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TheAntipopulist

Formerly Ben___Garrison

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joined 2022 September 05 02:32:36 UTC

				

User ID: 373

TheAntipopulist

Formerly Ben___Garrison

0 followers   follows 2 users   joined 2022 September 05 02:32:36 UTC

					

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User ID: 373

It's all either:

  1. Reasonably limited, like "we should only go after people who are inciting violence", but that's not representative of what's actually happened (i.e. the Right certainly hasn't limited itself to just that); or
  2. It accurately describes the Right's actions, but is excessively broad, like "it's fair to go after anyone saying mean things about Kirk".

Sure, people were misinterpreting my toy example there as if I always thought self-defense was hypocritical, which isn't true for the reason you listed. I've added a note to the original post for clarification.

This is a valid point, although I'd (lightly) push back in a few areas:

  1. To what degree was this actually true? I definitely remember it happening in at least some instances, but I also remember people saying that cancel mobs had short attention spans. Sure, you might get a few wackos keeping tabs, but the vast majority of the fury was a one-time deal.
  2. Right wing cancel culture is still new, and there's a chance they could do this too. I... kind of doubt they will to be honest, but I would guess the reason would be due to a lack of institutional power rather than a lack of wanting to do so. Granted, that would still be a difference, no doubt.

What? My argument wasn't about misattributing motives, it's that political violence isn't so uniquely special that it justifies what the Right is doing with its attempt at cancellations right now.

  • -10

The same response I gave to Jiro applies to you too. You vaguely claim I'm "gerrymandering definitions", and then don't provide any definitions of your own. Where specifically do you think I'm misrepresenting what the Right is doing?

Why do you think this situation is materially different than what the woke Left did back in 2017-2020? Nobody's been able to give me a compelling response to why we should accept what the Right is doing now, but that's different from what the Left was denounced for. It's all either:

  1. Reasonably limited, like "we should only go after people who are inciting violence", but that's not representative of what's actually happened (i.e. the Right certainly hasn't limited itself to just that); or
  2. It accurately describes the Right's actions, but is excessively broad, like "it's fair to go after anyone saying mean things about Kirk".

Also, I'm not sure what your point about violence is. That was a toy example I included to show that it's obviously better to be hypocritical than dead, not that I thought any self defense is hypocritical as a rule. Most people understand self defense is a necessary evil, so we accept it ahead of time, and accept it (to some degree at least) when others do it, so it's not hypocrisy.

That's... not what they were saying back during Peak Woke. The Right often made explicit appeals to free speech in their critiques of cancellations. And if we are just talking about "narrowing the Overton Window", then how is the Right's behavior any different in this case? It's not like they were being particularly scrupulous and only going after people who were inciting violence. They used terms like "celebrating the death" that were highly ambiguous and thus expansive to almost anyone who said anything bad about Kirk.

Political violence is still fairly rare in the US, but it's not clear to me why that should be grounds for broad cancellations. The Right didn't think this was the case when Paul Pelosi was attacked with a hammer, for instance.

  • -10

Cancel culture was always a thing, but it became a Thing with the emergence of a faction of illiberal progressives that had the clout to actually apply pressure and a desire to do so. This inversion of the 'proper' order of things was deeply upsetting to the many conservatives who saw themselves as rightful hegemons of American culture.

I'm curious about this part. What do you mean by "conservatives saw themselves as rightful hegemons of American culture"? Are you talking about things like evangelical dominance during W Bush's administration?

I never said game theory broadly doesn't apply to coalitions in any scenarios, I said the fundamental assumptions that would make tit-for-tat a dominant strategy are broken. Most game theory arguments assume a small number of competitors and perfect information. Cancel culture of one coalition vs another is a case of millions of competitors sort of half-playing the game (along with dozens of other games simultaneously), also the pieces and the board are shrouded in fog.

As they say, hypocrisy is the compliment vice pays to virtue. The old social trust has been dynamited: there is likely no escape from this partisan cycle. This is the post Christian world that the postmodernists wanted. We now hate our enemies and wish the worst for them, as the president says.

