GET https://kbin.spritesserver.nl/u/@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network/top/2024-01-20::2024-01-20

Security

Token

There is no security token.

Firewall

main Name
Security enabled
Stateless

Configuration

Key Value
provider security.user.provider.concrete.app_user_provider
context main
entry_point App\Security\KbinAuthenticator
user_checker App\Security\UserChecker
access_denied_handler (none)
access_denied_url (none)
authenticators
[
  "two_factor"
  "remember_me"
  "App\Security\KbinAuthenticator"
  "App\Security\FacebookAuthenticator"
  "App\Security\GoogleAuthenticator"
  "App\Security\GithubAuthenticator"
  "App\Security\KeycloakAuthenticator"
]

Listeners

Listener Duration Response
Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Firewall\ChannelListener {#723
  -map: Symfony\Component\Security\Http\AccessMap {#722 …}
  -logger: Monolog\Logger {#783 …}
  -httpPort: 80
  -httpsPort: 443
}
0.00 ms (none)
Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Firewall\ContextListener {#706
  -tokenStorage: Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authentication\Token\Storage\TokenStorage {#1017 …}
  -sessionKey: "_security_main"
  -logger: Monolog\Logger {#783 …}
  -userProviders: Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Argument\RewindableGenerator {#705 …}
  -dispatcher: Symfony\Component\EventDispatcher\Debug\TraceableEventDispatcher {#747 …}
  -registered: false
  -trustResolver: Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authentication\AuthenticationTrustResolver {#780 …}
  -sessionTrackerEnabler: Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authentication\Token\Storage\UsageTrackingTokenStorage::enableUsageTracking(): void {#703 …}
}
0.81 ms (none)
Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Firewall\AuthenticatorManagerListener {#584
  -authenticatorManager: Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Authentication\AuthenticatorManager {#595 …}
}
0.00 ms (none)
Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Http\Firewall\TwoFactorAccessListener {#582
  -twoFactorFirewallConfig: Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\TwoFactor\TwoFactorFirewallConfig {#842 …}
  -tokenStorage: Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authentication\Token\Storage\UsageTrackingTokenStorage {#1018 …}
  -twoFactorAccessDecider: Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\TwoFactorAccessDecider {#581 …}
}
0.04 ms (none)
Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Firewall\AccessListener {#579
  -tokenStorage: Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authentication\Token\Storage\UsageTrackingTokenStorage {#1018 …}
  -accessDecisionManager: Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authorization\TraceableAccessDecisionManager {#937 …}
  -map: Symfony\Component\Security\Http\AccessMap {#722 …}
}
0.00 ms (none)
Symfony\Component\Security\Http\Firewall\LogoutListener {#786
  -tokenStorage: Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authentication\Token\Storage\UsageTrackingTokenStorage {#1018 …}
  -options: [
    "csrf_parameter" => "_csrf_token"
    "csrf_token_id" => "logout"
    "logout_path" => "app_logout"
  ]
  -httpUtils: Symfony\Component\Security\Http\HttpUtils {#841 …}
  -csrfTokenManager: Symfony\Component\Security\Csrf\CsrfTokenManager {#1015 …}
  -eventDispatcher: Symfony\Component\EventDispatcher\Debug\TraceableEventDispatcher {#747 …}
}
0.00 ms (none)

Authenticators

No authenticators have been recorded. Check previous profiles on your authentication endpoint.

Access Decision

affirmative Strategy
# Voter class
1
"Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authorization\Voter\AuthenticatedVoter"
2
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
3
"Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authorization\Voter\RoleHierarchyVoter"
4
"Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authorization\Voter\ExpressionVoter"
5
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
6
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
7
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
8
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
9
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
10
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
11
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
12
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
13
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
14
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"

