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> ...COVID19-conspiracy theories...

Lab leak was a conspiracy _theory_ a year ago. Today it's _very_ much a serious contender for the source.

If people are _crazy_ and blocked or censored for theorizing about conspiracy, then conspiracies will happen.

The best solution to bad speech is more good speech.



https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1240754657263144960

> Based on current trends, probably close to zero new cases in US too by end of April

>> 5:38 PM · Mar 19, 2020·Twitter for iPhone

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Musk was constantly marginalizing COVID19 statistics and downplaying the effects. There's more than one COVID19 conspiracy.

Musk was part of the "not that bad", COVID19 is like the flu, etc. etc. conspiracy theorists.


> Musk was part of the "not that bad", COVID19 is like the flu, etc. etc. conspiracy theorists.

How is that a conspiracy theory? That's an opinion. Everyone has them. Why would you label him a conspiracy theorist for having an opinion you disagree with?

edit: why also is conspiracy theorist considered a pejorative? Conspiracy turns out to be the stuff of history.


> having an opinion you disagree with

At this point, we can say that "COVID19 will be done by April 2020" is a laughably incorrect response to the COVID19 issue entirely. Elon Musk was 100% the "like the flu", "Gone by April", "Lockdowns are stupid", "masking doesn't work" (etc. etc. etc.) bullshit train.

Everybody has their bad takes on various subjects. Elon Musk's COVID19 hot takes are among the worst I've seen. Others include some rather shitty behavior, like calling the Thailand guy a pedo for instance.

All-in-all, Elon Musk is NOT a good poster on Twitter, and if he takes over Twitter, I don't think I have much confidence in the long-term benefits of the platform. Its as if other online-trolls decided to take over various media outlets.

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Do you remember the 2020 election with any decent amount of memory? "COVID19 will go away as soon as the election is over", etc. etc. Tons of terrible takes on the subject. Musk was just part of that, and I daresay that falls into fall on conspiracy nut now that we can look back upon the pandemic with 2+ years of hindsight.

But if the COVID19 issue is a bad example / too political for your tastes, then I pivot to the Thailand Pedo guy tweets instead, which hopefully you can agree with me are uncalled for?


I disagree with you about Covid. That said we don't need to get into it. Just saying that arguments like:

> ..."COVID19 will go away as soon as the election is over", etc. etc. Tons of terrible takes on the subject...

are not terribly likely to sway me. In the same nature as you thinking people like that are crazy, I personally find your views to be wild. But it's nice we can both voice them and remain civil.

> Musk was just part of that, and I daresay that falls into fall on conspiracy nut now that we can look back upon the pandemic with 2+ years of hindsight.

Particularly:

> falls into fall on conspiracy nut now

Conspiracy is when a group of people conspire. To have a bad opinion is not to be a conspiracy theorist. If you want to call him a nut for a bad opinion, fine, but I just don't think conspiracy theorist makes sense when it has nothing to do with groups of people conspiring.

> But if the COVID19 issue is a bad example / too political for your tastes, then I pivot to the Thailand Pedo guy tweets instead, which hopefully you can agree with me are uncalled for?

Maybe I'll check out the Pedo guy tweets. I'm not on twitter, and don't know to which you refer.

Frankly I couldn't care much less about Musk. I care a great deal about free speech and throwing conspiracy theorist around as a pejorative.

The use of conspiracy theorist as a pejorative is an echo chamber way of attacking the message deliverer and dismissing what they have to say out of hand without consideration of their message. We do that too much in today's society, and considering the corruption present, we really shouldn't.

> All-in-all, Elon Musk is NOT a good poster on Twitter, and if he takes over Twitter, I don't think I have much confidence in the long-term benefits of the platform. Its as if other online-trolls decided to take over various media outlets.

Sure, maybe fair. I don't know. I feel that if he removes moderation and adds free speech, then it will be a net positive.

If any billionaire puts their slant on content moderation, I think its a net negative whether I agree with them or not. So, if he somehow does _just_ bring free speech back, then good. If not, then twitter will just be another biased platform as it has been, but with a new bias.


> Sure, maybe fair. I don't know. I feel that if he removes moderation and adds free speech, then it will be a net positive.

Do you even Jan 6th insurrection?

Donald Trump was removed from the platform because he has, and continues, to be a Jan6th conspiracy theorist. Donald Trump still believes he won the 2020 election.

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There's also a severe amount of Russian propaganda going around the internet right now. Do you support letting the Russian bots reign free on Twitter?

Russia / Moscow are clearly trying to use the internet to spread false information on Ukraine.

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In any case, having a "jackass" as the leader of Twitter (Pedo Tweet, Elon Musk "funding secured $420", and other such lies) is definitely a reason to leave the platform IMO. Elon Musk will attract other high-profile jackasses at a minimum.

The dumbass celebrity shitposting is the worst part of Twitter. I like Twitter mostly as an RSS-like replacement (since RSS itself is not as popular these days), with well-intentioned bloggers sharing information on a "push to serve" basis.

