joyously acknowledging that yes, your data is cherry-picked, does not address the fallacy in any way. — Jabberwock
I have already wrote that: by challenging your view by reflecting on it from a different point of view. — Jabberwock
You have flatly refused to look at other evidence. Could that be the reason for why we were looking just at one? — Jabberwock
Anchoring cannot be 'implied', if we are looking at several indices without rejecting any of them beforehand. 'Let us look at all the indices and average them' is not 'anchoring'. — Jabberwock
If someone objects to slavery and someone proposes to significantly increase religious freedom of the slaves then yes, it would be a nice improvement of their index, but it would still not address the problem, i.e. slavery. — Jabberwock
Your claim that the resolution of the conflict in Ukraine requires overthrowing of tyranny — Jabberwock
The question is not 'Can we make Russians happier?' but 'Can we make Russians stop subjugating other countries?' — Jabberwock
I have given you the facts, how you assess their influence on the probability is up to you. — Jabberwock
, the performative behaviour of the person whose gender it is is restricted on pain of counting as what they (feel they) are. So if you were to say "You're a woman! Not a man" to a trans man, because they were wearing a dress, what's restricted in that moment is the violence of your assertion — fdrake
Great, so you finally did some reading. — Jabberwock
is using a single outlier to support your argument is a fallacy or not? — Jabberwock
If the accusation is "there's no evidence for X" then cherry-picked evidence disproves that claim. There has to exist evidence for X in order that I can cherry pick it, it therefore disproves the claim that there is no evidence in favour of X. — Isaac
it is easier to overcome one's confirmation bias by seeking many sources, both confirming and countering his thesis. — Jabberwock
I have proposed to review as many indices as possible, including yours, with no particular weights attached to any of them, so there would be no anchoring and no preferential treatment whatsoever. You object to that because you realize that putting them all together would indicate your source is an outlier. How exactly is that framing? — Jabberwock
that is not what is generally meant by the term — Jabberwock
Meaning of tyranny in English
tyranny
noun [ U ]
uk
/ˈtɪr.ən.i/ us
/ˈtɪr.ən.i/
Add to word list
government by a ruler or small group of people who have unlimited power over the people in their country or state and use it unfairly and cruelly:
This, the president promised us, was a war against tyranny.
a situation in which someone or something controls how you are able to live, in an unfair way: — https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/tyranny
If you reject historical probabilism, then you cannot argue that the US provoked the war: if history is wholly undetermined and future inscrutable, then nobody could predict any course of events, therefore they are blameless. — Jabberwock
Maybe you have read many sources, but you engage with only one. — Jabberwock
I don't ask my teenager for explanations, because he's not a research subject. — Srap Tasmaner
Because men and women and all the others can and do wear dresses -- and women also don't wear dresses. That is, the behavior doesn't define the identity, nor do traits. Whatever identity is, it's not those (though some identities identify with those). There are some roles which are slotted for the genders which people are attached to, but people also overcome these along with traits-based views while maintaining their gender identity: Think here not of trans but of cis -- how many cis people have you known who undergo physical and occupational changes which don't align with their self-picture, but still manage to identify as their gender? Does a man cease to be a man if he doesn't have a job? Does a man cease to be a man if he has erectile dysfunction? Does a man cease to be a man if he has feminine feelings? — Moliere
The trouble I have is that I want to get there by seeing those expressions as performance, but the people using these expressions keep talking like they're supposed to be taken as incontrovertible fact, or as witness -- however you do that you're opening yourself to the same types of skepticism and critique as any other expression. — Srap Tasmaner
No one would consider 'racist' an identity worthy of the same deference. Why gender specifically? — Srap Tasmaner
And that's the sticking point, the off-the-shelf narratives we bring with us to the discussion. Is there a process for rewriting those scripts, how does it work, what is required for that process, and how robust is it? — Srap Tasmaner
No, cherry-picked support does not disprove anything — Jabberwock
An argument based on a single cherry-picked point of support is fallacious — Jabberwock
I have described many factors from the history of both Ukraine and Russia that make me believe what you propose is unlikely. — Jabberwock
Unlike me, you have not engaged with any of them. — Jabberwock
This is simply confirmation bias. You engage ONLY with the evidence that supports your claim. — Jabberwock
The simple fact is that capability of some countries to move on the HFI by a certain amount has nothing to do with the likelihood of freeing of the whole of Russia from tyranny, which was your argument — Jabberwock
So you are simply not telling the truth when you say that I have not provided a shred of evidence. — Jabberwock
And tell me, you do not believe that the HFI contradicts my claim that the peaceful fall of regime in Russia is unlikely. How can it then support the opposite thesis? — Jabberwock
How could I tell if I am honest with myself or not? — Moliere
