Can you please give me a good response?

  • Kinetix
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    12 years ago

    “Narrative” doesn’t come from anti-establishment folks like me. Our job is to point to holes in the narrative. Ontology 101.

    “Contrarian” is the word you’re looking for.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 years ago

      Is being contrarian a good or a bad thing? Sounds like you think it’s a bad thing.

      I used to think it’s neither. Some people naturally go with the crowd, some go against it. Going against it doesn’t make you a free thinker, it’s just a different tendency.

      But now I think that being a contrarian starts off that way, as just a neutral natural tendency. But it forces you to frequently think deeply about things, because you keep getting in arguments. If you agree with most people you never have to think deeply about anything.

      So now I think contrarians are crucial to society, and we should all try to be contradict our natures by engaging seriously (not condescendingly) with them. It foces us to also think deeply about things.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 years ago

        Having a healthy dose of skepticism is always a good thing. It leads to asking questions and hopefully getting answers when applied EQUALLY to both sides of the argument.

        The issue here is that you are looking for AFFIRMATION rather than INFORMATION.

        • मुक्त
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          12 years ago

          I am looking for neither. Check my other replies. I am the one INFORMING, supplying bulk of primary information from good quality sources.

            • मुक्त
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              -22 years ago

              It takes one Galelio to prove entire church wrong, even if church takes 4 centuries to accept that he was right all along.

              If argument by numbers is your best argument, you need to read more. Much more.

              • Kinetix
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                12 years ago

                Tell us more about how reading more anecdotes is helpful and productive.

                Do you have a point in any of your whataboutism nitpickings? You deny all the evidence in front of you and what, would like to sit around for 40 years to wait for what YOU consider a body of evidence to get prepared for this virus?

                Or is there some other point?

                • मुक्त
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                  -22 years ago

                  The point is straightforward. I am not convinced that these vaccines are good for me (or for anyone else taking them), and I have good reasons - some of which I have presented. Except for a couple of people, the community here has responded mostly with logical fallacies (argument from authority, and argument from numbers being most popular), simplistic ridicules, and expressions of wild disbeliefs.

                  As abundantly evident, most people have been indoctrinated to believe that the evidence is settled in favour of vaccines, but not one person has tried to build the case for the vaccines from any evidence. But somehow I am the one doing “whataboutism” and “nitpicking”. Sure, burn the heretic. Or, as one bigot here commented, “jab him”.

                  • Kinetix
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                    12 years ago

                    Here’s the thing: Just like a flat earther, you’re rejecting everything you don’t agree with as logical fallacies, bigotry(say what?), or anything else. You are lacking in understanding what good information is, and until you can grasp the notion that just because an authority is telling you something doesn’t make it bad, you are simply being contrarian. Also, the people around here are not likely the experts in their fields - true experts are what the rest of us rely on, and just because we agree with them doesn’t mean there’s been an indoctrination of any sort. If you really want to follow that line of thinking, you can much more easily say that antivaxxers have been indoctrinated by misinformation trolls.

                    The evidence has become abundantly clear - the vaccine is amazingly safe and effective. COVID-19 is not worth the risk. Being anti-vaxx is a selfish and dangerous stance, as you’re risking other people’s lives for your “belief”.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    12 years ago

                    You sound foolish and erratic. Your “evidence” is all very weak. Your position is confusing and is hard to tell if you are confused of intentionally trying to spread misinformation.

              • @[email protected]
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                12 years ago

                the church consensus is entirely belief based. they don’t operate on science, they can’t, it invalidates their existence. your example is not comparable.

                if numerous independent scientists fulfill experiments and consistently arrive on the same theoretical consensus, any alternative hypothesis is invalidated until proven. you BELIEVE in something that is unproven and there is no theoretical evidence to support your belief. You need an idea as to why, and experiments to prove it consistently, before it can be presented. basically, what you are spouting right now is a belief you mistake for facts, as anecdotes are not evidence. correlation is not the same as causation.

                • मुक्त
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                  12 years ago

                  What exactly do you think science that puts word of authority on high pedestal is? An exercise in scientific method? Philosophy clearly labels reasoning that hangs on word of experts/scientists/preists as argument from authority fallacy.

                  I am well aware that the current generation is being taught in formal education that consensus of experts represents truth. But that mistake is a different debate, deserves a dedicated discussion.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    12 years ago

                    Philosophy is a creativity exercise. It’s archaic, and in modern terms, the first step in a long chain of steps to reach a conclusion.

                    You are mistaken in the belief that there is a debate here. Not everything is a debate. Not everything can have an opinion nor two sides of an argument. Reality unfortunately doesn’t work that way.

      • Kinetix
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        12 years ago

        Deluded.

        The body of evidence is clear, there’s really nothing for one to be skeptical of at this point. It’s like calling a flat earther a skeptic. You can title it what you want, but it’s delusion.

        • मुक्त
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          02 years ago

          Lol!
          Even if you are supporting vaccination, you need to be aware that the body of evidence is incomplete without phase-4 data, and long term studies of after effects. The CDC once took 27 years to decide that a particular vaccine was making the subjects more susceptible to another serious disease.

          • Kinetix
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            02 years ago

            Yes, you should not get the COVID vaccines because there might possibly somewhere somehow be an outlying case that you should be afraid of.

            COVID is perfectly safe to catch and really does nothing harmful to you whatsoever. Spreading COVID is also "the right thing to do"™.

            lolicopters!