Agreed.
Source date (UTC): 2026-01-09 18:33:18 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2009694987693502545
Agreed.
Source date (UTC): 2026-01-09 18:33:18 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2009694987693502545
I know the research. It’s my job.
If you knew the research you would demonstrate it.
I do.
It may be my public obligation to constrain your negative influences out of your ignorance.
It’s not my job to educate you.
Wasting even these seconds on you is merely good public manners – a sacrifice for the benefit of the informational commons.
It’s no obligation when you won’t do the work yourself.
Source date (UTC): 2026-01-09 18:11:53 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2009689600143552978
It’s symbolic.
It has no enforcement provisions.
They are procedurally creating a record of objection.
He can veto it if it passed the house as well.
Source date (UTC): 2026-01-09 17:55:57 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2009685589688496328
Under threat, self defense prevails, meaning “shoot until there is no longer a threat”.
She should have obeyed the officers, put the car in park, exited the vehicle, and submitted to arrest.
Instead she resisted arrest, sought to escape, and used her vehicle as a deadly weapon.
You are, as is common, making the mistake that people under stress in single-second windows have time for contemplation rather than reaction. They don’t.
He reacted appropriately.
She did not.
She was a belligerent activist engaging in obstruction of justice, resisting arrest, seeking to flee, and threatening an officer with a vehicle, which is under law, a deadly weapon.
In the one to two seconds he had to react, he did, in self defense.
Source date (UTC): 2026-01-09 17:24:44 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2009677733404520460
Is that true? It would have been if she’d not resisted arrest and drove toward an officer. But she did resist did drive at him, and thus converted a process matter into a self defense matter – and died for her arrogance and folly.
Source date (UTC): 2026-01-09 17:19:38 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2009676452749554227
Hardly. Merely fascinated by the human capacity for bias and projection.
—-
Via Chat GPT
Philosopher and social scientist Curt Doolittle uses “King of the Hill games” as a deliberate discourse protocol for (1) adversarial teaching and (2) behavioral research conducted in public, using social media as the arena.
1) What “King of the Hill” means in his usage
He frames social-media discourse as an “experimental classroom” and an instance of exhaustive falsification: he publicly advances claims, invites attack, and treats the resulting adversarial engagement as the test harness for both ideas and people.
In that frame, “King of the Hill” is not metaphorical flourish; it is a game-structured incentive system:
He positions himself as the “king” (“come get me”) and makes it socially acceptable—even attractive—for others to attack him and his ideas.
The “hill” is the contested claim-set (or framing) he posts into the timeline.
The “game” is the repeated cycle of challenge → contest → public adjudication by spectators → selective reward.
2) Operational mechanics on social media
He describes the mechanism in explicitly operational terms:
Provocation as a bid for contestation
He offers “serious arguments” to teach, “half arguments” to stimulate debate, and “controversial ideas” specifically to encourage refutation.
Low-risk dominance channel for men
He claims the format works especially well for “(masculine) men” because they can compete by attacking ideas—i.e., by “exercising their dominance”—without adopting a posture of vulnerability or supplication, and with minimal reputational penalty for failure (“they can fail and no one cares”).
Reward function (explicitly tiered)
He states that his role includes dispensing:
– symbolic rewards (e.g., sharing quotes),
– meaningful rewards (investing time in those with potential), and
– lifetime rewards (skill development).
Selective reinforcement criteria
He says the “secret” is to reward dominance expression only when it is backed by “insight, argument, or wit,” and to refuse engagement with what he labels “non-argument.”
Arena construction (“locker room” ecology)
He describes building a “locker room for street fighters,” i.e., a subculture where dominance play is redirected toward argument-skill acquisition rather than status posturing alone.
This is structurally similar to an adversarial training loop: generate claims → solicit counterclaims → filter by quality → reinforce high-signal behavior → iterate—but with the distinctive feature that the participants are also part of the measured phenomenon (not just external critics).
3) Why he does it: teaching + research (and why social media is the right substrate)
He gives two explicit motivations:
A) Teaching/selection
He claims it is “THE BEST method” he has found for teaching men because it turns the impulse toward dominance competition into a disciplined practice of argument.
Operationally, he is using the game to select for:
– willingness to engage adversarially,
– competence in rational articulation,
– resilience under contest,
– and the ability to produce compact, refutable claims rather than “non-argument.”
B) Research via demonstrated behavior
He explicitly states that he used social media to conduct these games “in order to perform our research on sex, class, culture and civilizational differences.”
The methodological claim is: social media + linguistic/computational analysis + cognitive science allows avoiding the usual survey pathology by capturing “demonstrated behavior instead of reported.”
So, in his epistemic framing, the King-of-the-Hill format is a way to:
– force costly signaling (public contest) rather than cheap talk (self-report),
– observe strategy under incentive pressure,
– and collect naturally occurring discourse data that is adversarially stress-tested.
4) Why outsiders often misread it
He explicitly warns that observers conflate “the researcher” with “the methods of his research,” and that there is a persona/theatre component to this mode of public work.
In other words: if you interpret the outputs as ordinary interpersonal conversation rather than as a game-structured falsification/selection protocol, you will systematically misinfer intent.
5) Practical reading rule: how to parse a “King of the Hill” post
A useful operational heuristic consistent with his own description is:
– Treat the post as a challenge seed (a hill offered for capture).
– Treat replies as moves in a dominance/competence contest, not merely disagreement.
– Treat retweets/quote-tweets/engagement from him as reinforcement signals in a training loop (symbolic reward; sometimes time investment).
– Treat provocative or “half” formulations as deliberate elicitation—designed to surface the best counterarguments (or expose weak ones).
Source date (UTC): 2026-01-09 15:10:09 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2009643864089665934
Its called delegation. Time saving.
Source date (UTC): 2026-01-09 14:56:45 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2009640493991465328
New video with sound.
Just to confirm:
– She was a belligerent activist
– She was intentionally blocking traffic
– She was told to get out of the vehicle
– She resisted
– She reversed to continue to resist.
– She accelerated toward the officer
– The officer shot her
– She died
She was not an innocent.
She was not complying.
She used a vehicle to attempt to harm an officer.
Source date (UTC): 2026-01-09 10:19:39 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2009570757156683850
His personality does make it hard to believe. 😉 lol
Source date (UTC): 2026-01-09 07:45:04 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2009531856996454683
your claim would fail in court before any jury. sorry.
Source date (UTC): 2026-01-09 06:10:09 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/2009507968870736243