take the path of least resistance.EquALLity wrote:If they want to be mean, and they think that being more tricky about it will hit harder, then they'll do that anyway.
How do you know that?EquALLity wrote:So you might as well ban the obvious bullying.
This is why it's probably better to put the resources into counseling. She's going to get that all of her life, when there aren't bully police around to protect her.EquALLity wrote:I also don't consider calling someone a 'fat bitch' benign.
Can you prove it? That sounds like a guess.EquALLity wrote:It might sometimes be useful to do that, but the slight positive that comes out of that is insignificant compared to the harm that comes from bullying.
Sure, but while fat shaming may not be very useful, if you close the door to all conversations about this, you also lose all the the helpful things (like advice on exercise, weight loss, etc.) that are sincere, and that's certainly not helpful either.EquALLity wrote:Teens who call people fat are overwhelmingly not trying to help the person they are insulting.
Wasting resources. People who are overweight eat too much.EquALLity wrote:Being overweight doesn't make somebody a bad person.
How are they wasting the lives of others?
Yes and no. People who are overweight eat more than they need to eat. Calories in vs. calories out is basic physics, and genetics can't overcome that.EquALLity wrote:Also, I thought there were genetic factors that can come into play with being overweight/obese?
This is a big problem. Thankfully the Chinese government (where I was saying in the other thread that certain restrictions may be OK) is science based. They take the advice of experts; scientists, engineers, economists. I would not trust the US government to do that.EquALLity wrote:The republicans don't even believe in science!![]()
Student run anti-bullying clubs could be a great approach, since it's free (doesn't expend district resources), and it's a kind of self policing which will be better received and influence peers more.EquALLity wrote:Actually, I don't really see that stuff in my school. My school is pretty nice, and very anti-bullying, seeing as we have clubs that promote tolerance and we watch documentaries about bullying in health class and have discussions about it.
It's good to provide information and encouragement, as long as it's not force. I'm just worried about the opportunity cost, and what they're not teaching in its place.EquALLity wrote:When you say that schools shouldn't try to stop bullying, that would mean stopping things like units in health class largely about the negative impacts of it. But how would that stifle free speech?
Those are usually acts of fraud, and are punishable as criminal offenses. But also: people (but particularly minors) should not be on the internet except anonymously. That's one great way to prevent cyber bullying.EquALLity wrote:There are a lot of other things that are not open for interpretation to the extent you are describing, like cyber-bullying.
It's an inherent human problem. But there's a shortage of good teachers. It's not a simple solution. Pay is too low, and it's a thankless job. There are not resources to hire better teachers.EquALLity wrote: About the bias, that's pretty much just a problem with not hiring good teachers. Teachers are supposed to put their religious/political/whatever views aside.
Both. They talk about this kind of stuff on liberal shows like TYT. Somebody else probably knows more about this than I do, since I don't follow them carefully. There are a couple of threads on the "Islamophobia" in the media, I think.EquALLity wrote:Are you talking about the mainstream media, or new media? There's a huge difference when it comes to that stuff there.
Serious enforcement policies are very resource intensive. If it's just documentaries, that's a little cheaper, but we're still dealing with opportunity cost. What did they NOT teach so they had time to show that documentary instead?EquALLity wrote:What resources are being expended on bullying, other than educational parts of courses (like documentaries) that don't restrict free speech?
Maybe, maybe not. You would have to compare it to a situation in which bullying is somehow non-existent.EquALLity wrote:Perhaps they *can*, but seeing as it has such strong links to mental illnesses, it's still overall extremely negative.
A little bit of it -- having adversaries and learning how to deal with that -- could be essential to childhood development and creating well adjusted adults.EquALLity wrote:Bullying prevention is harmful because... bullying is actually good?
But what if, in attempting to do so, you inhibit their development and make them socially retarded in some way?EquALLity wrote:You can't protect them forever, but it makes sense to protect them while they are developing.
There's no reason to believe that. It's very likely when they are vulnerable because they haven't learned to deal with it yet. That is: Children may only be so "vulnerable" because of what they have yet to learn in social interactions.EquALLity wrote:It's not safer for people to deal with bullying when they are younger, because that's when they are most vulnerable.
See the Francione/Deontology thread and my discussions with Inator there over the last few pages (from where he starts to post). It's all about that.EquALLity wrote:How is fairness subjective?
If something is unfair, chances are it has a bad outcome.
