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Notes -
Why is it that a person can prefer someone who disagrees with them politically on more items than someone who disagrees on fewer items that are a strict subset of the other person's disagreements, so that it cannot be explained by priority of items?
Let me give a toy diagram to clarify. Suppose we have six areas where the people in question can disagree: ABCDEF. Now, if Alice cares mostly about A, I can see her preferring Bob, who agrees with her on A, but disagrees on B-F, over Carol, who agrees on B-F but disagrees on A. But what I'm talking about is when Bob disagrees with Alice on all of A-F, while Carol agrees with Alice on ABC and disagrees on DEF. Carol's disagreements with Alice are a strict subset of Bob's disagreements with Alice, so there's no way of prioritizing items that should make Alice prefer Bob over Carol…
…and yet, I've found people who express exactly this sort of preference. What is this?
Because usually they have other things than their opinion in common, for example class, upbringing, faith, worldview, sex, hobbies, interests and so on.
Most intellectual online reactionaries would find discussing politics with a leftist like Sam Kriss or a liberal like Scott Alexander (both of whom are intelligent, very familiar with online political debate, twitter dissident right arguments, are well read etc) more entertaining than discussing it with a random intellectually disappointing groyper who can only reshare the same 10 /pol/ infographics.
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