Straw man per definition, although i did stop reading after "spitting opponent int the face"...
You misconstrued my argument into"ACLU should support your right to do anything and everything" (including the colorful "spitting in the face", "beating them or killing them" etc.) and then attacked that as as a fallacy that it is. That, my friend, is a straw man argument and why I stopped reading after that paragraph.
Also I should add that the generalization (your rights end where blah blah) was directed at the "spit opponents in the face" nonsense.
When you make a general statement that's ridiculous, that's wrong, that even you don't agree with, that doesn't make pointing that out a 'straw man'.
I understand that you want it to be one - you would rather be right, and if it were a straw man, that'd be a very convenient thing for you. Saying it doesn't make it one.
There comes a time for you to realize when it's your statement that's flawed, not the examples pointing out that it's flawed.
I have pointed out clearly how it's flawed - twice, and you continue not only not to get the point, but to completely ignore it.
When I point out how you ignored points, you don't fix it, you just say something like 'oh, I didn't read them before'. Well, hint hint, read them now? Too much to ask?
If I say, "all Republicans are against any civil rights bill", and you post examples of Republicans voting for civil rights bills, I'm not right to say "straw man".
Now, it would be a straw man, if you counted conservative Democrats as Republicans, or you counted non-civil rights bills as civil rights bills.
But that's not the case. I pointed out valid example to *what you said*, but because they're not *what you meant*, you attack the examples, and stand by your 'rule'.
For the third time, to talk to a wall, you said:
"If your mandate is to defend and preserve individual liberties, supporting a narrower reading of a constitutional liberty goes against the mandate. "
So let's take a few of my examples.
On the right to a speedy trial, which IIRC is now interpreted as something like 30 days, is that a "narrower reading" than saying it means one day?
On the right to free speech, which has an exception for yelling fire in a crowded theatre, is restricting that a "narrower reading" than free speech allowing that?
On the right to protection against unreasonable searches, is the probable cause a "narrower reading" of that right than requiring "beyond a reasonable doubt"?
All of these examples are ones where the current law, which the ACLU supports, are the "narrower reading of the right".
And yet, you presumably agree with each of them - and would not say that this position is inconsistent with being a 'civil rights organization'.
YOU SAID - I'll repeat that - YOU SAID - "If your mandate is to defend and preserve individual liberties, supporting a narrower reading of a constitutional liberty goes against the mandate. " So, YOU SAID that in every one of the cases I list, that the current law you presumably support, which is the "narrower reading of a constitutional liberty", is inconsistent with being an organization that protects civil rights.
Now, what's the payoff if you - and the odds are not good - finally get the point? You saying 'oh ok, that's not what you mean, it wasn't worded right'.
Not all that exciting - but look how hard it is, three times so far needed in detail, just to get you to recognize one simple, obvious error you made?