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ITT 2: We post shit that is neither funny nor interesting

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B1rd
Again, you do a lot of reading in to things that aren't there. I never used the word "some", I said your group, implying all people with social justice leanings, are defined in part by their exaggeration of sexism against females, both in its frequency, impact and relevancy to society. And I didn't say sexism doesn't happen, I implied that what you call sexism is often just a triviality or justifiable behaviour, and you certainly seem to be exaggerating its relevance to Uber, whose problems certainly seems to be the typical regulatory and "worker's rights" complaints.

The word sexism itself is tied to the sjw ideology and theories of patriarchy and such that state that women are under widespread oppression in society. But such things are ludicrous when you look at things impartialy. Women benefit inordinately more from wealth redistribution schemes, they benefit from progressive actions schemes, they get off much lighter for identical crimes as men, they disproportionately win family court cases and have higher attendance at universities and achieve higher grades than men, and they commit suicide around 4 times less often. And then, even though things like feminism and affirmative action have wide-spread institutional support, people attack Jordan Peterson having the temerity of being a role model for young men and standing up for their interests. No wonder!
DaddyCoolVipper

B1rd wrote:

Again, you do a lot of reading in to things that aren't there. I never used the word "some", I said your group, implying all people with social justice leanings, are defined in part by their exaggeration of sexism against females, both in its frequency, impact and relevancy to society. And I didn't say sexism doesn't happen, I implied that what you call sexism is often just a triviality or justifiable behaviour, and you certainly seem to be exaggerating its relevance to Uber, whose problems certainly seems to be the typical regulatory and "worker's rights" complaints.

The word sexism itself is tied to the sjw ideology and theories of patriarchy and such that state that women are under widespread oppression in society. But such things are ludicrous when you look at things impartialy. Women benefit inordinately more from wealth redistribution schemes, they benefit from progressive actions schemes, they get off much lighter for identical crimes as men, they disproportionately win family court cases and have higher attendance at universities and achieve higher grades than men, and they commit suicide around 4 times less often. And then, even though things like feminism and affirmative action have wide-spread institutional support, people attack Jordan Peterson having the temerity of being a role model for young men and standing up for their interests. No wonder!
I love how you start this post by countering my deliberately-charitable interpretation of your words with an even more batshit insane claim, lol. "Not some people with social justice leanings, but ALL of them"- you're hilarious!



https://www.theverge.com/2017/6/13/1579 ... huffington

Having read personal accounts of women who have quit Uber I think it's a fair judgement to call their workplace culture sexist.



The word sexism itself is tied to the sjw ideology and theories of patriarchy and such that state that women are under widespread oppression in society
Just because critique of patriarchy exists that doesn't mean "sexism" automatically means that in all contexts. Aren't you someone who complains about sexism against men?

Also, you're very transparently taking this opportunity to rattle off a bunch of MRA propaganda/talking points when the conversation wasn't even about that. I said Uber had a sexist workplace and now you're veering off-topic to talk about overall suicide rates, like, what are you smoking..?



As for Jordan Peterson I think you're deliberately oversimplifying people's criticism. I know lots of people make fun of his "clean your room" advice, but it's undeniably good advice. Critique is more often given towards the fact that he uses these techniques to build an audience of lonely/despondent young men and then provides them a gateway into alt-right ideology with his grandiose anti-postmodernism ranting and such.
E m i

B1rd wrote:

I really have no idea what you're trying to say, but I think that calling someone batshit insane constitutes an attack. Furthermore, just look at the type of people who posted the Tweet.
his implication seems to be that the "wish for brutal male domination" comes from some assumed characteristic of "abusing women", assumed to be possessed by "muslims" and assumed to have a prevalence of 100%. the assumption makes no sense sadly, it's statistically wrong. if that is not the assumption and his assumption is closer to reality, then the "wish for brutal male domination" would be incompatibile with it.

example - i support the rights of black people not because of my wish for brutal crime, but because my brain is big enough to filter statistics, percentages, and understand words with more than 8 letters. sorry for an idiotic example.