This type of stuff is accelerationism, which I addressed in the post.

the retaliation has to be stiffer

This just exacerbates the third point I made why retaliation to re-establish deterrence doesn't work: it'll be perceived as uncontrolled escalation by the other side. At this point you're just throwing gasoline on the fire.

The problem the left has at the moment is that moderates just don't matter

This is so much less true today than during peak woke (roughly 2017-2020).

political hypocrisy is almost always a symmetrical phenomenon

I don't disagree.

Kimmel himself said "I want to say kudos to my bosses at ABC for doing the right thing and canceling Roseanne’s show today. It’s not an easy thing to do when a show is successful, but it’s the right thing."

I wasn't aware of this, so thanks for posting it. It seems Kimmel got a little bit of what he deserved then.

Well sure, people dislike unfair representation, but 1) a lot of that is due to FPTP, not gerrymandering, and 2) they don't really care enough to do much about, certainly not enough that it'd be worth 8-20 House seats to continue being unilaterally semi-disarmed.

Tit-for-tat might work when it's only one individual vs another, or if it's something like nuke strikes where only a handful of people have access to the Big Red Button. But it's just flatly not going to work in cases of big amorphous coalitions for all the reasons I listed. Also, the Left hardly had their behavior for "free", they plausibly lost 1-2 elections because of it, and the specific woke subfaction that is most loving of cancel culture hasn't been this politically irrelevant in a decade or more.

the difference between the percentage of the vote that went to the out party

First off, it's not correct to just take a simple percentage and say something like "if party A won 40% of the vote, it should get 40% of the seats". It doesn't work like that. Think about it: in an FPTP system, if voters were totally uniformly distributed, then a party that won 60% of the votes would get 100% of the seats. The reason this doesn't happen in practice is because of sorting. The simplest rule for "fairness" that's used in academic lit is something like the following:

  1. “Efficency Gap” rule. The difference between the two parties’ seat-shares should be twice their vote-share difference i.e. if one party gets 60% of the vote and the other gets 40% (a 20% vote-share difference), then they should split seats 70%-30% (a 40% seat-share difference).

You can go to this link for more info, specifically under the 4 definitions of fairness.

While you're right that it's not like the Dems have totally disarmed themselves from using gerrymandering, the important point is that they're not pushing nearly as hard as Republicans have done over the past few decades. As I said, R's are up 8 to 20 seats depending on the fairness metric used.

The limits of political hypocrisy

Read it here for proper image embedding

In the wake of Charlie Kirk’s death, there have been a wave of conservatives going after anyone they see as “celebrating” the assassination. There have been several scalps, including MSNBC pundit Matthew Dowd, Washington Post columnist Karen Attiah, political streamer Destiny, and, most prominently, Jimmy Kimmel.

To many, it seems like the Right now has its own version of woke.

I’ve seen some people pushing back against this idea, but their arguments are pretty weak. I’ve seen some people claim Kimmel was really cancelled for other reasons behind the scenes (low ratings, high costs) and that the Charlie Kirk stuff was just an excuse, but there were always plenty of claims that left-wokeness was really about corporate politics as well. I’ve also seen claims that there are voices on the Right saying “hey guys, maybe we shouldn’t do this”, but such warnings are mostly hesitant and directed at specific phrases rather than full-throated condemnations. There seems to be a specific allergy to the words “hate speech” as that was a phrase the Left liked to use which makes the hypocrisy a little too on-the-nose for some, but otherwise people like Ted Cruz are more than fine with “naming and shaming”.

It’s clear there’s a fairly broad appetite for this type of behavior on the Right. And not just against the big targets, but against small-timers too. There was much hubbub about a MAGA doxxing database with over 20,000 entries of random people that were perceived as worthy targets. The website has since been taken down or moved (it had been served at this URL), but not before I took a few screenshots like this one and this one of some of the entries.

As you can see in the second image, they believe something as simple as saying “and the world kept turning” in regards to Kirk’s death is worthy of being terminated from their jobs -- and are apparently willing to go through with their threats too, with the words “CONFIRMED FIRED!” proudly emblazoned on the page.

