Or if you want me to put it more precisely: when discussing politics and many other topics, it seems to be impossible to disagree significantly with the board consensus without having some posters vehemently oppose and even hate you.
See, I don’t see this as a misrepresentation as to what you said. I take this as giving you the benefit of the doubt. @steronz made the assumption that you were upset about things that actually happened, but it turns out, that you were upset about the delusional fantasies that exist only in your imagination.
Setting aside the debate about the current crop of individual conservative posters, I would just like to note for the record that this sequence is a good example of the kind of bubble that’s being complained about.
Two speculative responses “thoroughly debunked” a point that wasn’t even categorically incorrect, and it was time to move on. You would kinda have to be a little bit sick in the head to want to play the other side of that game. Knowing that if you say ‘well, you know, that’s kind of a hot button issue in the Brexit age, and while not all political beliefs are protected, certainly some are, so it’s really a question of at what point a political opinion rises to the level of deeply-heldness that it should be afforded that status, as Kimstu’s subsequent cite demonstrated, even though they seemed not to realize that, and there’s a good argument that one’s “conservativeness” is more akin to one’s “democratic socialistness” than to any mere political opinion,’ and so on, that it’s a coin flip whether you’ll get any substantive response, but a guarantee that you’ll get the snarky ones from people who don’t actually know… what’s the good faith incentive to take the time to argue that position, much less support it?
Even if, hypothetically, you’re the kind of poster who is a total dipshit who never contributes anything, and really only seems to be here to antagonize people and then complain, you’re not wrong if you complain there’s a hive mind sort of mentality in these kinds of threads.
If the pandemic didn’t start with a tourist, but such tours are a potential source of infection, shouldn’t they be regulated to a higher safety standard anyways, regardless of whether or not this particular pandemic started with a tourist?
If the pandemic didn’t start with a meat market, but such meat markets are a potential source of infection, shouldn’t they be regulated to a higher safety standard anyways, regardless of whether or not this particular pandemic started with a meat market?
If the pandemic didn’t start with a lab, but such labs are a potential source of infection, shouldn’t they be regulated to a higher safety standard anyways, regardless of whether or not this particular pandemic started with a lab?
That’s Dr. Fauci’s point when he says “who cares?”. Regardless of how the pandemic started, what DRIVES IT is community spread. Community spread can be countered (NOT ELIMINATED but slowed down) by taking certain precautions like masking or social distancing, or by vaccinations.
For people to act like figuring out the exact source of the pandemic is of critical importance while downplaying the actual steps we can take to counter the pandemic is transparently disingenuous. It isn’t something you do to fix the pandemic, it’s what you do to use the pandemic for political gain.
I wouldn’t have linked to eternalism and it’s block universe concept if I did not know what determinism means. Are you familiar with the concept and acceptance of the block universe and what it means for perception of time?
But let’s grant your point of view that contradicts relativity and say that the universe is intrinsically random. Intrinsically random still does not provide a mechanism to consciously override physical law.
Bottom line is your brain is a physical organ. No amounts of wishing otherwise will change that fact.
Sure, eventually you can eliminate it, but with the number of people infected that’s definitely not an immediate goal. In the short term, the purpose of masking, social distancing, etc is not to eliminate the virus (and it’s important to make that very clear because otherwise idiots point to every case and shout “see, your fascist lockdowns aren’t working!” before spreading COVID around) but to reduce its R value to below 1.
If you keep a virus at an R value below 1 long enough, then yes it will eventually be eradicated. But with something like COVID you have to either eliminate it world-wide or prevent travel, so realistically these measures alone won’t eliminate COVID any time soon. But they COULD get COVID down to a level where a concentrated effort can eliminate it.
Good, then you can answer my question from post #1609. What exactly did you mean in post #1600 by saying that “humans live in a deterministic universe”? Are you asserting that the physical universe is in fact 100% deterministic, in which all outcomes are at least theoretically entirely predictable?
Nobody here is in any way claiming that there exists any “mechanism to consciously override physical law”, or that the brain is anything but a physical organ.
You seem to be desperately persisting in attacking that strawman because you can’t address the arguments actually being made.
There are experts with far more knowledge and tools at their disposal that are looking into this. Given that, it will probably be years, if ever, that they pin down exactly how this came about.
The complaint in this thread is that the media is misinforming the public, which is both entirely untrue, and also is irrelevant to the job that the experts are doing.
If someone misunderstands a headline, and doesn’t bother to read the actual article, much less follow up on the sources, what bearing does that have on what practices that labs should take going forward to prevent accidental release of infectious substances?
@DemonTree made the claim that the media was lying about the possibility of a lab leak for political purposes. This is simply untrue. It also has no bearing on what is actually happening with those whose job it is to determine what may have happened and how to prevent it in the future.
The enemy being the virus, I assume, and not those who have helped to spread it by downplaying the dangers and engaging in disingenuous rhetoric. But you are correct, it is changing and becoming more powerful, which is why concentrating so much on the last battle is futile, when we should be concentrating on the future.
This is too, too true. Putting effort and evidence into a post takes time, and many times all you get is snark and unsupported opinion in return. It’s a losing battle.
Yes, “100% deterministic” does imply, as I said, that all outcomes are at least theoretically entirely predictable. Are you in fact asserting that the physical universe is 100% deterministic?
It’s not a difficult question, and if you do actually understand what “deterministic” means, you shouldn’t be having such trouble answering it.
(And no, the “block universe” hypothesis, which is nowhere near as unified or uncontroversial as you’re trying to suggest, does not automatically imply that the universe is 100% deterministic.)