It's better at building a relationship, — Moliere
what this has taught me also is that listening to another's story is better for learning more about the world and yourself -- otherwise it's very easy to get trapped in my little web of thoughts. — Moliere
You have no other support to make the claim that a peaceful rebellion in Russia is likely in a reasonable time — Jabberwock
flatly refuse to consider the vast evidence that says something else. — Jabberwock
I accept the capitulation. — Jabberwock
So the US are sending 75 billion to Yemen too? Good news. — Isaac
No Sudan Somalia CAR Afghanistan ...? — jorndoe
You mean one time in every ten thousand you act as if you're omniscient? — Isaac
Very possibly - doesn't everyone? — Vera Mont
the simple fact that people will be better able to construct a story about themselves than strangers who know nothing about them. — Moliere
It's not just the unvarnished truth. — Srap Tasmaner
99.99% certain — Vera Mont
Except you did not do what you now say you do. You have given one source (cherry-picked after your ahistorical claim that Ukraine turned around in a decade turned out indefensibie). — Jabberwock
I look at all sources — Jabberwock
Are you saying that we have no reason to believe Putin threatening a war due to his perceived threat is likely to do that? — Jabberwock
So 'willing to go to war', with which you have agreed, is now 2% chance? — Jabberwock
We do not, so we do not. — Jabberwock
I'd like it more if you aimed at the level of narratives instead of going all the ways down to words -- though I understand it looks like it's the use of individual words that's at stake, of course it isn't, they're pieces of a larger puzzle. — Srap Tasmaner
identity is always something you perform, rather than something that you are — Srap Tasmaner
and your ideas about yourself play a part in that performance but are also a reflective simplification of that performance. — Srap Tasmaner
It's always about balance. Hundreds of thousands of lives, millions more at risk, for the sake of a few decimal place improvements on the human freedom measure is not balance, it's insanity. — Isaac
... instigated + ordered by the Kremlin. Do we have an insane government on our hands? :/ — jorndoe
I consider all the facts known to me and draw conclusions from them. Like everyone else, I surely apply some bias, based on my previous opinions, but at least I try to challenge them. You consider only one fact, sorry, an opinion, that suits your conclusion and, not unexpectedly, confirms that your conclusion was right. — Jabberwock
It means that you are likely to shoot the deer: there are two factors that make it more likely than not, unless we know other facts. — Jabberwock
most likely he would react by waging a war. — Jabberwock
Unless you have good reasons why he would not, those two premises (with which you agree with) tell us that he would likely do that. — Jabberwock
The difference is that we have no right to demand they make that sacrifice from the comfort of our homes. — Jabberwock
So you'd commit to error-theory, then? Or at least the analogy that all identity talk is as existentially important as talk of horoscopes? — Moliere
I do not dismiss it — Jabberwock
it should be considered together with other sources and not in isolation. — Jabberwock
If I argue that the global temperatures do not rise from year to year and carefully select data for only those places where it does not and ignore all others, are my conclusions as valid as the conclusion from the study where all data are considered and the results are just the opposite? — Jabberwock
getting all their opinions together does equal out those issues — Jabberwock
Ukrainians in general were not more opressed economically and judicially according to your single source and the descent into draconian tyranny is still unaccounted for. — Jabberwock
You said 'yep' when I wrote that Putin is willing to go to war to defend against perceived threats and you agree that he sees free and prosperous Ukraine as a threat. The conclusion must be that he would go to war for that reason. — Jabberwock
there is a strong unified global community committed to protection of its members which Ukraine could be a part of — Jabberwock
Given your view that he sees free and prosperous Ukraine as a threat, it is very likely that he would ask for it. — Jabberwock
given that this hypothetical is quite likely on your proposed course of action, it seems this course of action would make the peaceful rebellion against Putin less likely. — Jabberwock
for you people being jailed, beaten up, poisoned, shot and deprived of basic democratic freedoms is a few decimal places on your precious index. People actually involved might have a bit different opinion on that. — Jabberwock
Yes. That would certainly make everything confusing! You'd have to more or less ask the other person to make clear what we're talking about, and here I am saying "it's not clear, but it's not that -- you have to take people at their word" — Moliere
gender is one of those things which gets re-expressed in many different ways throughout various cultures. — Moliere
So I see it as there being something very basic, which is hard to get at that underlies this re-expression (what I've referred to as a way-of-being, in contradistinction to both traits and behaviors). I'd say our identities exist, but maybe not in the same way, or at least the way we usually talk about existence doesn't seem to work here since it's neither traits nor behaviors. I'm not sure that identity is amenable to scientific analysis, though I think historical analysis works. I've been situating gender within culture, because I think that's what gives shape and meaning to gender identity.
