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150 points pmags | 4 comments | | HN request time: 0.759s | source
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RajT88 ◴[] No.43643433[source]
I've observed this weird cognitive dissonance with outdoorsmen, since I am quite fond of fishing.

They tend to be a pretty hardcore MAGA bunch, but also don't like pollution because it messes up their sport. When you ask them about stuff like this (how can you support someone who pretty openly wants to mess up your pastime?), they get mad or change the subject.

I get it - people are complicated and can care about many things at once. Nobody likes it when someone is seemingly poking at their belief systems. Still - you'd think it'd give them some kind of pause.

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wpietri ◴[] No.43643605[source]
I think everybody has this sort of cognitive dissonance, albeit perhaps in different amounts; we just allocate it differently. And I think society is set up to help that. For example, I like animals and I eat meat. Would I kill a cow? No, but I'm happy to eat a burger. I've worked to get relatively comfortable with unresolved cognitive dissonance, so I can at least recognize my hypocrisy here. But I think it's way easier for people to refuse to think about it.

As with distributed systems, coherence is hard and expensive. Being rational about something, as opposed to just rationalizing, is long, slow work. We don't live in an age of patience. But perhaps one will come again, and until then we can at least try to be exceptions.

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croes ◴[] No.43643647[source]
If you won’t kill a cow but like eating burger that’s not cognitive dissonance.
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ada1981 ◴[] No.43643683[source]
Sure it is.
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1. elygre ◴[] No.43643752[source]
I cannot kill a cow, but I’m happy there are people who can.

I also cannot build trains or houses, but I am an ardent supporter of a rain-proof roof.

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2. dagw ◴[] No.43643818[source]
Those are two different uses of 'cannot'. I know how to kill a cow, but 'cannot' bring my self to do it. I 'cannot' build a train because I don't know how to, but if I did I would be happy to do so.
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3. XorNot ◴[] No.43643895[source]
I mean killing a cow is easy, but they weigh like 150kg and efficiently butchering the carcass is the hard part.
4. mindslight ◴[] No.43644149[source]
Do you know how to "kill" a cow in the sense of turning most of it into edible food rather than merely letting it go to waste? If not, then I'd call that a similar type of aversion.