This is a good point. I anecdotally hear that crabs don’t do this from my parents who cooked crabs, but this may be suspect due to memory issues on my part. If I am understanding correctly, the major objection your comment brings up is: this article presents a faulty anecdote and a ‘lesson’ that can be abused by the speaker. And that is dangerous.
In particular, I think you are referring to speakers who do misuse the metaphor to achieve group compliance. I agree this seems possible, and I respect your experience with it. Thus, I agree that there is a phenomenon at play here that can be misused.
Anyhow, I like to attach ” The discerning reader will find problems in each of the anecdotes and applications. ” at the end of my writings, in order to ameliorate the effects you mention -- you will notice it on the original article. Perhaps this doesn’t actually achieve the right ends of encouraging skepticism and cynicism, hohwever.
Thank you for bringing this up. I will check my anecdotes more carefully next time (I did check this one on Googling, but hearsay from people who have cooked crabs in the past led me to believe the initial title was solid enough to post.) In due time, I will edit this post to reflect your thoughts :).
One strange bug-fix: praying once in a faraway Church in Spain helped daylight some relationship damage I was suffering. I’ve never been religious and still am not.
This didn’t come out of explicitly looking for bugs, but it seemed in keeping with the theme.
This entire project looks very exciting. I hope it yields something life-changing, and I’d love to take part.