TragicMonkey
Poisoned Waffles
Your will to care seems to fluctuate wildly. I wonder if there's a pattern.
Have you heard of "irony"? It's a bit like steely and goldy.
Your will to care seems to fluctuate wildly. I wonder if there's a pattern.
Have you heard of "irony"?
What about those who "guessed" incorrectly, promised to never let the skeptics forget their words, then slithered away as soon as things turned south? Do you admire their chutzpah?
Have you heard of "irony"? It's a bit like steely and goldy.
Not that it really matters at this point.
Jussie Smollett turns out to be a lying, race-baiting grifter. The people who suspected his story to begin with had good reason, and were ultimately vindicated. About the only thing that didn't get called from day one was the highly-placed corrupt official who would assist his grift. Maybe you don't care about this kind of thing, but you probably should.
There was no highly placed official assisting him from day one.About the only thing that didn't get called from day one was the highly-placed corrupt official who would assist his grift.
Tragic Monkey said he didn't care and prophesised this behaviour in the original thread.
Cares selectively... like most folks.
As I'm not one of the people calling anyone racist I can't answer your question. Ask them, instead.
Then what is it exactly that you're saying?
I thought I said it pretty clearly a couple of times already: this was stupid. Everybody who took a position on whether this event occurred as represented or not was acting on low information, reported selectively, third-hand. Guessing correctly that the attack was fake was not a Sherlock Holmesian triumph of deduction, nor was assuming it was a fake an exercise in good skepticism; simply getting to the right answer isn't the point, it's how you get there that matters. And using hindsight to augment the "reasoning behind" prior guesswork isn't impressive skepticism either. Yes, the people who bought the story were wrong about it. But the people who called it a hoax before any evidence don't deserve gloating rights for their sagacity.
The point of this place (originally) is to use reason properly, not to rush to guess the right answers. It's not a quiz show.
And everything I typed is wasted because the next outrageous sensationalism in the press-- whether it's a noose in someone's cubicle or a remark on a receipt or somebody's Halloween costume-- will immediately inspire the same behavior here and elsewhere: everybody will rush to judgment, take sides, then snipe unpleasantly at each other for weeks until something else distracts. Then if one day actual evidence emerges and the truth is revealed one side will congratulate themselves for their brilliance.
I think we ought to be able to do a little better than that, here. We're better than Facebook and Reddit, surely?
I thought I said it pretty clearly a couple of times already: this was stupid. Everybody who took a position on whether this event occurred as represented or not was acting on low information, reported selectively, third-hand. Guessing correctly that the attack was fake was not a Sherlock Holmesian triumph of deduction, nor was assuming it was a fake an exercise in good skepticism; simply getting to the right answer isn't the point, it's how you get there that matters. And using hindsight to augment the "reasoning behind" prior guesswork isn't impressive skepticism either. Yes, the people who bought the story were wrong about it. But the people who called it a hoax before any evidence don't deserve gloating rights for their sagacity.
The point of this place (originally) is to use reason properly, not to rush to guess the right answers. It's not a quiz show.
And everything I typed is wasted because the next outrageous sensationalism in the press-- whether it's a noose in someone's cubicle or a remark on a receipt or somebody's Halloween costume-- will immediately inspire the same behavior here and elsewhere: everybody will rush to judgment, take sides, then snipe unpleasantly at each other for weeks until something else distracts. Then if one day actual evidence emerges and the truth is revealed one side will congratulate themselves for their brilliance.
I think we ought to be able to do a little better than that, here. We're better than Facebook and Reddit, surely?
I thought I said it pretty clearly a couple of times already: this was stupid. Everybody who took a position on whether this event occurred as represented or not was acting on low information, reported selectively, third-hand. Guessing correctly that the attack was fake was not a Sherlock Holmesian triumph of deduction, nor was assuming it was a fake an exercise in good skepticism; simply getting to the right answer isn't the point, it's how you get there that matters. And using hindsight to augment the "reasoning behind" prior guesswork isn't impressive skepticism either. Yes, the people who bought the story were wrong about it. But the people who called it a hoax before any evidence don't deserve gloating rights for their sagacity.
The point of this place (originally) is to use reason properly, not to rush to guess the right answers. It's not a quiz show.
And everything I typed is wasted because the next outrageous sensationalism in the press-- whether it's a noose in someone's cubicle or a remark on a receipt or somebody's Halloween costume-- will immediately inspire the same behavior here and elsewhere: everybody will rush to judgment, take sides, then snipe unpleasantly at each other for weeks until something else distracts. Then if one day actual evidence emerges and the truth is revealed one side will congratulate themselves for their brilliance.
I think we ought to be able to do a little better than that, here. We're better than Facebook and Reddit, surely?
I didn't say there was.There was no highly placed official assisting him from day one.
It never left reality. The advent of a highly placed official to assist Smollett was not predicted on day one.Care to bring this back to reality?
I'm trying to figure out how you got fromETA: https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/jussie-smollett-update-kim-foxx-texts-emails/146674/ The most charitable support I can find. Who knows what theprestige actually has in mind.
Some people actually didn't make any judgement until evidence that not only countered, but excluded, important details of Smollett's claim came out. In the Smollett case it was not unreasonable to say his claim was untrue from an early stage because the details that supported his claim of racism and homophobia were discredited very early in the investigation and that was reported. It was only unreasonable to continue to claim his version was true.
I didn't say there was.
I didn't fault people for not calling it out.Huh? Then why fault people for not calling it out?
The only thing reasonable people failed to accurately predict about Smollett's story was the one thing that they couldn't reasonably have predicted.How does your sentence make sense otherwise?
Her involvement in the case was to perpetuate the grift.Kim Foxx was involved in the case not the grift.
She helped him get away with it.She didn't help him commit the crime.
You're wildly misrepresenting Foxx's involvement.ETA: I see I actually misrepresented you by toning down your claim and that makes my statement wrong because I said merely helping, not helping with the grift. He did have two highly placed officials trying to help. But that "help" was merely getting a better investigative agency involved. Would it have actually worked out better for Smollett if the FBI had taken over the case?