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The New Coffee Room

  1. TNCR
  2. General Discussion
  3. Taking On The Mouse

Taking On The Mouse

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion
141 Posts 12 Posters 3.7k Views
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  • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

    I’m curious what’s the broader principle for you.

    Is punishing private entities who opposed a bill favored by the party in power a valid act of government in your mind? So, for example, if it were Elizabeth Warren or Gavin Newsome doing it, you might grumble about the particulars but would at least recognize them as exercising a legitimate prerogative of power?

    Or is this simply something you think is ok if your side does it but would be government overreach if the other side does it?

    JollyJ Offline
    JollyJ Offline
    Jolly
    wrote on last edited by
    #87

    @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

    I’m curious what’s the broader principle for you.

    Is punishing private entities who opposed a bill favored by the party in power a valid act of government in your mind? So, for example, if it were Elizabeth Warren or Gavin Newsome doing it, you might grumble about the particulars but would at least recognize them as exercising a legitimate prerogative of power?

    Or is this simply something you think is ok if your side does it and government overreach if the other side does it?

    If Warren opposed it, it's just another day in politics. If a Disney employee opposed it, without being an official spokesman for the company, it's just another day in politics. If the CEO of Disney personally opposed it, it's just another day in politics.

    I think it a very slippery slope that should be avoided, when public companies wade into the lawmaking of social issues.

    “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

    Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

    1 Reply Last reply
    • jon-nycJ Online
      jon-nycJ Online
      jon-nyc
      wrote on last edited by
      #88

      Mask mandates are a social issue.

      If the Biden administration punished companies for taking a vocal stance against them that would be legitimate in your mind?

      Only non-witches get due process.

      • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
      JollyJ 1 Reply Last reply
      • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

        Mask mandates are a social issue.

        If the Biden administration punished companies for taking a vocal stance against them that would be legitimate in your mind?

        JollyJ Offline
        JollyJ Offline
        Jolly
        wrote on last edited by
        #89

        @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

        Mask mandates are a social issue.

        If the Biden administration punished companies for taking a vocal stance against them that would be legitimate in your mind?

        Good question, but mask mandates are also a workplace and productivity issue. That's a corporate issue, especially in healthcare.

        “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

        Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

        jon-nycJ 1 Reply Last reply
        • HoraceH Online
          HoraceH Online
          Horace
          wrote on last edited by
          #90

          Has the language of “punishment” been conceded? Cessation of special privileges of debatable and impermanent social value is not necessarily “punishment” for the purposes of this discussion. It’s not as if Disney’s decision makers are being arrested.

          Education is extremely important.

          jon-nycJ 1 Reply Last reply
          • CopperC Online
            CopperC Online
            Copper
            wrote on last edited by
            #91

            Elections have consequences.

            Ask those people that were intimidated by Mr. Obama's IRS.

            Some people thought that was over the line. It probably was, but a lot of people thought it was heroic.

            1 Reply Last reply
            • JollyJ Jolly

              @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

              @LuFins-Dad

              Yes it’s taking away a privilege but it’s being done as a punishment obviously. As a parent you are surely familiar with taking away a privilege as punishment.

              None of the principled reasons to remove the privilege occurred to these guys before the Ed bill. In fact these very same clowns just wrote a new and rather substantial Disney privilege into law a just a few months ago. (Tech reg bill applies to all social media companies ‘unless owned by a company that operates a large amusement park in the state’).

              Do you not understand politics or are you being intentionally obtuse because corporate America got gored for coloring outside of the lines?

              IvorythumperI Offline
              IvorythumperI Offline
              Ivorythumper
              wrote on last edited by
              #92

              Do you not understand politics or are you being intentionally obtuse because corporate America got gored for coloring outside of the lines?

              Coloring outside the lines sounds like acting beyond their corporate charter...

              1 Reply Last reply
              • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                Driving on public roads is a privilege. Maybe they can take licenses away from every Disney employee who publicly opposed the bill.

