• @AdmiralShat
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    218 months ago

    Hyperbole and hypotheticals aren’t “making up statistics”

    • @[email protected]
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      178 months ago

      It doesn’t seem like this post was meant to be hyperbolic though? Hyperbole doesn’t work well in the context of numbers. If someone said 1 in 100 people drive a Toyota, how would I differentiate that from being an actual figure or hyperbole? It’s not obvious unless you look into it. Likewise, if someone told me that 1 in 400 people in the US get shot every day I’d struggle to tell if that’s true or not, given how much I hear about gun crime over there.

      This post is quite clearly framed in a way that sounds like fact.

        • @[email protected]
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          38 months ago

          I don’t think the personal attack is really necessary. I do legitimately want a discussion about this, but people are getting the impression that I want to distract from the point of the post, which I promise you is not my intention. I apologise if anything I’ve said has come across that way. I shall leave things here.

    • @[email protected]
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      118 months ago

      Im pretty sure those users a legitimately, unironically autistic.

      Not being abelist, just trying to prevent others from taking this argument for more than it is: someone incapable of thinking outside explicit literals.

      • @[email protected]
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        128 months ago

        Lol fair enough, I can understand why you’d think that.

        I’m quite capable of thinking figuratively. But in the way that this post is framed, I’m pretty sure any layperson would take the figures as being based on some actual statistics. It’s deceptive, and I don’t think that’s a good look if anyone were to look into this in any detail. If you’re going to make an analogy, make it actually analogous. And if you want to use hyperbole, use it in a way that’s clear (i.e. by not mixing in numbers)

      • DessertStorms
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        8 months ago

        That’s not how autism works, and saying you’re not being ableist doesn’t actually mean you’re not being ableist, as you’ve demonstrated here.

        (and before you even try, because I’m not coming back to debate this, I am autistic, and those assholes are just being deliberately obtuse and pedantic, throwing autistic people under the bus to defend them is gross. And if you are autistic too and think that means you can’t be ableist, let me introduce you to lateral and internalised ableism which are what your reply would be if not “run of the mill” ableism)…

        • @[email protected]
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          98 months ago

          now how autism works

          I have aspergers, I was in special ed for two years in elementary school because I was disruptive to class. I have met hundreds if others on the spectrum in my life.

          I can tell you that this is exactly how many people with autism approach situations.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 months ago

          What makes you say myself and the other poster are being ‘deliberately obtuse and pedantic’? It’s pretty hurtful and that is not my intention in the slightest. I’m not trying to undermine the argument made by the post, I just think it’s a valid concern when the figures don’t add up and it’s worth discussing.

      • @AdmiralShat
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        48 months ago

        It’s not misinformation if the post starts off as a hypothetical

        Some people like you aren’t capable of thinking much further than your face though