Matthew Yglesias has written about how the Right is doing a motte-and-bailey here, presenting anyone who speaks ill about Kirk as “celebrating” or even “inciting” violence, when in reality there’s a large continuum:

  • Threats and incitement to violence may actually be illegal.

  • Violent ideation and celebration of murder are seriously wrong and worthy of condemnation, but not illegal.

  • Saying mean stuff about a person in the immediate wake of his death is generally in poor taste, but you’d expect it if the person was really bad.

  • Sharp criticism of a major public figure is just participation in a free society.

I explained my own take on Kirk here, how I was horrified that anyone is dying in political violence, but that Kirk was hardly some “martyr for truth”. He was just a mundane political operative -- a commentator/e-celeb that wasn’t particularly noteworthy prior to his death. The idea he was “promoting dialogue” was completely hollow when what he was really doing was farming infantile leftists for dunk opportunities that he could then post on TikTok and elsewhere for money and clout. I certainly don’t think that’s evil, but it’s also not some great public service. Is my opinion sufficiently insensitive that people on the Right think I should be fired? Based on the types of people that are being targeted in the screenshots above, I’d say it’s plausible to think so.

MAGA’s turn towards cancel culture is pretty blatantly hypocritical, and its hypocrisy on one of the things that many on the Right felt most fiercely, and which won them many allies (including myself, for a time). While most people are cynical on most political topics, I genuinely care about free speech as an end in and of itself. Seeing this type of behavior for the Right was thus annoying for the same reason it was annoying when it was coming from the Left.

It’s not like I’m completely shocked about this turn of events or anything. There had long been a more authoritarian-leaning Right subfaction that was pushing for cancellations in the other direction. But several years ago, it was hardly certain that they would prevail. I had hoped the Right would just collectively decide to do the right thing, or at the very least that they would be compelled to do so by lacking the institutional soft power required to pull off what the Left had done. It turns out that direct, top-down government action can do pretty much the same thing, while still being ambiguous enough to not get instantly shredded by the courts for violating the Constitution.

It’s great. Fantastic. I love it.

As I’ve discussed this topic with people, I’ve frequently run into the issue of hypocrisy as it applies to politics. The word “hypocrisy” has a negative connotation -- with good reason, I’d add! That said, I don’t think there are no arguments for political hypocrisy. In fact, there are several I’ve seen that can explain it in neutral terms, or even promote it as a straightforwardly good thing.

Why political hypocrisy is good, or at least understandable

Argument 1: Political coalitions aren’t a single person. This should be obvious to everyone but it bears repeating here. It can be tempting to think of political parties as a single gestalt organism, especially when it comes to the outgroup. It would certainly make it easier to debate their ideas at least. But of course it isn’t true -- these coalitions are big amorphous blobs that include millions of Americans, and as is increasingly the case, they include hundreds of millions or even billions of non-Americans as well. Every person has their own beliefs and agendas, and it’s entirely plausible that the people loudly decrying Woke cancel culture on the basis of free speech are a different set than the ones who are gleefully celebrating the MAGA cancel culture sequel.

Argument 2: Catharsis. I don’t think it’s good that people want to see harm done to those they perceive have wronged them, but it’s certainly understandable. Seeing a petty tyrant get their just desserts can feel great. There can be object-level glee in seeing someone fuck around and find out, even if you don’t really agree with what’s being done at a meta-level. I’ve seen plenty of people echo sentiments that were essentially “no, I’m not going to feel sorry for these people after they’ve spent years doing it to us”. We’re several years removed from peak woke so it can feel a bit distant now, but many on the Left completely lost their minds when the mobs were in full swing. Some of my favorite examples include when Bari Weiss was cancelled for saying “immigrants, they get the job done”, as well as Firefox cancelling its CEO in 2014 for a donation made against gay marriage in 2008 -- a time when even Obama was officially against full legalization.

