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by mlthoughts2018
2356 days ago
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I think this really is not worth noting and the rapid appearance of a bunch of astroturfing comments along these lines is really disappointing. This post deserves to be dealt with on its own, and it’s perfectly fine as a statistical commentary on these graphs. It happens to be wrong in the conclusion, but not for any kind of political bias-based reason. If you aren’t willing to engage with people who hold a different view and have power to stop your preferred policies, why would expect them to do the same for you, and why would you expect your policies to ever be enacted? You’re looking for reasons to dismiss something on purely superficial grounds, and effectively disallowing any possibility that certain groups could actually present data that forces you to change your beliefs. It strikes me as even worse and more dangerous dogmatism than what comes out of the right-wing climate denying think tanks. |
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Not at all, IMO, it was the first thing that occurred to me: "Sounds like the title of a hit piece. I wonder who wrote it?" Cf. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betteridge%27s_Law_of_Headline... etc...
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"What is the most important part of any message?"
"The name of the messenger."