shuyung wrote:
I didn't compare you to a high school sophomore.
In point of fact, you did:
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I think you mistake the purpose of the George Carlin bit. As, I'm sure, do most high schoolers.
"As" clearly indicates a comparison.
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Bearing in mind that you are not a fan of George Carlin, that doesn't make him a fool.
No, you are correct. Me not liking him does not make him a fool. He is a fool because he uses disgust at humanity in general as a way to "provoke thought" when in fact, being disgusted at one's fellow humans in general is simply a sign of arrogance. This is compounded by the fact that a comedy routine necessarily oversimplifies issues that are far more complex than they appear in the routine, and
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His routine on selling and ****, aside from attempting to garner laughs, was also meant to provoke thought.
That's nice. However, practically anything can "provoke thought". Being able to "provoke thought" is faint praise indeed.
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He was a comedian who used provocative language and subjects. You dismiss it because you don't like George Carlin.
Doing provocative things is not indicitive of anything other than the ability to go outside customary social niceties. I dismiss it because it attempts to masquerade as social commentary when it's really just question-begging disguised with ridicule. I dislike George Carlin because of that. You have it backwards. I don't dismiss what he says becuase I don't like him. I think what he has to say is for the most part vapid, foolish and overly simplistic, and I disliek him because he pretends to look down on people in general from that extremely low pedastal.
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A high schooler takes from the routine a different message, not investigating farther than "yeah, let's be allowed to get hookers". Which you can see how that would appeal to a high schooler.
I can. I also see that it's precisely the same argument a highschooler might use on his social studies teacher in favor of legalized prostitution. If the teacher would respond with a carefully-thought-out response, the high-schooler would no doubt simply dismiss the nuances and complexities because he really just wants to **** hookers, who in his mind, are fun, sexy, and attractive.
Carlin does much the same thing, except that because he's a comedian, no one responds to him at all. Instead, people quote him on the internet rather than make their own argument in favor of looser prostitution regulations. In that regard, he's provoked little thought.
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Attempting to compare George Carlin's logic to a high schooler's does a disservice to the material, either you did so purposefully because you are seeking to denigrate the material, or you did so accidentally because you have never given any thought to George Carlin's material beyond a high school capacity.
I'm sorry, do I hold too low an opinion of a popular entertainer? I don't really care about whether I'm doing a disservice to his material or not. In point of fact, you've given me no reason whatsoever to think of Carlin as any more than an overgrown high school kid. All you really said was that he's trying to "provoke thought" and that high school kids hear it and think "Yeah! Hookers!"
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Either way, you drew the comparison. If you are insulted by that, maybe you should be more careful.
Or perhaps you ought not to engage in your typical tactics of making baiting comments and playing semantic pedant in order to start an argument. Did I direct any personal comments at you? No? Then perhaps you ought not to be lecturing me for the horrible crime of insulting a comedian.