The most famous forms of Holocaust denial and revisionism tend to focus on Jews, casting doubt, for example, on how many were exterminated in the camps. But denying the impact the Nazis had on the other groups they targeted, including queer and trans people, disabled people and Romani people, is still Holocaust denial. Maybe someone should tell J.K. Rowling.

  • Lath
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    -1173 months ago

    You’re partially right. I am confusing the two, but not the spirit of their meaning, which is “to conserve”. Conservation is a force for good, but this political party thing is only focused on the bad.
    Why let it occupy the entire meaning and overshadow its better uses? To say “Conservative” with disgust is to ignore its potential for better uses.

    • @entity
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      823 months ago

      Why change things when you can argue semantics?

      • Lath
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        3 months ago

        This is about changing things. But we’re talking about different things to change it seems.
        And yes, semantics.

    • @Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I appreciate that there has been some confusion regarding the use of this word. And I also appreciate your sentiment that it would be nice to focus on the positive. However, so much evil throughout history has come from conservatism, that the word weighs heavily with negative connotation that should not be removed.

      In social context, nothing good in the history of mankind has ever come from conservatism. Nothing at all.

      Here is a non-political definition, for some clarification. Note the lack of preservation of nature.

      conservative /kən-sûr′və-tĭv/ adjective

      Favoring traditional views and values; tending to oppose change. Traditional or restrained in style.
      "a conservative dark suit."
      Moderate; cautious.
      "a conservative estimate."
      

      The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition • More at Wordnik

      (My apologies for the American dictionary reference in a thread about an English person. It was just the easiest one to copy/paste on a phone.)

      • Lath
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        3 months ago

        Moderate; cautious.

        Yes, these are my thoughts on the word’s meaning, in large.

        A moderate and cautious approach to change.

        Absolute refusal of change is the extremism part of this definition that seems to be viewed as its defining attribute instead.

        Edit: Maybe this view of mine is flawed, but it’s how I see a Conservative party should be. To avoid unchecked progress, maintain stability and implement only rigorously verified policies, in small, but certain steps. Their core tenets are moderation and cautiousness.

        • @Dasus@lemmy.world
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          273 months ago

          Their core tenets are moderation and cautiousness.

          Lol no

          Viewing words that prescriptively is kinda insane and willfully ignorant.

          When someone says “gay”, do you start arguing about how “it has nothing to do with sexuality, it just means carefree’, ‘cheerful’, or ‘bright and showy’.”?

          Cmon. Cmon. CMON

          • Lath
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            -183 months ago

            It means both. And both meanings started as positive, then one meaning became the focus and the other completely ignored.

            That’s what you should be upset about.

        • @Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world
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          153 months ago

          Fair enough. If politically conservative people legislated with a moderate, cautious demeanor, I would respect that. In fact, I might even side with them on several policies.

        • Flying Squid
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          133 months ago

          A moderate and cautious approach to change.

          What would the moderate and cautious approach have been to gain independence from colonialists?

          What would the moderate and cautious approach have been to ending slavery?

          What would the moderate and cautious approach have been to giving workers basic rights?

          • Lath
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            -153 months ago
            • Shore up the defenses, create logistics trains, be certain of the allies available, initiate battle when ready and after all diplomatic recourses have failed.

            • Have a standing replacement framework, compensate losses, ratify laws to support equal rights in its entirety, reduce support of transgressors in public eyes over time. There were few slave owners. Turning the masses against them wouldn’t have been difficult.

            • Prepare alternative replacement in case of refusal, then support unionizing while giving subsidies to encourage participation.

            Ideally, it’s supposed to advance slowly while keeping everyone relatively happy and stable.
            A government is supposed to consider all of its citizens and that means taking into consideration the consequences of failure, while also planning how to remedy them.

            • Flying Squid
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              93 months ago

              I’m sorry… are you actually going against revolutions against colonial powers?

              And if turning the masses against slave owners wouldn’t have been difficult, why did a war have to be fought over it?

              • Lath
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                -73 months ago

                You asked for a moderate and cautious approach. I gave you an example of one.
                If you draw from this more than what it is, then that’s on you, not me.

                The war in the US at least was fought due to a poor approach on the subject.
                The UK, at the very least if anything, managed to end slavery peacefully on its soil.

                • Flying Squid
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                  73 months ago

                  Britain has not ended slavery. And when it technically outlawed slavery within the British Isles (which is actually all the anti slavery laws did), it was neither a moderate nor a cautious approach.

                  But, more importantly, there is still slavery in Britain:

                  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_trafficking_in_the_United_Kingdom

                  Britain didn’t even end slavery in the 19th century either. They just changed the term to ‘indentured servitude’ and ‘blackbirding.’

                  So it wasn’t ended peacefully because it wasn’t ended.

                  Also, the idea that you even should end slavery gradually is pretty offensive to all of the people enslaved throughout history. Would you be comfortable saying to them, “you won’t be freed, but we’re ending this eventually because it’s a gradual process.”

                  • Lath
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                    -63 months ago

                    Yes, it should be done gradually.
                    What did the former slaves in the US have after they were freed? Nothing.
                    Food, clothing, housing are burdens we can’t afford even now. Did you expect them to magically appear out of thin air once the slaves were freed?

                    You want everything to be done now, on the spot, a fair and just world for everyone. How nice of you. But do you have the resources? The infrastructure? The personnel?
                    You think that everyone will without a doubt respect everyone and everything without enough basic necessities to go around?

        • @Noel_Skum@sh.itjust.works
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          13 months ago

          The big problem about discussing conservatives / Conservatives here is that this board seems quite US-focused. The British Conservative Party (the current party of UK government) pretty much came in to existence back in the day to “conserve” things and put a check on “progressive / liberal” policies. Conservative means something different whether your context is American-politics or whether it’s politics-politics.

    • @frunch@lemmy.world
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      143 months ago

      Conservative is yet another word that’s been commandeered to the ends of the right wing. They have a long history of distorting or outright willfully misinterpreting words and symbols. Their use of the punisher logo is a classic example

      • Lath
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        -133 months ago

        That’s the thing though, anyone can twist words to fit one’s view. So why accept their vilification? Why jump into that pot of vitriol and say “yes, this is how it has to be”?

    • @Drivebyhaiku@lemmy.world
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      73 months ago

      To believe “conservative” branded political parties are conflated with the English connotations of the word is quite frankly falling for propaganda at this point. Politically speaking “conservative” has a unique meaning that has nothing really to do with financial prudence or slow and measured progress. What they seek to “conserve” is old power structures. Heirachies founded on intergenerational wealth or old exclusionary policy that created privileged citizen classes. Sometimes they dress it up in the mask of “traditional values” but it’s all basically just smoke and mirrors. It’s why they attack inclusive policy, civil rights fights including education policies, social safety nets and tax policies that target wealthier citizens. They have to “conserve” the pecking order where old money remains uncontested power, new money casts the illusion that upward mobility it possible and nobody is allowed to mention that they are being treated as a second class citizen.

      The idea of self branding yourself a “conservative” serves by flattering ones own ego because as a label it’s primed to make one feel reasonable and measured… But. It’s just fluff.