PaulConventionWV
Member
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2011
- Messages
- 16,041
Why not? How would a future in which we all treat cat-calling like the N word (no legislation involved) personally affect you? You've already said you don't engage in the behavior, and you supposedly tell your friends not to do it, so...?
Because it would be far more effective if people would choose not to be affected by the constitutionally protected free speech of others than to start some non-descript campaign against cat-calling. I just don't think it's that big of a deal. Who am I to judge if someone wants to find a lover out on the street? If they see someone they want to get acquainted with, they have the right to attempt to get to know them. Just because I wouldn't do it, it doesn't mean people shouldn't be able to do it at all.
The whole notion of this vague dialogue that's supposed to somehow have a positive effect somewhere down the road is so vague and hypothetical that it's pointless to talk about it. Let's focus on the real problems instead of caring so much about what people say and hear in public.
You can't make society change its opinion. If your idea is a good one, then it will be adopted by society with or without your help. Do you think the civil rights movement of 1964 needed MLK Jr? No, he was just representing an idea that happened to be what people wanted. If it weren't him, it would have been somebody else. So if society feels the need to make cat-calling taboo, then it will come to be with or without your "dialogue."
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