The free exchange of bad ideas does not. But they have to be demonstrably bad or incorrect, not just subjectively so or offensive to some people. That's where science based standards are so important.EquALLity wrote:Because that, and because the free exchange of ideas leads to societal progress.
You can't reliably tell the difference. That's the point.EquALLity wrote:Bullying is not the free exchange of ideas. It's being a jerk with the intent of being a jerk.
Hm...brimstoneSalad wrote:Sort of. If a person says "I don't have a mental illness, I'm just a sad person: it's part of who I am, don't try to change me!" then that person has identified with the quality, and is fully at fault for it because it's an inherent part of the person's existential self.
On the other hand, if a person says "I want to be happy, this isn't a part of me, it's like some sadness that has attached itself to me, a disease leeching off my happiness, I would love it to go away." etc. then that's NOT part of identity, so it's not that person's fault, since it's not a part of the person proper, but something "other" that is affecting the person.
I would say "sort of" because based on behavior, if a person is trying to fix it, that person has probably already taken the first and often most essential step of identifying it as "other" and not part of the self, and as a problem to be fixed instead.
That's not what it seemed like:brimstoneSalad wrote:As far as I know, that has always been my position. Not sure what you're seeing as contradictory. This is why my argument about what disease really is was so important.
You said anxiety, as in the disease, not anxiousness, as in a quality.Before, you wrote:Or anxiety could just be defined as a condition of chronic cowardice.
How would you word it so that there'd be implicit condemnation?brimstoneSalad wrote:Carrot and stick. Sure, encourage them to get help, but any encouragement is implicit condemnation if they don't take the advice.
Of course there's a line. It's comparable to the line drawn between good person and bad person.brimstoneSalad wrote:Where do you draw the line between coward and non-coward? Is there a line?
What makes you think this?brimstoneSalad wrote:Supposed to, maybe, but they rarely do, and probably never succeed. Fighting biases outside a scientific context where there are proper controls to eliminate them is bound to fail.
How would that be unfair?brimstoneSalad wrote:Then it becomes randomly or erratically enforced. Or some kind of unfair "three strikes" policy.
Hear both sides of the story, and get third party opinions to try to figure out the truth.brimstoneSalad wrote:Or, that student is lying, or provoking it, possibly doing the same thing in return and not reporting that. Who exactly do we trust?
I don't see why that's necessarily true.brimstoneSalad wrote:Most forms of bullying are far from clear, otherwise it would be easy to stop.
Who is going to decide whether or not calling someone a 'fat bitch' is an attack or not?brimstoneSalad wrote:That's not the kind of example I gave, but who is going to decide that? Do you decide based on whether the person is offended?
Whoops, I meant to say: I see no reason to believe that bullying prevention has serious negative consequences to development.brimstoneSalad wrote:What? I didn't say it did.
I said certain ways of stopping it might.
If you stop it by putting all of the kids in bubbles so they can't interact with each other, that would probably have serious consequences (do you disagree?). These things have to be tested, you can't just experiment on huge populations of children with radical social restraints and expect them to be well adjusted.
Perhaps, but do you have evidence about this more creative bullying?brimstoneSalad wrote:Sure, but they're lazy and often don't feel the need to. Restrictions teach creativity as a matter of necessity.
Helping students be healthy to begin with doesn't address the core of the problem. Bullies are always going to find things to bully people for, because they want to bully.brimstoneSalad wrote:Can you prove it? That sounds like a guess.
Again, you're the one saying we need to expend resource here. If we're acting to DO something expensive, there should be evidence that it does a lot more good than harm, and that it's more cost effective.
How does this compare to (spending the same amount of money) the good done by counseling, which doesn't have the negative of restricting free speech?
How does it compare, even, to a fitness program and better food choices and education to just help students not be fat to begin with?
Everything costs money, and we're dealing with limited resources here.
It's not closing the door on all conversations about it. The only part when it becomes a problem is when fat shaming comes into play.brimstoneSalad wrote:Sure, but while fat shaming may not be very useful, if you close the door to all conversations about this, you also lose all the the helpful things (like advice on exercise, weight loss, etc.) that are sincere, and that's certainly not helpful either.
The same thing for discussions on religion, or anything else.
That doesn't automatically make them bad people.brimstoneSalad wrote:Wasting resources. People who are overweight eat too much.
