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 Re: We are all Slave now. Quote: 
 If one wishes to demonstrate that he is cultured and smart, he must offer his anti-Trump bona fides early and loudly. Most of my upper middle class friends who wish to ensure you know they're well thought on issues offer that signal to each other and bond over it.That first paragraph cites an embarrassing phenomenon that is absolutely rampant. If I had a dollar for for every friend and acquaintance who uses Trump as a virtue signalling device, I could pick up a really nice bottle of wine. The portion of my social circle that is upper middle class to somewhat affluent engages in the most vocal of virtue signalling. Their propensity to do this on numerous issues makes me suspicious of their motives. They bang on Trump like a gong, I think, because he's like a giant virtue-signalling lever. Rather than having to signal on some mix of issues that would telecast one's virtue, which involves reading and actually thinking, you can just pull the Trump lever. "Have I mentioned how much I detest Trump? I'm a great guy... Total opposite of your brother in law who inherited a real estate business and loves Trump. He's a serious dick." The second paragraph describes a person who wants to telecast that they have enough income to have benefited from Trump, but would never stoop to voting for Trump. They're double signalling: I'm rich but also principled. (Half of them are lying about not voting for Trump, as they're well heeled enough to have had one of those "smart wealth advisors" who knew, unlike the middle level guys, that Trump would actually be great for their portfolio.) And now we come to the paragraph you misinterpret. When I say the "only people who aren't signalling are...," that does not mean 100% of all other groups are signalling. That is impossible. It means some portion of all other groups are signalling. Should I have used "groups" rather than "people"? Arguably. Particularly to a board full of lawyers with whom I'm disagreeing. But I expect reasonable people to understand I am not arguing (indeed no one could argue) that all people of a certain category are signalling. Regarding people targeted by Trump, or wearing MAGA hats, however, I do believe 0.00 people are signalling. I see no way any Mexican person would be signalling - at all - in stating Trump hatred. He's flatly racist toward them and amassing troops at the border. I see no reason any person in a MAGA hat would be signalling because to embrace that know-nothingism is self-degradation. Quiet Trump voters may be acting out of greed, bigotry, religious motives, or belief in protectionism. But the MAGA hat crowd is acting out of desperation. Perhaps one could assert it is signalling to align ones self with even a "deplorable" movement, but the essence of signalling is insecurity and desire to be seen as better than somebody else. To align yourself with the bottom of the barrel is very strange signalling. For that reason, I have to say the MAGA hat people are earnest. Whether as a result of confusion, delusion, or simply because they hold really noxious views, they are "all in" on the crazy. | 
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 I do not believe there is any demographic of Trump critics out there which does not contain a percentage of virtue-signallers except those targeted by the man. I think this about almost every "movement' of the day. People start movements for the right reasons, and then glommers-on jump into them, looking for a purpose. You get a mix of truly committed people and people who just want something to commit to, among many other varieties. Fromm nailed it all in True Believer, which might be the most ironically titled book of all time. ETA: It's nearly impossible to miss the "religious" element of these movements. We're wired to behave in a tribal manner. Recall how everyone was suddenly behind W after 9/11? You'd have been beaten up for saying, "Well, this is kind of a result of our failure to follow through on foreign aid to Afghanistan after the Russians were defeated." People were all suddenly aligned and there was a fervor, sort of a reverse of Melville's line that " genius all over the world stands hand in hand and a shock of recognition runs the circle round": "Righteous anger stands hand in hand and a shock of recognition causes all hands to eschew questioning and act as one." You can see the religious element in the MAGA rallies, in Bernie's rallies. It popped up in that pipeline protest that attracted thousands of people, many of whom weren't even sure what they were protesting. You saw it in #MeToo, which erupted from an investigation of a rapist (Weinstein) into a hurricane of accusations that continues to grow. You see it in the resurgence of right wing political parties in Europe. You just saw it elect a right winger in Brazil. It exists in our environmental movements, in pro-life movements. All of these things, any movement, are comprised enormously of people looking for direction and people desiring to signal to others. It's both a feature of and bug in our socializing instincts. | 
