He used a term that nobody uses to describe a positive observation, a word that is intrinsically associated with harm. And he gets no pass for attempting to weasel out of the implication.
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Replying to @BlamKaboom @joyfulrivers and
I said "cite one". You say it's commonly used. I've seen many examples in my life of negative associations, whether that be gay or trans contagion rhetoric, anti-drug rhetoric, anti-media rhetoric. Show me a benign example of the phrase 'social contagion' in the psych field.
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Replying to @BlamKaboom @joyfulrivers and
Are you for fucking realpic.twitter.com/mt1TmbaQSi
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Replying to @BlamKaboom @MjrKusanagi and
The whole point of this article, as they describe in their introduction, is that in the context of education the concept of "peer contagion" has almost always been used for negative behaviors (drug use, bullying, teen pregnancy, etc) and they're trying to flip it around
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