|
|
|
|
|
by anigbrowl
1196 days ago
|
|
Not really. Policy doesn't make good headlines. Everyone understands that in 2008, investors received significant bailouts. 'Bailouts' are synonymous with people receiving help for investment losees. Depositors, workers, etc. are creditors who did not agree to shoulder investment risk. 'NO BAILOUTS' is an unsubtle slogan, but we're talking about a headline. Headlines are not meant to be nuanced case-switch statements, they serve the same role as function identifiers and need to be maximally concise to get attention. Your suggestion ignores the point above that the person who coined this headline made distinctly non-extremist policy suggestions. You might say 'well people should never use inflammatory language to make their point.' But if so, you need to consider that all kinds of bad policies can be put onto the books while being couched in very bland-sounding terms to get past people's filters. |
|
Just want to say, I've had bugs caused by misleading function identifiers which do something very similar to what they say, but not quite. Developers take the name literally and won't even bother to read their documentation.
And it's the same thing with slogans like "no bailouts" or "defund the police". These slogans do get more attention, but your actual nuanced argument doesn't. That's a problem, because many people who would agree with the actual argument are immediately turned off by the slogan, including the people who need to hear your message the most: those who are unsure and who you're trying to convince to join your side. These unsure people will hear the most adversarial version of your words, like how a customer will read the critical reviews on a sponsored product (not the positive ones), or a jury will pick apart the testimony of the accused.
This is what people (read: Democrats and Republicans) do in today's society: they preach to those who are already on their side and will already vote for them and their proposals. They don't preach to the other side, and presumably think everyone there is a lost cause, because they themselves are hearing the other side's most radical voices. But despite what mass media would make you believe, most people are actually very rational and understanding: and I still believe that when you present your argument more nuanced and reasonable, even though less people hear it, more end up joining your cause.