▲ | pclmulqdq 5 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
The poster made a comment using imprecise generalities that was intended to imply specifics. When taken as a set of generalities, it seems a lot softer and less politically pointed than it is. I treated what they said as what they wanted to say in order to expose what they meant. A strawman in the common usage of the term involves changing the argument to a weaker version that is not within the text you are arguing with. If you want to suggest that this is fallacious, you could call it a tu quoque fallacy, which was the point of the post. However, when you want to claim the moral high ground to forgive/soften a political assassination, it does matter that you are being a hypocrite about it. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | wewtyflakes 4 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
That is a lot of word salad to dance around bad faith arguments. | |||||||||||||||||
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