Actually, people said that the star of the Hunger Games was too 'fat', even though she wasn't even overweight.brimstoneSalad wrote:Not enough to cause the level of obesity Americans consider fat.
Usually, ok.brimstoneSalad wrote:But either way, being fat is absolutely a matter of what and how much is put in one's mouth.
It is often about behavior, but the reason people shame obese people is because of stereotypes associated with the obese and aesthetics. They don't usually care about the obese peoples' health.brimstoneSalad wrote:People have a tendency to shame obesity because, unlike pretty much anything else about appearance, it's a legitimate issue of behavior and choice.
If it's fair to shame somebody for wearing fur, it's fair to shame somebody for being fat. The more important question is: Is it effective?
Approach is important.
I don't think the Chinese government is as good as you seem to in what they are doing with that stuff, but that's the other topic (sorry, it's been awhile).brimstoneSalad wrote:This is a big problem. Thankfully the Chinese government (where I was saying in the other thread that certain restrictions may be OK) is science based. They take the advice of experts; scientists, engineers, economists. I would not trust the US government to do that.
Context is incredibly important when we're talking about restrictions on freedom of speech. And the kind of speech being restricted is important too (it needs to be speech which can be analyzed without bias as much as possible -- something with clearly definable scientific or logical claims).
How would an anti-bullying club promote a chilling atmosphere?brimstoneSalad wrote:I hope it doesn't promote a chilling atmosphere though.
Health classes teaches about that stuff also.brimstoneSalad wrote:Documentaries and discussion on bullying -- the time could probably better be spent on teaching children health and good diet and lifestyle practices -- but that is at least providing information, and not using force.
Some types.brimstoneSalad wrote:But also: people (but particularly minors) should not be on the internet except anonymously. That's one great way to prevent cyber bullying.
Are you putting quotes around the term Islamophobia as an implication that it's not a real thing?brimstoneSalad wrote: Both. They talk about this kind of stuff on liberal shows like TYT. Somebody else probably knows more about this than I do, since I don't follow them carefully. There are a couple of threads on the "Islamophobia" in the media, I think.
What very resource intensive policies are you thinking of?brimstoneSalad wrote:Serious enforcement policies are very resource intensive. If it's just documentaries, that's a little cheaper, but we're still dealing with opportunity cost. What did they NOT teach so they had time to show that documentary instead?
Do you have any evidence to support the idea of this perfect level of bullying?brimstoneSalad wrote:Maybe, maybe not. You would have to compare it to a situation in which bullying is somehow non-existent.
The example of keeping kids isolated in bubbles would be one. How else could it be accomplished?
This could be incredibly detrimental to child development.
The problem is, if you can't find a comparison, it's impossible to make claims about it.
Looks into language deprivation, and feral children:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_ ... xperiments
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feral_child
It's hard to say how important certain kinds of social interaction are to children -- even a little bullying -- because there are no reliable experiments or case studies withholding these.
There's probably some perfect level of bullying -- just enough for growth, but not too much to cause emotional scarring. But we don't know what that is or how to achieve it.
That's not the case, considering that the kids who aren't bullied are mentally healthier.brimstoneSalad wrote:But what if, in attempting to do so, you inhibit their development and make them socially retarded in some way?
Perhaps they are vulnerable largely because of inexperience (but also because their minds are still developing), but the evidence shows that it's still better for them not to be bullied.brimstoneSalad wrote:There's no reason to believe that. It's very likely when they are vulnerable because they haven't learned to deal with it yet. That is: Children may only be so "vulnerable" because of what they have yet to learn in social interactions.
If you isolated a child from bullying and put that child into the real world as an adult, it would likely be just as vulnerable -- or maybe more so, since children are usually more emotionally resilient.
Alright, I'll read that in depth later, and possibly reply to it.brimstoneSalad wrote:See the Francione/Deontology thread and my discussions with Inator there over the last few pages (from where he starts to post). It's all about that.
Here's a link: https://theveganatheist.com/forum/viewt ... 703#p15703
The free exchange of bad ideas does also, because the free exchange of ideas leads to the good ideas winning and people realizing the bad ideas are false.brimstoneSalad wrote:The free exchange of bad ideas does not. But they have to be demonstrably bad or incorrect, not just subjectively so or offensive to some people. That's where science based standards are so important.
It sounded like you were suggesting that bullying is the free exchange of ideas.brimstoneSalad wrote:You can't reliably tell the difference. That's the point.
