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Author Topic: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.  (Read 81913 times)

Reelya

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #300 on: March 02, 2017, 10:22:10 am »

https://yro.slashdot.org/story/17/03/02/1417211/a-norwegian-website-is-making-readers-pass-a-quiz-before-commenting

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Two weeks ago, NRKbeta, the tech vertical of the Norwegian public broadcaster NRK, published an explainer about a proposed new digital surveillance law in the country. Digital security is a controversial topic, and the conversation around security issues can become heated. But the conversation in the comments of the article was respectful and productive: Commenters shared links to books and other research, asked clarifying questions, and offered constructive feedback. The team at NRKbeta attributes the civil tenor of its comments to a feature it introduced last month. On some stories, potential commenters are now required to answer three basic multiple-choice questions about the article before they're allowed to post a comment. The goal is to ensure that the commenters have actually read the story before they discuss it.

Loud Whispers

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #301 on: March 02, 2017, 11:15:02 am »

I imagine if posts were no longer able to be edited or deleted, it'd be quite an effective deterrent against PC culture. Once it's more unavoidable, people would quickly grow sick and tired of the outrage brigade manufacturing a shitfit over their every poorly-worded remark. Spurious accusations of racism, sexism and misogyny would probably recede somewhat from the political/cultural landscape as those who scream the loudest are quickly proven to be hypocrites and swiftly cannibalized by their own.

Sounds good to me, let's do it.
Tbh I'd just use sock puppets to call you racist with accusations that would remain standing for all time
checkmate atheists

Really the whole proposal seems unnecessary. As a general rule of thumb, if you put it on the internet, it's there forever. Editing or deleting your posts is simply a function of reddit being cancer and anyone who tries to have a discussion on such things as youtube comments has buried themselves alive willingly. If your photo is uploaded onto facebook, assume thousands of people have downloaded it onto their hardrives or are uploading it into torrents for conversion into pornography. If your post is uploaded onto anything remotely accessible to the internet, assume everyone important to you is reading it and judging you on it, because public is public and the window is open to the world. If you have been prudent and uploaded nothing involving your own identity, assume all of your friends and acquaintances have uploaded everything about you and tagged it anyways. Between the millions of weaponized autists screencapping and archiving everything there is zero chance to escape scrutiny nor the internet hate machine simply by editing or deleting one's posts. It reminds me of the girl who made bomb threats for a laugh at an American airport in the USA, she was in the netherlands. She blocked the FBI's twitter account in response, after they received her threat, and naturally they had the Dutch police contact her on their behalf.

Removing this ability is just the Dutch girl incarnate, removing a valuable ability to edit out errors or make changes to a post in an effort to thwart a problem it exacerbates. Kids need to be taught basic infosec but there's that issue of how in this world is it possible to? Time ago kids were warned not to put their a/s/l on the internet and now they're putting their addresses, their friends lists and a daily update of everything they're doing online, that information remains forever. Thus every kid who posts half baked political ideas or proudly advocates support for a fetish group or delivers unsolicited opinions on the Israel/Palestine conflict is forever going to carry that with them for use by random grognards on the net to fuck with them for top lels

I would not then think that the real issue is there isn't MORE data retention, but rather that there is far, far too much. Consider your example itisnotlogical, such things like twitter and facebook are used by normies to connect everything about their ordinary day to day lives together with their own personal identity. Thus if they make a mistake and post something compromising - such as a controversial political statement or a nude photo, if they cannot delete anything which is humiliating or erroneous in some way, that backlash is connected to everything in their lives. With data retention as it is, there need not even be a single compromising event that spurs this annihilation. If you have a hundred people screening through someone's personal information - only public information needed, you will definitely be able to find something you can send to their boss, their family, their loved ones and so on, and then you can start doing stuff like sending hundreds of pizzas and free koran study guides to their house. At that point the only defence such a person has is to delete everything and pray their hunters grow bored and forget about them/didn't collect enough information to trace back to them, which is nigh-impossible. Moreover, if someone hacked your facebook and just spammed compromising shit whilst you had no power to edit or delete it, then you are also fucked with no option out. Moreover, if only website admins can edit posts but people cannot edit their own posts, then you can get such reddit tier situations where people are shadow muted/edited, with such hilarious examples as editing a threat in which the supposed speaker didn't say nor can change.

