I was trying to point out why part of your post was nonsense, despite making some valid points, and sending your troll back back at you. Words—with a few exceptions like ‘objectivism’—are not as strongly associated with a single moral system as you suggest. There is no single moral system that originates in the USA, and no single moral system that everybody who uses the terms “racism” and “sexism” in a sentence holds. And unless you think that Russia has adopted the moral system “whose place of origin is the USA”, 2.19.2 in the Russian constitution poses a problem for you, unless you assert that using the tokens “racism” and “sexism” is sufficient for your thesis to hold but spelling out that racism and sexism are bad without using those tokens somehow makes your hypothesis not apply.
P.S. Maybe your idea of stereotypical Americans causes you to mistake my response for “holy indignance”. For what it’s worth, I’m not indignant or angry, just amused. Perhaps I should have added some smileys? And for your information, since I know you’re Russian, I wasn’t born or raised in America, though I live there now and am a naturalized citizen.
And unless you think that Russia has adopted the moral system “whose place of origin is the USA”
Kind of. The current Russian constitution was written at the extreme high point of Russian popular affection for the American way of life, and the people who wrote it were big fans of the US constitution. Such attitudes have gone way down since then.
unless you assert that using the tokens “racism” and “sexism” is sufficient for your thesis to hold but spelling out that racism and sexism are bad without using those tokens somehow makes your hypothesis not apply.
Now I’m curious: why does this particular assertion look absurd to you? From where I stand, using marker words like “racism” and “sexism” looks like a pretty clear case of signaling. That’s like the difference between saying cheating on your spouse is bad, and saying cheating is “a sin”.
I could agree with you that “racism” and “sexism” are often used only for signaling, and even that they are (probably) used more for that purpose in the USA than elsewhere, on average, but I don’t agree that they’re only used for that purpose, and I don’t agree that they’re a product of one moral system or that they’re only used by people who hold that moral system. Some people use the words because it’s easier to say one word than ten words, easier to say “racism” than to speak a whole sentence when you know the listener will understand that you are referring to the systematic differential treatment of people on the basis of skin color.
I was trying to point out why part of your post was nonsense, despite making some valid points, and sending your troll back back at you. Words—with a few exceptions like ‘objectivism’—are not as strongly associated with a single moral system as you suggest. There is no single moral system that originates in the USA, and no single moral system that everybody who uses the terms “racism” and “sexism” in a sentence holds. And unless you think that Russia has adopted the moral system “whose place of origin is the USA”, 2.19.2 in the Russian constitution poses a problem for you, unless you assert that using the tokens “racism” and “sexism” is sufficient for your thesis to hold but spelling out that racism and sexism are bad without using those tokens somehow makes your hypothesis not apply.
P.S. Maybe your idea of stereotypical Americans causes you to mistake my response for “holy indignance”. For what it’s worth, I’m not indignant or angry, just amused. Perhaps I should have added some smileys? And for your information, since I know you’re Russian, I wasn’t born or raised in America, though I live there now and am a naturalized citizen.
Kind of. The current Russian constitution was written at the extreme high point of Russian popular affection for the American way of life, and the people who wrote it were big fans of the US constitution. Such attitudes have gone way down since then.
Now I’m curious: why does this particular assertion look absurd to you? From where I stand, using marker words like “racism” and “sexism” looks like a pretty clear case of signaling. That’s like the difference between saying cheating on your spouse is bad, and saying cheating is “a sin”.
I could agree with you that “racism” and “sexism” are often used only for signaling, and even that they are (probably) used more for that purpose in the USA than elsewhere, on average, but I don’t agree that they’re only used for that purpose, and I don’t agree that they’re a product of one moral system or that they’re only used by people who hold that moral system. Some people use the words because it’s easier to say one word than ten words, easier to say “racism” than to speak a whole sentence when you know the listener will understand that you are referring to the systematic differential treatment of people on the basis of skin color.