There are two possible meanings to phrases like “banning Trump is a good thing”, and I think you are conflating the two in a motte-and-bailey. The motte is “the fact that Trump is banned is a good thing for Trump’s health”. This is likely true for the reasons you mention (Twitter is a drug etc). The bailey is “the decision process that Twitter used to ban Trump (which, as an ongoing process, has also been used to ban people in the past and will presumably be used to ban people in the future) is a good thing for the world”. But to defend this statement, all claims about whether Trump himself is healthier off Twitter are irrelevant, because Twitter is obviously not banning people for their own health (they’re the cause of the addiction!). Even if every individual person they choose to ban is personally better off banned, if the process is flawed (as our simplistic example, “only ban conservatives”) then the process can still be bad for the world at large.
So which of the two versions are you claiming (or is it some third thing I missed)? If your claim is just “the fact that Trump is banned is a good thing for Trump”, then fine, I don’t disagree with you, but I’m also not sure why you’d bother to write this article—why should we all care about Trump’s personal health? But if instead you’re arguing that Twitter’s process isn’t broken, then stop hiding in that motte.
I wrote this primarily because there is a category error in terms of how people think about Twitter, and how Twitter presents itself to the public. I didn’t spend as much time on the latter case because I don’t know that many people reading this work for Twitter.
If I had the opportunity to write an essay for Jack Dorsey I would basically say “hey, you’ve created a behavioral addiction and you need to manage it like you’re managing a behavioral addiction and not pretend it’s anything but that.”
You can say what you want about alcohol and tobacco, but at least they acknowledge they’re peddling an addictive vice. They at least encourage people to be responsible, even if it’s nearly an empty gesture. Twitter made their own addiction and they won’t cop to it. They’re making decisions in a way that attempts to shift the blame on to the people being banned and it’s sort of like Purdue Pharma telling people if they’re hooked on oxycodone, it’s entirely their own fault. https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/opioid-manufacturer-purdue-pharma-pleads-guilty-fraud-and-kickback-conspiracies
Twitters decision making is flawed largely because they’re pretending they’re not a behavioral addiction that rewards antisocial behavior from their users.
I perhaps should have been harder on them here if I have an impression otherwise.
There are two possible meanings to phrases like “banning Trump is a good thing”, and I think you are conflating the two in a motte-and-bailey. The motte is “the fact that Trump is banned is a good thing for Trump’s health”. This is likely true for the reasons you mention (Twitter is a drug etc). The bailey is “the decision process that Twitter used to ban Trump (which, as an ongoing process, has also been used to ban people in the past and will presumably be used to ban people in the future) is a good thing for the world”. But to defend this statement, all claims about whether Trump himself is healthier off Twitter are irrelevant, because Twitter is obviously not banning people for their own health (they’re the cause of the addiction!). Even if every individual person they choose to ban is personally better off banned, if the process is flawed (as our simplistic example, “only ban conservatives”) then the process can still be bad for the world at large.
So which of the two versions are you claiming (or is it some third thing I missed)? If your claim is just “the fact that Trump is banned is a good thing for Trump”, then fine, I don’t disagree with you, but I’m also not sure why you’d bother to write this article—why should we all care about Trump’s personal health? But if instead you’re arguing that Twitter’s process isn’t broken, then stop hiding in that motte.
I wrote this primarily because there is a category error in terms of how people think about Twitter, and how Twitter presents itself to the public. I didn’t spend as much time on the latter case because I don’t know that many people reading this work for Twitter.
If I had the opportunity to write an essay for Jack Dorsey I would basically say “hey, you’ve created a behavioral addiction and you need to manage it like you’re managing a behavioral addiction and not pretend it’s anything but that.”
You can say what you want about alcohol and tobacco, but at least they acknowledge they’re peddling an addictive vice. They at least encourage people to be responsible, even if it’s nearly an empty gesture. Twitter made their own addiction and they won’t cop to it. They’re making decisions in a way that attempts to shift the blame on to the people being banned and it’s sort of like Purdue Pharma telling people if they’re hooked on oxycodone, it’s entirely their own fault. https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/opioid-manufacturer-purdue-pharma-pleads-guilty-fraud-and-kickback-conspiracies
Twitters decision making is flawed largely because they’re pretending they’re not a behavioral addiction that rewards antisocial behavior from their users.
I perhaps should have been harder on them here if I have an impression otherwise.