Me, Grimlock! wrote:What you did is exactly the same! You'd like to think that it's not, but it is. What did you observe about Dark Zarak? That he brought up an example to make a point? Because it's impossible to observe that he brought it up to project feelings. Don't know about you, but I can't observe feelings over the Internet.
Dark Zarak wrote:God, I hate that so much.
What appalls me most about this whole thing is how angry people are at this kid.
It's there in black and white.
He confesses his own hatred of something, and then projects anger, presumably his own since nobody has yet indicated anger in their posts, onto other people.
Me, Grimlock! wrote:Logical fallacy!
Really? Which fallacy would that be then?
Me, Grimlock! wrote:It's the exact same thing.
No. Making an observation based on falsifiable facts is inherently different to jumping to a conclusion because you want to pick a fight.
Me, Grimlock! wrote:Besides all this, I'm not sure what kind of moral high ground you're trying to gain.
I seek nothing of the sort, there is no moral high-ground here.
Me, Grimlock! wrote:Would you go up to the parents at this kid's funeral and tell them you started a thread to laugh at the way he died? Would anyone here admit to his parents that they chimed in?
Since they're hardly likely to see the funny side of it, I think that would be overly tactless, and downright rude, so no, obviously not.
Me, Grimlock! wrote:Would you tell an alcoholic, fat, disease-ridden couch potato with awful hygiene that he or she should die to his face?
Since it would achieve nothing, no.
Of course you're deviating from the issue at hand. That would be harrasment, with the effect of causing emotional harm to a particular individual, this thread was made for the purpose of discussing the news with some Darwin-Award style comic relief.
Me, Grimlock! wrote:Yeah. You really posted this to help all of us at Seibertron to learn what not to do. Thanks. I won't go bury my head in sand now.
Congratulations, you can snide remarks about quotes taken out of context, deliberately misconstrued, and then turned into a straw man for you to take a swing at.
DesalationReborn wrote:I have to say, reading what you want is different from reading what you see, and interpretation here is crucial. I'm seriously wondering: who is talking "should" and "deserves to"? All I've ever seen here is "has" and "probably will."
And, frankly, I've only seen one side trying for "moral high-ground"-- the other is simply rationally stating why they aren't guilted by such, simply defending an entitlement to an opinion.
How are you not a moderator?
Dark Zarak wrote:And straw man??? Please. What's the straw man? People who say "Stupidity should be lethal"? It's right here in the thread.
Okay, I count three people who have said that if one chooses a stupid course of action that is likely to have a catastrophic outcome, then that person deserves the fate they have chosen for themselves.
Nobody has said that stupidity in general should be lethal, merely expressed a lack of concern for those who bring their fate upon themselves.
The way I read it, they're judging behaviours, not people.
I will admit that I may be wrong in thinking that they're speaking about causality (sleeping in the bed one has made, for instance), as opposed to the abstract concept of actually deserving a fate. (like a murderer or a rapist being put to death)
Dark Zarak wrote:I don't see how it's a straw man when the very thread title and original post is so celebratory in nature.
That is the straw man.
Had I intended it to be celebratory I could have included exlamation marks, italics, bold, uneccessary capitalisation and emoticons.
I used plain text so as not to convey any particular feeling or sentiment.
Had I wanted to celebrate it would have looked more like this:
hypothetical thread wrote:Another one
bites the dust.
That's one less NARUTARD

fan.
Dark Zarak wrote:People should not laugh at this kid, or how he died, on the basis of him being stupid, because they also do stupid things.
That is my point. Right there. It may even be in even plainer English than the last time I posted it, which was in bold.
That's a massive over-simplification, that I think results in a conclusion that does not really follow from the premises.
Stupidity comes in differing orders and magnitudes, with differing risks/rewards and probabilities involved.
Someone who eats McDonalds every day is arguably stupid for doing so, but chances are very good that they will live long enough to reproduce before the grease and fat kill them, whereas this kid's actions were immediately lethal.
That is less stupid than burying your head in sand. Much less so.
Dark Zarak wrote:How is that not supremacist?
It's not supremacist because nobody is making themselves out to be super-man or God's chosen people. The comments are coming from the perspective of a lot of insignificant individuals who just so happen to have survived as long as they have because they have a sufficient capacity to evaluate risks and avoid doing things that will probably get them killed immediately.
dark zarak wrote:* No, I'm not inventing a new argument here. I am actually able to admit when I'm wrong with a point, and now I have been able to refine my larger point in light of my new realization.
I understand and respect that.
However, I disagree on the basis that humans have evolved to a point where genetics has largely taken a back-seat to behaviour in determining who is fit to survive, and that his death has prevented the opportunity for his reasoning and behaviour to be copied by others.
dark zarak wrote:it's the definition of hypocrisy.
I disagree on the basis that there is a difference between orders and magnitudes of stupid actions. The people who find humor in the manner of the kid's death are all still alive as a result of a fundamental difference in behaviour.