Idiocy thrives in the dark, not in dialogue.and its partner,
Idiocy does not die in darkness but, rather, in dialogue.One of the things I believe in most strongly is the greatest possible freedom of information in all parts of life. I want to learn, I want to understand things to the best of my ability, I want to make good judgements and decisions, and I can't do any of those things inside a cloud of vague misinformation like what's offered by any strongly biased source of knowledge.
So while I disagree with the comments Guillen made, and a part of me wants to just say 'let's make the idiots shut up,' I know that would be counter-intuitive and hypocritical. Because even if his comments are ignorant, he should have the right to make them, just as authors and educators the world over should be allowed to give bias-free information to the best of their abilities. Just as everyone should speak without retribution from those who would keep people in the dark for fear of promoting idiocy.
I completely agree (although I feel that the company had the right to issue any punishment they agreed upon because they were private). It's completely impossible to ever be fully "right" in any given situation just as it's impossible to not be ignorant.
ReplyDeleteAlthough I may agree or disagree with a topic or statement at a particular time, it's easy to revise judgement in later light. I think the claim is less a judgement of who he was commenting on and more that he isn't allowed to comment on them. It's important to protect this right so we can protect the rights of others in the future.