Even groups where negative tendencies are directly implied and very significant, like "people who have a desire to kill someone" (isn't that very simple?) are simplifiable as a "higher percentage number on a chart" and have not done anything yet. Do you think thought crimes are a good idea? I'm not sure if you do but a tendency of a group is even weaker than a thought crime because not even a thought is guaranteed.

this can apply to any group, who knows - maybe gingers have a higher tendency of school shootings... i bet there are some interesting statistics and tendencies out there.

B1rd wrote:

I said your group, implying all people with social justice leanings, are defined in part by their exaggeration of sexism against females, both in its frequency, impact and relevancy to society.
as someone with social justice leanings, my observations lead me to think that sexism is experienced in more or less equal intensity by both genders. but it also presents itself in different ways for each, so if one only looks into certain types/sources of sexism, they might weirdly misinterpret it as [insert gender] experiencing ALL sexism more than the other.

imagine if MRAs and feminists united into one group, it would be pretty cool i promise
keremaru
i can't do streams lol
abraker
Why use languages like English when you start to warp the meaning of arguments by via vagueness of interpretation.
Just state everything in a mathematical context. I trust math. It is never wrong and only has one possible interpretation.
DaddyCoolVipper

abraker wrote:

Why use languages like English when you start to warp the meaning of arguments by via vagueness of interpretation.
Just state everything in a mathematical context. I trust math. It is never wrong and only has one possible interpretation.

You have no idea how much I want this.

Seriously, there should be a reformed version of German where everything is 100% precise and literal.
B1rd

abraker wrote:

Why use languages like English when you start to warp the meaning of arguments by via vagueness of interpretation.
Just state everything in a mathematical context. I trust math. It is never wrong and only has one possible interpretation.
Was it intentional that your post was is hard to interpret. Don't blame English because of your failure to use it properly. Also, maths sucks.
johnmedina999
How about we all just stop posting? That way, our arguments would have no chance of being misinterpreted.
Endaris
Let's discuss in Esperanto.
Zain Sugieres
b1rd you're going to hell
B1rd

DaddyCoolVipper wrote:

B1rd wrote:

Again, you do a lot of reading in to things that aren't there. I never used the word "some", I said your group, implying all people with social justice leanings, are defined in part by their exaggeration of sexism against females, both in its frequency, impact and relevancy to society. And I didn't say sexism doesn't happen, I implied that what you call sexism is often just a triviality or justifiable behaviour, and you certainly seem to be exaggerating its relevance to Uber, whose problems certainly seems to be the typical regulatory and "worker's rights" complaints.

The word sexism itself is tied to the sjw ideology and theories of patriarchy and such that state that women are under widespread oppression in society. But such things are ludicrous when you look at things impartialy. Women benefit inordinately more from wealth redistribution schemes, they benefit from progressive actions schemes, they get off much lighter for identical crimes as men, they disproportionately win family court cases and have higher attendance at universities and achieve higher grades than men, and they commit suicide around 4 times less often. And then, even though things like feminism and affirmative action have wide-spread institutional support, people attack Jordan Peterson having the temerity of being a role model for young men and standing up for their interests. No wonder!
I love how you start this post by countering my deliberately-charitable interpretation of your words with an even more batshit insane claim, lol. "Not some people with social justice leanings, but ALL of them"- you're hilarious!



https://www.theverge.com/2017/6/13/1579 ... huffington

Having read personal accounts of women who have quit Uber I think it's a fair judgement to call their workplace culture sexist.



The word sexism itself is tied to the sjw ideology and theories of patriarchy and such that state that women are under widespread oppression in society
Just because critique of patriarchy exists that doesn't mean "sexism" automatically means that in all contexts. Aren't you someone who complains about sexism against men?

Also, you're very transparently taking this opportunity to rattle off a bunch of MRA propaganda/talking points when the conversation wasn't even about that. I said Uber had a sexist workplace and now you're veering off-topic to talk about overall suicide rates, like, what are you smoking..?



As for Jordan Peterson I think you're deliberately oversimplifying people's criticism. I know lots of people make fun of his "clean your room" advice, but it's undeniably good advice. Critique is more often given towards the fact that he uses these techniques to build an audience of lonely/despondent young men and then provides them a gateway into alt-right ideology with his grandiose anti-postmodernism ranting and such.
What self-respecting SJW could call xerself a SJW if xer didn't constantly rant about sexism and the patriarchy? It's a part of the definition of the label.

