chase Wrote:
i don't think that things that are offensive are necessarially equatable with those that actively oppress people or are in themselves an injustice. these djs certainly didn't add to the death toll of the tragedy with their remarks. stern can laugh at a woman's vanity in her desire for fake breasts and it's not denying anyone any rights. maybe the government does have a law that says that this is indecent and this is not, fine, i don't think that anyone can check that law to see what fits and what doesn't.
katie Wrote:
if you don't believe in a government, or specifically our government, then whose rules do you operate under, specifically for the "offensive," oppression, injustice? what system do you think these things should answer to, and how are they any different system of "some better understanding of what is and is not acceptable on a moral and philosophical level"? or is there such thing as injustice (slavery, murder, etc)?
i just don't think that things that are offensive require the same response that things that are unjust do. perhaps we're dealing with semantic arguments, but i distinguish between those actions that hurt my feelings and those that affect someone's right to live their life as they see fit.
i agree with you. at least i listed them separately.

while i also view them as separate, i do think attention should be paid when the offensive borderlines that which is unlawful/unjust. thus...
ill preface by saying this is my own opinion and you can disagree with it... but while the dj's didn't add to the death toll of the tragedy, they added to, i guess, the tragedy of the tragedy. the fact that these people were asian were completely irrelevant, it only helped make their "joke." it also made light of something unpreventable as a tsunami.
why does this make something offensive borderline unjust?
sure, people's feelings may be hurt, but it could be deemed unlawful if the fcc takes those complaints from hurt feelings and does something with them -- a fine, a slap on the wrist, whatever. if this is important enough, which many feel it is, the fcc may view it as unlawful to do with the public's airwaves (for instance, the public would rather not have their airwaves used to subject hundreds of thousands of people to racist remarks).
this is why i make the parallel to hate crime and hate speech. it is punishable by law to do certain things in this country if they're meant to cause emotional, psychological or bodily harm to certain groups of persons. the law says its unjust. now, what they said on the air may not have intended to harm to asians (perhaps they're not racist but just ignorant, or just aiming for the bottom line or just trying to make a joke and taking it to the next level, or whatever) but regardless, their actions could have caused harm -- maybe falling out of the way of hate speech, but falling into civil justice (lawsuits for personal or psychological harm). as an broadcasting outlet, a space of speech, the station probably already had a statement written out that it was a joke, that they didn't intend to cause harms, thus, unintended consequences of their speech. but even if it won't qualify as hate-speech, what they said on the air doesn't fall entirely out of the "harmful" range.
stern can laugh at some woman's boobs and she can sue for defamation or whatever. miss jones and her morning show can say all that bs about tsunamis and asians as a joke and face the consequences too. personally, i wish the fcc would concentrate less on breasts and get rid of trash of this racist ilk. i don't blame, and appreciate, citizens who stand up to it, too.