Its not productive to get into long, protracted arguments on the internet with people, that's common sense.
Anyone might get into a protracted argument once in a while, you get into several every day.
And its affected your brain because now you're using terrible internet logic that you see out of online political """fact checkers""" like Snopes when they try to call something false through disingenuous means.
When he refers to demons, he was clearly using a extreme figure of speech that is meant to call said group, essentially, very vile people in terms of morality who are so fundamentally broken or fucked that its hard to look at them as human and easier to look at them as something monstrous.
When you call someone a monster, you don't mean they are a literal creature from a horror film, for fuck's sake dude.
You're probably right. But it at least feels like doing something. I couldn't save my birth country, I wasn't old enough, established enough to make a difference there. This is the second fight, and I stand on much more solid ground this time, and have a window into the opposition's strategies. I've built myself up a private space to share my thoughts and archive everything and I've started moving to normie social media to fight them there. (Already on 30k impressions, only been there two weeks)
I actually blame spending time on TD, where people believe a lot of insane shit. You'll find people there who believe demons actually exist.
very vile people in terms of morality who are so fundamentally broken or fucked that its hard to look at them as human and easier to look at them as something monstrous.
But that's the thing. These people are academics, they're businesswomen, they're athletes, they're politicians. You act like the radical feminist movement is the stereotype of 400lbs lesbians who haven't seen the sun in weeks.
You're probably right. But it at least feels like doing something.
You know what that's called? Slacktivism. (granted, that doesn't mean to neglect the internet entirely as it obviously has value, but you make stronger inroads in real life into people's lives than you do as a stranger online unless you can somehow combine the two, e.g. becoming an influencer, creator or politician with a massive IRL following)
You act like the radical feminist movement is the stereotype of 400lbs lesbians who haven't seen the sun in weeks.
I don't know why you're arguing with me on this, I never brought up anything that discounts your point on that.
I agree with you. Radical feminists control massive bastions of political, financial, intellectual, industrial, and social power and that's a huge problem.
He's spent too much time on the internet, he literally has tens of thousands of comments on .win and its infected his brain.
What do you even mean? And I have lots of comments because I get into long, protracted arguments.
Its not productive to get into long, protracted arguments on the internet with people, that's common sense.
Anyone might get into a protracted argument once in a while, you get into several every day.
And its affected your brain because now you're using terrible internet logic that you see out of online political """fact checkers""" like Snopes when they try to call something false through disingenuous means.
When he refers to demons, he was clearly using a extreme figure of speech that is meant to call said group, essentially, very vile people in terms of morality who are so fundamentally broken or fucked that its hard to look at them as human and easier to look at them as something monstrous.
When you call someone a monster, you don't mean they are a literal creature from a horror film, for fuck's sake dude.
You're probably right. But it at least feels like doing something. I couldn't save my birth country, I wasn't old enough, established enough to make a difference there. This is the second fight, and I stand on much more solid ground this time, and have a window into the opposition's strategies. I've built myself up a private space to share my thoughts and archive everything and I've started moving to normie social media to fight them there. (Already on 30k impressions, only been there two weeks)
I actually blame spending time on TD, where people believe a lot of insane shit. You'll find people there who believe demons actually exist.
But that's the thing. These people are academics, they're businesswomen, they're athletes, they're politicians. You act like the radical feminist movement is the stereotype of 400lbs lesbians who haven't seen the sun in weeks.
You know what that's called? Slacktivism. (granted, that doesn't mean to neglect the internet entirely as it obviously has value, but you make stronger inroads in real life into people's lives than you do as a stranger online unless you can somehow combine the two, e.g. becoming an influencer, creator or politician with a massive IRL following)
I don't know why you're arguing with me on this, I never brought up anything that discounts your point on that.
I agree with you. Radical feminists control massive bastions of political, financial, intellectual, industrial, and social power and that's a huge problem.