Sexist jokes in the workplace? Oh, the humanity! No wonder men don't want women in the workplace if they are writing up exposés every time someone makes a joke (and it's only jokes that are offensive in some way that are truly funny). Everyone has to experience unpleasant bosses, unpleasant coworkers, unpleasant workplace environments, and so on. What's worse than this "culture of sexism" is the culture of the the victim mentality and the culture of infantilisation and treating adults as if they are emotionally-fragile children. Adults shouldn't need the state to intervene to sort out problems like workplace bullies.

And sexism against men? Does such a thing really exist? Indeed, even most dictionaries seem to state that sexism is typically against women. but the word sexism is basically feminist jargon, so it's not like I'd ever actually use the word myself. I'm not against traditional gender roles, since their utility is rooted in biology, and I'm not against employers choosing whatever arbitrary grounds for employment that they want, as it's their money they're giving away, and I believe in freedom of association, and people should have the right to associate with whatever type, race or sex of people they choose to.
Things like toleration vs not tolerating things is inherently a balancing act; there are certain behaviors and people you shouldn't tolerate, and there are those you should, and you need to discern these things apart. For example, obviously if you're an employer you should discriminate against drug addicts. But as for women and non-whites, it depends. Some jobs may be inherently unsuitable for women, take combat roles in the army as I've mentioned in previous stories, and in that circumstance discriminating against men is unjust. If you had to choose between a white man and a black man given equal credentials and a finite amount of information, it'd be more prudent going with the white man since in most locations whites are less prone to criminality and therefore presumably more likely to be a better employee. Or take discrimination purely on the basis of race, maybe you inherently prefer being around people of your own race so actively discriminate so you don't have to associate with people of other races, that's a valid reason and not a faulty assumption, and although the other party would no doubt be upset, withholding services is within your rights.
Anyway, that's my perceptive is "discrimination", "sexism", "racism" and the like. It's nuanced and you can't oversimplify certain types of behaviours as always good or always bad. Also note that technically discrimination is defined as something that is always unjust and wrong, however I just define it as exclusion of a certain group, however just those reasons might be.

As for Jordan Peterson, saying he's some gateway drug to some extreme right-wing view is silly. Firstly, he's fundamentally an anti-totalitarian and that's quite a pervasive point in his works. He accurately points out the arrogance of ideologues, thinking they know everything about the world, which one would need to determine a few select things as the cause of all troubles, be it the Jews or Capitalism or the patriarchy. If anything he's far more likely to deradicalise young men already radicalised by one ideology to another, and his message boils down to "sort yourself out", "get a job, work to improve your life and the lives of those around you", which is as good advice you can give. His advice doesn't stem from a political inclination, but rather from psychology, philosophy and life experience, and he was never aiming at the male demographic (and indeed he has plenty of advice for women), it just so happened that men are the ones who need the advice at this point in time. I'd reference his book 12 Rules for Life which I bought and has a lot of interesting points and condenses a lot of his lectures, however I'm not at home at the moment. The criticism of Jordan Peterson are often nothing more than people upset because his conclusions go against their ideology and thus attack him by whatever means possible, when any sane person can tell that he is largely a beneficial influence whatever things they may be able to nitpick about him.

And concerning things like Post-modernism and cultural Marxism, they are real things and not some "right-wing conspiracy". Post-modernism, generally summarised as radical subjectivism, and the claim that there is no objective truth, and that truth is merely used as a means of power and control, is a real thing. And it's basically the philosophical backing behind many beliefs of progressives, such as the patriarchy, behind the ideals of radical equality and tolerance in which no culture, even radical Muslim fundamentalist cultures, are judged to be inferior or undesirable. And of course remember the term "racism = power + prejudice"? It's basically straight out of the post-modernist handbook. Cultural marxism is simply the modern culture of Marxism brought over from the 19th and 20th century, with many similarities minus the Bolshevism, which was finally and utterly discredited, despite the best efforts for Western Leftist intellectuals for decades to maintain its credibility. Just read some classic literature like Crime and Punishment which Peterson goes on about a lot, it was published in 1866 yet the socialist characters within it are remarkably similar to modern-day SJW. Of course it's hard to prove where the ideas originated, but the label of cultural Marxist with many ideas traditionally associated with Marxism is as good as any.



