I don’t think it’s totally unrelated, but I don’t think that’s really what the article was about.
The main point was that good faith questions come from a place of curiosity, whereas bad faith questions belong on the battlefield… Even if people try to pass their bad faith questions as curiosity.
The main point was that good faith questions come from a place of curiosity, whereas bad faith questions belong on the battlefield… Even if people try to pass their bad faith questions as curiosity.