Stato
Well-known member
- Dec 21, 2011
- 7,367
Yeah and everyone already have their red lines. Thats how it is. You can make any normal person really angry if you play the right strings.
Are you saying there should be no red line? Are you saying you'd be perfectly fine with Mel Gibson standing there doing Holocaust jokes in front of Hollywood where several people are descendents of Jews who may or may not have survived the Holocaust? Would it be perfectly fine if someone strolled in and threw some suicide jokes directed at Robin Williams wife and kids? Or indeed to make jokes about some particular persons illness?
Is it "civlised" to go slap any of those "comedians"? No, probably not. Is it right? Yes.
No matter how many extreme and unrealsistic examples you invent to try to support your argument, the answer is always going to be that whether or not the joke is acceptable, you cannot respond with violence. By doing so, you are accepting that, whatever the circumstances, whoever hits hardest wins.
Incidentally , why use the old trope of putting the word comedians in inverted commas? Chris Rock is not a "comedian", he is a comedian. Whether you find him funny or not, he has the 30 years of ticket sales, critically acclaimed specials and millions of dollars he was paid to be one to prove it.