Random Arguments & Strawmen #15 |
||
Random Arguments & Strawmen #15
So, you are going to say that those obvious flaws in their methodology is reasonable and should be accepted because it plays directly into a personal bias and gives the results you like?
Offline
Posts: 2442
Asura.Kingnobody said: » So, you are going to say that those obvious flaws in their methodology is reasonable and should be accepted because it plays directly into a personal bias and gives the results you like? No I am saying that 13 Economic professors are far more qualified when it comes to make a list like this then you are. If anything you are questioning the methodology because you don't like the results. You aren't considering that these 13 individuals have far more knowledge than either of us on the subject and more than likely considered any potential bias objectively than either of us. eliroo said: » 13 Economic professors the sounds like a screw in a light bulb joke... how many of them ever left the confines of their university safe spaces? Offline
Posts: 2442
eliroo said: » Asura.Kingnobody said: » So, you are going to say that those obvious flaws in their methodology is reasonable and should be accepted because it plays directly into a personal bias and gives the results you like? No I am saying that 13 Economic professors are far more qualified when it comes to make a list like this then you are. If anything you are questioning the methodology because you don't like the results. You aren't considering that these 13 individuals have far more knowledge than either of us on the subject and more than likely considered any potential bias objectively than either of us. For all you know, these professors could have the same basis of their studies as Andrew Wakefield has. Offline
Posts: 2442
Asura.Kingnobody said: » eliroo said: » Asura.Kingnobody said: » So, you are going to say that those obvious flaws in their methodology is reasonable and should be accepted because it plays directly into a personal bias and gives the results you like? No I am saying that 13 Economic professors are far more qualified when it comes to make a list like this then you are. If anything you are questioning the methodology because you don't like the results. You aren't considering that these 13 individuals have far more knowledge than either of us on the subject and more than likely considered any potential bias objectively than either of us. For all you know, these professors could have the same basis of their studies as Andrew Wakefield has. Potentially this is true, but the fact they are more qualified than both of us still stands. We would need to find another similar analysis done by other experts to get a better idea of how off they are. I'm not necessarily saying their results shouldn't be questioned, I am saying that neither of us are qualified to question them. eliroo said: » they can give their analysis to the auditorium of my hairy *** crack if they have never seen daylight! eliroo said: » We would need to find another similar analysis done by other experts to get a better idea of how off they are. The data is there. Some projects show state-specific analysis Some show other types of analysis. (Problem is, I question this methodology also, as there are some biases embedded there too, even though they ranked Texas over Washington) I guess it just depends on what you consider is most important in determining economic health. Yatenkou said: » Bahamut.Ravael said: » Yatenkou said: » Onto more important things, I've been hearing that electors are going to vote against trump, any reliable source of info on this? Nothing really "reliable". Even the sauciest rumors say that they could get a max of 4-6 electors willing to vote against him, but nothing suggesting that they would vote for Clinton instead. Beyond that, one of the main groups trying to orchestrate this claims to have half a dozen voting against Hillary Clinton, too. I guess the goal would be to destroy faith in the electoral college and not necessarily get Clinton elected. There is no serious threat to Trump. Welp, the first day of Wisconsin recounts are in. The recount money was well-spent, as Hillary has a net gain of... one vote over the previous tally. Offline
Posts: 2442
Hopefully this endeavor slaps people back into reality.
Bahamut.Ravael said: » Yatenkou said: » Bahamut.Ravael said: » Yatenkou said: » Onto more important things, I've been hearing that electors are going to vote against trump, any reliable source of info on this? Nothing really "reliable". Even the sauciest rumors say that they could get a max of 4-6 electors willing to vote against him, but nothing suggesting that they would vote for Clinton instead. Beyond that, one of the main groups trying to orchestrate this claims to have half a dozen voting against Hillary Clinton, too. I guess the goal would be to destroy faith in the electoral college and not necessarily get Clinton elected. There is no serious threat to Trump. Welp, the first day of Wisconsin recounts are in. The recount money was well-spent, as Hillary has a net gain of... one vote over the previous tally. It's about as worthwhile as the tens of millions wasted on all the failed investigations and inquiries into HRC lol...
