The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

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seremtan
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by seremtan »

ACCEPTABLE NIPPLES
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MKJ
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by MKJ »

lol
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seremtan
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

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Transient
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by Transient »

A giant fuckoff popup asks me to create an account to read that article. No thanks. :down:
[quote="YourGrandpa"]I'm satisfied with voicing my opinion and moving on.[/quote]
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seremtan
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

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you can log in with google and unsub later ffs :|

here:
Liberals are no strangers to confirmation bias after all

A study shows they would give up the chance to win money to avoid hearing ideas they disagree with. So much for the champions of enlightenment

By Alex Berezow

Touting slogans such as “Facts have a well-known liberal bias”, people on the Left have made clear they see themselves as the true heirs and defenders of the Enlightenment. New research, however, shows that they’re just as deluded as everybody else.

One study, published in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, concluded that conservatives and liberals were equally averse to listening to opposing viewpoints on hot-button issues, such as same-sex marriage. In fact, they were willing to give up the chance to win money just to avoid the unpleasantness of hearing an opinion they disliked.

A meta-analysis of 41 studies recently published on the Social Science Research Network reached a similar conclusion: there was no difference in partisanship between liberals and conservatives. As it turns out, “open-minded” liberals are plagued by confirmation bias to the same extent as “closed-minded” conservatives.

Consider Seattle, a city that voted 87 per cent for Hillary Clinton and is proudly one of the most progressive – and well educated – in the US. A warm embrace of scientific reality doesn’t come with the territory: Seattle isn’t terribly fond of biotechnology, rejecting GMOs and even vaccines. Rwanda’s childhood polio vaccination rate is higher than Seattle’s. As for other vaccines, including MMR, only five US states have higher exemption rates than Washington State. If liberalism translated into embracing science, we would expect places like Seattle to have vaccination rates of 100 per cent. Blame for “alternative facts” and “fake news” therefore, can’t be pinned solely on the Left or Right. Both are culpable.

Alternative realities
This shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone who has followed politics in recent years. Society, fuelled by hyperpartisan news outlets and social media echo chambers, has created alternative realities for us to inhabit, full of self-reinforcing platitudes and free of any pesky information that might upset fragile world views.

That may explain the current US phenomenon of the “Regressive Left”, as University of Chicago evolutionary biologist Jerry Coyne called them, believing that – as he put it – “some positions aren’t just wrong, but [are] taboo to mention”.

The resulting absence of intellectual diversity has contributed to a toxic and intolerant American university culture. Jonathan Haidt, a social psychologist at New York University, has documented how few conservatives there are in academia. In 1990, liberal academic psychologists outnumbered conservatives 4 to 1; today, the ratio is roughly 14 to 1.

Similar ideological exclusion was on display during the recent March for Science. Some protesters held signs that read, “Science is not a liberal conspiracy.”

That’s absolutely true. It is equally true, however, that science is for everybody – liberals and conservatives, atheists and believers. Twisting science into a bludgeon for political opponents is a gross perversion of humanity’s best attempt at secular knowledge. Worse, it does grievous damage to the institution of science. Trust in science has been falling among conservatives for decades.

As it turns out, turning science into a political weapon has backfired spectacularly. The good news is that the first step toward solving any problem is to admit that we have one. These new studies are a good first step.
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Eraser
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by Eraser »

What part of that article surprised you?
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seremtan
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by seremtan »

what part of my post indicated that i was surprised?
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Transient
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by Transient »

Probably the 'ooh'
[quote="YourGrandpa"]I'm satisfied with voicing my opinion and moving on.[/quote]
surgeon62
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by surgeon62 »

Transient wrote:Probably the 'ooh'
I took the :| at the end as cancelling out any impression of surprise...

I think it's very human and instinctive to fall into bunkers based on ideology, but overcoming our natural tendencies and promoting an open debate is supposed to be part of what America is about. The current political climate is one where both sides want to be 100% correct and not allow the debate... By promoting this mentality, we're doing it wrong. :confused: :confused: :confused:
surgeon62
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by surgeon62 »

I literally ran across this minutes after posting...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8wYXw4K0A3g
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seremtan
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by seremtan »

Transient wrote:Probably the 'ooh'
it was a short 'ooh' not a long, surprised 'ooooooooh' :|
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Transient
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by Transient »

Personally I interpreted it as more akin to the 'ooh' from 'ooh eeh ooh ah ah ting tang walla walla bing bang'.
[quote="YourGrandpa"]I'm satisfied with voicing my opinion and moving on.[/quote]
surgeon62
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by surgeon62 »

Transient wrote:Personally I interpreted it as more akin to the 'ooh' from 'ooh eeh ooh ah ah ting tang walla walla bing bang'.
:olo: :olo: :olo:

I love this place.
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seremtan
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by seremtan »

Transient wrote:Personally I interpreted it as more akin to the 'ooh' from 'ooh eeh ooh ah ah ting tang walla walla bing bang'.
i meant it as more of a 'ooh-oo-pee-doop i wanna be like yoo-oop-be-doop i wanna walk talk like yoo talk like yoo

boo-boo-be-doop'
losCHUNK
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by losCHUNK »

I took it as a reference to every fucking Pitbull song
[color=red] . : [/color][size=85] You knows you knows [/size]
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seremtan
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by seremtan »

lol told
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seremtan
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by seremtan »

lol canada

https://www.spencerfernando.com/2017/07 ... hip-guide/
As reported by CTV, the new guide would divide [Canadian] citizenship into “voluntary” and “mandatory” obligations. Shockingly, while paying taxes, filling out the census, and respecting treaties are all considered “mandatory,” the new guide plans to say that “respecting the human rights of others is voluntary.”
what's gotten into liberal jesus? :dts:
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seremtan
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

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Eraser
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by Eraser »

:smirk:
[vid]https://i.imgur.com/W776lv2.mp4[/vid]
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Κracus
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by Κracus »

Those guys are awesome.

Difficulty level won't affect your fighting ability but will affect pretty much every other aspect of the game and how certain characters interact with you.
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seremtan
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by seremtan »

in the Ivy League campus version, it's the other way around
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Eraser
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by Eraser »

If you're going to give me a link to the original source so I can read the entire article, I might consider attributing any value to your post. Right now, it looks like cherry picking words to make a point.
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seremtan
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by seremtan »

as if privilege were a bad thing... :|
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seremtan
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by seremtan »

Eraser wrote:cherry picking words to make a point.
also known as speaking or writing
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MKJ
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Re: The Cultural Implosion Catalogue

Post by MKJ »

olo
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