Argument 3: Re-establishing deterrence. If one side discovers a new trick that proves very successful, they can be reluctant to part ways with it for obvious reasons. The only convincing way to promote mutual disarmament in this case is to use the trick right back on them, deliberately inflicting enough pain to get them to feel how awful it is. This gets them to realize what they’ve discovered isn’t some new superweapon that only their side can use, but rather an awful strategy that sucks just as much when used against them. Simply knowing that pain is being caused will always be less persuasive than feeling the pain directly.

Argument 4: Sometimes refusing to engage in hypocrisy is self-defeating. The classic example is violence. We can all agree life would be better if everyone swore off violence categorically. The only problem with doing so is that refusing to engage in violence of any kind leaves you vulnerable to those with less scruples. You can call them evil all you want, but it won’t stop them from beating you with a club and taking all your stuff. The only way to stop them is to engage in the violence of self-defense. And yes, this would make you a hypocrite if you had categorically sworn off violence, but being a bit hypocritical is better than being dead. In terms of politics, if the other is continuously engaging in a tactic that gives them a decisive edge by short-circuiting some of the previously established rules, then staying principled risks a chronically unfair playing field or even permanent marginalization if the issue is big enough. The problem lies in clarifying what tactics are giving the other side an unfair advantage -- this ends up being surprisingly difficult, and I’ll discuss it later in the article.

(Edit: In terms of the paragraph above, I’m using self-defense in a toy example where someone swore off all violence categorically to show why it’s obviously better to be hypocritical than dead. I don’t think self-defense is hypocritical as a rule, since most people broadly agree ahead of time that it’s a necessary evil, and accept it when others do it as well.)

Argument 5: Accelerationism. The idea we have to fight fire with fire. This is a more extreme version of argument #4, which claims that we’re in an “existential” conflict with a uniquely evil outgroup, so we have to use every tool at our disposal to prevail. People who make this argument have completely given up on having principles and are only worried about winning at all costs. To them, accusations of hypocrisy go in one ear and out the other, as all they’re concerned with is creating a larger inferno than the other side.

These arguments are mostly bad

In practice, though, I’m mostly unconvinced by everything except for argument #4. Having principles is a good thing, actually.

Argument #2 (catharsis) can be dismissed out-of-hand as an explanation more than an excuse. Sure it feels good to dunk on your outgroup in the short term, just like it feels good to have the US federal government spend recklessly on elder care. The devil is in the long term consequences.

Argument #1 (political coalitions aren’t a single person) is good to keep in mind, but it shouldn’t be treated as an everything-proof shield. It’s not particularly difficult to find specific individuals (many of them high-profile) that broadly condemned cancel culture when the Left was doing it, only to do an about-face now that the shoe is on the other foot.

Brendan Carr, Chairman of the FCC https://x.com/Thiss_Youu/status/1968469274244075614

Greg Abbott, Governor of Texas: https://x.com/Thiss_Youu/status/1968049619495162204

Laura Loomer, a top Trump advisor: https://x.com/Thiss_Youu/status/1967702598166909309

Matt Wallace: https://x.com/Thiss_Youu/status/1966851592994554300

Congresswoman Luna: https://x.com/Thiss_Youu/status/1966544648966386026

And of course, there’s plenty of smaller commentary accounts engaging in such behavior as well (example 1, example 2, example 3). Some have tried to claim that the Right’s version of cancel culture is different in some vague way that makes these statements not hypocritical, e.g. it’s OK to cancel someone if they’re “celebrating the death” of someone, but I generally find these arguments unpersuasive.

