@asteris not one for labels but think you can be a humanist and a 'nationalist' where as you want a state treated 'equally' or least fairly
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@Peymasad I would agree to that, but I can't find a single 'specimen' that abides by the definition. Can you? -
@asteris true hard to find examples but then what's where you and I come in no? :) -
@Peymasad but I still wouldn't call myself a nationalist in any recognizable sense. "I love my country" is an abstraction, isn't it? -
@asteris tbh term nationalist has many negative connotations that good is over looked.but I agree with u on gd&bad thrgh ppl,places,ideas -
@Peymasad what I object to is chauvinist exceptionalism. Self-destructive for any people & toxic to others, certainly has been for my own -
@asteris exactly what I object too.Humans find it hard to get to that middle ground and so old labels stay with old definitions -
@Peymasad still, some old definitions remain serviceable & meaningful. For instance, nazis, as we've finally realized again in Greece - 1 more reply
New conversation -
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@asteris The cognitive dissonance is strong in this one... -
@Pexlibanis that's the magic democracy unicorn. The only democracy you can have is the one we'll allow you to.
End of conversation
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+1 MRT
@asteris: You can either be a nationalist *or* a humanist; you either believe in supremacy of human rights *or* of states' rightsThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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