Time to be the Devil's Advocate: On the other hand, if everything you said was there forever, we'd might do the impossible and force people to actually think before talking. You take for granted reasons to delete, but if there was no delete there would be fewer reasons to.
And all the time I spend double-checking my posts would be justified, because then I would seem so much more eloquent by comparison. Yes, this is a good plan. I support this.
I like the sentiment of this, however it becomes China in short time. There is wonderful frankness involved in anonymous internet discussion where one can speak freely, speak honestly and speak plainly, without fear of repercussion for displaying ignorance or controversy. In real life, displaying that you do not know something or think differently from everyone else can be very dangerous to your livelihood, whereas on the internet you can formulate arguments by sharpening them with honest discussion - thus starting from a position of ignorance, moving to a position of thought. This breaks manufactured consensus and ideological restrictions on what can be discussed, ensuring the free flow of information and the continual testing of the validity of arguments. I argue that everything said is already present 'forever' (on the human timescale of things) and evidently it matters little to what is being thought. Yet because anonymity and the appearance of impermanence is available, one can speak freely and test their arguments to the world, something that is simply unavailable in any world analogue. To strictly enforce this proposal would mean that all debate would have to continue under a veneer of neutrality and suggestion, inferences instead of statements. Inferences are not as clear as statements.

Sheb

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #302 on: March 02, 2017, 12:09:04 pm »

I think what we need is partly being able to agree that if someone said something racist/stupid years ago, at some point if that person apologize and stop saying such thing we should stop giving a fuck. Maybe it's my inner crypto-Catholic speaking, but basically more forgiveness.

Like there was one stupid "controversy" recently about Oulaya Amamra, a French actress who won the Césars (France's attempt at copying the Oscars so their movies win something) as "Best Rising Actress". People dug out stupid, homophobic shit she said when she was 14. I mean, she says she changed her mind and apologized, what's the point of beating the drum of war or something.
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Loud Whispers

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #303 on: March 02, 2017, 12:35:13 pm »

Apologizing is the dumbest thing you can do on social media and guarantees you will be slaughtered. As it stands people enjoy being righteously outraged, thus admitting wrong means you will be pilloried and your life ruined. Only by remaining defiant can one retain their dignity and highest chance of livelihood, needing only as much time as people to get bored and move onto the next target. Likewise what is racist/stupid/homophobic is entirely relative. I've seen some stupid shit like tumblr harassing a girl into suicide simply because she drew an obese character as skinny. That's just what kids get up to, on the more adult side of things:
Spoiler (click to show/hide)
This is from /leftypol/ where they were going around on twitter ruining people's lives for being SJWs or Alt-Right, with the caveat being they're a collection of 900 marxists with no unifying frame of reference to whom every liberal is a SJW and every conservative Alt-Right. Note too, that /leftypol/ actually cared about PR, whereas most anons don't give a shit about PR and have indiscriminate targets with unrestricted ops. Consider how at any one hour of the day there are about 8,000 anons on /pol/ who are comfortable with being called nazis who have no qualms trawling through gigabytes of data, and are a formless force with zero concerns for PR. Hell, looking at one of the raid boards they're on their 122,000'th post, that's a lot of dox and raiding just for the sake of a hearty chuckle. Those are just the quasi-organized groups, consider how many hundreds of millions of individuals use publicly available information to stalk or harass people on a regular basis for their own personal reasons and agendas. Easily abusable stuff.

Simply put, by having subjective criteria with which to lend legitimacy to destroying people's lives is going to end in exactly that. Can anything be done about it? Probably not, the change has to happen on the individual level, with people taking better care of their information, which is itself impossible when so many are careless.
It is dangerous to expect this standard, that individuals must require forgiveness from a formless mass of online individuals, that the individuals must grant their forgiveness or else deliver retribution upon them for not obeying their consensus.

Starver

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #304 on: March 02, 2017, 01:13:27 pm »

Apologizing is the dumbest thing you can do on social media and guarantees you will be slaughtered.
That's a problem with Social Media.  I do try to apologise whenever I think I ought to (may be either more or less than I should, probably a mixture, probably also subjectively judged differently by different people), but just going There Is Something Wrong On The Internet without the possibility of de-escalating the resulting slanging match just ramps everything up to no benefit to any reasonable person.

(Yes, there are plenty of unreasonable people. The rest of your post highlights a possible set of crowds for such a label. But please don't take this comment as an attempt to be Voice Of Authority on this issue..)
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The Ensorceler

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #305 on: March 02, 2017, 06:41:25 pm »

There are correlations between genes and enjoying watching baseball however (since specific races/cultures like baseball).
You can also probably prove some level of genetic correlation as to whether people call soda "soda" "pop" or "coke" in the USA.
That doesn't mean the correlations are meaningful.

