I doubt it, because even when their interlocutor says something that appears reasonable, they're still wise enough to decipher what it really means.
― pomenitul, Thursday, 30 August 2018 08:14 (seven years ago)
I am not getting the impression, from the thread title on down, that reasonable is on the menu - this isn’t “Liberty vs Safety: debate”
― Andrew Farrell, Thursday, 30 August 2018 08:32 (seven years ago)
I always find it quite liberating when ppl abandon the basic good faith of proper conversation, you can really let rip
― ogmor, Thursday, 30 August 2018 09:54 (seven years ago)
^ New board description.
― pomenitul, Thursday, 30 August 2018 10:03 (seven years ago)
do these conversations ever change any of your own opinions/thoughts?
― lee guacamole (darraghmac),
Sadly never, but this is because they aren't conversations!! They are statements masquerading as conversations. They don't have the ebb and flow of conversations, which is why I don't like having them. I think in general its very difficult for anyone to have their opinions on anything changed in an exchange that doesn't have the give and take of a conversation
It makes me think a bit of those videos on youtube where someone DESTROYS someone else but whenever I have seen one its someone talking very fast and loud. I can see how it works when the person who's opinion is supposed to be changed is the viewer, but its strange in a one-to-one conversation when there is no audience to win over. But with my cousin it feels like there is an implicit or imagined audience that is being won over.
The thing is, I'm an indecisive person, I can have my mind changed fairly easily! but not like this!
― anvil, Thursday, 30 August 2018 10:21 (seven years ago)
it is making me think of a bad interaction with my brother recently. I probably could have dealt with it better, but he started talking in comments section quotes or something, and the type of shit that enrages me. And I pointed out to him that he is not quite the rugged individualist he thinks he is, especially when the main reason he's never ended up at a foodbank is the financial assistance he gets from his step-dad. I completely deflated him with that burn, but he'll just dig in deeper now!
― calzino, Thursday, 30 August 2018 10:32 (seven years ago)
regarding avoiding the "beatles exercise" i think there are other ways of doing it. i'm more than usually obsessed with them but if someone asks me if they're "the best band ever" i will actively call out that question as meaningless. constantly resorting to metadiscussion has its pitfalls, but i don't think it's inherently worse than the faux-naif approach.
i'm generally a big advocate of, in discussions, listening to what other people say, because it's frequently the only way to get those people to listen to themselves.
i am also a big fan of avoidance as a potentially useful metaconversational gambit.
― Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Thursday, 30 August 2018 13:39 (seven years ago)
Like when you see someone coming toward you with an "I have something to say" look on their face and you very quickly walk to the other side of the room?
― grawlix (unperson), Thursday, 30 August 2018 13:44 (seven years ago)
well, meta-relational, not really specific to a conversation. i'll talk to you but you have to make the invisible audience you're declaiming to go home first, that kind of thing.
― Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Thursday, 30 August 2018 14:04 (seven years ago)
on consideration this seems like it could be related to the effect of online discourse. anything one posts online does, of course, have an invisible audience.
― Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Thursday, 30 August 2018 14:09 (seven years ago)
Another approach I have frequently noted is that no matter what nuance or qualification you make in your statements about the world, they will be treated as if they were an extremely bald and simplistic. Then they proceed to demolish their version of your argument on the grounds that it is not accurate to the real world.
a fantastic (well, not "fantastic") example of this is playing out right now after the DeSantis comments, where commenters are spewing all kinds of disingenuous shit like "you can't say 'dog whistle,' because you already said 'dog' was racist when Trump said it about Omarosa"
― aloha darkness my old friend (katherine), Thursday, 30 August 2018 14:45 (seven years ago)
(that is, sadly, a real thing I read)
ime faux-naif leads to more talking as if it’s a subject they feel well versed in, they may attempt to assume the mentor role, or if they know your general position on things may think you’re not well educated on the subject and see it as a path to conversion to their larger philosophy.i like it only as a precursor to disengage with someone who I don’t have a close relationship with, or is in a position to do me harm if i really lay into them (i.e., boss at team happy hour).
― beard papa, Thursday, 30 August 2018 15:03 (seven years ago)
Faux-naif isn't quite the right term, the beatles example becomes one because they were a giant thing, and its not so much about the viewpoint as the subject matter. At the end of the day I don't want to talk about burkas or John McCain with my cousin, or with anyone else - and find my anxiety levels in such interactions are directly related to how much of the speaking I am doing.
― anvil, Thursday, 30 August 2018 15:20 (seven years ago)
there's a lot of wisdom in this!
I don't "debate" (ugh) people unless there's a good faith assurance on both sides that we are open to changing our minds. This is almost never the case so I almost never engage in political discussions with conservatives.
