▲ | dudefeliciano 3 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
> we have to talk to each other. yes, the conversations need to be honest and on equal footing. Not rage/click-bait to further divide society, which is exactly what Kirk did. His "conversations" were not about exchanging ideas but "owning the libs". > There’s a deeply concerning, common pattern of radicalized rhetoric on the left rejecting dialogue in favor of “action” (read: violence.). Qanon, January sixth, Pizzagate, Plandemic, Birther and other conspiracy theories, the attacks on democrat politicians, the rhetoric around George Floyds murder and BLM, the rage against black athletes doing something as simple as taking a knee. See a pattern? Hell Trump's own words and those of his cabinet are radicalized rhetoric, so I really don't know what to tell you when you say "the left rejects dialogue and is violent". "The left" has tried for years to explain the world via fact checking and educational content, lots of good that has done! > “If we don’t work out our disagreements with conversations, there’s only violence left.” Charlie Kirk never planned to be swayed by a better opinion. His whole career was based on "prove me wrong", an obvious challenge to prove that he is right, and nothing can sway him. Give me one time where he changed his mind through dialogue. Even when shown a dolphin foetus and mistook it for human, he did not accept that he was wrong. So yea, excuse me if I don't think you are arguing in good faith, just like i don't think Charlie Kirk ever was. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | duckdriver 3 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
It seems like no one can disagree with you in good faith. This is a convenient scapegoat for you to ignore strong counterarguments, since all it takes to dismiss the speaker is their "lack of good faith." With your brilliant reasoning, after all, how could anyone of good faith disagree? > His "conversations" were not about exchanging ideas but "owning the libs". There are many counterexamples to this. If you're arguing in such good faith, you should explore those. > lots of good that has done! Even this is a good example of what I'm talking about. It sounds like you're giving up on dialogue, which is precisely my point. Don't give up on it. Commend those who seek it. > fact checking Get out of your bubble. The many failures of anything-but-neutral fact checking are patently obvious, if you have the good faith to look. > Charlie Kirk never planned to be swayed by a better opinion You may be correct, but that doesn't even matter. The proposition that no one was swayed by his dialogue would be outrageous, and I doubt you would make such an argument. So even if he would never change his mind, he's still contributing to dialogue. I asked you before -- What is it that you propose be done about the tens of millions of Americans that agree with Charlie Kirk? | |||||||||||||||||
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