"I don't care if you respect or trust my experience. The point is, people who go around making experience claims aren't making arguments."
Experience isn't an argument? It's far from a perfect argument, sure, but experience definitely adds to the discourse when it's legitimate. Sure, especially on an anonymous forum it's easy to cook up bullshit "experience" that oh-so-conveniently denies reality. But I've asked more than once if that's what you're calling this here, and you've not given me an answer to that, so I don't know if that's what you're saying or not.
"President Eden, why are you so consumed with how an argument is made to please you and not about the justice of the argument itself?"
That's so egregiously misrepresented it's not worth the time to respond.
"It's seriously mind boggling how you project neutrality on these questions, when you're so often quick to pull the trigger about 'government tyranny' elsewhere."
No, it isn't. I'm rather sharply against government tyranny where it arises, and as I said earlier I don't like how Arizona has handled its immigration issues in general. But actually being able to analyze individual matters and consider whether or not a specific circumstance is or is not an example of this tyranny shouldn't be mind-boggling except to a hard-line ideologue who blatantly ignores reality so he can argue about his much more convenient version of it.
"Pantheon Books is not exactly a fringe publisher."
No, it isn't, you're right. Does that make Chomsky any more mainstream?