I love these three socialist lemmies. So I’m posting this here. Not sure how well or how mixed a reception this will get here. Not sure if the right place to post it. Plausibly shall step on some toes (with the bottommost instance of “not my left”) a bit. And I imagine there may be some responses nitpicking that 3 of the "not my left"s are more left than “my left” ~ to which I say, misses the point. Anyhoo… enjoy, or don’t. I strive to protect your freedom to receive things however you wish. Love that bitch called interpretation. ;D But I do hope it sparks some interesting thought, discussion, and maybe even is a useful tool. At the very least, it’ll help (a bit) to explain what I mean when I keep saying “not my left”, to those who misrepresent the authoritarian left as “the left”, or even really really misrepresent by calling the nowadays so-called “liberal” (left side of authoritarian right) as “the left”.


n_n
But it seemed a good place, given:
But of course, this being the fediverse, this is not a walled garden safe space to play in, genuinely “free of the “ML” influences” or others not so into the good stuff listed on Lefty Memes’ description&rules blurb at the side there^. ->
Good(?) laughs as most of the replies so far have been, it’s still seeming like likely intentionally obtuse trolling. At least to my level of expectation/faith in humanity (~ Hah! More fool me, eh? “The Internet”).
I really imagined the replies would be so different. I imagined political-philosophy debates on Bakunin (& other midarchists/anarchists/libertariansocialists) vs Marx&Engels might spark off, given the diagonal distinction in the libertarian left corner. Been a wild ride. Socrates better not go fishing today… He wont catch any fish. n_n
and if you like seeing lengthy pastes of where LLMs try to catch fallacies (like I do), click here, and see which it fumbled and which more you spotted that it missed [from before the most recent couple responses]
Here’s a fallacy analysis of the Lemmy thread you provided, identifying logical fallacies and attributing them to the relevant responders. I’ll organize this by responder and highlight the fallacies in their arguments, as well as any rhetorical devices or missteps.
Fallacies by Responder
“I do hope you’ll grow out of your political compass phase someday.”
Fallacies:
“Not my left is some strong anti-solidarity phrasing for someone who thinks of themselves as left on this silly misrepresentational chart. What was the point that I’m missing? That you’ll abandon the left when you don’t like it?”
“The issue is that you cannot enforce this equity when inequality arises.”
“I’m all for helping everybody. I was already never much a fan of the word ‘solidarity’ and there we have it. The greatest threat to all leftist thought is capitalism, and to be unwilling to stand against it in solidarity is what is needed before we devolve into attacking other leftists.”
Fallacies:
“Left is for liberation. If you aren’t for liberation we don’t have much to talk about. But sure, some forms of solidarity with rightists can be valid.”
“Oppressive political and economic structures. Not sure why you think I’m saying not everyone should get this, although realistically liberation is unlikely to arrive everywhere simultaneously.”
Fallacies:
“I’d rather improve it, than throw the baby out with the bathwater.”
“Fun condescension there though, in that diminutivising dismissive ad-hominem.”
“What other previous interactions? Just here? (Can’t be, since I’ve been offering refutations to that). Elsewhere? Where?”
“Fascinating interpretation.”
“Please use quotes to clarify where you think I doubled down on this.”
Fallacies:
Appeal to Authority (Bakunin Quote): Uses a quote from Mikhail Bakunin to support their argument, which can be seen as an appeal to authority if not properly contextualized or if the quote is used as a standalone justification. [Edit: Wasn’t that supporting? And the quote starts in wise rational humility with a “We are convinced”, not a “this is the one true way”. Surprising assertion that this can be interpreted as an appeal to authority. Seemed more like an invite to consider the nuanced idea.]
Tu Quoque (Whataboutism): Accuses optissima of projecting and doing the very thing they accuse Digit of, which can be a form of deflection. [Edit: I disagree about this. Not what was happening there. Weak claim of fallacy there. And a dangerous one (like it sets/affirms a precedent of letting abusers proactively blame their victims for their crimes.]
Poisoning the Well: Suggests that optissima’s interpretation is so “fascinating” (i.e., absurd or unfounded) that it doesn’t warrant serious engagement, potentially dismissing their argument without full refutation. [Edit: I genuinely found that fascinating. Not doing any kind of allistic subtextual slight there. I know not what foundation it has, hence large part of the fascination. Did not intend any commentary on how absurd it seemed. Genuine curiosity and bewilderment.]
Note: Digit’s arguments are generally more reasoned and less fallacious, but some rhetorical moves could be seen as fallacious in certain contexts.
“Lol pretty much every one of these political compass things are just ‘my ideology that I like is the cool freedom kind and every other one is dumb evil making you do shit you don’t wanna do’.”
Fallacies:
“Nazi propaganda.”
“I was told I had the freedom to receive things however I wish and it’s more fun if I pretend you’re a badguy.”
Fallacies:
Summary Table of Fallacies
Fallacies by Responder
Key Observations
Final Thought:
Would you like to dive deeper into any specific fallacy or exchange?