Of course correlations are meaningful, they're just not causal.

If you test the Koolaid and find that it's poisonous, that doesn't mean that all Koolaid is inherently poisonous. So you stick a sample in a centrifuge and seperate the Koolaid from the poison, and the Koolaid part tests as harmless. You've proven that Koolaid is not intrinsically linked to poison. But that doesn't mean you go back and drink from the pitcher.
This argument is not helpful. If the koolaid is qualitatively different from the poison (reasonable, given that the centrifuge can separate them), then why expect the koolaid to be happy about the poison? If someone made the same argument about police and said all police should be put in their own country, while the rest of the world did without law enforcement you'd think they were being moronic. Let's focus on getting the poison out, or neutralized or whatever.*

The metaphors are a bit thick, but with the given solution, you either ignore the pitcher (actively avoid "other" races, specifically on a personal level), throw out the pitcher (genocide, probably, but I don't think you intended that as your argument), or lock the pitcher away from other drinks (?) to prevent the poison from spreading (legally mandated racial separation at best, probably Jim Crow type shit too). Basically I think that argument ranges between cruelly dehumanizing and monstrous in its implications.

Sort of separately, why is the viewpoint character's own race ignored? There have been horrible people from every corner of humanity, so shouldn't the koolaid refuser isolate themselves from all of humanity?

*I do not support the death penalty or mass incarceration. For the most part, I think that crime is driven by various forms of insecurity (economic, safety, emotional, etc.), and that if those insecurities were better communicated and better satisfied by society, nearly all of that "poison" would disappear. "Getting rid of the poison" is not necessarily, or even, I suspect, necessarily not violent.
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Loud Whispers

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #306 on: March 02, 2017, 08:26:35 pm »

Apologizing is the dumbest thing you can do on social media and guarantees you will be slaughtered.
That's a problem with Social Media.  I do try to apologise whenever I think I ought to (may be either more or less than I should, probably a mixture, probably also subjectively judged differently by different people), but just going There Is Something Wrong On The Internet without the possibility of de-escalating the resulting slanging match just ramps everything up to no benefit to any reasonable person.

(Yes, there are plenty of unreasonable people. The rest of your post highlights a possible set of crowds for such a label. But please don't take this comment as an attempt to be Voice Of Authority on this issue..)
I have waited years to post this with no opportunity until now
Spoiler (click to show/hide)
I felt this Anon's feels

misko27

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #307 on: March 02, 2017, 08:42:19 pm »

Once my High-school Physics teacher assigned people to debate certain sides of an argument in front of the class. I got assigned to the group defending geocentrism. We won. Sheer audacity combined with our opponents resting on their laurels (and my teacher being generally insane) allowed us to knock down their arguments enough to satisfy the class.

I ended up in a similar situation in my last semester of english in highschool: I was on the side of arguing for emotions over morality. Literally feels before reals. And damn did we make that argument, cutting them down everywhere and never letting them stand on a single point. Absolutely trounced them. And do you know what happened? The guy running it started off by criticizing the "morality" team, taking them through a list of everything wrong with them and their arguments, before finally saying that they had won due to a technicality. He told my team that since he allowed us to define the argument, if we had wanted to win, what we were supposed to do was simply dismiss their arguments for not addressing ours and end it there, instead of trying to address what they said. My English teacher was confused, but he is also out of his god-damned mind so he allowed it.

Certainly sends a strong message
« Last Edit: March 02, 2017, 09:08:35 pm by misko27 »
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MetalSlimeHunt

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #308 on: March 02, 2017, 09:41:22 pm »

I spent a couple years in a debate sport. One of the first skills (and it is a skill) you have to acquire is the ability to basically drive yourself insane on the spot and believe whatever argument you're running. The alternative is to become really comfortable with lying, but believing is more effective. Do neither and you're sure to lose. Even after a lot of experience there was only one argument I could not mindfuck myself enough to believe or even lie convincingly about, that being contemporary panpsychism. I had no problem arguing in favor of human extinction or galactic conquest right after one another, though. Among some crazier things.

Anyway, doing this for a while definitely has side-effects. I spent about a year or so believing all beliefs are arbitrarily selected bullshit and that logic doesn't exist because it works just as well for supporting things literally nobody thinks is true as it does the empirically verifiable. I would literally get angry at people for clinging to their beliefs, because like we all know that your principles are just for style, why are you being so difficult with me?