If the person considers it part of his or her self and is trying to improve, he or she already recognizes it as a personal fault. That's a mature way to look at it, and it's the kind of (rare) person who actually responds well to shaming by accepting responsibility, recognizing he or she is wrong, and changing.EquALLity wrote: Hm...
Does it really matter if people consider things apart of themselves or not, as long as they're trying to get better?
Anxiety is a feeling, characteristic of 'disease' or an inherent character trait.EquALLity wrote: That's not what it seemed like:You said anxiety, as in the disease, not anxiousness, as in a quality.Before, you wrote:Or anxiety could just be defined as a condition of chronic cowardice.
It already is. "It's good to seek treatment" It's bad not to. "You're a brave person to seek treatment" You're a coward not to.EquALLity wrote: How would you word it so that there'd be implicit condemnation?
How so?EquALLity wrote: Of course there's a line. It's comparable to the line drawn between good person and bad person.
We can measure that based on your effect on others; upon the world around you.EquALLity wrote: If you are more good than bad, you are a good person, while if you are more bad than good, you are a bad person.
How exactly do you weigh those? Where's the balance point?EquALLity wrote: If you are more brave than cowardly, you are a brave person, while if you are more cowardly than brave, you are a coward.
Explain.EquALLity wrote: The only quality that doesn't abide by this rule would be rationality, since it is based largely on consistency.
Yes, but one action can also reveal a tendency or habit that underlies that action. We very often are our habits.EquALLity wrote: Do you disagree with that?
Before you said that 'very rarely is a person defined by one action', or something like that, seemingly supporting that you agree with what I'm saying here.
The failure of religion to come up with consensus, for example, or move beyond dogma. Without science, there is no guaranteed objectivity, and human nature being what it is, it's bad practice to rely on it.EquALLity wrote: What makes you think this?
Look into the effects of three strikes.EquALLity wrote: How would that be unfair?
And I thought you didn't care about fairness?
Now we're talking about setting up courts and trials. One of the most expensive parts of our society. Forget teaching, that's an unnecessary waste of resources, we need to run trials all day instead.EquALLity wrote: Hear both sides of the story, and get third party opinions to try to figure out the truth.
If you take their words for it, people will exploit that. The honesty of reporting would no longer be a good assumption. People would use reports of bullying to bully each other.EquALLity wrote: Also note that kids who go out of their way to report bullying are probably being honest.
If it were unambiguous it could be punished consistently, and being consistent in its bad result for the bullies they would not bully anymore.EquALLity wrote: I don't see why that's necessarily true.
Right. Who decides this?EquALLity wrote: Who is going to decide whether or not calling someone a 'fat bitch' is an attack or not?![]()
Like I said, some bullying may be important to childhood development. It may have positive consequences that outweigh the negative.EquALLity wrote: But wait, do you believe that there is no reason to believe that bullying has serious negative consequences to development?
The burden of proof is on you here if you're trying to expend more resources on preventing bullying. I'm presenting examples of how your arguments are not inherently true.EquALLity wrote: Perhaps, but do you have evidence about this more creative bullying?
It's harder to catch, and even more ambiguous. Very hard to consistently punish, which makes it pretty much useless to do so.EquALLity wrote: What would be an example? Like pretending to be friends with a person to get information to gossip? Why couldn't we punish that?
Anonymity is fine for that.EquALLity wrote: But we can at least prevent cyber bullying (being that it's clearer than verbal bullying),
Yes, that's called assault. And the police will help you with that in the real world too.EquALLity wrote: physical bullying,
This is not as easy. Note how you said "some"; when it's inconsistently enforced, it's not necessarily useful. Also, some innocent people will be punished.EquALLity wrote: and some instances of verbal/emotional bullying.
At what cost? And to what benefit?EquALLity wrote:And schools can still have campaigns and lessons against bullying.
Well, you don't necessarily know that.EquALLity wrote: Helping students be healthy to begin with doesn't address the core of the problem. Bullies are always going to find things to bully people for, because they want to bully.
This is not proof. We need data on costs and benefits -- hard data.EquALLity wrote: Which do you think happens more often? I think it's almost certainly bullying. I can't think of examples of constructive criticism that would happen in high school more than rarely.
Again, ambiguous. When does it become shaming?EquALLity wrote: The only part when it becomes a problem is when fat shaming comes into play.
