I'd hope it would be clear that writing about people's experiences of a problem is not a substitute for evidence of the problem.
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But apparently, it isn't. If you're interested in looking at how a well-documented problem is affecting individuals, you must hate data.
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When looking at whether intersectionality is inclusive of all who want equality, don't individual counterexamples qualify as relevant data?
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But not that this is typical of intersectionals. For that, we need the ample evidence of their closing down dissenting speech on campus
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I feel like we've been getting a lot of evidence for that recently with many de-platforming episodes and the decline in viewpoint diversity.
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I don’t think this is an unreasonable criticism, but I find thinking hard.
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Clearly.
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I likely don’t know enough about your project, but always worth thinking about confirmation bias.
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You don't say. I will be clear that I am looking for experiences of a specific thing and not for any other thing.
End of conversation
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You'd think it is important to have both data and lived experiences to paint a picture of the issue instead of seeing it from only one side.
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