Same thing goes with the continual return to issues like whether 700 deg temperatures could be attained outside of the laboratory. When that first came up, it was relevant to the disaster because she was using this claim as evidence for some sort of foul play. But that's one of the things she's actually admitted was in error and has dropped, so why do we return to that silliness again and again? Because it's low-hanging fruit, just an easy opportunity for mockery.
In this case, Vixen lately asked for list of her allegedly absurd claims. It's one thing to have made a mistake and then left it behind. It's another thing to insinuate the mistake was never made. But the exchange :—
Forum: "You've made absurd claims, therefore we don't take you seriously."
Vixen: "No I haven't! What absurd claims?"
Forum: [posts a list]
Vixen: "Why do you keep dredging this stuff up?"
illustrates that it's really just a rhetorical game being played here, not any sort of debate or investigative exercise.
Just would be better to focus on the current (if repetitive) discussion, as Jay and Andy do so well.
But not with infinite patience. You can only tell someone so many times that automatic release does not equate to automatic activation before realizing you're just being taken for a ride. Nobody is legitimately that thick.
Why do we engage? For the same reason everyone—no matter who they are—slows down to gawk at the road accident. It's hard for a skeptic to pass up such a train-wreck of reasoning. Once we engage, the rules of this forum compel us to assume sincerity on the part of the claimant. This creates quite a playground were one side can be as deliberately irrational as they want, and the other is constrained to be serious.
Let's be clear: there is no
legitimate doubt about the causes of this accident, except for interesting but ultimately inconsequential detail. None of what Vixen is claiming has the slightest toehold in reality. So every form of engagement will be, to some extent, an exercise in Absurdity Management. No amount of sober or fact-filled refutation will affect someone who is determined to be irrational just to see what mischief they can stir up.
This leads us to consider Zooterkin's dilemma: how shall we treat such a person? The right answer in the world at large might be simply to ignore it. Here in our little microcosm, a reasonable answer might be, "Like the misbehaving child she acts like."
Of course, just my worthless opinion.
No, it's worth considering. Self-policing is a skeptic virtue.