But, as a hunch, I'd be tempted to say that you're always better off arguing over first-principles rather than "facts."
― ryan, Thursday, 30 August 2018 16:39 (seven years ago)
Tucker Stone had a strong editorial on ComicsGate the other day:
Elsewhere, the developments in the ongoing social media annoyance/terrorism campaign grouped under the term #comicsgate continues to showcase more of what seems like a near infinite supply of the same brand of knuckle-dragging stupidity that goes along with any campaign whose only real message is one of whining complaint. Be it a harassment campaign circling around Darwyn Cooke's widow, multiple con-artist-led crowdfunding campaigns for comics no one will ever enjoy, an endless cycle of arguments that demand one immerse themselves in never-ending strings of social media updates, unreadable blog posts & supremely boring youtube videos involving people who are indistinguishable from an eye-rolling 9-year-old simply so you can understand what in the fuck they're all talking about and, most recently, a guy sending a picture of his asshole to another guy he dislikes online. ...there isn't much to say about the people involved in this particular subset of "the culture". Like the gamergaters that seem to have served as their inspiration, comicsgate is the last cry of a dying breed. They've already been replaced by the millions--not hundreds of thousands, millions--of children who have been reared on Raina, Yang & Kibuishi, by the tweens and teens who bleed Viz. They're going to be offensive, hateful, and annoying while they sink, but even the most lazy of searches of their hashtags sees each of their attempts at insurrection drowned out by a chorus of people who, while they occasionally seem to only marginally care about comics and art, at least recognize that racism and homophobia behaviors to be shamed. This has been coming for a while, this reckoning--and it will probably be a little bit louder, and a lot bit stupider, while people like Ethan Van Sciver and Richard Meyer bleed it for whatever money it has left.For what it's worth? More power to them. The sooner those guys burn out the financial core of this dipshit movement, the better. None of this has resulted in better comics, better writing about comics, or any good jokes. It's just eaten up lives, time and talent that could've been spent doing absolutely anything else, while ensuring that a large portion of interesting people spent way too much time online being batted around by a firehose of annoyance. And no, just to be clear, I don't mean the recent string of second-tier superhero freelancers, end-of-career bloggers and Image pitchmen who have made copy and pasting empty platitudes their latest attempt to brand themselves in a more appealing fashion so they won't be swept out of the door with the creeps when all those aforementioned millions who are growing up on comics, manga & middle-grade fiction that actually treats them like human beings with lives of value start deciding what the next wave of art is supposed to look like. The interesting people are the critics who didn't try, the artists who walked away, and the collaborations between groups that couldn't happen because of the constant poisoning of the well that comes from being a part of an industry that waits until the last minute, every fucking time, to get off its ass and make a moral choice to tell these losers to go a long time ago.
...there isn't much to say about the people involved in this particular subset of "the culture". Like the gamergaters that seem to have served as their inspiration, comicsgate is the last cry of a dying breed. They've already been replaced by the millions--not hundreds of thousands, millions--of children who have been reared on Raina, Yang & Kibuishi, by the tweens and teens who bleed Viz. They're going to be offensive, hateful, and annoying while they sink, but even the most lazy of searches of their hashtags sees each of their attempts at insurrection drowned out by a chorus of people who, while they occasionally seem to only marginally care about comics and art, at least recognize that racism and homophobia behaviors to be shamed. This has been coming for a while, this reckoning--and it will probably be a little bit louder, and a lot bit stupider, while people like Ethan Van Sciver and Richard Meyer bleed it for whatever money it has left.
For what it's worth? More power to them. The sooner those guys burn out the financial core of this dipshit movement, the better. None of this has resulted in better comics, better writing about comics, or any good jokes. It's just eaten up lives, time and talent that could've been spent doing absolutely anything else, while ensuring that a large portion of interesting people spent way too much time online being batted around by a firehose of annoyance. And no, just to be clear, I don't mean the recent string of second-tier superhero freelancers, end-of-career bloggers and Image pitchmen who have made copy and pasting empty platitudes their latest attempt to brand themselves in a more appealing fashion so they won't be swept out of the door with the creeps when all those aforementioned millions who are growing up on comics, manga & middle-grade fiction that actually treats them like human beings with lives of value start deciding what the next wave of art is supposed to look like. The interesting people are the critics who didn't try, the artists who walked away, and the collaborations between groups that couldn't happen because of the constant poisoning of the well that comes from being a part of an industry that waits until the last minute, every fucking time, to get off its ass and make a moral choice to tell these losers to go a long time ago.
