this post was submitted on 18 Mar 2025
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Oh, are you asking me, personally, for a definition of violence, just flat out, with no context?
I'd say violence is anything that causes unnecessary suffering to a living being, or significant damage to a nonliving thing.
What exactly do I mean by that?
Well, its quite context dependent.
Is burning down a Tesla dealership violent?
Sure!
Is a lesser act of violence in pursuit of a reduction of much, much greater violence justifiable?
Again, context matters, but generally speaking, the world is built upon violence, people just disagree about when it is justified.
If a man has pummeled you with hammer blows, you'd be justified in doing some violence back to him to get him to stop.
If a cartoon supervillain has become either the most or second most poweful man in the world, he has a history of and declared intention to commit mass systemic violence against hundreds of millions of people... and burning down some of his shittily designed and built self-immolating cars stands a good chance at knocking him, his grip on the minds of his idiot sycophants, and his overall level of power and influence down a peg?
When there are no 'legitimate' means that will effectively do this, effectively lessen his capacity to do violence against millions?
When this harms only things directly, and not people? When those things are overpriced luxury items?
Well, I'd rather not keep taking the hammer blows.
If you've got a more peaceful way to stop the hammering, I'd love to hear it... but my bones are breaking.
No I asked for a definition that doesn't include property damage.
Glad we cleared that up.
If you read what they're saying, they made a pretty good argument for why the definition of violence can include property damage.
You can stick your head in the sand all you want, but only reading answers that match your opinion is a good way to go insane.
Brother, are you blind?
See? Bad faith.
No, I do not.
The initial claim was that violence does not include property damage. So our self-proclaimed anarchist contradicted themselves in two consecutive comments.
Talk about sticking your head in the head, with reading comprehension like that y'all should go back to twitter
The initial claim was made by a different user. The user you're talking about elaborated on the importance of context, so they didn't contradict themselves.
With reading comprehension like that...
Well you accused me of whataboutism, so I explained how... yeah you could see it that way if you only look at the surface, but it's really a way of illustrating a more complex idea.
And well, here you go again, attempting to distill everything into neat, simple little boxes.
Twice now I quite literally explained to you how context is important in ... you know, definitions, which literally are a network of syntactic associations that are context... and now you've selectively replied by removing all of the context I gave.
So uh, yes, I'm glad we've cleared up that you are definitionally a simpleton, only insterested in very surface level, simple understandings of things.
When the person that started this thread said 'property damage is not violence', they likely (I can't read minds, but I've got a hunch) meant that property damage is not of the same magnitude of severity, does not or should not be judged by the same set of standards as violence directly against a person, that the entirety of a scenario involving violence should be considered when assessing it.
IE, they're using shorthand, and I attempted to unpack some of that shorthand for you.
Sort of like how the colloquial definition of 'theft' generally includes shoplifting, but generally excludes wage theft by employers, despite wage theft being of considerably greater monetary magnitude than shrink loss.
If you want 'a definition' of violence that doesn't include property damage, here you go:
Violence is any act that causes direct harm to a thing capable of suffering.
Now you can point out how that's a flawed definition, and I will redirect you to my comments on your own flawed and favored definition of terrorism from the FBI, and my own previous attempts at better defining violence, and then maybe we can have the actually interesting conversation about violence and property that you've thus far done your damndest to avoid.
I didn't need any of that explained to me. I understand and agree. You're trying to argue about things that I am not interested in arguing about.
After reading through the thread I did the same thing.
I tagged them as "bad faith actor".
Based on what, exactly?
Based on your bad faith acting. Ya know, the whole conversation up above.
No, I do not know. There was no "bad faith acting" above. Someone said property damage is not violence, I asked for evidence, none was provided, someone else jumped in to argue a bunch of stuff unrelated to the question but later admitted it was indeed violence. What part of that do you consider "bad faith acting"?