• @chuckleslord
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    26
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    4 months ago

    No, it isn’t. Whataboutism is pointing to a different wrong as a way to dismiss a currently discussed wrong. This is using someone’s past actions as a reason they shouldn’t be trusted in their current statement. It’s a legitimate attack on the speaker’s ethos.

    • @yetiftw
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      -234 months ago

      but it functions as a whataboutism. it doesn’t address the original concerns of the statement. instead it uses an ad hominem attach to discredit the argument

      • @Fedizen
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        84 months ago

        If this were a debate he’s making an argument that he’s denied the underlying principle of: eg arguing the “sky is blue” after saying “blue doesn’t exist”. I’m pointing out that this is a nonsensical statement in the context it was given.

        • @yetiftw
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          -174 months ago

          how is a concern about upending precedent a nonsensical statement? the source of an argument does not impact its validity as a point

          • @Fedizen
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            74 months ago

            The context makes the statement ironic and unserious.