                IvorythumperI Offline
                IvorythumperI Offline
                Ivorythumper
                wrote on last edited by
                #93

                @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                Driving on public roads is a privilege. Maybe they can take licenses away from every Disney employee who publicly opposed the bill.

                No, driving on public roads is not a privilege. It is a necessary condition for the commonweal.

                jon-nycJ 1 Reply Last reply
                • JollyJ Jolly

                  @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                  Mask mandates are a social issue.

                  If the Biden administration punished companies for taking a vocal stance against them that would be legitimate in your mind?

                  Good question, but mask mandates are also a workplace and productivity issue. That's a corporate issue, especially in healthcare.

                  jon-nycJ Online
                  jon-nycJ Online
                  jon-nyc
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #94

                  @Jolly said in Taking On The Mouse:

                  @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                  Mask mandates are a social issue.

                  If the Biden administration punished companies for taking a vocal stance against them that would be legitimate in your mind?

                  Good question, but mask mandates are also a workplace and productivity issue. That's a corporate issue, especially in healthcare.

                  Recruiting is a corporate issue too.

                  Social issues affect us in the workplace as well as the home.

                  Only non-witches get due process.

                  • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                  JollyJ 1 Reply Last reply
                  • HoraceH Horace

                    Has the language of “punishment” been conceded? Cessation of special privileges of debatable and impermanent social value is not necessarily “punishment” for the purposes of this discussion. It’s not as if Disney’s decision makers are being arrested.

                    jon-nycJ Online
                    jon-nycJ Online
                    jon-nyc
                    wrote on last edited by jon-nyc
                    #95

                    @Horace said in Taking On The Mouse:

                    Has the language of “punishment” been conceded?

                    By DeSantis himself in his fundraising emails.

                    But it would anyway be obvious to any honest observer. Remember these very same clowns granted Disney yet another big carve-out (with no corresponding state development benefit) literally a single digit number of months ago.

                    Only non-witches get due process.

                    • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                    HoraceH 1 Reply Last reply
                    • IvorythumperI Ivorythumper

                      @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                      Driving on public roads is a privilege. Maybe they can take licenses away from every Disney employee who publicly opposed the bill.

                      No, driving on public roads is not a privilege. It is a necessary condition for the commonweal.

                      jon-nycJ Online
                      jon-nycJ Online
                      jon-nyc
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #96

                      @Ivorythumper said in Taking On The Mouse:

                      @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                      Driving on public roads is a privilege. Maybe they can take licenses away from every Disney employee who publicly opposed the bill.

                      No, driving on public roads is not a privilege. It is a necessary condition for the commonweal.

                      Maybe you’re making a normative statement not a positive one? But as a point of law you are incorrect.

                      (It has real world ramifications, for example the legal standard the state must meet to revoke the privilege)

                      Only non-witches get due process.

                      • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                      IvorythumperI 1 Reply Last reply
                      • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                        @Ivorythumper said in Taking On The Mouse:

                        @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                        Driving on public roads is a privilege. Maybe they can take licenses away from every Disney employee who publicly opposed the bill.

                        No, driving on public roads is not a privilege. It is a necessary condition for the commonweal.

                        Maybe you’re making a normative statement not a positive one? But as a point of law you are incorrect.

                        (It has real world ramifications, for example the legal standard the state must meet to revoke the privilege)

                        IvorythumperI Offline
                        IvorythumperI Offline
                        Ivorythumper
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #97

                        @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                        @Ivorythumper said in Taking On The Mouse:

                        @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                        Driving on public roads is a privilege. Maybe they can take licenses away from every Disney employee who publicly opposed the bill.

                        No, driving on public roads is not a privilege. It is a necessary condition for the commonweal.

                        Maybe you’re making a normative statement not a positive one? But as a point of law you are incorrect.