Here you go Flavin:
Offline
Posts: 2442
Lakshmi.Flavin said: » It's about as worthwhile as the tens of millions wasted on all the failed investigations and inquiries into HRC lol... I agree, I wish Clinton would stop wasting tax payers money! Lakshmi.Flavin said: » It's about as worthwhile as the tens of millions wasted on all the failed investigations and inquiries into HRC lol... Well, she lost partly as a result of people feeling like they couldn't trust her, sooooooo.... Now, all the money spent by the media to vilify Trump? That was not only wasted, but possibly helped lead to his victory. Bahamut.Ravael said: » Lakshmi.Flavin said: » It's about as worthwhile as the tens of millions wasted on all the failed investigations and inquiries into HRC lol... Well, she lost partly as a result of people feeling like they couldn't trust her, sooooooo.... Now, all the money spent by the media to vilify Trump? That was not only wasted, but possibly helped lead to his victory. That and the blatant identity politics being played all the time. It's like the old saying goes, a man will tell you nothing, but give him a mask and he'll tell you everything. People voted Trump in the voting booths because no one would see, they could vote how they wanted, and I think that is another factor. Shame on the MSM for continuing this stupid game, they should be celebrating, because once Soros is out of the picture, their main shareholder goes bye bye, along with his globalism ***. Asura.Kingnobody said: » Here you go Flavin: Offline
Posts: 2442
Bahamut.Ravael said: » Lakshmi.Flavin said: » It's about as worthwhile as the tens of millions wasted on all the failed investigations and inquiries into HRC lol... Well, she lost partly as a result of people feeling like they couldn't trust her, sooooooo.... Now, all the money spent by the media to vilify Trump? That was not only wasted, but possibly helped lead to his victory. That is a big thing, she didn't try to make herself trustworthy. Which honestly would have won her the election. Furthermore she kept doing shady things. eliroo said: » Bahamut.Ravael said: » Lakshmi.Flavin said: » It's about as worthwhile as the tens of millions wasted on all the failed investigations and inquiries into HRC lol... Well, she lost partly as a result of people feeling like they couldn't trust her, sooooooo.... Now, all the money spent by the media to vilify Trump? That was not only wasted, but possibly helped lead to his victory. That is a big thing, she didn't try to make herself trustworthy. Which honestly would have won her the election. Furthermore she kept doing shady things. It's not like the MSM wasn't helping to bury said stories, but there were just too many of them to bury all at once. Initiate investigation -> question person's integrity since investigation was initiated. Rinse, repeat. It's wonderfully circular. Nevermind that nothing of substance was ever uncovered. It's the fee-fees that matter.
Offline
Posts: 2442
Well it helped strengthen the notion that Clinton was a crooked politician who either lied or constantly "forgot" things.
Cerberus.Pleebo said: » Initiate investigation -> question person's integrity since investigation was initiated. Rinse, repeat. It's wonderfully circular. Nevermind that nothing of substance was ever uncovered. It's the fee-fees that matter. You just got to make sure it works next time! Or you could just do a little character assassination (Cain) if you want. It's not like she didn't try to do the same though. First with Sanders then with Trump about their taxes(though only the latter came up with something*).
