• NateNate60@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Pretty much anyone defending the postal worker here on the basis of what she did being “right” is missing the generalisation that must be made. If it’s okay for postal workers to refuse to deliver mail containing viewpoints they disagree with, that means it’s okay for bigoted postal workers to refuse to deliver mail from or to LGBT organisations. It means it would be okay for pro-life postal workers to refuse to deliver parcels containing birth control pills or flyers containing information about abortion services.

    You cannot have it both ways. If you make a rule that there are cases when it is acceptable for postal workers to destroy or refuse to deliver mail, it will be used by the other side against you.

    • thefartographer@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      I think she is a legend for what she did and I think USPS was absolutely right to fire her for it.

      I hope the mail goes back to being apolitical and that she experiences a soft landing and strong launch career-wise

        • thefartographer@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          Well, maybe I’d know that if I’d read the article. Did you ever consider that I was being lazy and vocal while uninformed?!

          I don’t know why I’m making it seem like this is your fault, but I hope you’ve learned your lesson

    • BarrelAgedBoredom@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      I’ll bite. Treating fascist flyers and LGBTQ+ flyers as the same thing is bullshit. Acting like the only fair thing to do is treat someone refusing the LGBTQ+ flyers the same as this person refusing to spread fascist flyers is bullshit. Reasons matter and it’s bullshit that society has normalized stripping the context and nuance out of situations in the name of “fairness”. She shouldn’t have been punished. We don’t have to generalize, we’ve been conditioned to generalize because it reinforces the status quo. It’s ridiculous that people refuse to acknowledge the threat of fascism in actionable ways because it’s “”“”““unfair””“”“”

      Also, it’s not ok for people to refuse to deliver medication on ideological grounds for an entirely different reason than it is to refuse to disseminate fascist propaganda. Postal workers wouldn’t know they’re delivering abortion medication in the first place as it’s sealed in (at the very least) an envelope that does not provide a description of the contents in a way that would reveal abortion medications over any other medication.

      • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        It is not a matter of fairness. I don’t give a shit about fairness. You are fundamentally making the same argument that the other person has tried to make in vain. I will explain the problem again using a rhetorical game for your benefit, but I will not engage in an argument with you, as you lot tend to make the same arguments ad nauseum. You will receive at most one response from me.

        We’ll play a simple mind game here. Let us pretend that you are on the side of good, and I am on the side of evil. Remember, this is just a rhetorical game here. We will take turns in an office which you have granted the power to censor the post. While you are in power, you can write a rule that determines what is and is not acceptable material for delivery. You can write any rule you want, constrained only by the fact that the rule must be interpretable without relying on some external oracle (i.e. “articles deemed inappropriate by @[email protected] are prohibited” is not allowed as a rule) After that, you leave office and it’s my turn in office. While in office, I will have the power to interpret the rule in any way I like, constrained only by the English language. After you have left office, all powers of interpretation are given to me (until I leave office).

        Your goal is to write a rule that filters out all of the content that you deem “fascist”. My goal will then be to apply, interpret, and bend your rule to filter out benign or left-wing content.

        Remember, the goal of this exercise is to prove to you that it is impossible to design such a rule that can adequately restrain the use of the power you have given this office without also giving me the power to censor articles you think are acceptable. If you do not wish to play this game or reply with anything other than a proposed rule, I will link to the explanation I gave the other person and there will be no more responses from me after that.

        If you want to play, reply with your proposed rule. I will reply with a way to interpret it in such a way that can be used to censor unintended articles.

        • Promethiel@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          The sword. A literal sword of Damocles, above “tHe MaLiCiOuS eNtITy”. Is that what you need to hear to feel you’ve won? The divine rights of kings and the paradox of tolerance to meet the same end, there’s a solution to your Gordian Knot.

          Now hit me with the defeatist game theory take against the groups that already would take everything.

        • GeneralVincent@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Not who you replied to, but let me give it a try if you don’t mind.

          • All promotional mail must clearly state the organization it was created by and its intent. • Claims made to support that intent must be followed by evidence from an independent and peer reviewed journal, study, or survey from within the past 20 years and clearly cite those sources. • And must provide at least one source that disagrees with the claim if one exists.

