Quote:
Originally Posted by PepsiFree
Go back and re-read the posts, it ain’t hard.
“I don’t want to incur a tax burden” < not an appeal to emotion
“You should think about the burden your children will bare for their entire lives” < appeal to emotion, a literal “think of the children”
“I’m making my decision because I want to share it with my kids and don’t mind the tax burden” < not part of an argument
“You shouldn’t think about that, you should think about burden your children will incur their entire lives!” < part of an argument
Are we getting it?
|
Except one is tangible and one is pure emotional in spite of reason.
Are we getting it? You hilariously attempted to mock a poster for something the original comment he responded to was explicitly doing and now you can't just accept it.
It's fine.