GreenBulldog
Member
- Joined
- May 5, 2011
- Messages
- 231
Had one today. It was 4 against one.
I live in SF Bay Area, so it's a pretty liberal place. Naturally, I'm outnumbered.
I had on my RP hoodie and the liberals didn't like it.
I told them what government is: Force! Government is about forcing you to do things at a barrel end of gun. If you don't believe me, say you want to opt out of social security and not pay. There were some more things I said about the evils of government, but that was the main point.
On Ron Paul, they said that he's a racist due to the newsletter.
Of course, I countered that argument saying that he didn't write them and disavowed them. When they weren't quite convinced, I told them that he wants to end the drug war and the death penalty because minorities are victims of those far more in proportion.
He didn't have a rebuttal and I didn't push for one (I believe not pushing is important).
I said, he was the publisher of the newsletter and you can say that he wasn't a good publisher.
They said that, that raised competency issue and possibly intelligence issue. Anyone who let that kind of things slip by raises competency issue to become president. To that, I countered that a MD who delivered +4,000 babies have an intelligence issue? About the competency issue, I asked what kind of mistakes a man can or cannot make to become president?
He didn't have a rebuttal and I didn't push for one (again, I think that's important).
The point I want to make here is that, if you're winning/won the argument, don't push it. Let them come to their own conclusion that they're wrong. Don't make them admit that their wrong or gloat. Don't get in their faces. That only hurt their prides and make them resent you instead. Just make your case and let them come to you. They will eventually if they know you're right. Hurting their egos make that process harder. Worse, it'll create blowback.
He also said that my support for Ron Paul is offensive and that I probably think that his views are offensive. I said I don't. I'm a libertarian and as a libertarian, we respect that people can do what they want as long as they don't violate rights, liberty, and properties of others, so by philosophy, it makes us tolerant of others.
You would think that, that would make someone think about how small of a person and a mind he has, but it didn't seem like it. If anything, it seems like he was rather proud that he was offended. What a sad existence if I'm correct.
I live in SF Bay Area, so it's a pretty liberal place. Naturally, I'm outnumbered.
I had on my RP hoodie and the liberals didn't like it.
I told them what government is: Force! Government is about forcing you to do things at a barrel end of gun. If you don't believe me, say you want to opt out of social security and not pay. There were some more things I said about the evils of government, but that was the main point.
On Ron Paul, they said that he's a racist due to the newsletter.
Of course, I countered that argument saying that he didn't write them and disavowed them. When they weren't quite convinced, I told them that he wants to end the drug war and the death penalty because minorities are victims of those far more in proportion.
He didn't have a rebuttal and I didn't push for one (I believe not pushing is important).
I said, he was the publisher of the newsletter and you can say that he wasn't a good publisher.
They said that, that raised competency issue and possibly intelligence issue. Anyone who let that kind of things slip by raises competency issue to become president. To that, I countered that a MD who delivered +4,000 babies have an intelligence issue? About the competency issue, I asked what kind of mistakes a man can or cannot make to become president?
He didn't have a rebuttal and I didn't push for one (again, I think that's important).
The point I want to make here is that, if you're winning/won the argument, don't push it. Let them come to their own conclusion that they're wrong. Don't make them admit that their wrong or gloat. Don't get in their faces. That only hurt their prides and make them resent you instead. Just make your case and let them come to you. They will eventually if they know you're right. Hurting their egos make that process harder. Worse, it'll create blowback.
He also said that my support for Ron Paul is offensive and that I probably think that his views are offensive. I said I don't. I'm a libertarian and as a libertarian, we respect that people can do what they want as long as they don't violate rights, liberty, and properties of others, so by philosophy, it makes us tolerant of others.
You would think that, that would make someone think about how small of a person and a mind he has, but it didn't seem like it. If anything, it seems like he was rather proud that he was offended. What a sad existence if I'm correct.
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