But when I do that -- that's when I land on these notions which are far from the lock tight demonstrations. The concepts are fragile, half-formed, and morphing along the way. How does anyone describe a way of doing things? We can say, in general, Being-in-the-world -- but that's the ontological expression rather than an expression of identity.
What I'm brought back to is that I think we all do this with respect to identity. How we relate to others isn't so much about the traits they hold, and is only partially dependent upon behaviors (consider how you can judge the same behavior as good or bad -- the perception of a person's overall reputation will guide how a perceiver judges a behavior). — Moliere
And because the whole point is to pick on those who are weaker. The stereotypical bully is a big guy who just takes advantage of his god-given advantage, with no effort. (Hence the way older brothers treat their younger siblings.) More important is the guy who's smart enough to spot people's weaknesses and manipulate them, bullying them through psychology. That's Trump, that's Finchy in The Office. — Srap Tasmaner
it's not just archetypes but your father that is your primary exemplar of manhood, so it's inevitable that you chose to emulate his example or reject it, and for most a mix of both they don't recognize until they're older. A child's first definition of woman is going to be "someone like my mom" and of man "someone like my dad". — Srap Tasmaner
I certainly did not expect you to ignore all the data that contradict your thesis. — Jabberwock
If the tool you have provided does not indicate changes caused by draconian oppression, then it is not a good indicator of oppression, right? — Jabberwock
Assessing more data does not get you closer to truth than carefully selecting just the one that confirms your thesis? — Jabberwock
Considering that Russia's score in 2000 was 5.57 and it moved to 6.16 in 2008, i.e. (improvement of 0.59), and Ukraine made the progress of 0.83 from 2000 to 2008, which was the period you mentioned, then we have to conclude that both made about the same progress in those respective periods? — Jabberwock
If yep, then Putin would still attack Ukraine if it had prospects for being free and prosperous, no matter whether it was in NATO or not. Conceding NATO membership would not stop the war, if Ukraine was to be free and prosperous, it would still be attacked. — Jabberwock
So if we conceded the whole Ukraine to Putin, as you propose — Jabberwock
we could not 'expect a likewise positive effect on pressure for change in Russia (including any stolen territories) from a free and prospering Ukraine next door', as there would be no free and prospering Ukraine next door. It pretty much would diminish the likelihood of the successful Russian revolt, would it not? — Jabberwock
And you seem to care about well being of non-Ukrainians only if Ukraine can be blamed for its decrease, otherwise you are content with 'balance', as you wrote. — Jabberwock
I'm not sure who "we" is supposed to be here. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Ukraine is far more than "halfway" in reducing Russia's supply of artillery systems — Count Timothy von Icarus
given Russia just had a rebellion — Count Timothy von Icarus
it seems possible that Russia is more than halfway to a defeat. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Funny how the solidity of Putin's grip on power seems to change depending on the purposes the argument is being put to.
Encourage more war - "Putin is weakening and could be overthrown any minute, just a few more bombs and we'll be there."