But the long-back-and-forth of 2-sentence long debates is... not useful for any form of discussion. It generates traffic and ad-revenue for sure, but its not useful to me. Good debates need longer-form formats, blogposts with multiple paragraphs and data to discuss.

I think "thread-reader" and 1/x and 2/x style long-form posts help a lot, but Twitter really isn't designed for medium-form discussion.


> Do you even Jan 6th insurrection?

This is gross language. I assume apparently implying something so obvious as to make my points absurd?

Regardless free speech should be welcomed in this case too. People can then just ridicule his opinions and tear them down directly. It's not like he can't reach his audience on Gab or some other network.

For background, I'm not pro-Trump. I'm libertarian and think both sides of the spectrum are just legs of the same body that stomps on our freedoms and makes us poor.

> Do you support letting the Russian bots reign free on Twitter?

With regards to propaganda I think I have an operating brain. As such, I can make up my own mind. As for bots, I do think it would be nice if we could come up with a technical solution guaranteeing a human is posting the tweet.

> In any case, having a "jackass" as the leader of Twitter (Pedo Tweet, Elon Musk "funding secured $420", and other such lies) is definitely a reason to leave the platform IMO. Elon Musk will attract other high-profile jackasses at a minimum.

Sure.

> since RSS itself is not as popular these days

Which is really too bad. I really love RSS based podcasting though!

> 2-sentence long debates is... not useful for any form of discussion

I completely agree.


> This is gross language. I assume apparently implying something so obvious as to make my points absurd?

Jan 6th insurrection is what started this "Twitter moderation debate" when Donald Trump was banned from the platform.

This is absolutely central to the entire discussion, and I'm trying to remind you of it. What should we, as an internet / online society do, to bad actors and/or trolls?

I think the solution chosen is obvious. We ban bad actors from online platforms of note. Russia (particularly Russian propaganda sources like RT) are another group, like Trump, who likely deserve the axe.

Once you and I agree that some actors deserve to be banned from online platforms, there's not much else to discuss. Its simply a matter of moderation, who truly deserves it or not. I think that moderation is a difficult and thankless job (I've done it myself on occasion).

But I absolutely see value in moderating forums / discussions. Twitter banning some bad actors is just a continuation of the online moderation model that we've used for so many years (since USENET at least).

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The #1 thing going all across conservative media right now, is how Elon Musk (might) bring Trump back to Twitter and reverse the Trump ban. Is this hypothetical something you'd support?

There's "free speech", and then there's "inciting rebellion against our entire system of government". And alas, I don't think that supporting the Jan 6th insurrection falls under the "free speech" camp, and that Donald Trump's ban should remain firm.

If a group of people want to spread conspiracy theories about the inadequacy of our election systems, then they no longer fall under "free speech" and are instead well within the category of "high treason" and/or "enemy of the state". That's the kind of talk that almost took down our entire country, and still threatens to do so in the next election cycle.


> This is absolutely central to the entire discussion, and I'm trying to remind you of it.

I don't think there's much to remind me of. I'm not on twitter and never really had the debate until now.

> What should we, as an internet / online society do, to bad actors and/or trolls?

Point out where they're factually incorrect. Ignore them. Ridicule them.

> I think the solution chosen is obvious.

This doesn't make it right.

> Once you and I agree that some actors deserve to be banned from online platforms, there's not much else to discuss.

I don't agree. And frankly, you just pointed out a a slippery slope that is exactly why I think you shouldn't ban anyone.

> But I absolutely see value in moderating forums / discussions.

I'm on the fence. Moderation is probably fine, but I don't like when megacorps do it. Centralization of power is my biggest concern.

> The #1 thing going all across conservative media right now, is...

I don't care. In my mind conservative and liberal media, cable news networks, and NPR, Etc... are just mouthpeices for the government and or corporatocracy. So long as the funding comes from a government or advertising, it's junk media in my mind.

> There's "free speech", and then there's "inciting rebellion against our entire system of government".

I would like you and me to peacefully rebel against our current system of government. Stop voting and stop paying taxes. Stop registering your vehicle, and stop getting government involved in marriage licensing. Let the whole dirtly system dissolve so we can be free individuals.

There, I openly incited rebellion. I'm sure you disagree, but that's not the point.

> I don't think that supporting the Jan 6th insurrection falls under the "free speech" camp

I disagree. But I think we're running in circles now.

> If a group of people want to spread conspiracy theories about the inadequacy of our election systems, then they no longer fall under "free speech" and are instead well within the category of "high treason" and/or "enemy of the state".

Wow, that's pretty dogmatic. Who watches the watchers? At some point a hammer like that will be used against perfectly peaceful people. Your statement sounds like it belongs in 1984 bequeathed by the Ministry of Truth. What if there at some point is an issue with the voting systems?

> particularly Russian propaganda sources like RT

One man's propaganda is another's BBC. BBC and NPR are both sponsored by governments that have bad track records of abuse of human rights. Why is Voice of America still allowed to operate on Twitter?