When you're using two to ten times the resources of every other human being, the odds are extremely good. Unless you build an orphanage every weekend to make up for it, you're probably a bad person.EquALLity wrote: That doesn't automatically make them bad people.
That's people being dumb, public figures will always have detractors.EquALLity wrote: Actually, people said that the star of the Hunger Games was too 'fat', even though she wasn't even overweight.
It's not just a problem of aesthetics, though, it's objectively unhealthy. The main reason it's aesthetically negative is because of that (going back to evolutionary psychology). If somebody is unfit, evolutionarily, they'll tend to be considered unattractive (even if people don't know why).EquALLity wrote: It is often about behavior, but the reason people shame obese people is because of stereotypes associated with the obese and aesthetics. They don't usually care about the obese peoples' health.
Witch hunts. People are terrified to say anything that might be interpreted as the least bit offensive for fear of being branded a bully and be bullied by the anti-bullying bullies.EquALLity wrote: How would an anti-bullying club promote a chilling atmosphere?
It can, but usually doesn't because it typically focuses on people rather than ideas or free expression.EquALLity wrote: I think bullying promotes a chilling atmosphere.
Opportunity cost. You only have so many days of classes, and there's a LOT more to teach about than bullying, and much more depth that can be gone into regarding health and nutrition. If you teach about bullying, you are sacrificing the ability to teach something else.EquALLity wrote: Health classes teaches about that stuff also.
There's no reason why it can't teach about both.
Muslims are not a race. They are people who subscribe to the doctrines of Islam, which are appropriately terrifying to some.EquALLity wrote: If you're under the impression that Islamophobia refers to 'irrational fear of Islam', that's not the case. It's irrational fear of Muslims, which clearly is prevalent in America.
I don't watch conservative media (Fox, etc.).EquALLity wrote: As for the mainstream media, I'm really going to need evidence there, because from what I've seen it's highly conservative.
Was it useful? I'd need to see statistics.EquALLity wrote: And that documentary was important, because it showed real kids who were bullied and their struggles.
As I said, it's not necessary. The person trying to implement a resource intensive program is the one who needs to provide evidence that it is or will be effective.EquALLity wrote: Do you have any evidence to support the idea of this perfect level of bullying?
This may be a result of too much bullying, or too extensive bullying. There's little research on the effects of no bullying, since it's just not a reality anywhere. You also need much better research than is available, which uses controls and looks at long term results (not immediate results, which are easy to study). The immediate result of a kid getting a shot is the kid crying -- from that you may think it's wrong -- but the long term results are immunity.EquALLity wrote: And it's comparable to the kids not being bullied. Compared to kids who aren't bullied, kids who are bullied have a lot more mental problems. There is evidence on this.
Everybody's bullied. Even bullies are bullied. Usually by abusive parents too.EquALLity wrote: That's not the case, considering that the kids who aren't bullied are mentally healthier.
Evidence on no bullying does not exist.EquALLity wrote: Perhaps they are vulnerable largely because of inexperience (but also because their minds are still developing), but the evidence shows that it's still better for them not to be bullied.
Or, you can just wait a generation, and the people with those bad ideas who weren't allowed to share them die off, and the bad ideas go extinct.EquALLity wrote: The free exchange of bad ideas does also, because the free exchange of ideas leads to the good ideas winning and people realizing the bad ideas are false.
No, bullying is just indistinguishable from the free exchange of ideas; you can't totally stop one without stopping the other too.EquALLity wrote:It sounded like you were suggesting that bullying is the free exchange of ideas.brimstoneSalad wrote:You can't reliably tell the difference. That's the point.
Never-mind if not though.
But since that's only dependent on what the person categorizes the problem as, and that's the only difference between that person and a person with a disorder, why would you condemn a person for that if that person is trying to fix the issue?brimstoneSalad wrote:If the person considers is part of his or her self and is trying to improve, he or she already recognizes it as a personal fault.
When you say that it's 'accepting responsibility', it sounds like an implication that people who don't consider it apart of themselves are just pretending they are not responsible.brimstoneSalad wrote:That's a mature way to look at it, and it's the kind of (rare) person who actually responds well to shaming by accepting responsibility, recognizing he or she is wrong, and changing.
Anxiety is the name of the disorder, and your response there was to my comment about anxiety specifically identifying it as a disorder.brimstoneSalad wrote:Anxiety is a feeling, characteristic of 'disease' or an inherent character trait.
