Comment by throw10920
2 days ago
> BTW, if you're gonna insult me, I don't see any point in continuing this. It does not matter how covert your insults are, the intent matters.
There aren't any insults in their posts. You're conflating someone dismantling your claims with insulting you. Which is obviously, clearly, laughably false.
You claimed something that's just wrong:
> Nobody is risking their reputation, that's just being over-dramatic.
Then they proceeded to show how you're wrong, and you deflected with
> You are unintentionally proving me right.
Then you throw in emotionally manipulative statements like
> but let's not pretend
> Both live a parasitic lifestyle.
> Here's something else you (judging by your attitude) won't like
Then link to a random YouTube video that says that the richest people in America have a much larger fraction of the wealth than they would if it was evenly distributed (which is extremely obvious), with zero actual elaboration of any sort of negative effects, then say
> Does that fall under your "doesn't really affect anything"?
And make arbitrary moral claims like
> Ownership does not have to be exclusive. In fact, it almost never should.
There's no coherent arguments here. Just angry opinions and envy and greed invoked by those that have more than you. The only person being "unwilling to engage constructively" here is the one being outraged and thinking that their outrage is a substitute for an argument, and who is unable to parse actually coherent arguments and so thinks that they're "passive aggressive dismissal".
> There aren't any insults in their posts.
Intellectual dishonesty is a form of insult. As is, for example, "laughably false". If you think I am wrong, you can explain why. But you choose to insult me because you enjoy it.
> manipulative statements
"But let's not pretend" is not manipulative, it's a figure of speech.
Parasitism is a fairly well defined term in biology which can be extended to sociology/economy.
"Here's something else you (judging by your attitude) won't like" - you're right, I lost patience with someone defending rich people and being dismissive without any reason.
> the richest people in America have a much larger fraction of the wealth than they would if it was evenly distributed
That's not what the video says. I suggest rewatching with a less dismissive attitude.
> And make arbitrary moral claims like
It's called an opinion. Now, entertain me, which part do you have an issue with? Do you think ownership or a product made by multiple people should usually be exclusive?
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The rest can be summed up as you defending inequality and trying to provoke me into insulting you. I have no problem with people who work harder or more skillfully than me having more (proportionally). I have a problem with people getting themselves into positions of power which allow them to take a cut from other people's work without contributing much or anything at all.
> Intellectual dishonesty is a form of insult.
That's manipulative rhetoric that isn't even relevant here - not only did you not point out a single instance of their alleged intellectual dishonesty, but it's not even something you can prove in the first place because you have to know what's going on inside the other person's head. And, that's not how anyone would take the your usage of "insult" as you initially wrote it. Dishonest redefinition of your existing words.
> As is, for example, "laughably false". If you think I am wrong, you can explain why.
Because only people who have massive, fragile egos believe that they are never wrong, and so refuting their ideas amounts to attacking them personally. The vast majority of people can understand the difference between those things if you ask them about it.
> But you choose to insult me because you enjoy it.
Factually false. I did not insult you, I pointed out that one of your statements was false. It seems like you're incapable of even understanding the difference between refuting your points and attacking you personally.
> "But let's not pretend" is not manipulative,
Again, false - it's an emotionally-charged, manipulative figure of speech. I usually don't like doing this, but let's ask an LLM what it thinks, because you won't concede points (even if they're obviously true to the vast majority of humans) unless there's a citation for them, and because LLMs carry a large amount of encoded information on human speech (and because dictionaries don't carry information like this):
The phrase “let’s not pretend that…” usually carries a skeptical or confrontational tone. It implies:
- Dismissal of false optimism or denial – signaling the speaker believes a certain idea is unrealistic or insincere.
- Challenge to the listener – pushing them to acknowledge what the speaker sees as an obvious truth.
- Impatience or frustration – suggesting the topic is already settled in the speaker’s mind.
- Assertiveness – positioning the speaker as cutting through pretense or spin. It can sound blunt, accusatory, or even cynical, depending on context and delivery.
<LLM content ends here>
So, it is factually true that that's a manipulative phrase. It's obviously not neutral. Are you not a native English speaker? Because this is something that virtually no English speaker past the high-school level or so would fail to understand (and I'm trying to be charitable by not assuming that you're a native speaker intentionally lying about the emotional connotation of that phrase).