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 It's just moronic to say that if a reporter suggest that a Republican President -- especially this President -- might not mean to tell the truth, that shows that they are biased and trying to help Democrats. You can't think that. Many people, not all of whom are Democrats, believe that the Presidents sometimes lies. With this President, that's not exactly going out on a limb. The other even more moronic thing you say is that it's "unquestionably neutral" to accept the White House's self-serving descriptions of what it is thinking and report it as the truth. If you really think that suggesting an intent to deceive shows one kind of bias, then the opposite obviously shows a different kind of bias. I think your narrow focus on bias is myopic, and that the much bigger problem is that reporters tend to accept official sources at face value for a variety of reasons that don't have anything to do with partisan affiliations. But trading reporter for stenography is not "unquestionably neutral." If you really think that reporting carries a "higher duty" than opinion, why does that duty disappear when it comes to stenography? Quote: 
 Your view of bias gets you to the f*cked-up world of Sunday morning political talk shows (e.g., Meet the Press), which typically have panels where conservative politicians are balanced out by (presumably liberal) journalists. Someone like you can call them neutral, since you have some kind of balance. It's a balance that predictable and systematically neglects and downplays what the left thinks, and provides a forum for conservative talking points to be pumped into the mainstream. In other words, the shows are biased, but it's a form of bias you don't even seem to be able to perceive. Quote: 
 And we both know that if a CNN reporter went on the air and said, the President said a lot of things that aren't true today, but we don't think he was lying because he's too dim to get stuff like that wrong, people would see that as biased too. And you wouldn't disagree. You would say, I bet, that the CNN reporter can't really know that the President is stupid, and is reflecting his Democratic leanings by calling the President dim. If it's biased to presume that the President is lying because you can't know what's in his head, it's also biased to presume that he is stupid, because you can't know that either. Really, what you're saying is that the press is biased to report facts that contradict the White House line. Your "bias" is a dressed-up version of "Fake News." | 
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 Not sure what you mean by the term, but it sounds like a pejorative way of suggesting that people express views in order to be understand by others as being the sort of person who expresses such views, rather than because they hold them sincerely. | 
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 Re: We are all Slave now. Quote: 
 https://acculturated.com/virtue-signaling/ https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/de...tue_signalling https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtue_signalling https://www.thesun.co.uk/living/2701...igin-examples/ https://www.urbandictionary.com/defi...e%20Signalling https://simplicable.com/new/virtue-signaling Pro Tip: Check out the Wikipedia entry. It will give you a single line quote that allows you to assert that this term is used by right-wingers. You can then call me a right winger. (Figured I'd save you some time and Ctrl+F scanning.) | 
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 By which I mean, "I hate Trump" is a statement I've literally never heard where not closely connected to a specific terrible thing he did. Quote: 
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 Re: We are all Slave now. It's funny for Sebby to say that when a journalist suggests the President is lying, that is a matter of opinion. It's not a matter of opinion. The President is lying, or he isn't. It's not like the truth of that depends on who you ask. It's a fact that is hard to determine, but that doesn't make it a question of opinion. | 
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 Re: We are all Slave now. Quote: 
 What I'm pointing out is how you categorize things--your attempt to try to explain what is important to which people and who sends signals and who doesn't. White people signal to belong to groups, and their bleeding heart concerns are presumed false and only spoken in order to fit in. Minorities are genuinely afraid and do not signal, making their feelings genuine. The fact that it doesn't occur to you that white people can be genuinely afraid (for themselves or people who do not share their race) is telling. TM | 
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 Nietzsche might've been right in fearing what men would become if organized religion ever faded away. In the Western World, we're just pinballing through endless "secular religions" to get behind. One fades in fashionability, another appears. And they all fuse people together temporarily in very impassioned activities. It's sold as progress, and partly it is. But it's also frivolous, like an endless litany of "awareness marches." | 
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 Re: We are all Slave now. Quote: 
 past tense lied past participle lied to deliberately say something that is not true So if you say something about it, that statement would fall into the categories of argument or opinion. Does that make it a question of fact, or one of opinion? Well, you can email that question to any number of 1L gunners. Seems quite immaterial to me. (And I'm not even sure I called it a question of opinion. Maybe I did, but I think that's your term.) | 
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