Speaker | Time | Text |
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One of the themes we talk about here at the Rubin Report is why it's so important to judge people as individuals and not as a collective. | ||
You as an individual are much more than your immutable characteristics, be they your skin color, your gender, your sexuality. | ||
unidentified
|
We are all suffering from a kind of political PTSD. | |
And that in fact many people who are on the right are there because they've been traumatized by really low quality dangerous leftist thinking. | ||
unidentified
|
Holy Christ! | |
So it's much easier, I think, to be offended than to take responsibility for your own actions. | ||
Just speak. | ||
Don't expect somebody else to do it for you. | ||
Don't siphon it off like some wing of government. | ||
It's for you to do. | ||
For us to do. | ||
It's for everyone. | ||
Because when you put someone in a corner, all you're really doing is locking them down in their belief. | ||
Leave them with a door open. | ||
What am I saying? | ||
unidentified
|
That's nuts. | |
I can't believe I have to say this, but I think you have to look at the facts of every individual case. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, the funny thing about her argument is that it was predicated on the idea that somehow people have a right to be comfortable. | |
It's like, that's just not a right you have in life. | ||
To be able to say that I base my opinion on my own views and that I don't have to fit into any particular box, I find that completely liberating. | ||
You never really own freedom. | ||
We only take care of freedom and preserve it to the next generation. |