― ▫◌▫ (sic), Friday, 31 August 2018 18:08 (seven years ago)
On one level I feel bad for my friend because this bubble of support is eventually gonna dissipate and he’s going to be left out in the cold with his participation in this bullshit tainting him forever.
― Perverse Mortgage (latebloomer), Saturday, 1 September 2018 04:09 (seven years ago)
Don't feel bad for him. This is the ideology he supposedly subscribes to, to the detriment of others. Meritocracy, free market, alpha white maleness, right? I don't get hanging on to people who are just lost by choice. If he was an addict or had recognized health issues, I could see putting in effort. Being around to hear or debate this bullshit is enabling. Say your thing and get out.
― Yerac, Saturday, 1 September 2018 04:18 (seven years ago)
xxp good piece. too bad he has a name that suggests he'd be some kind of Fox News talking head
― Nhex, Saturday, 1 September 2018 04:19 (seven years ago)
OMG, Kyle Baker is amazing.
So excited to be part of the new #comicsgate line of books. pic.twitter.com/o4Z1gxfHtw— Quality Jollity (@KyleJBaker) September 4, 2018
― Digital Squirts (Old Lunch), Tuesday, 4 September 2018 22:14 (seven years ago)
going back and forth on whether I should add my right-wing trump loving family back on FB and then just refute every single idiotic meme they post with actual facts or whether that is not worth my time.
― akm, Tuesday, 2 October 2018 21:48 (seven years ago)
Don’t
― I have measured out my life in coffee shop loyalty cards (silby), Tuesday, 2 October 2018 21:49 (seven years ago)
it is not worth your time
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 2 October 2018 21:51 (seven years ago)
thanks, that's what I was thinking. the majority of them have moved well beyond rationality into unhinged territory; also, I never have to actually be around them so it shouldn't matter to me as much as it does.
― akm, Tuesday, 2 October 2018 21:59 (seven years ago)
yeah, you have no real obligation to offer the milk of human kindness to cousins you don't ever see imho
― I have measured out my life in coffee shop loyalty cards (silby), Tuesday, 2 October 2018 22:33 (seven years ago)
involving yourself emotionally to the point of wanting to refute idiotic memes in this construction being a form of kindness.
Do not try to argue rationally with people who insist upon irrationality. It is a losing battle. I think shunning might be the best/only option at this point.
― Mummenschanz in a Metal Mood (Old Lunch), Tuesday, 2 October 2018 22:35 (seven years ago)
FB is a uniquely terrible platform for political convos, much less for trying to directly change someone’s mind
― Glower, Disruption & Pies (kingfish), Tuesday, 2 October 2018 22:44 (seven years ago)
FB, twitter, instagram...that's where the idiot trolls are kings and you will never win.
― omar little, Tuesday, 2 October 2018 22:45 (seven years ago)
all too true
― Nhex, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 00:19 (seven years ago)
why do people still use fb
― El Tomboto, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 00:27 (seven years ago)
Cousin-related guilt I assume
― I have measured out my life in coffee shop loyalty cards (silby), Wednesday, 3 October 2018 00:28 (seven years ago)
FB is a uniquely terrible platform
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Wednesday, 3 October 2018 01:49 (seven years ago)
I've had zero second thoughts about hiding friends or family members who post obnoxious political stuff. I don't need to take up any extra space in my head contemplating their awful POVs.
― Mario Meatwagon (Moodles), Wednesday, 3 October 2018 02:26 (seven years ago)
fb grand except for ppl who think its for learning/instruction which is a terrible terrible terrible concept to have about fb or anything else rly
― Dmac TT (darraghmac), Wednesday, 3 October 2018 10:51 (seven years ago)
Dmac TT is mostly OTM, aside than the fact that ultimately this was what finally forced Jol out
Refuting anything said just reinforces the point. What greater seal of approval can there be than have one of the enemy turn up and refute it for you? Any kind of learning/instruction has to have their guard down and wanting to listen (and yours too). This does happen! it can even (possibly) happen on fb.
With my hardcore RW cousin, I never refute anything, I may ask questions but I never offer my own opinion unless asked. If asked a leading question I say "no idea, never heard of it". If asked an open honest question I give an open honest answer. This very rarely happens
― anvil, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:09 (seven years ago)
One thing that has happened with my cousin is, deep levels of misreading - the sense that there is another conversation underneath the actual conversation that is taking place. I don't even think its wilful, and I aim for clarity in saying anything - but even in the simplest of exchanges something is misunderstood somewhere. And this extends well outside of anything political. e.g something as simple as "Will you get the train when you go?", leads to something like "what makes you think I'm going tomorrow?". And i'm flummoxed, how did "tomorrow" get in there? It feels like there are lots of unsaid levels to a conversation, its just more obvious in political stuff but happens outside of it too
― anvil, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:21 (seven years ago)
all agreed, anvil in on a four year contract pls
― Dmac TT (darraghmac), Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:25 (seven years ago)
I think whats happening is there is this "idea", but then only a part of it is communicated, and thats what I then respond to, but there's more to it than what I'm responding to so miscommunication is there right at the very beginning.