          If I can’t stop fascists sending mail, I’ll make sure the recipient has some tools and knowledge to debunk their bullshit. Also it will filter out low effort bullshit, and make factually wrong discrimination more difficult.

          • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            This one’s easy.

            I’ll pretend not to notice material that violates these rules coming from fascist organisations while applying them with strict scrutiny to non-fascist organisations. When someone objects, I’ll tell them to fill out a long form, wait 6-8 weeks for processing, and then after that I’ll send a warning letter to the fascist organisations telling them that they had better stop breaking the rules or else I’ll send them another letter! !I’ll challenge every source cited by the non-fascists as not independent while accepting low-quality garbage sources cited by the facists.

            • GeneralVincent@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              Ah, well if enforcement is part of the thought experiment then that’s only a couple extra amendments. The clear enemy of fascism is democracy;

              • Enforcement is led by an oversight committee that is democratically elected by the general population every four years

              • The oversight committee is overseen by an AI trained in intellectual honesty, ethics, and democracy

              • The AI is periodically trained and updated by Doug, a Minnesota resident who answers Survey Monkey questions on his opinion of ethics and democracy and is unaware of the consequences of his responses. Only the AI knows. No one else must know. Human bias has been conquered and postage peace has been achieved.

              • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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                10 months ago

                The rules of this game specify by that no external oracle is allowed.

                But I understand what you’re saying. Leaving law enforcement decisions to AI is problematic in its own right, however I don’t really have the time to go into depth about that. Mostly it has to do with the fact that AI will have the same biases as the data it was trained on, and in many cases, also the subconscious biases of the people who designed or trained it.

                • GeneralVincent@lemmy.world
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                  10 months ago

                  Yeah Doug was just a tenuous reference to Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy’s secret Ruler of the Universe.

                  I agree, AI is problematic. In theory, that could work in my favor if I train it to be secretly biased towards my beliefs, and put in safeguards to prevent it from being retrained or removed. But I imagine in the real world that would fail spectacularly.

                  No system can be perfect with imperfect humans and bad actors at its core, and I don’t really think AI should have any power over humans. Sorry, I kinda brought this down a rabbit hole away from the original point of the post lol

        • BarrelAgedBoredom@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          I’m an anarchist, rules aren’t really my thing. There is no rule to perfectly encapsulate the problem, I’m aware of that. As a matter of fact, I’m so aware that my ideological framework for understanding the world around me is opposed to the very concept of writing such a rule. Human information analysis and synthesis, as well as their resulting actions are infinitely complex and unpredictable. You’re setting me up for an impossible task in an attempt to pull one over on me and make your point. I agree with your point. I disagree with how it should be handled.

          That woman exercised her autonomy to act in the best interest of her community. Her community should be the only ones judging her actions. Not some duckweed manager, and certainly not laws. If her community found her actions unacceptable, then they should be the ones to determine how her wrongs are righted. I very much doubt most people in town would take issue with what she did. We can argue back and forth about what her community would think all night but neither of us truly know. She did.a good thing and she shouldn’t be punished for it

    • SSJMarx@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      If it’s okay for postal workers to refuse to deliver mail containing viewpoints they disagree with, that means it’s okay for bigoted postal workers to refuse to deliver mail from or to LGBT organizations.

      Wrong. You are describing two separate things and arbitrarily deciding that they are equal actions. Preventing hate speech from being circulated is a moral act, while hatefully censoring benign communications is not.

    • Floey@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      generalization that must be made

      No such generalization has to be made, what?

      If you make a rule

      Why does saying someone did the right thing require you to make a rule?

    • vala@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      This way of thinking is problematic. Freedom of speech is a social contract and hate speech is a violation of that contract.

  • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I understand where they are coming from, but its not their job to dictate what mail gets delivered.

    and it opens the door for right wingers to do the same if they do not get serious punishment for this.

  • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    As terrible as the flyers are, personal political and religious beliefs should not be enforced in any way at a workplace.

    Functionally this is similar to that county clerk that refused to issue marriage certificates to same sex couples. Can’t be supportive of one and not the other without being hypocritical.

    • stalfoss@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      That’s like saying if you support gay rights protestors, you have to also support nazi protestors, or you’re being hypocritical. You’re looking at things on the wrong axis.

      • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Yeah that’s exactly correct. Protestors and counter protestors both have a right to express their views, regardless of what I think of those views. As long as they don’t violate any laws in the process. That is literally one of the pillars the US is built on for instance. I don’t have to agree with you to defend your right to say those things I disagree with. The right to that freedom of expression is literally the 1st Amendment in the US.

        I don’t know what the limits are on speech in Canada, but they’re likely similar, just not as extremely biased towards protection. The US defends too much honestly.

        That doesn’t mean that your opinions and expressions are immune from controversy or disagreement. And speech is limited in certain circumstances, like direct threats. That’s not what’s happening here though.

        • ToastedPlanet@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          10 months ago

          Banning gender affirming care is a direct threat to trans people. Gender affirming care is a collection of lifesaving medical treatments and banning it denies trans people the fundamental right to exist. Refusing to spread a life-threatening disinformation campaign in Canada or hypothetically in the US is a strategic decision to defend life and liberty.

          We do not need to tolerate intolerance. Nor should we. Tolerance is a social contract or peace treaty. When one group, such as fascists, break that contract, they are no longer protected by that social contract.

          https://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/first_amendment

          Amendment I

          Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

          A person’s freedoms do not end when they break laws, rather there are no laws against our freedoms. A person’s freedom to swing their arm ends at another person’s nose. The freedom of speech ends where a person’s right to exist begins. Allowing fascists to trick people into banning lifesaving medical treatments isn’t speech we should protect. As it infringes on the right of those people to exist who depend on those lifesaving medical treatments.

          In the US, we are a nation of freedoms. We write laws to protect those freedoms. When the laws infringe upon our freedoms we change the laws.

      • Funky_Beak@lemmy.sdf.org
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        10 months ago

        It’s why I would argue that it’s a duty of care not to distribute as it spreads hate and hurt in the community and workplace. Probably wouldn’t fly in the US though.

        • anonymous111@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Who decides what is hurtful though?

          If it is the person delivering the leaflets then a Nazi postal worker can decide not to deliver postal votes as they see democracy as hurtful to their cause.

          • ToastedPlanet@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            10 months ago

            This is the paradox of tolerance. We resolve the paradox your argument is describing by reframing our concept of tolerance. When viewed as a social contract or peace treaty, we are able to tolerate each other and can refuse to tolerate intolerance. Under tolerance as a social contract, everyone in society agrees to be tolerant. If one group, say fascists, choose to be intolerant to any other group, the fascists are no longer protected by the agreement.

            Thus we can reject fascist intolerance and bigotry while still tolerating each other. We can reject hate speech and targeted life-threatening information campaigns against lifesaving medical treatments while still enjoying free speech.

            Also, fascists are bad-faith actors. Bad-faith actors will attempt to undermine our institutions for their gain no matter what we do. So our efforts should instead go to preventing bad-faith actors like fascists from taking power.

            • anonymous111@lemmy.world
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              9 months ago

              Hypothetically (because I’m interested and not trying to start an argument) would you ban the delivery of leaflets for a pro Trans party that was authoritarian?

              P.S. I agree with you points :)

              A different analogy would be a right wing person refusing to deliver left wing mail. Example might be something for a ‘Woke’ support group.

              Another could be, Atheists refusing to deliver religious letters of Christmas cards.

              My point is , we can’t leave it to individuals to decide these things in isolation.

              • ToastedPlanet@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                9 months ago

                We should ban any disinformation campaign that we as a society, through research and study, know to be a disinformation campaign.

                We should ban any hypothetical authoritarian pro-trans party and their leaflets because they’re an authoritarian party.

                We shouldn’t ban something for being woke because woke is now a fascist taking point to demonize the left and something being woke is not a real basis for something to be harmful.

                There is a difference between personal mail and disinformation campaign leaflets. No one should be banning Christmas cards unless they are part of a targeted disinformation campaign to deny people the fundamental right to exist.

                We as a society have chosen to leave this to individuals. This November 5th, the MAGA movement, a christo-fascist movement, is attempting to takeover our democracy. People in positions of leadership and power saying no to fascists attempting to subvert the results of the election may be all that stands between us and that christo-fascist takeover.