*kind of.. "he didn't pay taxes for 20 years!" "that makes me smart." I mean, it's a way to look at things.. Cerberus.Pleebo said: » It's the fee-fees that matter. Does hatred count as a "fee-fee"? Valefor.Sehachan said: » It's not like she didn't try to do the same though. First with Sanders then with Trump about their taxes(though only the latter came up with something*). *kind of.. "he didn't pay taxes for 20 years!" "that makes me smart." I mean, it's a way to look at things.. I think he is referring to the House Select Committee on Benghazi Shiva.Nikolce said: » Valefor.Sehachan said: » It's not like she didn't try to do the same though. First with Sanders then with Trump about their taxes(though only the latter came up with something*). *kind of.. "he didn't pay taxes for 20 years!" "that makes me smart." I mean, it's a way to look at things.. I think he is referring to the House Select Committee on Benghazi Or the foundation. Or the DNC. There's plenty of scandals about Clinton to go around. In "More evidence of the MSM and liberals not getting it still" news:
WP Opinion: Double down on the policies that make liberals unpopular because people vote from instinct instead of message Quote: As Democrats contemplate their losses in November’s election, most have settled on a solution. They believe that the party needs more economically populist policies. But this misses an essential reality: Most people don’t vote on the basis of policies. There is excellent research by political scientists and psychologists on why people vote. The conclusion is clear. As Gabriel Lenz writes in his landmark 2012 book, “Follow the Leader?”, “Voters don’t choose between politicians based on policy stances; rather, voters appear to adopt the policies that their favorite politicians prefer.” And how do voters pick their favorite politicians? It is a gut decision that is more emotional than rational. Mostly it hinges on whether they identify with a politician in the social and psychological senses. In an important recent book, “Democracy for Realists,” Christopher Achen and Larry Bartels show that “group attachments” and “social identities” are key to understanding voting behavior. Psychologist Jonathan Haidt reinforces this view with mountains of research showing that people choose their political views based on their tribal attachments. The problem for the Democratic Party is not that its policies aren’t progressive or populist enough. They are already progressive and are substantially more populist than the Republican Party’s on almost every dimension. And yet, over the past decade, Republicans have swept through statehouses, governors’ mansions, Congress and now the White House. Democrats need to understand not just the Trump victory but that broader wave. The Republican Party has been able to profit electorally at so many levels because it has found a way to emotionally identify with working-class whites as they watch their country get transformed. Globalization, automation and immigration all generate enormous social change. Republicans signal that at a gut level, they are uncomfortable with this change and like America the way it was. That is why states with older, working-class white voters, such as Ohio, Michigan and Wisconsin, all have Republican governors and statehouses. Partly this is a matter of policy (on guns, say), but mostly it is about identity and attachment, conveyed through symbols and signals. In a perceptive essay in the Harvard Business Review, Joan Williams explains that working-class people distrust and disdain professionals — and that the Democratic Party is now a party of professionals. These professionals, in this view, are overeducated urbanites with effete lifestyles (organic food, vegan diets, yoga) who have jobs that are about manipulating words and numbers. On the other hand, Williams notes, working-class people love the rich. They love, for example, a real estate developer from Queens who actually builds stuff, flaunts his wealth and retains all his basic appetites. When Donald Trump posts a photograph of himself in his plane eating Kentucky Fried Chicken, he is saying to his base, “I’m just like you, only with lots of money.” And in fact, Trump in many ways is a working-class person’s fantasy of what his life would be like if he were rich, from the Vegas-style triplex to the gold-plated fixtures in his plane. If this emotional attachment is the key to getting people to vote for you, what does this mean for the Democratic Party? It has advantages. It begins with a strong base of people who do identify with it: professionals, working women, minorities, millennials. But it needs to reclaim a larger share of working-class whites. To do this, the Democrats need to understand the politics of symbolism. Hillary Clinton’s campaign, for instance, should have been centered around one simple theme: that she grew up in a town outside Chicago and lived in Arkansas for two decades. The subliminal message to working-class whites would have been “I know you. I am you.” It was the theme of her husband’s speech introducing her at the Democratic convention, and Bill Clinton’s success has a lot to do with the fact that, brilliant as he is, he can always remind those voters that he knows them. Once reassured, they are then open to his policy ideas. Barack Obama is a singularly charismatic politician. But he might have made Democrats forget that the three Democrats elected to the White House before his election came from the rural South. They knew that world; they were of it. With these insights in mind, on the campaign trail, perhaps Clinton and the Democrats should have rallied not with Beyonce and Jay Z but rather with George Strait. And if you don’t know who he is, that’s part of the problem. So, instead of realizing that their message doesn't resonate with the rest of the nation, they are instead crying for more, stronger, and radical divides than ever before. Any guesses on how many seats they will lose in 2018? |
||
All FFXI content and images © 2002-2024 SQUARE ENIX CO., LTD. FINAL
FANTASY is a registered trademark of Square Enix Co., Ltd.
|