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by nl
5272 days ago
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Rick Santorum is not attacking a straw man, he is stating his honest, if misguided, beliefs. Moglen is not attacking a straw man, he is stating his honest, if misguided, beliefs. You could now attack a point completely unrelated or only superficially related to his rants about gay marriage and that would be a straw man. You could also, however, argue for or against his points with your own argument. This is true. Additionally, one could point out the good things about gay marriage. That's a perfectly reasonable approach. Specific to the Moglen argument, it doesn't make a lot of sense for me to argue against his points because I agree with a lot of them. However, I think the benefits are more important and I won't sit still and let only one side of the argument be presented. How would you suggest I should present benefits of social networking without you calling me a troll or saying my argument is a strawman? |
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Seems like you finally got it! (Although I disagree that his beliefs are misguided.)
Moglen was stating his beliefs because he was asked for them. You created a straw man to argue against them.
You could have just said "I agree with Mr. Moglen on points X-Z, but I would like to weigh them against the benefits of social networks" - and then do that. That would clearly mark that you are opening your own line of reasoning instead of trying to forcibly claim them on the OP. Then, we could have that discussion together.
You must understand - I did not take exception to you trying to start that discussion, but it's a cheap shot to say that Mr. Moglen was the one who should have done so. It's perfectly reasonable to stand up for your own arguments without forcing them on another person. It was a particularly cheap shot because you did not offer anything in line with your argument except the washing machine argument which I found very weak for the reasons I mentioned earlier.