Listen to this podcast and you will understand the title of the thread.
The guy brings a lot of fact-based argument and not "feeling" based reasoning.
"The concept of respect today is cheap. We use it far too readily to explain away why we, or someone we identify with, did what they did. We use a convenient, subjective understanding of respect as a qualifier for describing what we agree or disagree with. And we use this cheapened “respect” to grade a person’s integrity according to what we think others should agree or disagree with – usually by how it aligns with our own interests."
The guy brings a lot of fact-based argument and not "feeling" based reasoning.
"The concept of respect today is cheap. We use it far too readily to explain away why we, or someone we identify with, did what they did. We use a convenient, subjective understanding of respect as a qualifier for describing what we agree or disagree with. And we use this cheapened “respect” to grade a person’s integrity according to what we think others should agree or disagree with – usually by how it aligns with our own interests."