NB: It came to my attention that the URL to this article has "Debat" instead of "Debate" and that makes it look stupid but I think it's appropriate so let's leave it at that.
Facebook IQ test
Aah… Internet arguments. Such a beautiful, wonderful to behold manifestation of human intelligence and deep reflection, cutting deeper and deeper into the layers of thought as our collective intelligence slowly aligns to clearer and clearer ideas and consensus… Consensusis? Consensi or whatever.
So you like to have your opinion challenged, view things from different points of view and try to understand why people seem to feel THAT MUCH about something that you personally have not considered before or do not really understand fully from your perspective? Great. I think this is healthy behavior, thanks for pushing the human race further.
Some people say we're the sum of our experiences. Well I think we are the sum of a WHOLE BUNCH of experiences from a lot of different people. Don't we try to align ourselves, pick what we like in individuals we meet and try to emulate that, try to be better persons in our own way by learning through the wide spectrum of different ideas we have access to? At least I do. But you don't care about me and that intro sucks. I was going to add a bunch of pop culture references to make it cheaply funnier but no, sometimes it's no fun guys.
IT'S NO FUN AT ALL.
Anyway, the goal of this article is to point out some of the most prominent parts of Internet argument vocabulary. 15 years old Call of Duty players on Twitter never use those terms, so there's your chance to finally be special by starting Internet arguments with them.
There are others but I felt like those were a good start and it took me way too long to write this stuff and I'm lazy.