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1. blonde+(OP)[view] [source] 2020-09-29 18:00:19
Good Q. I think it’s a nuanced distinction. Helping too much can too often lead to a lack of empowerment, IMO. The idea that you can’t help yourself, so you must be led along by another as if you were a child. I think empowerment requires helping, but helping through “nudges,” if that makes sense
replies(2): >>pixelb+18 >>tunesm+bm
2. pixelb+18[view] [source] 2020-09-29 18:48:48
>>blonde+(OP)
In the context of a system where it's almost impossible to lose money above a certain point and almost impossible to make money below a certain point (edit: without doing something reckless, which often happens).. No this does not make sense to me.
replies(2): >>jquery+Je >>lucasp+Mo
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3. jquery+Je[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-09-29 19:27:20
>>pixelb+18
> In the context of a system where it's almost impossible to lose money above a certain point and almost impossible to make money below a certain point

Whether you believe we live in such a system seems like a matter of opinion and outlook.

4. tunesm+bm[view] [source] 2020-09-29 20:09:44
>>blonde+(OP)
I wonder if there's a correlation there, where for some people they think that offering any help is by definition paternalistic? "As if they were a child", as in believing that only children need help.
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5. lucasp+Mo[view] [source] [discussion] 2020-09-29 20:23:03
>>pixelb+18
You may be being slightly hyperbolic, but in either case I would doubt that is a majority-held opinion.
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