Encourage political action instead of war - "Putin is strong, it would take many decades to overthrow him"
Do get dizzy at all? — Isaac
very likely Ukraine in NATO — Count Timothy von Icarus
... got basically every prediction about the post-Cold War era wrong. — Count Timothy von Icarus
there are two problems with that: one is that there's some overlap I'm afraid with what people I don't like take as their ideal of being a "real man"; — Srap Tasmaner
there's no definably masculine "content" to the ideal -- what it's good for a man to do is generally good for a woman to do as well, so it's really more a matter of style, of a man's way of being good, of enacting the generic ideal, what it is to be good as a man. — Srap Tasmaner
the left says they're obviously standing up to bullies -- racists and sexists and the rest -- and the right says they're standing up to the bullies on the left. — Srap Tasmaner
What's really uncomfortable about this whole analysis though is that it does accept that the world is divided into strong and weak, and while the good man stands with the weak as a matter of choice, he is with the bully as a matter of nature, being strong. That also means that as a matter of psychology, choosing to see yourself as a protector of the weak is choosing to see yourself as not one of them, but as strong. And that means unavoidably making strength a part of your self-image rather than incidental to it. The other famous superhero line fits here: with great power comes great responsibility. If you accept the responsibility, it's a way of seeing yourself as powerful. — Srap Tasmaner
being a good man is a man's way of being good -- if you recognize that your society has given men privileges and authority, and that includes you, then you ought to recognize you've been given power to act for the good. That power is situational, not inherent to you, but it's real. And it's not necessarily something you wanted, but you have it. — Srap Tasmaner
There may also be something in the inherent differences in physical strength between men and women, on average, and using that relative strength responsibly too. — Srap Tasmaner
Being a good man is an adaptive behavior, a way to be as good as you can given that the society you live in has given you unequal power, something like that. — Srap Tasmaner
trans people are targets because they are living counter-examples to the belief that one's identity is determined by one's trait-based biology. — Moliere
Women are the declared targets of this enforced gender binary, as the group which is born to be subservient to men. Trans individuals, as living counter-examples, are also objects of patriarchy. Trans men aren't really given any more credence than trans women by our hypothetical misogynist, and it's still a disgust, at least, born from this view -- not quite resentment, but disgust, another ugly emotion. — Moliere
as soon as we write it into words then the original method I proposed for knowing a person's identity -- asking them -- can no longer be relied upon. If a law is written then there's usually a reason to lie somewhere because the law is not a reflection of our identity, or even anywhere close to what an identity is. — Moliere
The point is, as I have repeated for a long time now, that you base your whole argument on a single metrics, which you admit is quite prone to variation due to subjective weights assigned to particular indicators. In other words, you believe that the single indicator precisely describes the state of affairs in the region. I have provided you with four other indicators, you have never engaged with them. — Jabberwock
We ahve to compound ALL the data, your source, Freedom House, The Economist, Polity etc. and any other source available. We also need to consider facts both from the history and from the current state of affairs that could influence our assessment. — Jabberwock
is that correct? — Jabberwock
Ukraine is a grave threat to his regime. We know that he is willing to go to war to defend against threats, so it is reasonable that he would keep threatening war until there was no chance of free and prosperous Ukraine. — Jabberwock
As you are claiming that avoiding the war is better than letting people get under oppression, you would advocate letting him subjugate the whole of Ukraine if it meant war could be avoided. — Jabberwock
We also know that he is interested in Ukrainian territories and is willing to risk war to get them, therefore we can assume that he might want more Ukrainian territories. — Jabberwock
you would rather give away Ukrainian territories to avoid war, therefore you would advocate giving away further parts of Ukraine, until it run out of parts. — Jabberwock
The issue I am pointing out is that first you make very specific claims — Jabberwock
Data that do not fit your claims are 'pointless distraction'? — Jabberwock
We should only look at your data when examining your claim and disregard data that say something else? — Jabberwock
your single source does not seem particularly good in describing the level of opression in Russia — Jabberwock
If the tool you have provided does not indicate changes caused by draconian oppression, then it is not a good indicator of oppression, right? — Jabberwock
The point is there would not be a free and prospering Ukraine next door, because you would have given it away to Putin. — Jabberwock
By curtailing I also meant to suggest "blocking the advancement of". We could talk about rejecting the Scottish Bill if you like, my understanding was that the official reason was largely "we haven't changed the law in England yet, so making this easier in Scotland would cause some chaos down here". — fdrake
I saw a lot of people donating to an anti trans charity just before the bill. They were getting donations on the streets of Edinburgh. People would go by and tell them all kinds of things. I know they were anti trans because of their pamphlets, and the "all trans women are rapists" rhetoric they were spewing onto the street. I can understand why people would get that impression. — fdrake