Access decision log

# Result Attributes Object
1 DENIED ROLE_USER
null
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authorization\Voter\RoleHierarchyVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
2 DENIED moderate
Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
  +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
  +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
  +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
  +url: null
  +body: "It’s wild."
  +type: "article"
  +lang: "en"
  +isOc: false
  +hasEmbed: false
  +commentCount: 109
  +favouriteCount: 179
  +score: 0
  +isAdult: false
  +sticky: false
  +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
    date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +adaAmount: 0
  +tags: null
  +mentions: null
  +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
  +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
  +children: [
    3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
      +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
      +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
      +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
      +image: null
      +parent: null
      +root: null
      +body: """
        You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
        \n
        > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
        \n
        It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
        \n
        Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
        """
      +lang: "en"
      +isAdult: false
      +favouriteCount: 19
      +score: 0
      +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
        date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
      }
      +ip: null
      +tags: null
      +mentions: [
        "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
      ]
      +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
      +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
      +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
      +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
      +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
      +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
      -id: 326187
      -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
      +ranking: 0
      +commentCount: 0
      +upVotes: 0
      +downVotes: 0
      +visibility: "visible             "
      +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
      +editedAt: null
      +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
        date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
      }
      +"title": 326187
    }
    1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
      +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
      +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
      +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
      +image: null
      +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
      +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
      +body: """
        On the one hand, you’re right.\n
        \n
        I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
        \n
        On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
        \n
        Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
        """
      +lang: "en"
      +isAdult: false
      +favouriteCount: 4
      +score: 0
      +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
        date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
      }
      +ip: null
      +tags: null
      +mentions: [
        "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
        "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
      ]
      +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
      +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
      +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
      +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
      +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
      +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
      -id: 326450
      -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
      +ranking: 0
      +commentCount: 0
      +upVotes: 0
      +downVotes: 0
      +visibility: "visible             "
      +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
      +editedAt: null
      +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
        date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
      }
      +"title": 326450
    }
    2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
      +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
      +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
      +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
      +image: null
      +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
      +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
      +body: """
        There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
        \n
        You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
        \n
        Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
        \n
        I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
        \n
        I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
        """
      +lang: "en"
      +isAdult: false
      +favouriteCount: 0
      +score: 0
      +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
        date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
      }
      +ip: null
      +tags: null
      +mentions: [
        "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
        "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
      ]
      +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
      +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
      +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
      +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
      +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
      +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
      -id: 326490
      -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
      +ranking: 0
      +commentCount: 0
      +upVotes: 0
      +downVotes: 0
      +visibility: "visible             "
      +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
      +editedAt: null
      +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
        date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
      }
      +"title": 326490
    }
    0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
      +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
      +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
      +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
      +image: null
      +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
      +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
      +body: """
        I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
        \n
        Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
        """
      +lang: "en"
      +isAdult: false
      +favouriteCount: 0
      +score: 0
      +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
        date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
      }
      +ip: null
      +tags: null
      +mentions: [
        "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
        "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
      ]
      +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
      +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
      +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
      +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
      +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
      +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
      -id: 326543
      -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
      +ranking: 0
      +commentCount: 0
      +upVotes: 0
      +downVotes: 0
      +visibility: "visible             "
      +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
      +editedAt: null
      +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
        date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
      }
      +"title": 326543
    }
  ]
  -id: 31957
  -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
  -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
  +cross: false
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +ranking: 1705854792
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
    date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
  }
  +__isInitialized__: true
   …2
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
3 DENIED edit
Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
  +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
  +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
  +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
  +url: null
  +body: "It’s wild."
  +type: "article"
  +lang: "en"
  +isOc: false
  +hasEmbed: false
  +commentCount: 109
  +favouriteCount: 179
  +score: 0
  +isAdult: false
  +sticky: false
  +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
    date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +adaAmount: 0
  +tags: null
  +mentions: null
  +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
  +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
  +children: [
    3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
      +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
      +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
      +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
      +image: null
      +parent: null
      +root: null
      +body: """
        You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
        \n
        > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
        \n
        It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
        \n
        Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
        """
      +lang: "en"
      +isAdult: false
      +favouriteCount: 19
      +score: 0
      +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
        date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
      }
      +ip: null
      +tags: null
