Posted December 08, 2016
low rated
Vainamoinen: That it does.
Vainamoinen: I'm all for shifting blame to the conspiracy people, really, because they're the signal boosters, but the preachers of hate are usually sitting at the top of the communicative chain, and they are often very aware of how their followers react to their propaganda. When e.g. Breitbart writes hitpieces on private individuals, they know they're sending a mob of neo-nazis at their virtual and possibly real doorstep as well. This is a real, actual responsibility.
Vainamoinen: There's no need for you to believe anything, but I think that is often the case. But this doesn't mean he doesn't believe in it as well. The quasi-religious faith he puts in his own nonsense is a crucial part of his success. But do look at how he suddenly swerved to another idea when the threat of litigation beckoned.
Vainamoinen: Lots of people covered and signal-boosted it. For example – with quite some vehemence – Michael G. Flynn, the son of Trump's National Security Advisor to be.
Vainamoinen: I will, by default, assume any man or woman who believes Hillary Clinton operates a child sex ring out of a pizza restaurant to explicitly NOT be of sound mental health.
Vainamoinen: Servitude.
“I have days where, if I come home — and I don't want to sound too much like a chauvinist, but when I come home and dinner's not ready, I go through the roof.”
Adoration.
"All of the women on The Apprentice flirted with me - consciously or unconsciously. That's to be expected."
Their bodies.
“I moved on her and I failed. I’ll admit it. I did try and fuck her. She was married. And I moved on her very heavily... I moved on her like a bitch, but I couldn’t get there. And she was married."
No, whose responsibility it is is a question that is very difficult to answer. What it all comes down to is position of conspiracy ''news'' in terms of reasonable expectation and establishing intent. Its not a blanket liability of the ''news'' channel in question. You also take away responsibility from the people who believe in such things in the first place. And as should be apparent to anyone's who's considered freedom of speech and its boundaries, penalizing the act of putting ideas into idiots' heads will end in penalizing everything. Vainamoinen: I'm all for shifting blame to the conspiracy people, really, because they're the signal boosters, but the preachers of hate are usually sitting at the top of the communicative chain, and they are often very aware of how their followers react to their propaganda. When e.g. Breitbart writes hitpieces on private individuals, they know they're sending a mob of neo-nazis at their virtual and possibly real doorstep as well. This is a real, actual responsibility.
Vainamoinen: There's no need for you to believe anything, but I think that is often the case. But this doesn't mean he doesn't believe in it as well. The quasi-religious faith he puts in his own nonsense is a crucial part of his success. But do look at how he suddenly swerved to another idea when the threat of litigation beckoned.
Vainamoinen: Lots of people covered and signal-boosted it. For example – with quite some vehemence – Michael G. Flynn, the son of Trump's National Security Advisor to be.
Vainamoinen: I will, by default, assume any man or woman who believes Hillary Clinton operates a child sex ring out of a pizza restaurant to explicitly NOT be of sound mental health.
Shadowstalker16: It should also be remembered that of all the idiots who drink in his words, only one actually believed it enough to go check.
Vainamoinen: Slight correction: "only one believed it enough to go check armed with an assault rifle". The number of people who "checked" with handguns hidden or without armament can not be assessed properly. Shadowstalker16: In your opinion. If this was, what about the many instances of nonfactual reporting of Trump?
Vainamoinen: This is a tangent and basically a different topic, but I'll answer anyway. There has been nonfactual reporting on Trump, but it was absolutely drowned in fake news and conspiracy nonsense from the Trumpkins' side. So much in fact that my aunt in Ohio – a Democrat herself, naturally – eventually believed Hillary Clinton had announced to abolish the second amendment (and of course she never did). Vainamoinen: Servitude.
“I have days where, if I come home — and I don't want to sound too much like a chauvinist, but when I come home and dinner's not ready, I go through the roof.”
Adoration.
"All of the women on The Apprentice flirted with me - consciously or unconsciously. That's to be expected."
Their bodies.
“I moved on her and I failed. I’ll admit it. I did try and fuck her. She was married. And I moved on her very heavily... I moved on her like a bitch, but I couldn’t get there. And she was married."
And shifting blame is not a matter of who ''deserves'' it.
I still don't think he engineered one specially for the purpose. I don't think its wise to assume so. Its like saying a knife-maker made a knife so that someone would kill someone with it when in reality he made all the knives just to sell them and one happened to cause more harm than that done to vegetables.
Any other outlets covered it? Any outlets covered it as fact? What's Trump's guy did is defy good faith and expectation but I haven't yet fully thought about his liability.
Then it can't really be as much of his disease's fault as AJ's. You need to keep in mind that being able to incite excessively sensitive people (and by that I mean those who are legally insane, not self diagnosed with every mental illness they've heard of) is not incitement, since its not incitement to a reasonable person.
Did they report other people who checked? Obviously they cannot be discounted, but its difficult to count as well. But I still don't assume even half of AJ's 2 million something devotees went there in the span of a week or two.
Doesn't make it any less wrong that Trump's misinformation wing was better. Also don't forget how much the media covered for the real failings of Hillary.
I was hoping for more accountable stuff than creative interpretations of this boastful gameshow host's public statements. Ie does he believe fundamentally that women are inferior? Then why wouldn't he say anything about associated stuff like traditional gender roles or traditional family? Does he even have a traditional family? I'm still not convinced he believes in anything misogynistic beyond occasionally losing control and being overly advancing, to the point of minor stuff like groping.