• ThomasMuentzner [he/him, comrade/them]
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    3620 days ago

    And the Lesson we see here is : "Crazy- people-online belive all sorts of stuff , they should not be takeen to seriously , because they fundamentaly are NOT serious.

    • @lud@lemm.ee
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      520 days ago

      What’s the source of those images?

      Randomly posting images of text proves jack shit about anything.

        • @bishbosh@lemm.ee
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          319 days ago

          Thank you for providing a source. I am not who you were replying too, but this exchange is a funny little microcosm of the conversation.

          I doubt many will read the full piece, I doubt many know Roderic Day, and the text shown was fully opinion. There were not detailed citations in the text that would require checking, this wasn’t a study, there is basically nothing to the point outside the text itself, except the notoriety of the author, but the knee-jerk reaction seems to be to ask for a source. Would it change their opinion if it was written in the comment itself? Does it make it more legitimate if had been a published book? What level publisher does it require to make the case meaningful? Would it suddenly be a worthwhile point if this was taken from a New York Times op-ed?

          To restate the point of the text, to a degree there is no reason to expect them to study the source of the quote, because they wield “Source?” like a club.

          • Cowbee [he/they]
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            619 days ago

            Yep, I agree, it was very strange. The essay segment is an explanation for why people hold the opinions they have and act the way they do, not a thorough examination of Xinjiang.