So yeah, too much devil's advocacy is bad for you, no joke.
« Last Edit: March 02, 2017, 09:55:14 pm by MetalSlimeHunt »
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Strife26

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #309 on: March 02, 2017, 10:39:17 pm »

I've experienced the same thing, and it's definitely really, really creepy when one thinks about it.
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MetalSlimeHunt

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #310 on: March 02, 2017, 10:45:21 pm »

I did find a practical use for it once. I had forgotten a password that I used muscle memory for instead of remembering the actual characters, and after some frustration trying to figure it out I tried "believing" that it was all good and I hadn't had any problem with the password at all. Got it by muscle memory the first attempt after that.
« Last Edit: March 02, 2017, 10:47:19 pm by MetalSlimeHunt »
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To argue with a man who has renounced the use and authority of reason, and whose philosophy consists in holding humanity in contempt, is like administering medicine to the dead, or endeavoring to convert an atheist by scripture.
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Strife26

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #311 on: March 02, 2017, 10:50:24 pm »

Perception is reality and when you argue right, you're never wrong.
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overseer05-15

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #312 on: March 03, 2017, 07:53:03 am »

I spent a couple years in a debate sport. One of the first skills (and it is a skill) you have to acquire is the ability to basically drive yourself insane on the spot and believe whatever argument you're running. The alternative is to become really comfortable with lying, but believing is more effective. Do neither and you're sure to lose. Even after a lot of experience there was only one argument I could not mindfuck myself enough to believe or even lie convincingly about, that being contemporary panpsychism. I had no problem arguing in favor of human extinction or galactic conquest right after one another, though. Among some crazier things.

Anyway, doing this for a while definitely has side-effects. I spent about a year or so believing all beliefs are arbitrarily selected bullshit and that logic doesn't exist because it works just as well for supporting things literally nobody thinks is true as it does the empirically verifiable. I would literally get angry at people for clinging to their beliefs, because like we all know that your principles are just for style, why are you being so difficult with me?

So yeah, too much devil's advocacy is bad for you, no joke.

Mind you, becoming comfortable with lying is at least as bad for the same reasons.  Eventually you kind of fall in a mentality where everyone is lying about something.  And you start lying flagrantly in even the most mundane situations.  Trust me, I've been there.
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Sheb

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #313 on: March 03, 2017, 09:11:45 am »

I think what we need is partly being able to agree that if someone said something racist/stupid years ago, at some point if that person apologize and stop saying such thing we should stop giving a fuck. Maybe it's my inner crypto-Catholic speaking, but basically more forgiveness.

Like there was one stupid "controversy" recently about Oulaya Amamra, a French actress who won the Césars (France's attempt at copying the Oscars so their movies win something) as "Best Rising Actress". People dug out stupid, homophobic shit she said when she was 14. I mean, she says she changed her mind and apologized, what's the point of beating the drum of war or something.

Gotta agree with LW here. If you apologize, you're basically telling people that if they pile enough pressure on, you'll back down. It won't end with 'Oops, I phrased something poorly/said something I genuinely don't believe out of anger, sorry guys', it'll quickly grow to include any and all perceived sins like 'You didn't acknowledge your privilege!' or 'You said 'normal' people, omg!'.

Apologizing (or even arguing that no, what you said wasn't 'toxic' or 'problematic', because xyz) just gives power to people trying to censor you.

I'm not familiar with Oulaya Amamra, but I can guarantee that whatever she said, I'd have more respect for her if her response was 'You're dragging up shit I said when I was 14? Haha, eat a bag of dicks.'


1) My point was that we should be more forgiving and not hold people accountable for views they held years ago if they have changed their views. I don't think we disagree on this. But I'm not surprised that you seems to believe that acknowledging that you were wrong when you were and or/apologizing for past mistakes is a show of weakness or something. Fits right in that conservative/reactionnary stick you got going.
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Loud Whispers

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Re: The Unpopular/Controversial Ideas Thread.
« Reply #314 on: March 03, 2017, 12:16:17 pm »

I've certainly argued shit I didn't personally believe, because I believed that people *should* be able to argue the thing in question, and we're in danger of losing that 'ground' to people who want to make more and more opinions unacceptable to hold. I mean, I wouldn't choose flat Earthism as my yardstick there, but plenty of other things spring to mind.
The truth is, despite all my anti-EU polemic, I am actually Jean-Claude Juncker.
I tend to argue stuff out of boredom if I see too many people agreeing with the position, like a reflexive contrarian. The more controversial the topic the more thought I put into it, the more consensus the topic the more I test the consensus because it's fun