> Point out where they're factually incorrect. Ignore them. Ridicule them.

Good luck with that.

Trump, and his followers, today still believe the election was stolen. I don't believe there's any way to convince them otherwise. The only thing that can happen is to mitigate the damage.

You're welcome to try to convince them. I've done what I can from my side.

> Ridicule them.

That doesn't work for state-sponsored propaganda sites like RT. These groups have access to huge amounts of state-sponsored money and hire troll-farms from 3rd world countries to gaslight the discussion.

The opposite occurs, I'm ridiculed more often than not with these ridiculous discussion points. Its a losing battle because I fight fair, while they fight by buying up troll farms.

Unless I myself use a ton of fake accounts to build up a fake-following and build up a fake discussion, there's pretty much no hope at actually reaching critical mass and making discussion points move.

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The same occurs with billionare-level supporters like Elon Musk and/or Trump. They have the money to buy up false support and astroturf their supporters. You're up against literal professionals, who are paid per tweet to make the discussion look like their sponsored billionare is winning the discussions.

Its not quite as bad as state-sponsored propaganda like RT, but still bad.

You are naive. You aren't aware of the tactics being used in the modern social networks or how poisoned the discussion has become.

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> Why is Voice of America still allowed to operate on Twitter?

Are you seriously comparing BBC and Voice of America to RT? What side of the Ukrainian war are you on?

> I disagree. But I think we're running in circles now.

You're free to disagree, and I'm free to think of you as naive fool for doing so. At best, you're unaware of the tactics. At worst, you're in tacit support of them and are trying to convince me that the pro-Trump Jan6th insurrection crowd is a reasonable group that can hold a discussion with.

Alas, my experience says otherwise, and there's nothing you can say to convince me otherwise. Because I have actually talked to many Jan6th truthers and alt-right people on my own time. I've also discussed the Russian/Ukraine issue with pro-Russian / RT-supporters.

Its not like their "free speech" has disappeared off the face of the internet. I still seek them out for debate and they're readily available to discuss the issues with me.


> Good luck with that. > You're welcome to try to convince them. I've done what I can from my side.

Bit defeatist, but fair enough.

> Its a losing battle because I fight fair, while they fight by buying up troll farms.

Now who's the conspiracy theorist? Who's they!?

Just ribbin' you. : )

> You are naive. You aren't aware of the tactics being used in the modern social networks or how poisoned the discussion has become.

I've read some articles and have found most of this to be unconvincing. I think you're probably right that Twitter lends itself to bad conversation. But, just because a bunch of bots show up with false information or call me a dork, doesn't mean I have to believe them. I can verify sources, and quantity != quality when it comes to shitposts.

> Are you seriously comparing BBC and Voice of America to RT? What side of the Ukrainian war are you on

I'm on the side that understands without governments there aren't wars.

> You're free to disagree, and I'm free to think of you as naive fool for doing so.

Yup.

> Because I have actually talked to many Jan6th truthers and alt-right people on my own time.

Not unique to your experience. Many of that view run in my circles.

> Alas, my experience says otherwise, and there's nothing you can say to convince me otherwise.

Okay. Well talking to an immovable wall isn't a good look, so I'll drop it.

> Its not like their "free speech" has disappeared off the face of the internet.

Yup, which is why I don't care too much about Twitter either way. I'm just an advocate for free speech.

@dragontamer,

Thank you for the extended discussion. I'm going to try to get some work done.

Hope you have a great evening (assuming it's near night wherever you are)

Cheers,

- reedjosh


> I can verify sources, and quantity != quality when it comes to shitposts.

I feel I have the ability to figure this stuff out too.

Unfortunately, the people I care about do not have such ability. And they trust these online personalities (who are largely supported by bots) more than my discussion points or arguments.

Yes, I'm defeatist, but there's a reason for that. I don't think my friends being dumbasses / unable to handle propaganda is a reason to cut them out of my lives, but it is very disconcerting to me how terrible at logos they've become, and how much ethos/pathos sways them these days.

These are people close to me: my mother, coworkers, my sister, etc. etc. I enjoy a spirited debate with them now and then still but its not to actually convince them of any facts, but only for me to check up on how far the propaganda train they've gone. Actually trying to convince them of anything doesn't work, and is not the point of discussions in my experience.

The fact remains: online personalities (be they Ben Shapiro, Joe Rogan, Trump, etc. etc.) hold more sway to these people than my own words. I cannot win the ethos or pathos battle, only the logos battle (but that's only one peg of the rhetorical triangle). Without any support of ethos or pathos, its all for naught.

That's why rhetoric is ethos + pathos + logos. We can't just focus on the logos leg. Figuring out ways to punish the ethos (ex: banning Trump from Twitter, to diminish his reputation) seems like the only answer.

Any attempts for me to diminish ethos on my own only leads to an ad hominem attack which is easily deflected and diminishes my own logos.

> Hope you have a great evening (assuming it's near night wherever you are)

You as well.




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