Ok here I go again: "It's unanimous that you rejected everything, so you must be lying either to us or to yourself!", which was your rewording, is a lie, since that is not what I said at all.
What is it that you think you said? What do you think would be an acceptable paraphrasing of the implication of your statements in this exchange:
You: You've ignored all the evidence presented so far, so you'll forgive me if I conclude that you'll never admit to having seen evidence, no matter what it is.
Me: No, I haven't ignored it all.
{Provides examples}
You: It's pretty unanimous that you have. So either you're not telling the truth, or you're not very good at introspection.
Me:
{Provides summary of the interchange above...}
You: Obviously the stuff you accepted beforehand, you didn't reject.
Is your objection to the fact that I removed the word "pretty"? Are you trying to convince me that you were not implying that it was so close to unanimous as to be indistinguishable from unanimous... and furthermore that the only people who aren't in that unanimity are people who defend Trump no matter what?
Are you objecting to my rephrasing of "either you're not telling the truth or you're not good at introspection" into either you're lying to us (which is what not telling the truth means) or you're lying to yourself (which is clearly implied by not being good at introspection). Especially when you pair it with your repeated accusations of dishonesty. What would be an acceptable paraphrase for that in your mind?
How is my paraphrasing not what you said?
Unless, of course, you're falling back on a trivial and completely senseless interpretation of "lying" wherein if it's not
LITERALLY the exact wording that you used, then it's a "lie"? Is that what's going on here? If so, then grow a spine and just admit that this is the game you're playing so I can move on.
And right after I pointed it out, I explained that rejecting everything about the Russian collusion story doesn't prevent you from thinking that Trump has flaws or has done bad things otherwise, so bringing up the fact that you think Trump has flaws or has done bad things otherwise doesn't counter my claim that you reject eveything about the Russian collusion story.
Well, except for those things that I specifically mentioned that I haven't rejected. The only issue here is that I don't see that there's sufficient SOLID evidence for a conclusion of collusion. It's a non-negligible possibility, and there's a very reasonable likelihood that additional solid evidence will surface that will make that conclusion more viable. But at the moment, I cannot reach that conclusion unless I rely on confirmation bias and what I want to be true.
Furthermore, anything you accept now, you've accepted begridgingly and kicking and screaming. These things have been pointed out to you for months, and even now you're not accepting them fully.
1) There are several things that I've accepted with no argument at all. There are several other things that I've accepted once there has been verification of the claim presented.
2) There are many, many, many things that I don't accept "fully". First because I'm not a very dogmatic sort of person, and I think that all or nothing approaches to this sort of mess are idiotic and absolutely drip bias and belief. And second because that "full" acceptance is nearly always an acceptance of someone else's interpretation of what something is assumed to actually mean, rather than an acceptance of fact. And yeah, I'm not much given to accepting opinion and jumping on bandwagons.
Are you confused because I don't crow from the rooftops about the things I do accept? Am I failing to virtue signal loudly enough to satisfy you on this?
Hey, another lie! Obviously, I wasn't saying that you are a liar because you don't understand the explanation. That would make no sense. Seriously, I cannot believe that you are "misunderstanding" so much stuff by accident.
I didn't say you were calling me a liar because I didn't understand. I'm saying that you call someone a liar (not just me), pretty much whenever they don't accept your explanation, or when they find fault with your explanation. You call people liars with no evidence of them actually being dishonest, simply because you don't believe them. Like in this case exactly. You don't "believe" that I am misunderstanding you, therefore you conclude that I'm lying, and you feel justified in accusing me of such. It never seems to occur to you that either you have failed to be clear in your explanation, or that your explanation might be flawed. Rather, you immediately jump to the assumption that the other person is being dishonest.
Please step back and think about this a moment. Several times now, you have either misunderstood or in some fashion misrepresented what I said, as well as being in error about what I believe and what I think. At no point have I accused you of dishonesty. The things you have said about me are false. There's no question about that - they absolutely are false. But you clearly believe them to be true. Given that, it would be poor logic for me to decide that you are lying about them. It becomes incumbent upon me to change your belief first.
You might give that a try, instead of so frequently jumping to the accusation of dishonesty. I know from observation that you do not like being called a liar in similar situations. Why not go ahead and apply that golden rule for a while?
You don't think that me bringing up people from other planets was hyperbole? You have got to be kidding me.
Given that you seem to be hung up on me having dropped the "pretty" out of your claim of unanimity... no, it's not clear that it's hyperbole. It's also a completely pointless type of hyperbole that adds nothing to the discussion in any fashion, fails to illustrate any point, and is otherwise a distraction and misdirection within this conversation.
You're essentially refusing to allow any of the evidence of collusion. How is that not defending him? That you're not defending him on other matters doesn't change the fact that you're defending him on this, going so far as to find excuses for him.
Have you ever been on a jury?
Imagine you're on a jury, and the prosecuting attorney presents you with a bunch of arguments that the defendant is a child molester. His case consists of many, many items:
- The defendant was seen hanging out near an elementary school
- The defendant was observed having a conversation with a child, but the topic of the conversation is unknown. The defendant claims he was asking the child if they liked the school because his sister has a kid and he's been thinking about trying to convince her to move to the area.
- An anonymous person who refuses to testify said that he was acting susipiciously
- Another anonymous person who refuses to testify said that several years ago they observed what might have been a child on his browser window, and if so then he might have been looking at child pornogrophy
- Another anonymous person claims that several people are convinced that he is a child molester, but refuses to disclose who those people are, nor how many constitute several
- Another person claims that they heard from an inside source that the defense was having a hard time trying to cover up something that the defendant had done, and that it's possible that this thing might be child molestation
Which of those items would you reject as not being sufficient to consider in a court of law? Which would you set aside as speculative until further, more solid information surfaces to corroborate them?
Which items would you accept as evidence? Do those items, by themselves, constitute sufficient evidence to reach a verdict of guilty with respect to a charge of child molestation?
++++++++++++++++++++++++++
There's a huge pile of circumstantial information, and a monumental pile of speculation and allegation at present. Some of that information may ultimately be corroborated, and lend additional weight to the allegation of collusion. But at present, the actual known facts are quite slim. I don't accept the preponderance of hearsay as evidence. I don't accept that "where there's smoke there must be fire" - it's entirely too easy to give the impression of smoke when there is merely steam.
Since Trump's election, we have seen several cases of false-flags. I know nobody wants to acknowledge them, but especially with respect to race relations, there have been several instances of perceived hate-crime turning out to be fake. There have been several instances of Anti-Trump groups
initiating violence against Trump supporters, and in some cases against innocent bystanders or private property.
It is naive to ignore the current political climate. It is naive to accept speculative articles and uncorroborated allegation as fact. I protest against that. You accuse me of rejecting everything, despite the fact that there are several facts that I do accept as facts.
I challenge you, in return, to show me what you have rejected.