My point was that it's a matter of perspective. It's a question of whether it's part of the self, or not. It's a question of, also, how others see it (you might disown something, but others can deny this).
Or it could be neutral not to. I'm not saying that's true, but the opposites aren't the only options.brimstoneSalad wrote:It already is. "It's good to seek treatment" It's bad not to. "You're brave to seek treatment" You're a coward not to.
And we can measure bravery/cowardice by whether or not your bravery is more significant than your cowardice.brimstoneSalad wrote:We can measure that based on your effect on others; upon the world around you.
How do you weigh how cowardly or brave an action is?brimstoneSalad wrote:How exactly do you weigh those? Where's the balance point?
If you're knowingly irrational, you're not a rational person, because rationality is based on being consistent in that respect.brimstoneSalad wrote:Explain.
It *can*, but not necessarily.brimstoneSalad wrote:Yes, but one action can also reveal a tendency or habit that underlies that action. We are very often our habits.
Religion is all about bias, though. Religion isn't about removing your bias in the way that teaching is supposed to be.brimstoneSalad wrote:The failure of religion to come up with consensus, for example, or move beyond dogma. Without science, there is no guaranteed objectivity, and human nature being what it is, it's bad practice to rely on it.
Ah, I see. Ok, I guess that's not a good metric.brimstoneSalad wrote:Look into the effects of three strikes.
Fairness (or the perception of it) is important in law (legal fairness, equality before the law), otherwise it takes away its ability to discourage bad behavior, since people see it as unfair and random -- they perceive being punished as a matter of bad luck, rather than a result of causality based on their actions. This has a compounding effect that can promote more bad behavior in the people who feel they are being punish unjustly.
What? I never said anything about trials.brimstoneSalad wrote:Now we're talking about setting up courts and trials. One of the most expensive parts of our society. Forget teaching, that's an unnecessary waste of resources.
Hm, yeah, that's true.brimstoneSalad wrote:If you take their words for it, people will exploit that.
It may sometimes be unambiguous, but I don't see reason to believe most forms of bullying are this way.brimstoneSalad wrote:If it were unambiguous it could be punished consistently and, being consistent in its bad result for the bully, they would not do it.
This relates to the psychology of fairness in law I talked about above.
Calling someone a 'fat bitch' is obviously an attack.brimstoneSalad wrote:Right. Who decides this?
You don't have evidence for this, and the evidence available contradicts it.brimstoneSalad wrote:Like I said, some bullying may be important to childhood development. It may have positive consequences that outweigh the negative.
What resources?brimstoneSalad wrote:The burden of proof is on you here if you're trying to expend more resources on preventing bullying. I'm presenting examples of how your arguments are not inherently true.
Why would that make it useless?brimstoneSalad wrote:It's harder to catch, and even more ambiguous. Very hard to consistently punish, which makes it pretty much useless to do so.
Not necessarily.brimstoneSalad wrote:Anonymity is fine for that.
Why would it not be useful when it's less consistent?brimstoneSalad wrote:This is not as easy. Note how you said "some"; when it's inconsistently enforced, it's not necessarily useful. Also, some innocent people will be punished.
The cost could be an easy informational assembly with a power-point, and the benefit would be less bullying.brimstoneSalad wrote:At what cost? And to what benefit?
I think you do, for most bullies. They want to bully to put other people down so that they feel better about themselves. It doesn't matter what they use to put a person down, so long as they have something.brimstoneSalad wrote:Well, you don't necessarily know that.
But even if it doesn't stop bullying, it's still useful.
Anti-bullying campaigns may be completely useless and a waste of resources.
We have to consider effective altruism here.
Well, I found this: https://www.bullyfree.com/school-progra ... eness-databrimstoneSalad wrote:This is not proof. We need date on costs and benefits -- hard data.
"We spent $500 on this program and prevented 9 suicides"
In 2010, the program was piloted in ten school districts. Both formative and summative evaluation strategies were used to test the effectiveness of the program. The school districts used the first year to train school personnel and to plan. The second year they implemented the strategies and curriculum (Bullying Prevention Lesson Plans). The following is a summary of a few of the findings when pre- and post-program data for the elementary, middle, and high schools were analyzed. After looking at the t-test statistical significance (p < .05), improvement was found in 50 of the 59 behavior items measured by the survey. The following is a sampling of the findings in two areas: What Students See and What Happens to Students.