I spent a couple years in a debate sport. One of the first skills (and it is a skill) you have to acquire is the ability to basically drive yourself insane on the spot and believe whatever argument you're running. The alternative is to become really comfortable with lying, but believing is more effective. Do neither and you're sure to lose. Even after a lot of experience there was only one argument I could not mindfuck myself enough to believe or even lie convincingly about, that being contemporary panpsychism. I had no problem arguing in favor of human extinction or galactic conquest right after one another, though. Among some crazier things.
I don't think it's insanity if done right, more like method acting, self-deception and hyper-empathy, where you can argue fervently as if you were a zealot born to the cause - of a cause you care nothing about, or perhaps are even entirely antithetical too. I've never had to argue in favour of human extinction or galactic conquest, however I have had to argue such things as total warfare being beneficial for humanity and on a day to day basis am usually formulating the best arguments I can think of in opposition to everything I consider good in this world.

I do have one friend of note who was in med school on one such debate to do with ethics - namely that of screening for genetic diseases in future pregnancies and aborting the child based on the results. My friend learned from a very talented debater this very same ability to embody your argument as if you had lived it your whole life, whilst in reality he opposed aborting children merely for having signs of genetic diseases. Whilst pressing his argument forth systematically, having waited for all else to exhaust their points, he began dismantling them using very specific examples of suffering that could be averted with this screening and termination. His debate won, with the judges saying perhaps it was too good and a bit like Goebbels, and his opponent actually broke down in tears and started crying, saying he was right and she (unbeknownst to him) had a younger brother who suffered from one of the conditions he mentioned. She actually started crying, saying she should have put her younger brother out of his misery, and he never saw her again - which brings up the second most important thing in debates, to never have your personal being factor into your arguments at all. It's for your own safety as much as it is for performance, which really ties into the whole method acting thing, where you see method actors completely lose it in the act. Reminds me of the film 'thank you for smoking.'

1) My point was that we should be more forgiving and not hold people accountable for views they held years ago if they have changed their views. I don't think we disagree on this. But I'm not surprised that you seems to believe that acknowledging that you were wrong when you were and or/apologizing for past mistakes is a show of weakness or something. Fits right in that conservative/reactionnary stick you got going.
My point is that by establishing acceptable criteria based upon viewpoints, with which to destroy people's lives, there is nothing moral inherent in that. Such a system merely enforces a rolling agenda that ruins the lives of people the collective mass of internetizens decides is appropriate, with their definitions being entirely subjective and of ill-judgement. Why should you have to seek forgiveness on the internet for believing in something someone else doesn't like at all? Why do you have to change your views simply because someone on the internet is threatening to ruin your life?
You're starting from the basis that people accused by the internet of being wrong are wrong. The problem inherent in that is that in such things, especially political ones, what is considered right and wrong is subjective - thus what one considers acceptable is absolutely unacceptable for another.

Taking responsibility for your wrongs is one of the highest most admirable virtues that all must learn in life. Yet facing an angry internet mob, you must never, ever say sorry. Once you do it doesn't matter whether you did any wrong or not, people will attack you and ruin your life because you have signaled you are wrong and are now an acceptable target, with no one coming to your aid because they don't give a shit to defend wrong people. You are also wrong to pin this to the right wing, as it is something that is true to everyone and not just politicians, and not just right-wing.

Spoiler (click to show/hide)
Look at this guy. You don't know who he is, because his is just a normal guy. An American, left-wing, supported Hillary Clinton, he made a poorly worded tweet condemning a veteran widow that was picked up and pilloried by everyone. He kept trying to apologize multiple times but this made the backlash intensify, he deleted his twitter and the posts and the internet responded by ramping this up and getting him fired. I shouldn't have this tweet for example, but like I said before, once you post something it's on the internet forever. He didn't learn that by apologising you're letting your blood fall in the shark tank
Spoiler (click to show/hide)
Doesn't matter where or what the context is, even if they're bullying you into killing yourself while you beg for forgiveness for having done nothing wrong (the girl in question here is toxic for having drawn fat characters normally), the internet hate machine uses an apology to draw every inch of blood from your body. It isn't a question of what's right, merely what is happening - anyone who apologises gets ruined. More powerful people have been killed by "sorry" without regard to how much you've done for humankind, those who absolutely refuse to apologise and stand by everything the say are capable of weathering the world. Those who apologise get their lives ruined by people who'll forget who they are in one week.

Thus I argue that the moral thing is not to cease attacking someone for changing their worldview just to acquiesce to internet mobs, the moral thing to do is to not attack to begin with. And that's just not happening
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