I did stick with it, although there was, obviously, some discussion also of her lying. It does seem rather absurd to suggest that she honestly believed that she had native American ancestors, but I'll acknowledge that she could be either that stupid or that deluded, and we've been over that before.L'Emmerdeur wrote: Yes, that was your initial claim. You didn't stick with it, though.
She's not native American. She's a Harvard Law Professor - a smart lady. It's pretty reasonable to surmise that she knew what she's talking about. If she was Mit Romney, would you credit these claims of ancestry for a second? If she was Newt Gingrich or Donald Trump, would you for a minute think they "honestly believed" their lore and high cheekbones made them native American?
Perpetrating a falsehood has been established. We've already been over, endlessly, that lying involves subjective intent, and that one can perpetrate falsehoods (say, about WMD), but not be "lying" in the sense of a deliberate, intentional, knowing lie. In that sense, one can ignore the obvious, be under a delusion, or be rather stupid or gullible, etc., to really believe something incredibly absurd and contrary to the facts presented. This is the case here with Warren. She is a smart, accomplished, educated, lawyer, who became an Ivy League law professor. She knows what "evidence" is. She knows, or should know, what second hand hearsay reported by grandmamma about some ancestor grandmamma never met and has no corroboration of means - and what high cheekbones mean - this is not a stretch. I have already credited that it's possible Warren is so incredibly stupid as to think that constitutes evidence that she is Native American, or she was so deluded and conned by her meemaw and pappaws commentary about their Injun blood that she really, truly, honestly, thought she was Native American. But, those are really the two options. A belief that is not an absurdity or a delusion is not possible here.L'Emmerdeur wrote:I see you expressing your opinion here, but not bringing any evidence that Warren was lying or perpetrating a falsehood.Forty Two wrote:In regards to Warren, her claim is so absurdly stupid, that a law school graduate, and someone smart enough to succeed on the faculty of both UPenn and Harvard Law, must know that she cannot claim to be a Native American based on some family lore and high cheekbones. She is also very "Progressive" and she must know how insulting such a claim is to Native Americans, who to her are supposed to be a marginalized group whose identity should not be coopted by White Anglo Saxons who have no real evidence that they are in fact any part of that group.
You can't possibly say there isn't evidence that she perpetrated a falsehood here. She's not native American. She said over the years, time and time again, that she was. She's not. That's false. Spreading that information is spreading a falsehood.
Again, wouldn't you be laughing your head off if Ted Cruz or Rick Perry tried to do what Warren did? Would you credit them for a second on this? Yes or no.
The information she's presented is not evidence. High cheekbones is not evidence of being Native American. And, family lore - hearsay passed down from generations ago is not evidence. It's assertion. She does not have any "evidence." If meemaw says we have Mongolian roots because her meemaw said that there was a scandalous affair between meemaw's meemaw's mother and a suave Mongolian, that doesn't evidence my Mongolian heritage. And, that's all Warren has.L'Emmerdeur wrote:Uh yeah, I don't think I've ever claimed that Warren had proof, corroborated or otherwise. She does have evidence, however, and your accusation that she's lying or perpetrating a falsehood lacks any support.Forty Two wrote:If you consider family lore that has never been verified or corroborated "proof" and the racist claim that high cheekbones make her Native American, well, then that's your standard of evidence.L'Emmerdeur wrote:In regards to Warren, she has evidence that Indians were among her ancestors.
We've been over all this. Stop saying I've no "support" for the assertion that she's perpetrating a falsehood here. The claim that she's native American is false, as in lacking any and all reason or factual basis in reality. So when she says she's Native American she is, by definition, perpetrating a falsehood. If she really, truly believes it, then she's not lying. But, that can apply to anyone making an obviously false statement. By the standard you are using, we can never know someone is lying unless they flat out admit it.
That's your assessment, and i don't share it. I think to suggest that one's meemaw reporting what her meemaw may have said ages ago, but which nobody alive was present to hear, and which cannot be verified, is not on a higher level than bullshit. And don't leave out the high cheekbones. We know the morphology of them red injuns, high cheekbones and all. I think I heard Warren wasn't too good with the booze, either. Another strong indicator of her Injun status - can't handle the White Man's Firewater.L'Emmerdeur wrote:No, it isn't. Her evidence consists of family lore that she has Indian ancestors, one Delaware and one Cherokee. That's not strong evidence, but it's not bullshit either.Forty Two wrote:Is "rather weak" a euphemism for "bullshit?"L'Emmerdeur wrote:I acknowledge that the evidence is rather weak,
Her mother had no personal knowledge. Her mother reported hearsay within hearsay. It's worthless. There is no reason to accept it as fact. It doesn't make her Native American.L'Emmerdeur wrote:Her mother told her this. Given that the stories speak of people more than one generation removed from her mother, you are correct about the absence of personal knowledge. That doesn't make the stories a fabrication.Forty Two wrote:The proof of the claim is that she claims that someone who had no personal knowledge of a fact was told by someone else that some ancestor was native American.L'Emmerdeur wrote:but that doesn't negate its existence.
But it's not irrelevant to the Harvard Law Professor selling a line of bullshit. It shows she's willing to hang her hat on something you find yourself reticent to include in the conversation. I have a rather hooked nose, so I must be Jewish, right? Evidence!L'Emmerdeur wrote:Her 'high cheekbones' comment is irrelevant to the question of the validity of the family lore.Forty Two wrote:Oh, and you know how "they" all have high cheekbones, well so do we in our family. That's the proof whose existence is not negated. Generational hearsay within hearsay, reported by people without personal knowledge of the alleged facts, and claim to debunked racial morphology theory. I have a big dick, so I must have some African DNA.
So, let me get this straight, you think that there IS an evidentiary basis to Warren's claim that she is native American, because, well, family lore reported by people who have absolutely know personal knowledge and which is wholly uncorroborated.... and high cheebones....L'Emmerdeur wrote:Yes it can. However, if that judgement has no evidentiary basis, it carries no weight.Forty Two wrote:It can be adjudge false without being adjudged a lie.L'Emmerdeur wrote:Given that people with even less Indian ancestry than Warren believes she has are considered by recognized Indian nations to be Indians (to the point that one of them is the leader of an Indian nation), her claim cannot be adjudged a lie without evidence.
But, you say there is "no evidentiary basis" and "carries no weight" to say that her claim is false because: (a) Warren's alleged evidence is laughable, (b) high cheekbones don't mean shit, (c) family lore reported by meemaw that someone 4 or 5 generations ago married an Injun girl doesn't make you Indian, (c) genealogists have looked into this and found zero Indian ancestors, (d) the Cherokee nation says she's not Indian, and they go by very detailed roles of members of their tribe, and they say she's not Cherokee, and (e) the only reference to the alleged marriage to the Injun found is in a family newsletter referring to a marriage certificate which does not exist and/or has not been found and nobody can otherwise find a shred of evidence corroborating meemaw's "lore."
So - that's your evaluation of the evidence. You credit Warren with an "evidentiary" basis for her claim, even though she doesn't have any personal knowledge and only reports what her meemaw told her and her mom about what meemaw did not have personal knowledge of either, but says that previous generations reported to her.... supposedly. That's "evidentiary" to you. But, the identities of her parents, grandparents, great grandparents and great great grandparents being known, and not being Indians, that's not "evidence" that she's not a Native American. Genealogists scouring the ancestral landscape - not evidence. Her willingness to sling bullshit like high cheekbones - not evidence. The absence of a marriage certificate or any information corroborating a marriage to a Native American - not evidence.