If I say "try and avoid street X, there have been violent attacks there", is that victim blaming?
@underverse @AndrewDEvans of Iraq, for example). You can be culpably ignorant.
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@PhilosophyExp@AndrewDEvans That's an insane analogy. Where for example is the crime the US military was a victim of? -
@underverse@AndrewDEvans Eh? I'm not sure what we're talking about here! It wasn't supposed to be any kind of analogy. (Not being snarky.) -
@PhilosophyExp@AndrewDEvans We're talking about the culpability (or lack thereof) of someone who has been wronged. The subtext is obvious. -
@underverse@AndrewDEvans Sorry, it wasn't obvious to me, so clearly I'm not going to be able to cope with this conversation. Such is life. -
@PhilosophyExp@AndrewDEvans I'm sure you don't think that@sjzara's tweet about victim-blaming was apropos of nothing. -
@underverse You clearly don't think I'm a good faith interlocuator, so I have absolutely no interest in talking with you. It's just boring. -
@PhilosophyExp Let me clarify then I'm genuinely curious of what you think the context is. I believe it's follow-up on "Don't Get Drunk" -
@underverse head. So I came back to twitter, saw a convo in progress, didn't read back through the tweets, and just responded! That was it. - 4 more replies
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@PhilosophyExp@underverse you mean even if the decision makers were genuinely ignorant of facts that does not absolve them in this case? -
@AndrewDEvans be culpable if there are strong moral reasons to think people should strive against ignorance and they haven't done so. -
@PhilosophyExp yes, some have an absolute duty not to be ignorant -
@AndrewDEvans Well, any kind of duty not to be ignorant imposes some moral obligation (the extent of which varies, etc).
End of conversation
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