Momi wrote:

B1rd wrote:

I really have no idea what you're trying to say, but I think that calling someone batshit insane constitutes an attack. Furthermore, just look at the type of people who posted the Tweet.
his implication seems to be that the "wish for brutal male domination" comes from some assumed characteristic of "abusing women", assumed to be possessed by "muslims" and assumed to have a prevalence of 100%. the assumption makes no sense sadly, it's statistically wrong. if that is not the assumption and his assumption is closer to reality, then the "wish for brutal male domination" would be incompatibile with it.

example - i support the rights of black people not because of my wish for brutal crime, but because my brain is big enough to filter statistics, percentages, and understand words with more than 8 letters. sorry for an idiotic example.

Even groups where negative tendencies are directly implied and very significant, like "people who have a desire to kill someone" (isn't that very simple?) are simplifiable as a "higher percentage number on a chart" and have not done anything yet. Do you think thought crimes are a good idea? I'm not sure if you do but a tendency of a group is even weaker than a thought crime because not even a thought is guaranteed.

this can apply to any group, who knows - maybe gingers have a higher tendency of school shootings... i bet there are some interesting statistics and tendencies out there.


B1rd wrote:

I said your group, implying all people with social justice leanings, are defined in part by their exaggeration of sexism against females, both in its frequency, impact and relevancy to society.
as someone with social justice leanings, my observations lead me to think that sexism is experienced in more or less equal intensity by both genders. but it also presents itself in different ways for each, so if one only looks into certain types/sources of sexism, they might weirdly misinterpret it as [insert gender] experiencing ALL sexism more than the other.

imagine if MRAs and feminists united into one group, it would be pretty cool i promise
Are you okay, or are you just not good at formulating arguments? It's weird to use the words "assume" and "assumption" six times in one sentence. But as for the claim, it was never implied that 100% of Muslims were violent, but the fact that Muslims are in general much more violent and oppressive towards women than people in Western countries should be self-evident and is backed by statistics. The claim that women unconsciously wish for brutal male domination is harder to back up, but there have been studies for example that women often have rape fantasies and a lot of women orgasm during rape, so it's plausible enough. Certainly I've heard accounts of the former point by supposed women.

Making judgement about demographics based on statistics though is definitely not the same as prosecuting someone for a thought crime. Of course statistics don't give you the right to prosecute someone who hasn't committed a crime, but you can of course choose whom to associate with based on that information. And people do it all the time. For example, you would be more likely to pick up a hitchhiker dressed in a suit and tie rather than a scraggly homeless man, or walk through a well-manicured upper-class suburb that a slum, and such decisions can basically be summed up as making judgement about statistics of which group of people are more likely to be a threat to you or commit some undesirable behaviour.

And it's a good observation to note that pretty much all demographics have their own problems, thus it's not good to focus on the problems of one group to the exclusion of all others, such as feminists making out women to always be the victims and men to be the aggressors. Such antagonism can only lead to mutual hostility and not any actual problem-solving. I remember hearing on a radio once going one about how some issue or another was still a "gendered issue" when the percentage of victims was something like 55% women.

Anyway, that's all for tonight.
abraker

B1rd wrote:

abraker wrote:

Why use languages like English when you start to warp the meaning of arguments by via vagueness of interpretation.
Just state everything in a mathematical context. I trust math. It is never wrong and only has one possible interpretation.
Was it intentional that your post was is hard to interpret. Don't blame English because of your failure to use it properly. Also, maths sucks.
I blame English because it can be used by others improperly. You can use it properly, but others can use it improperly for their cause. There needs to be a language in which it is impossible to do that and impossible to make a post that is hard to interpret.
E m i

B1rd wrote:

Are you okay, or are you just not good at formulating arguments? It's weird to use the words "assume" and "assumption" six times in one sentence. But as for the claim, it was never implied that 100% of Muslims were violent, but the fact that Muslims are in general much more violent and oppressive towards women than people in Western countries should be self-evident and is backed by statistics. The claim that women unconsciously wish for brutal male domination is harder to back up, but there have been studies for example that women often have rape fantasies and a lot of women orgasm during rape, so it's plausible enough. Certainly I've heard accounts of the former point by supposed women.
such a thing was never implied, but it's the only way in which the claim can make sense, as the only way in which a less ulterior motive can't exist... if it was implied and was true, then the claim would totally make sense i guess. That's what I meant. I'm actually giving him the benefit of the doubt with that temporary assumption.

