If you're right and you aren't willing to actually communicate why, or worse, if you're right and you don't even understand why, you might as well be wrong.

If you're going to argue with people on the internet, and I know you are, either go full irony or actually take time to work out an argument that you know is going to be persuasive, none of this halvsies shit.

I was on the edge of becoming a leftist for like six months. That's literally how long it took for me to even be exposed to the idea that capitalism is bad for inherent and structural reasons, and not because of all the really obvious shit that liberals also disagree with but think can be reformed away.

  • Fordo [he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    More so for real life, since political discussion is so often unavoidable with friends or family members. I've got a brother-in-law whom I believe is genuinely well-meaning and is always receptive to what I have to say, has offered to watch any political videos I send him. Problem is he's in that centrist mindset that you've always gotta listen to conservatives/"both sides" or else you're a bad, close minded person. He's got a couple black friends — he sent one of them a video he found recently from a black conservative listing reasons why Trump isn't racist, and got mildly upset when they refused to watch the whole thing. Not to mention he's also worked in various levels of marketing for most of his adult life, and is friends with a guy who became a millionaire off of it, so the belief in capitalism might be strongly rooted. Still, I think he's got a chance.

    I'd just love to get it into his head that conservatives so often act and argue in bad faith, and that it's okay to disregard them sometimes at the very least.