I am aware, but I'd have to find and link articles etc. I was curious about Peterson after he appeared on the JRE (before I stopped Subbing). His work is lazy, he cherry picks and often misrepresents studies he cites. For example, his handling of C-16 was lazy, he didn't research the law at all or he purposely lied.
I find the man truly repulsive, just a bunch of alt-right bigotry and misogyny dressed up and presented as academic inquiry. As much as the right loathes education, there are few things bigots like more than any academic who gives them cover for their base bigotry, think the bell-curve etc. That's all Peterson is.
Yeh, your intellect knows no bounds.
Happiness is either misinformed or a bald faced liar. Full stop. I've seen Peterson on Rogan, Rubin, Gaad Saad (all long form interviews) and a handful of other programs. There's no misogyny or bigotry there at all. The video in this thread is an accurate representation of his positions. Guaranteed.make sure you tag me when you do. I've only recently started listening to him and I find him pretty fascinating. I'm not an alt-righter by any stretch so I'd like to know whats up before I start recommending others to view him.
Happiness is either misinformed or a bald faced liar. Full stop. I've seen Peterson on Rogan, Rubin, Gaad Saad (all long form interviews) and a handful of other programs. There's no misogyny or bigotry there at all. The video in this thread is an accurate representation of his positions. Guaranteed.
Thats my belief until proven otherwise. I don't even see reason to be suspicious, and I was looking the first few videos I viewed.Happiness is either misinformed or a bald faced liar. Full stop. I've seen Peterson on Rogan, Rubin, Gaad Saad (all long form interviews) and a handful of other programs. There's no misogyny or bigotry there at all. The video in this thread is an accurate representation of his positions. Guaranteed.
He could not support PETA terrorism, that doesn't mean he hates animals.It depends on the standards of misogynism and bigotry.
He has criticized the direction of the modern feminist/LGBT movement, so he is definitely a bigot/misogynist by some standards atleast.
I criticize my government, that doesn't mean I hate my country. I criticize Islam, that doesn't mean I hate Muslims. Hell, I'm critical of myself, yet have nothing but love for me.It depends on the standards of misogynism and bigotry.
He has criticized the direction of the modern feminist/LGBT movement, so he is definitely a bigot/misogynist by some standards atleast.
He could not support PETA terrorism, that doesn't mean he hates animals.
I criticize my government, that doesn't mean I hate my country. I criticize Islam, that doesn't mean I hate Muslims. Hell, I'm critical of myself, yet have nothing but love for me.
This idea that valid criticism equals hate has got to go. How else are we to improve if not thorough analysis of areas we're deficient in? Now I realize "valid" might vary with each observer, but that's why we need to scrutinize - in order to find objective truths.
You claim:
Then say you can't be bothered researching to find examples of your claim because you find Peterson repugnant and boring
Then say there are many examples if you look, even though you haven't cause you don't wanna do the research and THEN say the problem with the right is that they don't know how to research or source information properly.
Mind blown.
Trump winning did that to a lot of folks it seems. I follow Bill Maher on Facebook and watched his show every week but after Trump won he just went off the deep end. Now every post of his is something about trump or sharing these weird drawings from some “artist” who draws a bunch of anti-trump cartoony pictures. Sad!
That "debate" was dumb. It was basically just a shitty interview where they discussed a few topics in the purview of the gender wage gap, but neither person was actively defending a position that was far away from the other.
He was asked if the gender pay gap exists. He said yes, but it isn't solely based on gender, there are a multitude of factors that contribute to it. Well, yes, of course that's true, but then he singles out agreeableness and disagreeableness which may apply to some jobs but not others. Not all jobs allow you to realistically negotiate for your salary. He knows this. He even said that the prejudice of the people at the top does contribute to the pay gap. So he believes in the pay gap, and he believes gender does play a role. So then he rails against equality of outcomes, which no one realistically advocates for. Equality of opportunities is generally what people advocate for. So what's he really arguing against at that point?
He's saying all that to the news channel four audience, but if he was among his fans and they asked him about the pay gap, he would answer them "A pay gap that is solely caused by the gender doesn't exist." which is, you'll note, technically the same answer he gave news channel four but carefully tailored to sound like his fans want it to. He's not about to give them a lecture about the prejudice of the promotion board and the potential value of an organization promoting feminine traits (he did mention that medicine was thriving and quite feminine, so it stands to reason that he would probably consider the feminine traits in such industries as positive).
My guess is that he probably cares about the issues some, but he probably cares a great deal more about the money and fame that he gets by framing his beliefs to fit the mold of a certain online mindset. In this video specifically (I haven't seen many other videos of his) I don't think he's saying what a lot of his fan-posters think he's saying. Also, the interviewer was pretty shit.
I don't think that is necessarily the case anymore.
I've certainly met many, many people who argue for an equality of outcomes. Any inequality in outcome, between differing groups of people, is seen as evidence of on-going oppression, which ought to be addressed with heavy-handed regulation on the part of the state, down to the most minimal detail (including people's choices of words).
I don't think that is necessarily the case anymore.
I've certainly met many, many people who argue for an equality of outcomes. Any inequality in outcome, between differing groups of people, is seen as evidence of on-going oppression, which ought to be addressed with heavy-handed regulation on the part of the state, down to the most minimal detail (including people's choices of words).