Also sorry but I'm not into arguments in any sort of meaningful way, I treat related stuff only as entertainment. It's all about what information people have, people mostly have valid thinking. As an example, I don't really think Peterson is unable to comprehend percentages and tendencies. I just think he never even STARTED thinking about it in that way. Which makes his assumptions mostly make sense within his own thinking.

Example:

"Are there 2 genders or infinite genders ???"
Me: There are 2 biological sexes(ha got you) and probably an infinite amount of possible gender-related feelings/thoughts. So now you can stop arguing over a word, because regardless of what properties the word has, reality will stay the same.

I am mostly arguing with:
1. Everyone
2. Nobody
3. Both

So why wouldn't I be bad at formulating arguments?

B1rd wrote:

Making judgement about demographics based on statistics though is definitely not the same as prosecuting someone for a thought crime. Of course statistics don't give you the right to prosecute someone who hasn't committed a crime, but you can of course choose whom to associate with based on that information. And people do it all the time. For example, you would be more likely to pick up a hitchhiker dressed in a suit and tie rather than a scraggly homeless man, or walk through a well-manicured upper-class suburb that a slum, and such decisions can basically be summed up as making judgement about statistics of which group of people are more likely to be a threat to you or commit some undesirable behaviour.
But all of that stuff is unharmful and indirect. I actually hope everyone does that stuff to protect themselves from tendencies while not also harming anyone...
It's different from stuff like disallowing certain groups from entering a country, and bla bla bla. That does affect them negatively and directly

B1rd wrote:

And it's a good observation to note that pretty much all demographics have their own problems, thus it's not good to focus on the problems of one group to the exclusion of all others, such as feminists making out women to always be the victims and men to be the aggressors. Such antagonism can only lead to mutual hostility and not any actual problem-solving. I remember hearing on a radio once going one about how some issue or another was still a "gendered issue" when the percentage of victims was something like 55% women.
What would I know 8-)
igorsprite
resume ples(?) @-@
Green Platinum
Aurani

abraker wrote:

I blame English because it can be used by others improperly. You can use it properly, but others can use it improperly for their cause. There needs to be a language in which it is impossible to do that and impossible to make a post that is hard to interpret.
I have no idea what you're on about. If you fail to understand what the person said, it can ONLY be one of two things: either you can't read properly and are severely lacking in the knowledge of that specific language, or the person who wrote it lacks a deeper understanding of said language/doesn't know how to express themselves properly and concisely.

If someone makes an intentionally vague statement in an argument, you call them out for that, because that's not how debates and discussions work. It's called being a mongrel, and if they refuse to throw vague statements at you, you simply cease talking to them, as there's nothing to discuss with such people.
B1rd

abraker wrote:

I blame English because it can be used by others improperly. You can use it properly, but others can use it improperly for their cause. There needs to be a language in which it is impossible to do that and impossible to make a post that is hard to interpret.
This wouldn't fix anything, communication extends beyond the literal meaning of words, and if the other party is being intellectually dishonest it doesn't matter how precise your speech, they will find a way to strawman you. E.G Jordan Peterson vs Cathy Newman debate. It's the fault of the person, not the fault of English.

abraker

B1rd wrote:

abraker wrote:

I blame English because it can be used by others improperly. You can use it properly, but others can use it improperly for their cause. There needs to be a language in which it is impossible to do that and impossible to make a post that is hard to interpret.
This wouldn't fix anything, communication extends beyond the literal meaning of words, and if the other party is being intellectually dishonest it doesn't matter how precise your speech, they will find a way to strawman you. E.G Jordan Peterson vs Cathy Newman debate. It's the fault of the person, not the fault of English.