Besides individual examples, there has to be some level of group accountability. This is a messy issue, and of course there are bad incentives for partisans to handwave all their side’s wrongdoings while focusing on and amplifying their outgroup’s. The best compromise I’ve seen people use is to look to both sides’ leaders, and see what they’re condoning and possibly whether they’re getting lots of pushback. Each public figure gets an invisible score that’s higher the more prominent they are, e.g. sitting Presidents are worth the most, then senior administration officials and elected officeholders, then less prominent politicians and major public intellectuals, then local leaders and more obscure influencers, and finally any random accounts at the bottom. The more examples of high-level leaders that you can give that are condoning some action, then the more accepted said action can be seen as at the group level. Under this system, the Right can broadly be seen as accepting of their new cancel culture since many high profile figures endorsed it, while the Left should not be seen as accepting assassinations as a general tactic since no major leaders endorsed the specific act of killing Charlie Kirk, and most went on to specifically disavow it (example 1, example 2). This is a messy, imperfect system, but the alternatives are worse. Being under-stringent means you’ll unfairly tar entire swathes of people based on the statements of a few irrelevant anons on Bluesky or /pol/, while being overly-stringent leaves open opportunities for nonsensical buck-passing where people do the rigamarole of “I don’t condone their actions… but you should probably do what they say anyways”:

Argument #3 (re-establishing deterrence) seems useful on the surface, but practical considerations make it unworkable.

First, there needs to be some discipline in using the tactic just enough to get the other side to feel pain without going totally overboard. The problem is that it’s practically impossible to impose discipline on a large amorphous group. There will always be people pushing to go further, either claiming that there hasn’t been enough pain inflicted yet, or that seeing their outgroup suffer is so funny that it should continue for its own sake, or the accelerationist argument that views escalation as a virtue in and of itself. Just because you might be willing to banish a trick after demonstrating it once or twice doesn’t mean the rest of the coalition is, or that you’d be able to stop them in any meaningful way.

Second, pain will almost always be uneven. Different issues matter at different levels for different people. Moreover, it’s basically impossible to calibrate the level of suffering inflicted to the correct extent, and for it to affect the correct people. Cancel culture in particular can only really hit targets of opportunity, and getting fired for political statements is a far bigger punishment than most of the victims deserve. In contrast, many of the people who had been most ardently pushing cancel culture from the other direction won’t receive any punishment at all, at least directly. They’ll get some minor indirect punishment from seeing their side “lose” in a vague sense, but that doesn’t strike me as especially productive.

Third, equivalent reciprocation will almost always be seen as escalation by the other side no matter what. As an example, tons of people on the Right saw the BLM riots as the perfect excuse for storming the Capitol on January 6th, despite the two being very different. Sectarian grievance talliers don’t typically bother with precision, and this event would be no exception. They simply squinted, saw the BLM riots as vague “political violence”, and used that to justify or excuse the violence of J6. Most reasonable commentators could agree that both events were bad but for different reasons: the BLM riots for the scale of the destruction, and J6 for trying to overthrow the American political process. But for the people on the Right, the BLM riots were obviously far worse, as they’d just redirect the conversation to the issue of scale as that was more favorable ground for them.

As I’ve debated people on both sides, it’s never ceased to amaze me how unaware people are of the sins their own side commits when they can instantly regurgitate ludicrously detailed lists of every transgression their outgroup has committed on a given topic for the past 20 years. I’m guessing this mostly comes down to media diets, as conservatives will receive news endlessly relitigating liberal faults while minimizing their own side’s issues, and vice-versa for liberals. In terms of how this will shake out for the Right’s cancel culture, the Left is going to interpret this through their own biased lens where it will look highly escalatory. An example leftist probably thinks conservative hysteria over cancel culture back in 2017-2020 was severely overblown, that it barely affected anyone, that those it did touch definitely deserved it, and that it wasn’t really censorship since the government wasn’t the main instigator. I would disagree to some extent with all of those assertions, but everyone’s in their own little bubble so it will look convincing to them regardless. Then they’ll get a maximally uncharitable view of what conservative cancel culture is like: the Right wants to cancel basically everyone, it’s a case of racists targeting reasonable people, the government IS heavily involved this time, etc. Obviously that’s going to look escalatory, and so the Left will feel justified going even harder on cancel culture next time, or in using other dirty tricks.

Argument #4 (that refusing to engage in some hypocrisy is self-defeating) and argument #5 (accelerationism) go together. I find 4 convincing while 5 goes too far. Most political discussion spaces are echo chambers through natural sorting, and statements like “we have to fight against the outgroup HARDER!!!” is something that will only rarely encounter pushback. Using the enemies’ weapons against them is an idea that follows naturally, but… where does that end? Should the Allies have set up Jew-operated gas chambers for ethnic Germans as revenge for the Holocaust? I don’t think so.

