Trying not to feed the trolls

  • 319 Posts
  • 283 Comments
Joined 9 months ago
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Cake day: August 23rd, 2024



  • this whole explanation that something is “a perspective” or “interesting” and so that means it’s okay if it doesn’t fall into the category of “true” is… it’s not good.

    I mean, it can be if you’re amplifying irrelevant voices, as amplifying irrelevant extreme rhetoric sparks panic and polarization. But if, say, an official says he thinks something about how Trump is running things, that’s interesting. If a new poll comes out about sentiment amongst voters about how Trump is running things, that’s interesting. And Rachel Maddow blogs, which I share in @opeds@thelemmy.club here and there are, if not interesting, at the very least a perspective shared by a non-insignificant portion of the population. By sharing these things, readers get a window into the thinking of people who have a different perspective than they do, which isn’t just positive, but a necessary means of fighting polarization, and fueling compassion and empathy.

    I mean just someone explaining their take on things is fine. Maybe that’s what you mean by (2).

    Correct. I’m not going to run around sharing links to conspiracy theories, that is completely different.

    What you’re saying now is different from what you said before.

    Yeah, in hindsight I wasn’t entirely correct in that initial response. I know for a fact that I saw some things that lead me to that conclusion, but I am less sure that those things I saw were accurate now that I think about it.

    Where does this happen, what are some of the cities? Where can I read more about it? How did you find out about it?

    Some cities I have seen this happen in were San Francisco and New York City (there might be others as well but I can’t remember off the top of my head). I am not aware of any studies or anything that quantify or validate my conclusion though.



  • Hey! I really appreciate you looping me in on this.

    I am just trying to sort out whether you are (1) posting this stuff because you think it’s true (2) posting it because “doing battle for your team” so to speak is the pattern of behavior you see, by fun conservative commentators you’re trying to emulate (3) posting it because you’ve independently decided that you don’t give a shit whether it’s true as long as it “feels” like a win for your side.

    For the things I post, I’ll usually post them because I either 1) think that the content is probably both relevant and true, 2) it portrays a relevant perspective, or 3) is just plain interesting

    If any articles I share make false claims in a community like @news@thelemmy.club then I’m more than happy to remove them. For places like @opeds@thelemmy.club I’m not as careful and I hope it’s clear that the stuff over there or at @rightwingvideos@thelemmy.club aren’t always going to be 100% true or objective.

    Now as far as my behavior is concerned @bdonvr@bdonvr@thelemmy.club if I’m no longer welcome here I’ll leave. Many of my communities here are continuations of my old Lotide communities, and I only left that software because it’s abandonware now. I’m sure at this point there’d be other Lemmy instances I could go to if you don’t like what I post here.

    Edit: Also, the point of Rule 6 was to reduce spam, as my communities were starting to get brigaded by leftists basically saying “fake news” verbatim in the comment sections of certain news posts. I don’t like those types of rules, but it seems necessary for now since it keeps happening. It’s a neutral rule, so if anyone says “fake news” on an article from a center or left leaning source I’ll remove that comment too.

    Edit 2:

    No this is a thing in blue states, and not at all related to being a citizen or immigrant. I think they call it “equitive justice” or “progressive prosecution”, either DAs will refuse to charge a POC for a crime due to their race, or judges will waive bail for the same reason.

    Where did you read this? Can I find out more details about why you think this is happening, and read for myself the argument that it is happening?

    This was something I noticed during BLM riots particularly, and in some blue areas afterwards like in New York (though not as prominently since the riots), there’d be cases of somebody stealing something or hurting someone, caught on video, and the DA would refuse to place charges on the individual. For the life of me I couldn’t figure out why else they would do that.

    Now to be fair I think there was some overlap between the BLM riots and me still watching Steven Crowder so maybe some of the stuff I observed at the time wasn’t entirely accurate or correct (I stopped watching him during the Summer Of Love because I noticed he wasn’t as truthful as he claimed to be during his coverage)





























  • The Eternals - Could have been amazing if they weren’t trying to tell like six origin stories AND THEN a team-up story in the same film

    Honorable mentions:

    The Marvels - The first act was some of the best post-Endgame stuff in the MCU, the bickering between the three leads really reminded me of how the Avengers fought in the first Avengers film. It really was a shame that they just said “sorry” in a cornfield and released all the tension right at the end of the first act.

    The Substance - Had the potential to be a timeless classic but it forgoed poignancy for 40 extra minutes of absurdist, overindulgent and redundant body horror

    The New Mutants - They should have never hired the director of The Fault In Our Stars for a movie like that

    LEGO: The Adventures Of Clutch Powers - Too much setup without payoff

    We’re All Going to the World’s Fair - HORRIBLE pacing really hurts this movie even though the story, atmosphere and worldbuilding were incredible