BeeRadTheMadLad

joined 11 months ago
[–] BeeRadTheMadLad@lemm.ee 1 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

He's not smart in the book sense but he does know how to play the game. For example, if you listened to the audio of his call to Zelensky which lead to his first impeachment investigation, pay attention and you might notice he avoided being explicit with his quid pro quo and spent the whole conversation beating around the bush and using weasel words to try and get what he could out of him without implicating himself. Even if the Senate trial wasn't openly a farce, he still would've been found innocent because for something like this you have to be able to prove intent and that's extremely difficult unless you blunder your way into an explicit admission of intent to commit a quid pro quo somewhere along the line, which he didn't do in the audio of the phone call. I'm not saying it's wrong to be suspicious because that call was obviously shady as hell, but it was never going to meet the burden of proof.

His propaganda and overall rhetorical strategy are similarly manipulative. It's very common to mistake his lies for being stupid and obvious and assuming that's just the end of it when in fact it's actually a very specific rhetorical strategy called firehosing. The idea behind firehosing is to flood the entire system with too many political narratives, misdirections, pivots, red herrings, strawmen, contradictions, and controversial statements to keep up with so that everything is up in the air and the less regard for truth and consistency you have, the more effectively you can pull it off because the goal is to overcome reason with aggression while simultaneously drowning out opposing narratives and/or fact checking with sheer volume and repetition. It's kind of like gish galloping but on a much more broad and ambitious scale, or if you're as much of a gaming nerd as I am it's the 'zerg rush' of political rhetoric. This explains why his falsehoods are so effective despite being so obvious - ironic as it looks on the surface he would actually be far less effective if he vetted his own bullshit and tried to make sure everything he said were at least semi-close to being believable.

Tl;dr, he's a moron at some things. Manipulating millions of people and accumulating power at their expense (and ours as well even if we see through it) is, unfortunately, not one of them.

[–] BeeRadTheMadLad@lemm.ee 1 points 11 months ago

Regardless of whether that's technically true, the context in my initial comment made it clear that the answer to your question is "mean", did it not? I specifically cited those wealthy outliers to exclude median since outliers wouldn't change a median value, after all.

[–] BeeRadTheMadLad@lemm.ee -2 points 11 months ago (2 children)

I can only go by the words that you use when you ask a question my guy, and the words you used indicated that you were asking if it was the average (mean) OR the middle figure in the distribution of incomes (median).

[–] BeeRadTheMadLad@lemm.ee 5 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (2 children)

Bold of you to assume he doesn't know damn well how totalitarian this is.

[–] BeeRadTheMadLad@lemm.ee -2 points 11 months ago (5 children)

I believe average but I'm not sure that's particularly relevant here. We're talking about wages, not wealth. It's the latter that your Bezos's, Zucks, etc can potentially throw off when measuring averages.

[–] BeeRadTheMadLad@lemm.ee 6 points 11 months ago

The second part may very well be true, the Trump campaign team could likely get off scott free using the Tucker Carlson defense. The first part is nonsense though. A fake video that makes someone look like an asshole is absolutely defamatory.

[–] BeeRadTheMadLad@lemm.ee 33 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) (4 children)

Defamation, slander, libel, something along those lines.