• @[email protected]
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    125 days ago

    you literally accused people who said they want Jill Stein to win of lying and actually wanting another candidate to win. that’s bad faith.

      • @[email protected]
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        125 days ago

        no, they are saying they don’t want any of that and voting against Republicans and Democrats at the same time.

        • @[email protected]
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          025 days ago

          No, they don’t care who wins because they are privileged and think it won’t affect them. No third party has ever come close to winning in the history of the country. It will not happen. So they are expressing that they’re okay if it gets worse.

          • @[email protected]
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            125 days ago

            No, they don’t care who wins because they are privileged and think it won’t affect them.

            another bad faith statement. you need to ask them what they want, and believe their answer, or dialogue cannot progress.

            • @[email protected]
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              025 days ago

              Your (and their) arguments may not be in bad faith, but they are in conflict with objective reality.

              They either believe Jill Stein will actually win, which is false based on all of US history, including the elections she already participated in.

              Or they believe there is literally no difference for, say, women, when 1/3 of SCOTUS are religious extremists appointed by an insurrectionist. Or on climate. Or Ukraine. Or voting rights. Etc. The question “is a president allowed to break the law and do whatever” is somehow still open. Is that not completely insane?

              I understand what they claim they are doing with the protest vote. But in actuality, they have looked at the difference and decided that it isn’t much. That can only come from a position of privilege or extreme ignorance.

              • @[email protected]
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                225 days ago

                They either believe Jill Stein will actually win … Or… they have looked at the difference and decided that it isn’t much

                this is still putting words in their mouths. it’s not good-faith engagement.

                • @[email protected]
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                  025 days ago

                  No, that’s reality.

                  The other case I also pointed out is they might be unaware of the facts. You are engaging in bad faith by misrepresenting my words to form a what you think is a strawman to argue against.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    225 days ago

                    No, that’s reality.

                    stating your perspective about it doesn’t make it reality. you need to actually listen to what people say, and if you think it’s unrealistic, then you can say you think it’s unrealistic, but you can’t just assert that they can’t possibly have any other motivations.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    125 days ago

                    You are engaging in bad faith by misrepresenting my words to form a what you think is a strawman to argue against.

                    what straw man?

                  • @[email protected]
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                    125 days ago

                    i asked copilot to weigh in on this. i have edited it for brevity (there was a lot of boiler-plate), but this is the last half or so completely unedited:

                    Whether or not someone is engaging in bad faith would depend on their intent and whether they genuinely believe in their arguments or are purposefully distorting the discussion.

                    It’s important to approach such discussions with the aim of understanding and addressing the actual points being made, rather than attributing motives or misrepresenting positions. This fosters a more productive dialogue and helps avoid the pitfalls of bad faith arguments and logical fallacies. If you feel the discussion is not progressing constructively, it may be beneficial to step back and reassess the approach to ensure a good faith exchange of ideas.