In support (that he likely doesn't want) of Marcus' constraints on the wiggle 
room allowed to "individualists", I've often wondered about the VERY common 
accusation of "strawman!", as a response to criticism.  To put my wonder in 
context, I saw this article on a very liberally biased website (RawStory):

  The Varieties of American Evangelicalism
  https://crcc.usc.edu/report/the-varieties-of-american-evangelicalism/

wherein they use some seemingly strawman characterizations of some pretty deep 
and interesting psychological pathologies.  With names like Trump-vangelicals 
and iVangelicals, even *if* their classification is useful, it's offensive (by 
proxy, of course, since all that god stuff is obsolete to me).

Contrast that with an article to which it links:

  Can Evangelicalism Survive Donald Trump and Roy Moore?
  
https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/can-evangelicalism-survive-donald-trump-and-roy-moore

The question I care about is: To what extent are tedious regressions into the 
etiology of a toxin attempts to *treat* the disease and to what extent are they 
a waste of time?  I try to steelman whenever I can.  But the snowflake 
sensibilities of self-described individualists are a bit too irritating.  It's 
tough to imagine a canonical, self-sustaining, self-governing, morally solid, 
archetype like John Wayne whimpering about how he's been strawmanned.  Such 
wilting rhetoric makes an actual individualist like the Unabomber seem more 
upstanding and trustworthy ... and that inference is just plain dangerous.

Here's a fun exploration of whether it's OK to punch nazis: 
https://youtu.be/iEyL1rDe60w

-- 
∄ uǝʃƃ

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