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by crims0n 94 days ago
Remember the good ol' days when people just didn't discuss politics or religion out of decency? There was a reason for that, both bring out the worst in people.
2 comments

Suddenly I'm reminded of the decent (grown) people who yelled in six year-old Ruby Bridges' face when she was merely attending elementary school. So if that was 1960, I'm just wondering when those good ol' days you're referring to where.
It is an expression, you needn’t interpret it literally.
Oh, okay. I guess that's a convenient excuse to not have to back up your words.
This is hn not reddit, do you really expect a response to your whataboutism?
His reply was not whataboutism; it was a legitimate and direct retort to your post that exposes that what you asserted was false.
You can literally replace the first four words in their sentence with “What about when”.
"Whataboutism" is just asking you to validate your claims, I guess.
You don’t need me to validate it for you, search “never discuss politics or religion in polite company” - it was a common maxim.
What, exactly, was the expression in your post that was not meant to be interpreted literally?
“Good ol’ days” is an idiom.
The problem is that living life is inherently political. Being able to ignore politics, not having to feel the need to discuss them, is a sign that you are inherently better off than a good chunk of this country.

A lot of people spend most of their waking hours having to deal with or at least keep in mind the fall out from regressive politics. Asking people to not discuss politics is like asking someone living in fear for their safety to not try and improve said safety. You're asking to not have to be bothered by something that annoys you to talk about in exchange for someone not being able to advocate for their life and livelihood.

I agree with the sentiment. My point was more people used to have a common understanding that there was a time and place for political (and religious) discussion - and that those beliefs were deeply personal, shaped largely by experience, and not meant to be held against one another in the broader judgement of their character.

Somewhere along the way we lost that idea, not all cultural changes are for the better.

I see, so from this reply I gather that your parent post was not “just an expression” as you claimed elsewhere, and you just got snippy when someone pushed back against your obviously out-of-touch assertion of fact.
As stated elsewhere, “good ol’ days” is an idiom. That was the expression. The point I was making was independent of the idiom/expression.
Goddamn, I wish I could block users on HN.
Just some intellectual sparring mate, no ill will intended.
> not meant to be held against one another in the broader judgement of their character

Really? When was that time? 1000 BC?

Was pretty common with my grandparents generation so… mid 20th century? I know it can be hard to believe post-internet.