| > This does not make an objective misrepresentation. It doesn't even make it a subjective misrepresentation. They would be objectively misrepresenting it if "mass-murder" is objectively incorrect and/or if "mentally ill people" is objectively incorrect. As I said in my previous comment: mass-murder is, at worst, subjectively incorrect and mentally ill people is obviously correct. It is objectively a misrepresentation. It was misrepresented as being about mentally ill people in general. In reality, it is about an identifiable subset of mentally ill people, for a clear reason that directly relates to the basis for subset identification. To describe it as "the mass-murder of mentally ill people" is to imply that it doesn't have anything to do with the government assistance question. But it does. That is what makes it misrepresentative. > I don't have to wonder why they refuse government assistance. It's the mental illness. Many mentally ill people do not refuse government assistance. In fact, probably a large majority of them are happy to receive government assistance. > You are stating that you believe the policy is justified because they are mentally ill. I am not stating that the policy is justified because they are mentally ill. I am not stating, and did not state, that the policy is justified at all. In fact, I explicitly said: > I disagree with it, but it's objectively not what you're representing it as. I will not reply to you further, because this is not a good-faith discussion — it is just you repeatedly refusing to acknowledge something that I have clearly established, and falsely claiming that I said things that I objectively did not say. |
That seems to happen a lot to you. You should consider your part in that.
> I disagree with it
This is not exclusive with justifying it.
> No, only those who refuse government assistance.
> Which inherently makes them a threat to others. Keep in mind that this is happening in the context of Iryna Zarutska getting stabbed to death.