The late comedian George Carlin made a
good living on his famous “Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television”
monologue. In the monologue, he details seven particular words that one
could never use on television (or radio either) regardless of intent or
context. Use of any of those seven words would (and will) get you
bleeped out. Use of enough of them at one sitting and the FCC (in
America) will have you up on fines or worse.
Well, Mr. Carlin’s seven dirty words won’t usually cause an eye
blink on the Internet; however, some topics are tacitly taboo
regardless of the site one is surfing or the point one is trying to
make. The introduction of any of these verboten topics into a comment
stream, blog post, or general web discussion will invariably result in
the immediate cessation of whatever was being discussed and the
explosion of a full fledged flame war. These particular topics are so
incendiary because they have little or no perceivable middle ground.
One must chose a side and any refusal to chose a side will usually
result in taking fire from BOTH sides.
Pretty much all of these topics have been around for years, but none
of them show the slightest sign of becoming any less inflammatory. If
anything, the rapidity of communication available via the web has
polarized these issues even more. They are all grenades and a wise man
once said, “when the pin is pulled, Mr. Grenade is not our friend.” So,
without further ado and with apologies to the late Mr. Carlin, Ten
Topics You Cannot Discuss on the Internet (without serious drama
following shortly thereafter).

Everyone has an opinion about the Middle East. It may be about the
Palestinian State; it may be about oil; it may be about Israel; but
that little area of land is blood-soaked for a reason. Trying to talk
about the Middle East will almost always end up in a fight because no
one has been able to come up with a win-win solution to the area’s
problems in a few thousand years. Any solution requires one side or the
other to give ground and so far, no one has decided to. This mentality
carries over into the supporters of the different positions. Israel is
evil. The Palestinians are evil. The Jews are evil. The Arabs are evil.
Round and round it goes. Again, no middle ground.

Can’t be discussed rationally. No way, no how. To some it’s a
perfectly acceptable lifestyle. To others, it is anathema. It is
genetic. It is a choice. It can be “cured”. Once a homosexual, always a
homosexual. Nature – or nurture. What’s really upsetting is no middle
ground is usually available. If one happens to be a live and let live
type of person, he or she is still in some danger of being painted
negatively by the other side. One thing that makes this particular
topic so explosive is homosexuality is much more mainstream now than it
used to be. To some, that is a positive and sought after development.
For others, it is a sign that the apocalypse is at hand.

Arguably the most discussed man in all of history. His life
traditionally splits the dating system of the Western World into BC and
AD. He is also probably the single most divisive person in all history.
He was a good man and a great teacher but nothing else. He was God in
the flesh. He never existed. Strangely, many people of all stripes who
can rationally and calmly discuss the existence of God devolve into
name calling and mudslinging once Jesus is brought up. Jesus is another
guaranteed firestorm starter.

“Can’t we all just get along?” isn’t really an option. Things are
better than in the past in some instances, but in others, not so much.
Regardless, trying to talk about it reasonably is nearly impossible.
Moderate voices are usually shouted down. Even in the 21st century some
people still believe in the superiority of one race over another,
despite the fact that, organically, race is a myth. We have
ethnicities, yes, but race is an artificial construct based almost
solely on the amount of melanin in a person’s skin and the size and
layout of the facial bones and musculature. We’ve come a long way, but
a long way remains and to discuss it reasonably is difficult. Cries of
discrimination start coming in from all sides and before anyone knows
it, the “discussion” is in the crapper.

Pro-Choice. Pro-Life. Anti-choice. Baby. Fetus. When does birth
begin? I have read more than once that civil debate on abortion is
difficult in person and absolutely impossible online. The reasons are
plain. It’s a topic that is naturally polarizing. It pits men against
women, one religion against another, freedom against bondage, and for
some it is literally a matter of life and death. The most divisive
facet of the abortion debate, however, is the tendency for both sides
to apply black and white thinking to a subject with way too many gray
questions to fit into those pigeonholes. The result in “real life” can
be crazy mad protests all the way up to clinic bombings. Online isn’t
much better as otherwise nice, civil, rational people go from zero to
pissed off in less than a second. Too visceral. Avoid at all costs.

This is mostly an issue for Americans and there is a certain amount
of politics involved, but even those who live in countries with very
strict gun control, or no gun control (and little concern about it) are
sure to weigh in on this controversial topic. It is, of course, all the
more controversial for Americans because it goes to the very core of
the nation – the constitution and the right (or not) to bear arms. We
have already had at least one incident of comment war over this topic.

The Holocaust is ALWAYS a fire starter. It never happened. It
happened but the numbers are inflated. It happened but why is it so
important. The Holocaust is about the Jews. The Holocaust is about all
the targeted populations of the ***. The Holocaust didn’t get the job
done. One reason this topic is so toxic is enough people are around who
were eyewitnesses to make a strong case one way, but enough people are
around who must rely on second hand information to be subject to
influence by deniers. Either way, almost NOTHING elicits the strong
feelings that the Holocaust does, and if one makes the mistake of
saying one doesn’t care either way, well, god help you.

Of all the topics on this list, politics is the one that seems to
have shown the most recent increase in rancor (though not on Listverse
– item 6 takes the cake there). In the US we have the Republicans and
Democrats, and in many other countries (such as the UK and most of the
Commonwealth there is a similar variation of partisan political
parties. For the diehard political pundit, his party is his team. It’s
his family. It’s a mountain he’s ready to die on. I’ve seen people get
physically sick upon learning “their” candidate had lost an election.
The saddest part of this polarization is the gridlock it creates in
governments. After all, the politicians know about the splits and
they’ll pull out all the stops to add to their camp so they can stay in
office.

Evolution or Creation? The books that have been written on this
subject for either position could probably fill a modest library. Each
side has reams of data and boatloads of facts to back up its position
and each side roundly thinks the other side’s data and facts are so
much excrement. The worst part is, again, no middle ground. If one
tries to adopt a position that incorporates both sides, each side will
rip him or her to shreds. When the origins of man come up, the gloves
come off.

More people have died in the name of God, whatever name that may be,
than pretty much all other causes combined. Christian. Muslim.
Buddhist. Atheist. Scientologist. No matter the stripe, a surefire way
to get EVERYONE mad is to disparage another’s religion or lack thereof.
It’s simple, really. Religion or, spirituality if you will, is probably
the most intensely personal part of anyone’s being and that includes
those who reject religion and spirituality altogether. Also, religion
is a family affair. When someone feels his religion is under attack,
that attack immediately becomes personal and familial. One push leads
to a counter push and the atomic explosion goes off. To make matters
worse, some religions have as an integral part a command to
proselytize. Also, some people, not from a sense of command, but of
desire, will want to proselytize. When that happens, your intensely
personal experience collides with another person’s intensely personal
experience and the result is a perfect storm of firestorm.
So, there it is. The ten topics you cannot discuss online (without
serious drama following shortly thereafter). A word for the wise: it
might pay to discuss the reasons behind this inability to discuss
certain topics without a war, rather than discussing the merits of the
items mentioned specifically. Let’s keep this more civil than the last
list that mentioned one of the topics here.