NephyrS wrote:
Technically, I didn't say you were defensive. You said I asked a question designed to put you on the defensive.
Technically, you did:
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The fact that you're so defensive about it
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If it's not something that makes you defensive, then you're assuming my intent. If it is something that put you on the defensive... Then I'm not the one claiming it, you are. It's a pretty obvious inference from your statement.
I don't need to assume your intent. You started questioning me about why I'm posting rather than anything relative to the topic at hand or any related tangent. That's the purpose of questions like that - it's why, in formal debate, they are considered an error. This isn't hard to understand.
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You keep going off on tangents deflecting from ever having to answer the questions I ask by saying "I'm debating wrong". You also seem to have a problem with me discussing points that you are the one who brings up.
Well, stop debating wrong then. Or else, if you want to talk about formal debate rules (which we aren't using here) we can if you wish to cite some where switching the topic to your opponent is legitimate and accepted- debate rules being based on principles of reasoning, and all. I thought you lied reasoned discussion, and wanted me to engage in it? It's unclear why you are complaining so loudly now that I'm not entertaining your desire to do the opposite. As for discussing points, I don't see you discussing anything, just complaining loudly that I won't subject myself to your self-appointed position as determinant of acceptable posting motivation.
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Moreover, you seem to assume many things about me, and then use them to back up your claims (i.e., you can't talk about Christians because you're not a Christian). It's a silly argument to say you can't talk about something you don't personally espouse anyway, but that point aside- I am Christian, therefore by your logic I can say something is un-Christian, and it's not self serving.
Actually I made no such assumption whatsoever - I merely did NOT assume your were a Christian, and now you are taking that lack of assumption as me assuming the contrary.
You know how you can tell? When I first brought it up, I compared your behavior to Beryllin's, who was undoubtedly a Christian; it would be very hard not to be clear on that if you had ever talked to him.
Moreover you are strawmanning what I said. I did not say you could not discuss beliefs you don't hold; what I said was you can't tell people who don't hold your beliefs
how to hold their beliefs or
in what way it is acceptable to do so, and expect to be taken seriously. To go back to the ISIS analogy, we could discuss whether ISIS was Islamic if there were legitimate reason to question whether they were Islamic in the first place (for example if they rejected large portions of the Koran, or did not hold that Mohammed was the Prophet) but since they do, in fact, hold to fundamental tenets of such theology, they're Muslim. We can call them un-Islamic until we're blue in the face but we sound stupid doing it and its rather transparent that "us-Islamic" happily comports with the interests of the West.
(That, by the way, is what discussion looks like)
Now, as for you being a Christian, you're on somewhat stronger ground there, but Christianity has its own internal divisions and there is room for debate on many points of doctrine. Simply telling someone "well, I'm a Christian and I disagree with what you're doing isn't Christian" isn't making any progress. That's what Beryllin did, and part of the reason he was so intolerable was that the obvious response: "Well, so am I, and I think it is" not only didn't phase him but he apparently couldn't even understand that it was possible for other Christians to disagree with him. He would, to be fair, try to back it up with Scripture occasionally, but that was generally debateable as well, or it was simply Scripture warning of divine punishment for those who err, without even the slightest attempt to demonstrate that it was me (or whoever else he was talking to) that was in error rather than him.
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So maybe you should stop assuming things about me and basing your arguments on those assumptions?
Since I'm not, and I jut gave you a lengthy and concrete explanation as to precisely why and how I am not making such assumptions, maybe you should get off your high horse about it. You started off complaining that I wasn't interested in discussion with people and just snarking at them (or words to that effect) but I see a lot more effort in my posting than yours. All you seem to want to do is continue to defend your right to conduct your own little inquisition into my thinking.
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It's kind of interesting that your point in this thread is literally to troll (to stir up liberal histrionics), but you're the one getting visibly bent out of shape. So yes- Y U mad bro?
A troll doesn't explicitly tell people he's trying to provoke them. There's a message there for the left - this country needs two viable sides to political debate. When one side is engaging in shrieking hysteria and the other side is backing away eyes wide there's a serious problem. The solution is to stop the shrieking. It's really not unlike why someone wouldn't want to engage with Beryllin - the Left is terrified of admitting that they are not in the utter moral right.
As for getting visibly bent out of shape - ok whatever. You're the one who is complaining about adhering to a fairly basic principle that ad hom is form of error, and you just don't want to let this line of reasoning go. You're the one all upset that someone might "assume what you think" or whatever it is. I just finished giving you a good explanation of how my point about self-interested critiques of other beliefs fail, but I predict you'll just gloss over that as if I didn't even post to (for all intents and purposes) just repeat yourself again in different words.
It's definitely not me bent out of shape here. I don't need your approval.