Invisible Man
Member
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2019
- Messages
- 4,363
I come back to the accusation that was made against me a couple of times that my initial question in this thread was gaslighting. And I'd like to invite readers to think about the discussion that's gone on in this thread with respect to gaslighting.
Here's how wikipedia defines gaslighting:
Throughout this entire thread, I've done nothing other than ask honest questions and raise points that I believe to be legitimate. I have taken points raised against what I said seriously, engaged with them, and when I agreed with them conceded the point. I have consistently spoken to everyone in a respectful manner. I have never belittled the people arguing against me or treated their position like it doesn't deserve to be taken seriously.
The same can't be said about some of the people arguing against me. They've used profanities against me. They've given me neg reps. They've impugned my reading abilities. They've called me and my arguments idiotic. They've asserted that my arguments have never before been taken seriously because they don't deserve to be because they're so stupid. They have acted like the reason they can't point to anything in the Constitution to support their position is because nobody would have ever even had the possibility of impeaching a former office holder enter their minds, as if the very use of the word "impeach" ruled that out.
But it turns out, as anybody who takes a little time to look into it can see, that there is precedent for impeaching and/or subsequently trying former office holders, that discussion about doing so, and whether or not the Constitution allows it, has gone on throughout the nation's history, the very points I've raised have factored into these discussions, and, in fact, far from being some marginal idiotic view that nobody discusses because they never took it seriously, the position that impeaching and subsequently trying former office holders is allowed by the Constitution is, as far as I can tell, the majority view among constitutional scholars who have addressed the question. If I didn't have enough confidence in my own reasoning abilities, I would have easily been effectively silenced by all the people telling me that the things I was saying were too stupid to warrant a response, before even taking the time to look into it.
So who here has engaged in gaslighting?
Unfortunately, I fear that those who have engaged in it are now so committed to the position that they've portrayed as the only one that's conceivable, that it will be difficult for them to give the other side a fair shake, no matter what points may be in its favor.
Here's how wikipedia defines gaslighting:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GaslightingGaslighting is a form of psychological manipulation in which a person or a group covertly sows seeds of doubt in a targeted individual or group, making them question their own memory, perception, or judgment. It may evoke changes in them such as cognitive dissonance or low self-esteem, rendering the victim additionally dependent on the gaslighter for emotional support and validation. Using denial, misdirection, contradiction, and misinformation, gaslighting involves attempts to destabilize the victim and delegitimize the victim's beliefs.
Throughout this entire thread, I've done nothing other than ask honest questions and raise points that I believe to be legitimate. I have taken points raised against what I said seriously, engaged with them, and when I agreed with them conceded the point. I have consistently spoken to everyone in a respectful manner. I have never belittled the people arguing against me or treated their position like it doesn't deserve to be taken seriously.
The same can't be said about some of the people arguing against me. They've used profanities against me. They've given me neg reps. They've impugned my reading abilities. They've called me and my arguments idiotic. They've asserted that my arguments have never before been taken seriously because they don't deserve to be because they're so stupid. They have acted like the reason they can't point to anything in the Constitution to support their position is because nobody would have ever even had the possibility of impeaching a former office holder enter their minds, as if the very use of the word "impeach" ruled that out.
But it turns out, as anybody who takes a little time to look into it can see, that there is precedent for impeaching and/or subsequently trying former office holders, that discussion about doing so, and whether or not the Constitution allows it, has gone on throughout the nation's history, the very points I've raised have factored into these discussions, and, in fact, far from being some marginal idiotic view that nobody discusses because they never took it seriously, the position that impeaching and subsequently trying former office holders is allowed by the Constitution is, as far as I can tell, the majority view among constitutional scholars who have addressed the question. If I didn't have enough confidence in my own reasoning abilities, I would have easily been effectively silenced by all the people telling me that the things I was saying were too stupid to warrant a response, before even taking the time to look into it.
So who here has engaged in gaslighting?
Unfortunately, I fear that those who have engaged in it are now so committed to the position that they've portrayed as the only one that's conceivable, that it will be difficult for them to give the other side a fair shake, no matter what points may be in its favor.
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