                        (It has real world ramifications, for example the legal standard the state must meet to revoke the privilege)

                        The fact that the State must act with due process to deprive someone of the right to drive on public roads tells us it is not a privilege. One has a natural right to access to all the goods of a society -- this is not privilege.

                        By your legal compass, walking freely on the sidewalk is also a privilege.

                        A driver's license is not a privilege, it readily must be given to anyone who demonstrates a basic competency and provides proof of legal and financial responsibility to protect the public and other private parties against financial harm. That the State enacts some regulation for the common good does not make it a privilege any more than a marriage license creates a privilege to marry, as distinct from ordering a natural right toward the common good.

                        CopperC 1 Reply Last reply
                        • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                          @Horace said in Taking On The Mouse:

                          Has the language of “punishment” been conceded?

                          By DeSantis himself in his fundraising emails.

                          But it would anyway be obvious to any honest observer. Remember these very same clowns granted Disney yet another big carve-out (with no corresponding state development benefit) literally a single digit number of months ago.

                          HoraceH Online
                          HoraceH Online
                          Horace
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #98

                          @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                          @Horace said in Taking On The Mouse:

                          Has the language of “punishment” been conceded?

                          By DeSantis himself in his fundraising emails.

                          So it served him to use that word at that time to that audience. Rile them and their support up, that makes sense.

                          But it would anyway be obvious to any honest observer.

                          What's obvious is that words have rhetorical value to serve an agenda. Just as the word now has rhetorical value to you and your framing.

                          Remember these very same clowns granted Disney yet another big carve-out (with no corresponding state development benefit) literally a single digit number of months ago.

                          So these "clowns" granted a carve-out with no public benefit, but from your perspective, a reversal of such would be unfair punishment. What if the carve-out wasn't just or for the public good to begin with? At that point, you're hand-wringing about motivations for doing a good thing. I suspect there is room for some hand-wringing about the motivations for granting the carve-out, but that is not the hand-wringing that serves your agenda.

                          Education is extremely important.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          • jon-nycJ Online
                            jon-nycJ Online
                            jon-nyc
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #99

                            This doesn’t seem very hard, Horace.

                            If they approached this, say, last year and said “these privileges we granted Disney (and something like 1000 other entities) don’t make sense, let’s revoke them” that would be fine and I’d cheer them on.

                            When they take them away explicitly to retaliate for their having exercised their first amendment rights, that’s a problem and none of us should think that’s a good precedent no matter how much we love or hate Disney or DeSantis or teaching fisting in kindergarten.

                            Only non-witches get due process.

                            • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                            HoraceH 1 Reply Last reply
                            • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                              This doesn’t seem very hard, Horace.

                              If they approached this, say, last year and said “these privileges we granted Disney (and something like 1000 other entities) don’t make sense, let’s revoke them” that would be fine and I’d cheer them on.

                              When they take them away explicitly to retaliate for their having exercised their first amendment rights, that’s a problem and none of us should think that’s a good precedent no matter how much we love or hate Disney or DeSantis or teaching fisting in kindergarten.

                              HoraceH Online
                              HoraceH Online
                              Horace
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #100

                              @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                              This doesn’t seem very hard, Horace.

                              If they approached this, say, last year and said “these privileges we granted Disney (and something like 1000 other entities) don’t make sense, let’s revoke them” that would be fine and I’d cheer them on.

                              When they take them away explicitly to retaliate for their having exercised their first amendment rights, that’s a problem and none of us should think that’s a good precedent no matter how much we love or hate Disney or DeSantis or teaching fisting in kindergarten.

                              You accept the existence of politics and its realities when you accept, without hand-wringing, the special favors done by the government for Disney. Your hand-wringing is only special pleading. These special favors are fair game for retaliatory reversals, exactly to the extent they were fair game to be granted to begin with.

