My gut reactions are actually more like (1) uneducated radical who really should be trying harder to get a job, (2) drunk, (3) well-intentioned nice guy, (4) a pretty big jerk withoneinthreeormorechanceofapoint I MEAN A JERK (I don’t want to signal supporting the privileged rich, sigh).
I know I’m rather insensitive for thinking (1), but the fact that he’s clearly decided to drown his problems in alcohol that bugs me. It implies to me he’s the type of poor who thinks it appropriate to blow his money on alcohol, lottery tickets, and cigarettes. I have a visceral negative reaction to this variety of poor people. Yes, I’m privileged. Bite me. The beardedness and grizzliness and ripped jeans are justified by his income but to me, alcoholism is not. Explained, perhaps, justified, no.
(2) just seems to me like a part of “one of these things is not like the others”. I can trace logical paths for (1), (3), and (4), respectively circumstance (I’m poor, I want money) plus logic (if this happened I would get money), learned belief (caring for the poor is good) plus logic (if this happened it would be good for the poor which would be good), and circumstance (I’m rich, being rich is good) plus learned belief (so there are good reasons why keeping my money is good) . But… where is the logical path from which (2) can be deduced?
I definitely had a more negative reaction to (2) than to (1). But I’m also a loony leftist (albeit not the big-government variety), so not the typical intended recipient of the signalling.
My gut reactions are actually more like (1) uneducated radical who really should be trying harder to get a job, (2) drunk, (3) well-intentioned nice guy, (4) a pretty big jerk withoneinthreeormorechanceofapoint I MEAN A JERK (I don’t want to signal supporting the privileged rich, sigh).
I know I’m rather insensitive for thinking (1), but the fact that he’s clearly decided to drown his problems in alcohol that bugs me. It implies to me he’s the type of poor who thinks it appropriate to blow his money on alcohol, lottery tickets, and cigarettes. I have a visceral negative reaction to this variety of poor people. Yes, I’m privileged. Bite me. The beardedness and grizzliness and ripped jeans are justified by his income but to me, alcoholism is not. Explained, perhaps, justified, no.
(2) just seems to me like a part of “one of these things is not like the others”. I can trace logical paths for (1), (3), and (4), respectively circumstance (I’m poor, I want money) plus logic (if this happened I would get money), learned belief (caring for the poor is good) plus logic (if this happened it would be good for the poor which would be good), and circumstance (I’m rich, being rich is good) plus learned belief (so there are good reasons why keeping my money is good) . But… where is the logical path from which (2) can be deduced?
I definitely had a more negative reaction to (2) than to (1). But I’m also a loony leftist (albeit not the big-government variety), so not the typical intended recipient of the signalling.