My org kept poaching their punters though, they soon left. Buggers also couldn't stand light rain. — fdrake
But I'd also say that Goldwater was striking a masculine note with his remarks, entrenching the connection between the right and a particular view of masculinity. — Srap Tasmaner
Folks, those numbers haven't been independent. — jorndoe
Putin + team probably wouldn't be too happy about Belarus changing towards democracy, transparency, and all that (perhaps even seeking NATO membership :gasp:), either. — jorndoe
Your claim was that it went from oligarchy to democracy in ten years. Do you still support that claim? — Jabberwock
One specific indicator has changed (through no fault of Ukrainian authorities) that has badly affected the overall score. That is the peril of using a single datapoint for your argument. — Jabberwock
I am using the 2022 table and it shows that the biggest change from 2012 to 2014 was in the category I have named. The other one was religion. In other words, Ukraine went from 7.04 in 2012 to 6.50 in 2014 mostly due to a single indicator. — Jabberwock
Yes, you still are ignoring them, if you consider the single indicator from a single source as sufficient evidence for your claims. According to the Freedom House 'Freedom in the World' index, Russia went ten points down since 2015, but so did Ukraine. Does it mean that they both went from democracy to oligarchy? No, it does not, it means that some particular indicators which were given arbitrary weights went one way or another. Why should your single datapoint carry more weight than mine? — Jabberwock
No, I have argued that the score might be affected which would throw off your maths. — Jabberwock
draconian laws were introducted after 2020. — Jabberwock
I can read that and know you intend the bolded "she" as a continued reference to the person with female natal sex who was declared a woman at birth and then identified as/behaved as/became a man later. I don't think I immediately need to read you as intentionally misgendering. Which could well have happened. Since my Internal Twitter picked up on it, and it is usually quite good. — fdrake
Unless there was further context that the EHRC report's recommendation came out for purely political reasons as a curtailment of rights (which I can imagine being the case, since I don't know what knock on effects this will have on current trans protections). — fdrake
As an aside, I do hope that we can keep TPF able to have these kind of discussions in a respectful manner, it's something we've needed to argue about in the mod thread on numerous occasions. — fdrake
So we are supposed to ignore it and pretend it that the other data are not there? — Jabberwock
using data from two different sources if you have the relevant data in a single table in a document you have linked does look a bit suspicious, wouldn't you say? — Jabberwock
If Ukraine had the exact same score, but in the period of six years ten countries would fall behind it because people there lost their freedom, then Ukraine would automatically improve in the ranking. Is that evidence of its improvement? — Jabberwock
Are you using a different source again? I cannot even find such categories in the 2022 document. — Jabberwock
in 2000-2008 Ukraine also did not went from 'corrupt oligarchy' to 'free democracy', as was your claim. The data shows a constant process of improvement that has lasted at least two decades, but that is only because there are no data from before 2000. That is, nothing about the data supports your claim that Ukraine went from oligarchy to democracy in a decade. — Jabberwock
I say we have to take all the factors into consideration — Jabberwock
I have already explained what factors were, in my opinion, instrumental in the fact that the progress of the two countries was different. You have just ignored them. — Jabberwock
I have already listed the laws, do you want every single act listed? — Jabberwock
strict tightening of censorship laws that put you in jail for 16 years MIGHT have some impact on the freedoms of those involved — Jabberwock
your single source does not seem particularly good in describing the level of opression in Russia, — Jabberwock
In the link you have provided: https://www.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/2023-01/human-freedom-index-2022.pdf — Jabberwock
Why the same site gives different scores for the same country for the same year? I do not know — Jabberwock
comparing rankings from different years is simply wrong - rankings are relative, so they heavily depend on the movements of other countries. — Jabberwock
Ukraine did not turn from corrupted oligarchy to a free democracy within a decade — Jabberwock
Ukraine had a temporary decrease caused by an armed rebellion instigated by Russia — Jabberwock
you propose that Russia move from the oppression it is under now... to the state caused by the oppression it also caused? How does that make even sense? — Jabberwock
It mostly improved a single indicator because it the effects of the armed rebellion caused by its neighbor were less pronounced. — Jabberwock
Before the rebellion Ukraine had scores above 7.0, that is in the middle between the current Russia and the current Spain - it was much better than Russia was then and much better than Russia is now. Before Russia has started troubles, Ukrainians were not nearly as oppressed as Russians are now, as your own source shows. So no, Ukraine did not go 'from where Russia is now', because it was never there (since 1991). — Jabberwock
Well, your argument was that it is clear that countries can go from corrupted oligarchies to free democracies in a decade. Is it still so clear? — Jabberwock
Sure: censorship laws, freedom of movement laws, laws on companies, laws on gay 'propaganda'. These are just formal measures, as important are changes which are nor formally sanctioned, like treatment of protesters, activities of Roskomnadzor, closing publications under false pretences, etc. — Jabberwock