A lot of the accelerationists are chomping at the bit for a day when they can freely inflict violence on the people they disagree with. There’s a good deal of “predictions” (more like wishcasting) of an imminent civil war in the US. I personally doubt we’ll see a redux of 1861 anytime soon, but I find scenarios like The Troubles or the Years of Lead much more plausible, and I’d like to avoid those if at all possible. Part of it is simply that civil strife is bad in almost every dimension, and part of it is my idealistic view that I don’t find bullets to be a more legitimate way to solve differences of opinion than words.

But it’s also an issue of efficacy. Using the most nasty tricks you can think of alienates people from your coalition. You lose allies who genuinely value principles over dunking on the outgroup. Everyone will draw this line in a different spot, and the further you go the more people who will think you’ve crossed it.

Drawing the line

Basically, if you’re going to be hypocritical, then I think you should be pretty dang certain that it’s going to substantially help your side rather than be neutral or detrimental. To illustrate that point, I have six examples, three of which are for cases where hypocrisy is justified, and three where it’s not.

Situations where hypocrisy is justified:

Gerrymandering: California will soon vote on whether to redistrict itself for the express purpose of counteracting a Republican gerrymandering plan in Texas. The rewards from gerrymandering are extra House seats which could tip the balance of House control -- a tasty prize. Democrats had unilaterally disarmed themselves with bipartisan commissions in many states, but that did little to convince Republicans to ease up. Democrats could probably go even if they play hardball, which is a lot better than the status quo where they’re down somewhere between 8-20 seats depending on the fairness metric used.

Super PACs: Citizens United allowed for vastly increased spending in elections. This used to be an issue the Democrats were strongly against, although with the recent realignment of affluent individuals and corporations towards the Dems I’m not sure that’s so strongly the case any more. But no matter what, both sides would be justified in accepting large donations even if they thought it was bad that Citizens United was decided as it was. Cash is important for amplifying the candidates’ messages to persuade voters. It probably doesn’t mean much in Presidential elections any more -- the marginal impact of either Trump or Harris having an extra billion dollars was probably near-zero in 2024 -- but the impact in smaller elections is still present.

Politicizing SCOTUS nominations: The Left arguably did this with Bork’s nomination, and McConnell’s subsequent revenge-push for conservative justices at almost all costs has borne great dividends. The Supreme Court would look very different if Trump 45 didn’t get the chance to nominate 3 whole justices. Some of that was due to luck (and RBG’s pride), but McConnell’s stalling of Merrick Garland’s nomination indefinitely certainly didn’t hurt.

Situations where hypocrisy is NOT justified:

Pardons: Biden pardoned his son Hunter after saying he wouldn’t as one of the last acts of his presidency, and then Trump came in and pardoned the J6 rioters as one of the first acts of his presidency. Biden’s case was just straightforwardly bad, but I also don’t really think Trump gained much by doing what he did either. Basically every president for my entire life has been abusing the power of the pardon in one way or the other. Either side could stop at any time.

Corruption: Trump has been engaged in an unprecedented number of corrupt-looking enterprises. There is the Trump meme coin scam. There was the Qatari luxury jet nonsense. Recently there was the story about the Trump admin shutting down a corruption probe on Tom Homan. Does MAGA really gain anything by Trump having a scam coin? I doubt it, and that’s why I’d say the next Democratic administration could simply not be openly corrupt, and they’d be just fine.

Cancel culture: Wokes thought they had a new superweapon for a little while, as the short-term gains were readily apparent both in terms of those who were cancelled outright, and from the broader effects on culture. But the long-term impact was horribly, disastrously negative for them. Early wokeness helped pave the way for Trump’s first term, and the hysteria during peak woke caused Harris to say things in 2019 that severely (perhaps even fatally) damaged her prospects in 2024. Additionally, even though we’re in an era where it seems like the extreme fringes only ever get more power within their coaltions, the woke left managed to lose clout in the Democratic lineup, with left-leaning centrists like Nate Silver and Noah Smith recently pissing on their graves to raucus applause.

