Three questions that will destroy any argument with the Left

  1. Where is the pee stored?
  2. What hour does the narwhal bacon?
  3. What number am I thinking of right now?

Look out yall, this is scary stuff 👀

spoiler

I did not watch this video 💅

  • star_wraith [he/him]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Hirschman draws his examples from three successive waves of reactive thought that arose in response to the liberal ideas of the French Revolution and the Declaration of the Rights of Man, to democratization and the drive toward universal suffrage in the nineteenth century, and to the welfare state in our own century. In each case he identifies three principal arguments invariably used: (1) the perversity thesis, whereby any action to improve some feature of the political, social, or economic order is alleged to result in the exact opposite of what was intended; (2) the futility thesis, which predicts that attempts at social transformation will produce no effects whatever—will simply be incapable of making a dent in the status quo; (3) the jeopardy thesis, holding that the cost of the proposed reform is unacceptable because it will endanger previous hard-won accomplishments.

    These reactionary and libertarian nerds think they're so clever with arguments that boil down to "no no you can't do that good thing because if you do that then X will happen", where X is a completely unsupported supposition they treat at absolute scientific fact.

    Link

    • Ram_The_Manparts [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      2 years ago

      Look, my fantasy world wins over your material reality, mmmkay?

      Checkmate liberals. :bateman-ontological:

    • LENINSGHOSTFACEKILLA [he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      All three of the "thesis" (bullshit unproven and impossible to demonstrate ideas) boil down to "we've tried improving society somewhat and it didn't create a utopia, ergo communism bad"

    • The_Dawn [fae/faer, des/pair]
      ·
      2 years ago

      What is it? Will proposed changes do nothing or the opposite of what's intended? The first two are literally contradictory lmao.