Nonsense. If I claim that it is a scientific fact that you won't get burned if you set yourself on fire, I'm making false claims as to whether that is a scientific fact. — Πετροκότσυφας
Cost of site to run: $49/month
Subscriptions received: $247 — jamalrob
What is needed is a reasonably steady income that over time meets, but does not greatly exceed, the cost of operation. Too much money at one time presents an odd problem. One might be a year ahead in income, but if one stops seeking donations, eventually the cash will be gone and people will be out of the habit of thinking about donating. — Bitter Crank
Premise 2. Pinocchio claims "my nose grows now" — Michael
I think you've just moved the goal post. — Wosret
The evil falsehoods do in both cases, is firstly by big brothering people, and deciding what kind of information they can and cannot handle, or should and shouldn't be privy to, which makes you an unreliable, patronizing person. The evil it does in the second case, is that anyone that would rather believe pleasant falsehoods than terrible truths is also not trustworthy, or credible, and weak of heart and mind — Wosret
Yes, I think I did.You misunderstand. — Wosret
Advocate just forgetting about it, and not worrying about what happened to them, and sing the virtues of just feeling good all the time, regardless of what happens to you or those around you. — Wosret
Kind of undercuts your credibility, if, as you suggest, truth is not undesirable for being useless, or irrelevant, but because it might make you feel bad? — Wosret
No, its value is relative to its actual usefulness. We can be wrong about something's usefulness, which may make us value facts that are useless, but we value them mistakenly believing them to be useful. — Wosret
The truth about what happened to your loved one is indeed desireable, in order to feel the appropriate emotional reaction, which I think at least honours their memory and what they went through. Would you like to have suffered a great trial, and have everyone think that it was a walk in the park? — Wosret
I think TGW's goal is to convince people to stop procreating. Now I don't think the antinatalists have a snowballs chance in hell of stopping the entire human race from procreating, but they might convince some people. That brings up the question of what a practical antinatalist hopes to accomplish. If you can't convince everyone to stop giving birth, then how about plan B where you convince people to make a world that's less terrible to be born into? — Marchesk
All truth is clearly desireable, males in particular love to know tons of useless facts, and can seem to never get enough of them. — Wosret