The factual point that moderate liberals are more censorious is easy to lose track of, and I saw confusion about it today that sent me back to this article.
I appreciate that this post starts from a study, and outlines not just the headline from the study but the sample size. I might appreciate more details on the numbers, such as how big the error bars are, especially for subgroups stats.
Historical context links are good, and I confirm that they state what they claim to state.
Renee DiResta is no longer at New Knowledge, though her previous work there is still up on her site. I really like the exploration of her background. It might be nice to see something similar about Justin Murphy as well.
Swearing is negatively correlated with agreeableness
citation for this is in the link on the previous sentence; I might adjust the link so it’s clear what it covers.
It’s often corporate caution that drives speech codes that restrict political controversy, obscenity, and muckraking/whistleblowing. It’s not just racist or far-right opinions that get silenced; media and social-media corporations worry about offending prudes, homophobes, Muslim extremists, the Chinese government, the US military, etc, etc.
This paragraph seems clearly true to me, but I’d prefer to see citations, especially since it’s related to politics.
every guy with a printing press could publish a “newspaper” full of opinions and scurrilous insults
citation for this would be nice, or just a link to an example. Here’s a discussion with sources.
I really like Zvi’s comment tying this back to a more detailed model of Asymmetric Justice.
I really like this post overall; especially in the context of Asymmetric Justice it feels like something that’s simple and obvious to me after reading it, while being invisible to me beforehand.
The factual point that moderate liberals are more censorious is easy to lose track of, and I saw confusion about it today that sent me back to this article.
I appreciate that this post starts from a study, and outlines not just the headline from the study but the sample size. I might appreciate more details on the numbers, such as how big the error bars are, especially for subgroups stats.
Historical context links are good, and I confirm that they state what they claim to state.
Renee DiResta is no longer at New Knowledge, though her previous work there is still up on her site. I really like the exploration of her background. It might be nice to see something similar about Justin Murphy as well.
citation for this is in the link on the previous sentence; I might adjust the link so it’s clear what it covers.
This paragraph seems clearly true to me, but I’d prefer to see citations, especially since it’s related to politics.
citation for this would be nice, or just a link to an example. Here’s a discussion with sources.
I really like Zvi’s comment tying this back to a more detailed model of Asymmetric Justice.
I really like this post overall; especially in the context of Asymmetric Justice it feels like something that’s simple and obvious to me after reading it, while being invisible to me beforehand.