                It would be better if there were systems in place to stop disinformation campaigns, but in this Canadian woman’s case, her civil disobedience was the only system in place. We might soon find ourselves in her position. Where civil disobedience is the only recourse to prevent the worst outcomes of fascist policies. So we should not discount civil disobedience out of hand.

                Also, fascists are bad-faith actors. Bad-faith actors will attempt to undermine our institutions for their gain no matter what we do. So our efforts should instead go to preventing bad-faith actors like fascists from taking power.

                I am copying this here, because it’s what refutes your argument’s central point. We should not factor in what fascists will do into our decision making process. Fascists will try to destroy our way of life no matter what we do. So instead of worrying about trying to appease fascists, which has never worked, we should focus on keeping fascists out of power. If the fascists takeover our democracy, we aren’t getting it back for free. So we should want individuals to engage in civil disobedience to prevent fascists from taking power and enacting their policies. To do otherwise would make us complicit in our own destruction.

                Freedom of speech rests on the foundation of the truth. If we elevate lies to the level of the truth we will lose our freedom of speech. There is no utility in tolerating intolerance. In humoring a known disinformation campaign we do not dissuade the fascists, who are always looking to see what they can get away with. Nor do we safeguard our liberties, but instead lay the groundwork for them to be taken away. If we let the fascist decide what is true then it is the fascists who decide what we speak.

                • anonymous111@lemmy.world
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                  9 months ago

                  Good points. I agree with the paradox of tolerance and your other points.

                  Thank you for taking the time to reply. This type of discussion is why in use social.media but it is rare to get past the partisan brigading.

                  Civil disobedience is an interesting point in this case. Personally, I probably would have acted as this Canadian woman did.

                  What I am struggling with is understanding what counts as a disinformation campaign. I read in your post that you’d answer this as a society and with research however, if you were put in charge of this research tomorrow, do you have a draft definition of a disinformation campaign?

                  I ask as I try to see the world in black and white and steer clear of the grey however, this is rarely possible.

                  Free speech being a good example. It’s either a 1 or 0.

    • jeffw@lemmy.worldOPM
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      10 months ago

      I was thinking more about the “can’t force me to make a cake for a gay wedding” thing

      • M500@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        As others have said it’s a government position and it’s delivering mail. I’m not sure if Canadian law, but in think that’s a pretty severe crime in the US.

        What if the person didn’t want to deliver medicine because they believed that god will heal everything?

        While the mail is hateful, it needs to be delivered.

        Also consider that someone paid for the flyers and paid to have them mailed. So this guy is effectively robbing them of two different transactions.

        To be clear, I don’t support the flyers in any way, but what the guy did was wrong.

  • BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Good. This is the same as a pharmacist refusing to fill a prescription due to personal beliefs. You took a job knowing what it would entail.

    • SSJMarx@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      The Post Office disseminating hateful propaganda is bad, actually, and just because the law currently requires Postal workers to do it doesn’t make it right.

      • iamtherealwalrus@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        So a pharmacist should be allowed to refuse selling e.g. birth control, due to personal beliefs? Everyone can just decide who they want to service for any reason, right?

        • nutsack@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          the post office is right to punish her for not doing her job, but she is also right to sacrifice her job for an act of civil disobedience. they are both right. the only person who’s a piece of shit here is the one sending the mail.

          • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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            10 months ago

            Yes. Exactly. But that’s the original point: you accept the job with the understanding that, if you find a particular aspect of the job to be against your morals, and you refuse to perform your job due to your morals, that you may be disciplined and/or fired.

            The wrinkle here is that pharmacists have some degree is 1a protections (in the US) because their objections are on religious grounds rather than humanist ones. That makes firing them difficult, because it can be argued that it’s religious discrimination. An obvious solution would be to require them to refer the person to another pharmacy, so that they aren’t violating their religion, but pharmacists are arguing that’s compelled speech that still violates their 1a rights.

            • nutsack@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              nobody should ever be granted special privileges based on religion or political beliefs. the postal service and the pharmacy face the same moral circumstances in these two scenarios.

              civil disobedience is still disobedience. you do it because you believe its right, and you accept the consequences.

              • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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                9 months ago

                AFAIK, no one has rights based on political beliefs. But in the US, people have religious liberty granted to them under the constitution, within some fairly loose limits, and discriminating against people in employment based on their religious requirements is not legal. There’s the issue of ‘reasonable accommodations’; if I’m Muslim, then a company denying me the ability to pray several times each shift is almost certainly religious discrimination.

                Yes, I agree that we should view religion as a choice rather than an inherent quality, but that’s not the way the constitution is.

    • SkyezOpen@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Pharmacists can get away with that. The mail person is a federal employee and doesn’t have that luxury.

  • njm1314@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    While I have the utmost sympathy for her, if a postal worker is picking and choosing what mail is to be delivered the entire concept of the post office becomes moot.

    • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Yeah. I have very strong political, moral, and ethical opinions.

      I’m also a government employee, and those opinions disappear when I’m performing my duties. I enforce rules I find idiotic all the damn time and let people get away with bullshit that should be illegal. They’re not my rules.

    • SSJMarx@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      I agree in that it should be a democratically-accountable panel that prevents hate speech from being disseminated through the mail, rather than an individual, but that doesn’t make this individual’s actions wrong.

      • Emerald@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I think your panel concept sounds like a horrible idea. Have the state look through everyone’s mail and decide if they want to allow your mail through or not? I’m sure that would definitely only work well and wouldn’t be used against the people you designed it to protect.

        • SSJMarx@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          Private correspondence is different from a hate organization disseminating mass flyers. I would not be in favor of censoring private correspondence.

          • Emerald@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            The thing you should do is crush that hate organization, not screen every flyer that goes through the mail

  • jpreston2005@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    At some point we have to recognize that these organizations are delivering blatant misinformation and hate-speech. That is, speech designed to “other” an already minority group of civilians.

    These postcards accuse teachers of “pushing transgenderism” and describe gender-affirming medical care as “chemical and surgical mutilation.”

    This hateful and divisive rhetoric has real effects on trans people just trying to live their lives, and one should not be forced to participate in the dissemination of said hate-speech propaganda. I’m glad that they just suspended her, and ended up paying her for the days missed after she came back.

    I, for one, am sick an tired of being delivered hate-speech in the mail. Some of the republican mailers I get are littered with the same hateful misinformation. It does nothing but foment anger towards an already marginalized minority group. It’s wrong, and the post office should refuse to deliver it.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      That actually happens? I can’t say I’ve ever gotten hateful misinformation in the mail (and no, I don’t want to find out). My snail mail is mostly spam, with the occasional bill that doesn’t want to be electronic. More than half the time, it all goes directly in the recycle bin.

    • Emerald@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      I, for one, am sick an tired of being delivered hate-speech in the mail. Some of the republican mailers I get are littered with the same hateful misinformation. It does nothing but foment anger towards an already marginalized minority group. It’s wrong, and the post office should refuse to deliver it.

      Honestly, a part of me likes getting this mail just so I can easily identify the morons in my state.

      "Oh, this person running for senator thinks aliens are coming to eat your dog in Ohio? Well… I now know they’re bad. *trashes mail*

      • SSJMarx@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        Apples to oranges comparison. Facilitating speech is not automatically a neutral action. Facilitating hate speech is bad and censoring hatemongers is good. The law is irrelevant to the question of morality.

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      10 months ago

      “God doesn’t make mistakes.” This has to be the best argument I have ever seen. Just wow… Can’t god also solve the 3x+1 problem? Would be useful.

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    10 months ago

    I don’t disagree in therory but there is no way we can let postal workers have a say in what they can or cannot deliver. Fire them for doing it and move on.

  • capital@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    This is hateful shit.

    Unfortunately, they have the same argument as Kim Davis for not doing their duty.

    They both refuse to do their duty due to moral concerns.

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    10 months ago

    Tolerance may end with Intolerance, but idk how I feel about postal workers having the right to decide what does and does not get mailed.

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    People can refuse to bake a cake for a gay couple.

    People get punished for not delivering hate mail.

    Why is it so easy for hatred to do things but so hard for decency to push back?

  • hate2bme@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I have nothing against trans but this person should have delivered them. If these are legal there is no reason not too. Just think of it as any other trash mail.