Burnt Hill » 10 Dec 2016 12:50 wrote:I agree that it is logically inconsistent to dismiss, on the one hand, the idea that artists and their patrons bear any responsibility for the impact of their work/passion (it's "dangerous" to suggest that) while on the other hand to assert that anyone who so much as discusses Pizzagate bears responsibility for the actions of one lone gunman. It speaks to some cognitive dissonance in play.
They are two separate ideas taken to their extreme that don't deserve to be juxtaposed.
It seems perfectly fine to ascribe to some aspect of both, without being hypocritical.
Fair enough. But how these ideas translate into action is interesting. On the one hand, we are told that art is sacrosanct and that it is dangerous to assign culpability to artists or their patrons (I'm sympathetic to that viewpoint, by the way). On the other hand, we are asked to not even
discuss the implications of Pizzagate simply because it might cause a random wacko to pop off.
Yes, I'm all for applying rigor to the discussions of pizzagate. Justice is more likely to happen if there is hard evidence. But while I do think that circumstantial evidence is prone to certain biases, I still think it's worthy of discussion because it opens the way towards more direct evidence and therefore a tighter case (either for guilt or for innocence). As I mentioned on another thread, my current opinion is that pizzagate is a psyop based on real events that may or may not have anything to do with Comet and/or Alefantis directly. Nevertheless, it is worth discussing because CP
is a real thing, torture and murder
are really happening, and these evils
are being protected by powerful actors.
And, there is an effort to clamp down on free speech precisely so these things cannot be discussed and reach the light of day.