The video you provided is frustrating, but interesting. From what I have gathered, in addition to the literal meaning, there is contextual information to the literal meaning, information on what an idea suggests for entities, past, future, and present. This contextual information seems to change on a whim while literal meaning remains the same.

To simply put it, "I will go outside" can supposedly be interpreted literally, but there is a wealth of unknown contextual information to it: outside the room? Outside the house? Outside when? Tomorrow? Etc... and the lack of such information can be taken advantage of as freedom to formulate arguments that suits your needs.
B1rd
That's true.
DaddyCoolVipper

Aurani wrote:

I have no idea what you're on about. If you fail to understand what the person said, it can ONLY be one of two things: either you can't read properly and are severely lacking in the knowledge of that specific language, or the person who wrote it lacks a deeper understanding of said language/doesn't know how to express themselves properly and concisely.
I used to agree with this, but I've seen so many problems and arguments happen as a direct result of linguistic misunderstandings that I can't help but feel like the language itself is part of the problem. English has a LOT of words and ways of conveying ideas that rely too heavily on context and previously agreed-upon definitions. Abraker just pointed this out too.

I think most arguments are caused by misunderstandings, and part of those misunderstandings are attributable to inherent flaws within English. It becomes especially apparent when talking to someone who isn't a native speaker.
Aurani
So you argue that you're someone (or know someone) who has fundamentally learnt the entire English language, down to the last detail and who can without fail utilize it to its fullest, and that the language is to blame for the misunderstandings? That's....... lunacy.
Most of the misunderstandings stem from improper use of the language, and that's the fault of none other than the user.
DaddyCoolVipper

Aurani wrote:

So you argue that you're someone (or know someone) who has fundamentally learnt the entire English language, down to the last detail and who can without fail utilize it to its fullest, and that the language is to blame for the misunderstandings? That's....... lunacy.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯

What can I say, people misinterpret very easily. You see it online with people HARDCORE misreading even scientific journals. I don't think clarity is a strong point of the English language at all, especially in contrast with something like German.
Aurani
That's still a problem with the people - not the language. People misreading it due to their own lack of a deeper understanding of the language = people's problem.

As for German having more "clarity" than English - it has nothing to do with the overall functionality of the language. It's the same as saying it's impossible to cut bread with a dull knife and pointing out that a sharp knife is the only way to go. Yeah, a sharp knife may do it with better efficiency, but a dull knife will do the job nonetheless. It's your fault if you're so clumsy with it as to not cut the bread and instead cut yourself.
DaddyCoolVipper
Then in that case, we disagree on the meaning of "overall functionality", because I think if a language is more clear (in your analogy, a sharp knife as opposed to a dull one) then it IS more functional/useful, particularly for debates and arguments.

See how disagreements tend to come purely from people interpreting words differently? ;^)
silmarilen
I hate it when people blame the system instead of the person abusing the system. Yeah, the system has flaws, but only an asshole would abuse those flaws. Not specifically talking about your discussion right now, it's just something that popped into my head after reading it.
BrokenArrow

DaddyCoolVipper wrote:

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

What can I say, people misinterpret very easily. You see it online with people HARDCORE misreading even scientific journals. I don't think clarity is a strong point of the English language at all, especially in contrast with something like German.
I don't really believe German is much different from English in terms of clarity. I know it's kind of a meme at this point that Germans have a word for everything, but really all it does is make sentences shorter. The language might be more efficient in that sense but I don't think there is any German phrase that couldn't be directly translated into English while still maintaining the same level of precision.

I'm with Aurani on this one, really in 99% of the cases it comes down to how well the person can use the language. I doubt there's a lot of people that push the boundaries of the English language.
DaddyCoolVipper

silmarilen wrote:

I hate it when people blame the system

silmarilen wrote:

the system has flaws


When people "blame the system", they're generally talking ABOUT those flaws that are openly acknowledged to exist in the first place. No need to get defensive and reject analysis into those flaws/how they can be improved, you know?



