You are viewing a single comment's thread from:
RE: The Behavorial Sink: Experiment Made Reality?
Yes I would have. You went full ad hominem for some reason and gave no indication of your actual opinion.
The poorest fifth is living on wellfare and food stamps. Part of the criteria for utopia is missing when we consider the crime rates of the areas in which that fifth of people reside.
You went full ad hominem
I did NOT..quote it
for some reason and gave no indication of your actual opinion.
exactly right. I expressed no opinion. My opinion isn't being discussed. Your ad homineum remarks are. I'm asking you to support your assertion...and you post pictures of lolipops.
"Have you ever watched the news or read a history book?"
You also claimed that I said Calhoun is "mentally unstable" even though I didn't. An obvious attempt to distort facts in your favor.
That meme applies to you so it's relevant. You're mad.
it was an honest question...have you?
I quoted your remark about calhoun
ah..speaking of ad homineum attacks...
*ad hominem
You attacked your opponent's character or personal traits in an attempt to undermine their argument.
Ad hominem attacks can take the form of overtly attacking somebody, or more subtly casting doubt on their character or personal attributes as a way to discredit their argument. The result of an ad hom attack can be to undermine someone's case without actually having to engage with it.
I'd say that when you said to me "You're mad"
that qualified.
Yeah well it takes 2 to tango.
And again, that was a question posed to the reader, not a statement.
how did the poorest fifth of the people live that you read about is your VAST reading of history?
Which era are you referring to? Where? The fifth Kingdom of Egypt? Italian Renaissance? Hellenistic Greece? Feudal Japan?
The quality of life of the poorest class differs very much depending on the era to which they belong.
You're trying to call me out, but I don't think you know what you're talking about or what a utopia even is.
of course I do..
The term utopia was coined from Greek by Sir Thomas More for his 1516 book Utopia, describing a fictional island society in the Atlantic Ocean. The word comes from Greek: οὐ ("not") and τόπος ("place") and means "no-place", and strictly describes any non-existent society 'described in considerable detail'.
it's a literary metaphor.
Exactly. So I have to wonder, why are you making a case for utopia in America? Based on a Fox News report, no less.