> Parasitism is a fairly well defined term in biology which can be extended to sociology/economy.
...which, again, is not how English speakers use this phrase in a non-biological context (which we're obviously not in). You didn't provide any definition of how it might be extended, so this is another false statement. Again - the vast majority of English speakers know that this is always used as a pejorative term unless it's specifically defined in a biological context (which you did not).
> I lost patience with someone defending rich people
Ah, so there's your agenda: you're just emotionally upset with rich people and trying to attack them through any means possible - whether it's outrage, misinterpretations of common English words and phrases, or logical fallacies.
> and being dismissive without any reason
They made concrete logical points that you were unable to respond to. Again - reduction of logic to "dismissiveness", which is a logical fallacy.
> That's not what the video says.
That's what you said, literally in the same line as the link:
> to quote "1% of of America has 40% of all the nation's wealth"
I'm just repeating your own description of the video back to you.
> It's called an opinion.
Yes, you can have an opinion that's also an arbitrary moral claim. That's not the same as an actual argument for your position.
> Now, entertain me, which part do you have an issue with?
No, I don't think I need to. I don't need to present an opinion to point out all of your logical fallacies, and in general it's useless to even try to present an opinion to someone who makes these kinds of factually false statements, logical fallacies, and emotional attacks, because if they were capable of making arguments without resorting to those things, they would have.
> The rest can be summed up as you defending inequality
Yet again, factually false. Refuting your statements is factually not the same as arguing for some perceived opposite position of whatever you hold.
> and trying to provoke me into insulting you
...what? This is not only wrong, it's just...so completely off the rails that there's no coherent response to it.
It massively undermines your positions that you can't defend them without rhetoric, emotional manipulation, falsehoods, and fallacies. Someone who can actually defend their arguments doesn't have to do those things.
You know that the point of Hacker News is intellectual curiosity, which means rational discussion, and not just emotional outbursts and fallacies, right? The entire point of this platform is to challenge each others' ideas.
If you can't take someone else challenging your ideas without thinking that they're personally attacking you (which, as previously stated, is false), or you immediately assume that someone is arguing the negative (which is also false), then you should take a break, instead of degrading the quality of the site.
> not only did you not point out a single instance of their alleged intellectual dishonesty
>> It's likely to be worse though, as people don't do it.
> This whole last sentence is fallacious.
I did point it out, quite explicitly so.
> but let's ask an LLM what it thinks > So, it is factually true
LLM don't operate on facts, LLM generated output is irrelevant to your assertion. (I could do the same for your and robertlagrant's replies and get the same results but I won't bother. Do it yourself if you disagree with me.)
> intentionally lying about the emotional connotation of that phrase
I don't care that it's emotionally charged. I challenge you[0] to come up with a better way to say people are getting exploited without being emotionally charged.
[0]: Oh, I guess this is also manipulative. Might be just the way people talk to each other.
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For the record, the video compares 3 distributions - what people think it should be, what people think it is, and what it actually is. Neither me nor the video mentioned "evenly distributed" like you claim.
> That's what you said, literally in the same line as the link:
And now you inexplicably claim something else:
>> to quote "1% of of America has 40% of all the nation's wealth"
Are you arguing 1% owning 40% and even distribution are the only 2 options?
> Just angry opinions and envy and greed > outraged and thinking that their outrage is a substitute for an argument > unable to parse actually coherent arguments > "passive aggressive dismissal" > the point of Hacker News is intellectual curiosity, which means rational discussion, and not just emotional outbursts and fallacies
Please take your own advice here.
Note that ad hominems are still ad hominems even if you speak about me in third person. You claim you only attack my arguments and then conclude with this??? ;)
I am happy for people to challenge me and improve the way I can argue. I am also open to being proven wrong but then there has to be another explanation for inequality. Yes, you have no obligation to find it and I could be arguing wrong for the right position. However then refuting arguments against inequality without offering a solution is effectively supporting it - if people get the message that all arguments against it are wrong, then they will get the impression inequality is right.
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Look, you might have had some good points in your first response and I might have assumed bad faith from robertlagrant too early because several things in his first post ticked me off. But your first reply already concluded with strongly emotionally manipulative language. Your second reply reads like you grasping for straws, any straws, to discredit me, throwing stuff at the wall and seeing what sticks. It does not further the solution to inequality in any way.
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