BrokenArrow wrote:

I don't really believe German is much different from English in terms of clarity. I know it's kind of a meme at this point that Germans have a word for everything, but really all it does is make sentences shorter. The language might be more efficient in that sense but I don't think there is any German phrase that couldn't be directly translated into English while still maintaining the same level of precision.

I'm with Aurani on this one, really in 99% of the cases it comes down to how well the person can use the language. I doubt there's a lot of people that push the boundaries of the English language.

I think it's a bit better than English. All languages, as far as I'm aware, still have serious clarity issues; it's just the nature of languages in general, at least the ones I've seen. I think it'd be nice to have a language someday that fixes that flaw though.
silmarilen

DaddyCoolVipper wrote:

silmarilen wrote:

I hate it when people blame the system

silmarilen wrote:

the system has flaws


When people "blame the system", they're generally talking ABOUT those flaws that are openly acknowledged to exist in the first place. No need to get defensive and reject analysis into those flaws/how they can be improved, you know?
No, when people "blame the system" they are generally saying that the people abusing it shouldn't be blamed.
It's one thing to point out the flaws in a system, it's another thing to pardon the people abusing those flaws because "hey, the system is flawed anyway right? can't blame the people for abusing it."

Just because you can exploit a system does not mean you are not at fault for abusing that exploit. Why do you think exploiting is a bannable offense in so many games?

Trying to fix the flaws is a whole other thing that i didn't even mention. You can try to fix the system without pardoning the abusers.
DaddyCoolVipper

silmarilen wrote:

No, when people "blame the system" they are generally saying that the people abusing it shouldn't be blamed.
It's one thing to point out the flaws in a system, it's another thing to pardon the people abusing those flaws because "hey, the system is flawed anyway right? can't blame the people for abusing it."

Just because you can exploit a system does not mean you are not at fault for abusing that exploit. Why do you think exploiting is a bannable offense in so many games?

Oh, I see. Yeah I think it's okay to criticise people who go out of their way to exploit systems just as much as it's okay to criticise systems themselves. I'm not really sure what specific conversations you're thinking about here though
DJ Enetro
I see absolutely no reason why people should shun or be annoyed by anyone socially inept, especially if that person wants to socialize.
Doing so is just like discrimination - you don't want to learn about that person's past or personality, and to be fair, it places you on a higher level than other people, which I hate.
E m i

DJ Enetro wrote:

I see absolutely no reason why people should shun or be annoyed by anyone socially inept, especially if that person wants to socialize.
Doing so is just like discrimination - you don't want to learn about that person's past or personality, and to be fair, it places you on a higher level than other people, which I hate.
that's because you're cool

cooler than me and stuff :cry:
DaddyCoolVipper

DJ Enetro wrote:

I see absolutely no reason why people should shun or be annoyed by anyone socially inept, especially if that person wants to socialize.
Doing so is just like discrimination - you don't want to learn about that person's past or personality, and to be fair, it places you on a higher level than other people, which I hate.

Socially inept people can be annoying because you need to put a lot of energy into them just to have a normal interaction. They need to be "carried", essentially.
Ashton
The only big long lasting three here
Self Kill
what a great topic~
DJ Enetro
Forums are a place for discussions, but that does not mean “create only topics that the majority of people like to talk about”.
Then again, posting spam is not okay either, where the not-extremes are subjective.
abraker
I think we are overdue for an Enertro thread

I refuse to believe the accumulation of Enetro posts thus far ease the amount of unrest that has built up
B1rd
As far as languages go, there needs to be a balance struck between things being clearly ordered and the need for things to be loose and flexible. An as Jordan Peterson pointed out, the personality traits of order vs flexibility seems to be something that differentiate "Liberals" and Conservatives on the political spectrum, the former generally wanting more flexibility and the latter wanting more order. This applies to language as well (and political words are particularly bad on this). Take the word "Libertarian", there's a significant amount of people who thinks this term has so broad a scope it can be used to define people with polar opposite values, and if you try to clearly define the word, they will berate you for not being "inclusive" enough. Which is obviously ridiculous, because if a word is so watered down it can be used to define anything, it defines nothing, and essentially is of no use as a word anymore. Thus you must actively fight against sloppy language use in which words are used to mean things they're not supposed to and thus their meaning expanded, as this sloppy language use is what contributes to the watering down of the language.