It becomes shaming when it becomes a personal insult as opposed to critiquing a behavior.brimstoneSalad wrote:Again, ambiguous. When does it become shaming?
Look at social justice warriors, particularly in the Atheism plus debacle, and how they railed on people who were trying to make sensible and fair minded points. These people are rearing to go on witch hunts and destroy careers over nothing, or something that was just honestly a little poorly worded (or just honest and well worded).
Are they actually using ten times the resources of the average person?brimstoneSalad wrote:When you're using two to ten times the resources of every other human being, the odds are extremely good. Unless you build an orphanage every weekend to make up for it, you're probably a bad person.
I think it's safe to say that highschool students who are obese are not building orphanages every weekend. It's a fair guess, one in which you will be right 99.999% of the time.
Er...brimstoneSalad wrote:That's people being dumb. Those who get seriously bullied for it are the ones who are significantly overweight.
Bullies will pick on the lowest hanging fruit. Be less weird or ugly than the kid next to you, and you should be safe.
In reality, it's not mainly a problem with aesthetics. When it comes to fat shaming, it is.brimstoneSalad wrote: It's just just a problem of aesthetics, though, it's objectively unhealthy. The main reason it's aesthetically negative is because of that (going back to evolutionary psychology). If somebody is unfit, evolutionarily, they'll tend to be considered unattractive (even if people don't know why).
Anyway, that's irrelevant to the point that obesity shaming is rightly substantiated because it's objectively negative. The only problem is that it doesn't work very well to encourage people to not be obese.
It doesn't create that effect at all in my school.brimstoneSalad wrote:Witch hunts. People are terrified to say anything that might be interpreted as the least bit offensive for fear of being branded a bully and be bullied by the anti-bullying bullies.
It creates a chilling atmosphere in that it makes people afraid to be bullied, and in that it makes those who are bullied afraid to go to school.brimstoneSalad wrote:It can, but usually doesn't because it typically focuses on people rather than ideas or free expression.
Yes, but bullying is an important topic.brimstoneSalad wrote:Opportunity cost. You only have so many days of classes, and there's a LOT more to teach about than bullying, and much more depth that can be gone into regarding health and nutrition. If you teach about bullying, you are sacrificing the ability to teach something else.
What? Where did that come from? I never suggested that Muslims are a race.brimstoneSalad wrote:Muslims are not a race. They are people who subscribe to the doctrines of Islam, which are appropriately terrifying to some.
I'm not just talking about Fox. I'm talking about the mainstream media in general.brimstoneSalad wrote:I don't watch conservative media (Fox, etc.).
See that link.brimstoneSalad wrote:Was it useful? I'd need to see statistics.
Again, we're talking about doing something and expending resources.
It is a reality. Not everyone is bullied.brimstoneSalad wrote:This may be a result of too much bullying, or too extensive bullying. There's little research on the effects of no bullying, since it's just not a reality anywhere. You also need much better research than is available, which uses controls and looks at long term results (not immediate results, which are easy to study). The immediate result of a kid getting a shot is the kid crying -- from that you may think it's wrong -- but the long term results are immunity.
There's a difference between one kid saying one comment and bullying.brimstoneSalad wrote:Everybody's bullied. Even bullies are bullied. Usually by abusive parents too.
See above about too much bullying.
Again, there's a difference between one asshole saying one thing and bullying.brimstoneSalad wrote:Evidence on no bullying does not exist.
The ideas won't go away on their own because people can't publicize them. People will pass them onto their kids etc..brimstoneSalad wrote:Or, you can just wait a generation, and the people with those bad ideas who weren't allowed to share them die off, and the bad ideas go extinct.
Also, socially, if the bad ideas are ridiculed enough, people will just stop holding them because they don't want to identify with something all of their peers consider bad.
Also: Good ideas don't always win. Or sometimes they take many generations to do so, the bad ideas causing so much damage in the process.
Can non-human animals afford to wait for vegan ideas to win over carnist ones?
Can girls who are having their genitals mutilated right now afford to wait for secular ideas to win?
I agree that you can't totally stop bullying without stopping the free exchange of ideas in practice, but there are still many situations in which bullying can be stopped in practice without hurting the free exchange of ideas.brimstoneSalad wrote:No, bullying is just indistinguishable from the free exchange of ideas; you can't totally stop one without stopping the other too.