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ted (not lasso) pfp
ted (not lasso)
@ted
reading the Canceling of the American Mind and the intro outlines how both the political left + right have built rhetorical defenses that avoid actual debate. the left’s: complex, layering personal attacks to block any criticism the right’s: simpler, dismissing experts, journalists and Trump critics both rely on what the authors dub "The Great Untruth of Ad Hominem,” which is that “bad people only have bad opinions.” we see this happening across the board with the H1B debate: calling someone a billionaire, big tech, indian, white, MAGA, second generation, etc. to refute their points. society as a whole argues for power and status using identity politics. seemingly everyone is guilty.
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Dean Pierce 👨‍💻🌎🌍 pfp
Dean Pierce 👨‍💻🌎🌍
@deanpierce.eth
I dunno, I feel like holding people accountable for their shitty actions is probably a good thing, and the term "cancel culture" was invented to trivialize and discount legitimate calls for accountability. I have yet to see any examples of someone who was actually "cancelled" who didn't fully deserve it, and the popularization of actually calling out bad behavior has seemed to be a clear net win for society.
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ted (not lasso)
@ted
the book also doesn’t love the term “cancel culture” but uses it because it’s recognized and used by all the book captures a lot of cases of cancellation (eg losing job) that seem undeserved, but given you put cancellation in quotes i’m not sure what qualifies in your book. good read regardless.
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