                              Education is extremely important.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              • jon-nycJ Online
                                jon-nycJ Online
                                jon-nyc
                                wrote on last edited by jon-nyc
                                #101

                                I have never liked the special carve outs and special deals. It’s the difference between market capitalisms and crony capitalism.

                                I would love for them the bust the sugar cartel that benefits I think five families in the US (which fund Rubio by the way). I would love to end carried interest exemption to capital gains for hedge funds and private equity. I would love to end the ethanol absurdity. I would love to end the oil depletion allowance.

                                But motives matter. We should end them because they’re fundamentally corrupt and harm consumers and/or taxpayers. I don’t want one of them ended because the particular interest group opposed the administration on some piece of legislation.

                                Only non-witches get due process.

                                • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                                HoraceH 1 Reply Last reply
                                • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                                  I have never liked the special carve outs and special deals. It’s the difference between market capitalisms and crony capitalism.

                                  I would love for them the bust the sugar cartel that benefits I think five families in the US (which fund Rubio by the way). I would love to end carried interest exemption to capital gains for hedge funds and private equity. I would love to end the ethanol absurdity. I would love to end the oil depletion allowance.

                                  But motives matter. We should end them because they’re fundamentally corrupt and harm consumers and/or taxpayers. I don’t want one of them ended because the particular interest group opposed the administration on some piece of legislation.

                                  HoraceH Online
                                  HoraceH Online
                                  Horace
                                  wrote on last edited by Horace
                                  #102

                                  @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                                  I have never liked the special carve outs and special deals. It’s the difference between market capitalisms and crony capitalism.

                                  I would love for them the bust the sugar cartel that benefits I think five families in the US (which fund Rubio by the way). I would love to end carried interest exemption to capital gains for hedge funds and private equity. I would love to end the ethanol absurdity. I would love to end the oil depletion allowance.

                                  But motives matter. We should end them because they’re fundamentally corrupt and harm consumers and/or taxpayers. I don’t want one of them ended because the particular interest group opposed the administration on some piece of legislation.

                                  And meanwhile the rest of us won’t hand wring about the horrible precedent set, when the real precedent was set by the existence of the favors to begin with. There is no evidence of a lack of principles if people observe that long standing political and cultural realities happen to fall their way once in a while.

                                  Education is extremely important.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  • jon-nycJ Online
                                    jon-nycJ Online
                                    jon-nyc
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #103

                                    Rewarding friends and punishing enemies are not really the same thing. One is far more insidious.

                                    Only non-witches get due process.

                                    • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                                    HoraceH IvorythumperI 2 Replies Last reply
                                    • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                                      Rewarding friends and punishing enemies are not really the same thing. One is far more insidious.

                                      HoraceH Online
                                      HoraceH Online
                                      Horace
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #104

                                      @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                                      Rewarding friends and punishing enemies are not really the same thing. One is far more insidious.

                                      This was a public and transparent move to reward desantis supporters. It’s how politics is supposed to work, more so than less transparent sweetheart deals that reward far fewer people in more insidious ways.

                                      Education is extremely important.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                                        Rewarding friends and punishing enemies are not really the same thing. One is far more insidious.

                                        IvorythumperI Offline
                                        IvorythumperI Offline
                                        Ivorythumper
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #105

                                        @jon-nyc said in Taking On The Mouse:

                                        Rewarding friends and punishing enemies are not really the same thing. One is far more insidious.

                                        Yes. Rewarding friends is far more insidious as it takes a public good and privatizes it. Punishing enemies is only a private harm.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        • jon-nycJ Online
                                          jon-nycJ Online
                                          jon-nyc
                                          wrote on last edited by jon-nyc
                                          #106

                                          You should think this through at some point when the stakes of the debating point de jour are behind us.

                                          As much it seems unfair that cops let their friends off for various offenses, if the local department had it out for me and decided to make me their target it would thousands of times worse.

                                          Only non-witches get due process.

                                          • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                                          IvorythumperI HoraceH 2 Replies Last reply
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