I also notice a deep reluctance to writing anything down, like in making a decision about something I suggest well ok write down the pros and cons and lets see what we've got. He is very reluctant to do anything like this, and the decision ends up being made more on a kind of instinct, and only at that point will the reasons come out - like after the fact. The answer must come first, and only then do the questions get a look in. Which leads to a strange sense of outcome being pre-ordained, almost as though questioning or analyzing the options is somehow upsetting the natural order. Thats why i think 'refuting with facts' is kind of a mugs game - at least with my cousin. actual 'politics' is tangential, its much deeper than that
― anvil, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:29 (seven years ago)
The only time I stage an intervention on a right-wing post is when it’s made by my sister, where I respond in a way that’s guaranteed to have her remove said post.
― suzy, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:30 (seven years ago)
I am a little surprised at the idea that Facebook is a terrible platform for politics - I've seen people have good nuanced conversations on it, usually in the context that they are both on a mutual friend's post. I literally can't imagine that happening on Twitter or - or on Instagram? on Bebo? on Ello? on Youtube comments?
haha dmac trenchant posts turning fatalistic in the last four words vmic
― Andrew Farrell, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:32 (seven years ago)
Yeah, I don't think Facebook is bad for political discussions except for the factors that make political discussions online bad in general.
― Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:37 (seven years ago)
it's not innately bad for political discussions, it's just way too easy to make terrible lies and malice proliferate. takes no thought or time to see something offensive and immediately, blindly forward it and connect it to dozens of more people. With no real repercussions. and Facebook in particular, it is not in the company's financial interests to limit this activity. though maybe things will change. Maybe Facebook tightening and better enforcing restrictions will be the equivalent of Amazon raising the minimum wage to $15.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:49 (seven years ago)
But again what are you comparing it to? It’s 10 times better than Twitter on all those counts, and everything else is only better because it’s smaller.
― Andrew Farrell, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 12:06 (seven years ago)
I don't know, compared to actually having a conversation with someone? Because yeah, it's an innate problem with social media of all sorts.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 12:11 (seven years ago)
It's just all so passive and mindless. Just wait till every American with a phone gets the not optional stupid ass emergency notice from the White House today. That's going to be the way of the future.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 12:12 (seven years ago)
https://longreads.com/2018/09/18/no-i-will-not-debate-you/
― psychocandy fairweather low spark of high (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 3 October 2018 12:50 (seven years ago)
i don't think that facebook is uniquely bad as an internet discussion platform, and indeed it has some advantages other platforms don't, but its size, and the fact that consequently all the worst people use it, works to its disadvantage. i find there's a sort of gresham's law of internet discourse - bad speech drives out good.
the other problem with internet discourse, and it's been this way since the days of usenet at least, is that it discourages listening and encourages soapboxing. why have a back-and-forth with another person when you can instead play to the gallery? in this way the internet is frequently an asymmetrical form of communciation masquerading as a symmetrical form.
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Wednesday, 3 October 2018 13:40 (seven years ago)
I still think the observation Louis CK (sorry) made is pretty apt. It's just so easy to say something mean and hurtful online, and not only will you not see the reaction of the person you're hurting, what you posted will just stay up there forever, for them and others to see and think about. So what took me a split second to do has a much bigger and longer impact.
There was someone else recently who made the prediction re: social media and cell phones that in the not too distant future we will look back on this era like we look back on everyone smoking or kids eating nothing but processed junk food. Like, "what were we thinking?!"
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 3 October 2018 13:53 (seven years ago)
― Josh in Chicago
that may be theoretically true, but in practice we're very good at forgetting the past. yeah i said some fucking awful stuff on usenet 25 years ago, but unless i run for public office, who gives a shit?
for me the problem is that negative feedback registers more powerfully than positive feedback, combined with the natural tendency on the internet to exaggerate for effect. if someone tells me i am the greatest person of all time, i shrug, say "thanks", feel good for a second, and move on with my life. on the other hand if someone talks shit about me, it stays with me for a while longer. maybe other people have different experiences, i certainly wouldn't want generalize that experience, but at the same time i don't feel like i'm wholly alone in reacting in such a fashion.
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Wednesday, 3 October 2018 14:18 (seven years ago)