That’s why I’m confident in this prediction: If MAGA goes as hard on cancel culture as the woke left did, it WILL blow up in their face eventually.

Accelerationists might dispute my examples where I claim hypocrisy isn’t justified. They might say that Trump pardoning the J6 rioters was actually very popular with swing voters, or that it wasn’t but it still “fired up the base” which somehow did small-tent things to win the election. Or perhaps they might say cancel culture was worthwhile for the Left despite some backlash because it changed American culture in ways that justified the cost. I’d disagree with all of those assertions, but in any case I think those discussions would be more productive than vague motioning at how hypocrisy is always acceptable due to how evil the outgroup is.

I'm not entirely opposed to the things you advocate for, but for me this is more of an object-level issue. I really don't want to have to have to compete against a billion Indians, especially when the field has relatively high unemployment at the moment.

Agreed. This 100K payment thing seems less effective than a salary floor, which is an idea that's been floating around for a while. That, and don't tie H1Bs to employers like serfdom so they'll be less willing to put up with crappy conditions.

Thank god. The H1-B system is well-known to be an absolute cesspit of corruption and fraud. The original purpose was for US businesses to selectively fill positions that there was a shortage of US talent for, but it's been heavily gamed by Indian diploma mills. Even the idea of a "labor shortage" doesn't really make sense when since it's not like the market would have never cleared, it was more an issue of the right pay/benefits. Indians were much more willing to put up with crappy conditions and lower pay, which made the field worse for everyone, and that's before talking about the blatant nepotism they'd often engage in.

Here's hoping the rule will actually stick, but given Trump's previous track record, I'm kind of doubtful. There's a high chance the courts either shred this outright, or at least significantly water it down.

Most people don't buy most things in advertisements they see. The way it works financially is through scale: advertisements are shown to thousands or millions of people for relatively cheap (like $2 per thousand impressions).

Even if it doesn't prompt a direct sale, advertisement at least gets the word out. Raid: Shadow Legends is just a shitty mobile game like any other, but it's practically a household name on Youtube due to their aggressive sponsorship policy.

In some cases it's prudent to escalate to using the opponents' tactics to secure victory. Stuff like gerrymandering comes to mind, where unilateral disarmament is self-defeating.

This is not one of those cases. Cancel culture will blow up in MAGA's face eventually if they go down this road as hard as the Woke did.

  • -11

Of course it's cancel culture. I can maybe, sort of get behind shaming some of the most egregious cases just like I could maybe get behind shaming some of the extreme cases the left highlighted during peak woke, but this type of thing always degenerates rapidly. That's exactly what's happening right now. There's a website serving as a MAGA doxxing database over this stuff, which supposedly only includes the worst examples, yet I'm finding cases like this one and this one. Posting stuff like "and the world kept spinning" is apparently a fire-worthy offense in MAGA's eyes.

Just pure MAGA hypocrisy. I can't believe I once saw the modern right as an ally in the fight for free speech.

Couldn't agree more. The "don't speak ill of the dead" reasonably applies to the deceased's immediate family, but trying to do mass censorship of all online discourse on the topic is just ludicrous. So yeah, it'd be incredibly rude to go up to Kirk's parents or to his funeral and call him a shithead, but that does not apply to the internet at large for the same reason most Americans don't really care about dying orphans in Africa: empathy falls off rapidly with distance.

I gave you a bunch of public, conspicuous and escalating acts of political violence against specifically mere speech and you dismissed it out of hand.

Anecdotes are not data. I also came up with a list of random celebrities that have been attacked, but I don't think that would be sufficient to establish a hypothetical counterclaim that being an apolitical celebrity is actually more dangerous than being a political figure. Note I wouldn't actually make that claim, I'm just using it to prove a point about the dangers of relying on the availability heuristic.

While the Years of Lead or the Troubles would definitely qualify to make politics "dangerous", I don't think you'd need to go that far to show danger.

Yeah, fair enough.