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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 2, 2026

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I'm afraid I'm not your professor.

An interesting variation on the "It's not my job to educate you" line. Of course here, you could have simply used the "cut and paste" function to quote the relevant parts of the articles you linked to. Which you didn't. Because you couldn't. Because your sources don't support your claims.

Anyway, if you are unable to support your claims with actual evidence, I will draw my own conclusions.

And my conclusion is very simple: Your factual claims are false and therefore your conclusions do not stand up to scrutiny.

An interesting variation on the "It's not my job to educate you" line.

Actually, it was an interesting variation on "Sorry but I'm not your research assistant".

Of course here, you could have simply used the "cut and paste" function to quote the relevant parts of the articles you linked to. Which you didn't. Because you couldn't. Because your sources don't support your claims.

Of course, here you could have simply used basic reading skills to analyze the sources and, if I were making untrue claims, refute them using said sources.

But you aren't interested in making an actual argument, you're interested in wasting time.

My conclusion is simple: your factual claims are false and you are tedious.

Of course, here you could have simply used basic reading skills to analyze the sources and, if I were making untrue claims, refute them using said sources.

Actually, I was did. As mentioned above, I "looked at those links and saw NOTHING supporting your claim." Not much else can be done except to give you a chance to identify the passages which you believe support your position.

You are using what is sometimes called the "thick book strategy." i.e. you make a false claim and when asked for backup, you point at a lengthy article and insist that the backup is contained somewhere within. But refuse to say where.