
Now when I hear someone say "broken," it doesn't have the reassuring subtext of "I know this is a gross oversimplification, and I'm open to providing more detail about my reasoning." It might mean the opposite.
#Wallstreetbets lingo news software#
It could be used when you wanted to gloss over complex questions of what the software is good for and what you need it to do, while at the same time, to avoid lying by omission, drawing attention to what you were omitting.īut then people started calling software "broken" to express, "My gut feeling is that this software sucks, and I think it would be a waste of time for me to question or attempt to substantiate this feeling," and they felt validated in that attitude because there was a perfect means for expressing it in the programming lexicon. For example, calling software "broken" started as a gross oversimplification that drew attention to itself as a gross oversimplification. There are a lot of statements in these subcultures that can't be definitively pinned down as ironic or not ironic. : On the other hand, if our goal is to define an out-group and attack them, then broad strokes and vague insults are really useful and hard to counter

If our goal is to make truthful (as in, accurately representing reality) statements, then we need to be precise and avoid broad strokes when we describe a group. We still have some data problems - a kid is generally going to give you the answer they think makes you happier, and they're probably pretty relaxed about half-truths to annoying uncles/aunts asking them about gaming habits. It'd be more accurate to say something like "About 70% of kids report playing minecraft", or we can keep to anecdotal evidence: "all my nieces and nephews play minecraft". "Kids like minecraft!" is kind of wrong, but it's kind of right and isn't necessarily a straw man. Sometimes we do want to make broad statements. An example of this usually goes: "Well, Christians believe the world was created in 7 days, and since we have good evidence the world wasn't created in 7 days, Christians must be insane." You just took 2 billion different people, who are spread across factions with internal debates and arguments, and simplified them into a straw man that at most represents a small percentage of that slice. By taking a large and diverse group and simplifying it down to a single viewpoint (that's not a tautology) then you're setting up an out group to be attacked under a single characteristic. The phrase is often accompanied by a rocket emoji.So usually a setup of "All Xs are Y" is used to setup a straw man. Conversely, a trader with "paper hands" sells out early.Ī rallying cry on WSB, which members use to express their belief that a stock will rise significantly. Often referenced using emoji, "diamond hands" are how members express their belief that their position is valuable and worth holding on to for maximum profit. Shorthand for chicken tenders, which WSB uses as slang for profits on a trade. Someone who has taken heavy losses on a stock, in WSB parlance: While others may have profited from a similar position in the past, that person has been left holding the bag.

The social media pseudonym of Keith Gill, a financial adviser in Massachusetts whose Reddit posts and YouTube video streams helped drive interest in GameStop's stock.Īn acronym for "you only live once." If someone on WSB has "yoloed" a stock, that person has poured a significant portion of their investments into it. An intentional misspelling of "stocks" that originated with an internet meme.