Because English is the most widely used language, being used all over the world in a lot of different cultures and environments, it's probably been subject to this process of having meanings and definitions watered down and expanded upon more so than languages used by small, culturally homogenous populations, which brings the benefit of having an expanded vocabulary but with the downside of added vagueness. I'd imagine German is precise and functional because that's the character of the German people, but I don't think you can just reproduce that functionality by copying their language, because that functionality essentially stems from the people, and if non-Germans were to use the language they would probably degrade in to something less precise over time.

But in example of Aurani here, it was definitely his fault for misusing the word "functionality".

DaddyCoolVipper wrote:

Socially inept people can be annoying because you need to put a lot of energy into them just to have a normal interaction. They need to be "carried", essentially.
As a socially inept person myself I agree with this sentiment and don't expect anyone to expend energy to interact with me (and I wouldn't want pity like that anyway). Though I would add that sometimes I do have something important to say so it would be nice if certain loud-mouthed people could learn to shut up and let someone speak without interrupting for just a few seconds.
Shohei Ohtani
As far as languages go, there needs to be a balance struck between things being clearly ordered and the need for things to be loose and flexible. An as Jordan Peterson pointed out, the personality traits of order vs flexibility seems to be something that differentiate "Liberals" and Conservatives on the political spectrum, the former generally wanting more flexibility and the latter wanting more order. This applies to language as well (and political words are particularly bad on this). Take the word "Libertarian", there's a significant amount of people who thinks this term has so broad a scope it can be used to define people with polar opposite values, and if you try to clearly define the word, they will berate you for not being "inclusive" enough. Which is obviously ridiculous, because if a word is so watered down it can be used to define anything, it defines nothing, and essentially is of no use as a word anymore. Thus you must actively fight against sloppy language use in which words are used to mean things they're not supposed to and thus their meaning expanded, as this sloppy language use is what contributes to the watering down of the language. Because English is the most widely used language, being used all over the world in a lot of different cultures and environments, it's probably been subject to this process of having meanings and definitions watered down and expanded upon more so than languages used by small, culturally homogenous populations, which brings the benefit of having an expanded vocabulary but with the downside of added vagueness. I'd imagine German is precise and functional because that's the character of the German people, but I don't think you can just reproduce that functionality by copying their language, because that functionality essentially stems from the people, and if non-Germans were to use the language they would probably degrade in to something less precise over time.

But in example of Aurani here, it was definitely his fault for misusing the word "functionality".
Green Platinum
Don't know 'how a language should function' is such a partisan issue now. Or is it just B1rd applying political rhetoric to irrelevant topics again?
Aurani

CDFA wrote:

As far as languages go, there needs to be a balance struck between things being clearly ordered and the need for things to be loose and flexible. An as Jordan Peterson pointed out, the personality traits of order vs flexibility seems to be something that differentiate "Liberals" and Conservatives on the political spectrum, the former generally wanting more flexibility and the latter wanting more order. This applies to language as well (and political words are particularly bad on this). Take the word "Libertarian", there's a significant amount of people who thinks this term has so broad a scope it can be used to define people with polar opposite values, and if you try to clearly define the word, they will berate you for not being "inclusive" enough. Which is obviously ridiculous, because if a word is so watered down it can be used to define anything, it defines nothing, and essentially is of no use as a word anymore. Thus you must actively fight against sloppy language use in which words are used to mean things they're not supposed to and thus their meaning expanded, as this sloppy language use is what contributes to the watering down of the language. Because English is the most widely used language, being used all over the world in a lot of different cultures and environments, it's probably been subject to this process of having meanings and definitions watered down and expanded upon more so than languages used by small, culturally homogenous populations, which brings the benefit of having an expanded vocabulary but with the downside of added vagueness. I'd imagine German is precise and functional because that's the character of the German people, but I don't think you can just reproduce that functionality by copying their language, because that functionality essentially stems from the people, and if non-Germans were to use the language they would probably degrade in to something less precise over time.

But in example of Aurani here, it was definitely his fault for misusing the word "functionality".
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