      +mentions: [
        "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
      ]
      +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
      +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
      +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
      +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
      +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
      +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
      -id: 326187
      -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
      +ranking: 0
      +commentCount: 0
      +upVotes: 0
      +downVotes: 0
      +visibility: "visible             "
      +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
      +editedAt: null
      +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
        date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
      }
      +"title": 326187
    }
    1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
      +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
      +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
      +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
      +image: null
      +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
      +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
      +body: """
        On the one hand, you’re right.\n
        \n
        I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
        \n
        On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
        \n
        Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
        """
      +lang: "en"
      +isAdult: false
      +favouriteCount: 4
      +score: 0
      +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
        date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
      }
      +ip: null
      +tags: null
      +mentions: [
        "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
        "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
      ]
      +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
      +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
      +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
      +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
      +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
      +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
      -id: 326450
      -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
      +ranking: 0
      +commentCount: 0
      +upVotes: 0
      +downVotes: 0
      +visibility: "visible             "
      +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
      +editedAt: null
      +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
        date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
      }
      +"title": 326450
    }
    2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
      +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
      +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
      +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
      +image: null
      +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
      +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
      +body: """
        There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
        \n
        You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
        \n
        Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
        \n
        I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
        \n
        I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
        """
      +lang: "en"
      +isAdult: false
      +favouriteCount: 0
      +score: 0
      +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
        date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
      }
      +ip: null
      +tags: null
      +mentions: [
        "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
        "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
      ]
      +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
      +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
      +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
      +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
      +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
      +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
      -id: 326490
      -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
      +ranking: 0
      +commentCount: 0
      +upVotes: 0
      +downVotes: 0
      +visibility: "visible             "
      +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
      +editedAt: null
      +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
        date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
      }
      +"title": 326490
    }
    0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
      +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
      +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
      +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
      +image: null
      +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
      +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
      +body: """
        I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
        \n
        Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
        """
      +lang: "en"
      +isAdult: false
      +favouriteCount: 0
      +score: 0
      +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
        date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
      }
      +ip: null
      +tags: null
      +mentions: [
        "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
        "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
      ]
      +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
      +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
      +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
      +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
      +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
      +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
      -id: 326543
      -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
      +ranking: 0
      +commentCount: 0
      +upVotes: 0
      +downVotes: 0
      +visibility: "visible             "
      +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
      +editedAt: null
      +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
        date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
      }
      +"title": 326543
    }
  ]
  -id: 31957
  -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
  -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
  +cross: false
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +ranking: 1705854792
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
    date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
  }
  +__isInitialized__: true
   …2
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
4 DENIED moderate
Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
  +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
  +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
  +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
  +url: null
  +body: "It’s wild."
  +type: "article"
  +lang: "en"
  +isOc: false
  +hasEmbed: false
  +commentCount: 109
  +favouriteCount: 179
  +score: 0
  +isAdult: false
  +sticky: false
  +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
    date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +adaAmount: 0
  +tags: null
  +mentions: null
  +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
  +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
  +children: [
    3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
      +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
      +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
      +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
      +image: null
      +parent: null
      +root: null
      +body: """
        You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
        \n
        > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
        \n
        It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
        \n
        Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
        """
      +lang: "en"
      +isAdult: false
      +favouriteCount: 19
      +score: 0
      +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
        date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
      }
      +ip: null
      +tags: null
      +mentions: [
        "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
      ]
      +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
      +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
      +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
      +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
      +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
      +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
      -id: 326187
      -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
      +ranking: 0
      +commentCount: 0
      +upVotes: 0
      +downVotes: 0
      +visibility: "visible             "
      +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
      +editedAt: null
      +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
        date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
      }
      +"title": 326187
    }
    1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
      +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
      +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
      +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
      +image: null
      +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
      +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
      +body: """
        On the one hand, you’re right.\n
        \n
        I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
        \n
        On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
        \n
        Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
        """
      +lang: "en"
      +isAdult: false
      +favouriteCount: 4
      +score: 0
      +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
        date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
      }
      +ip: null
      +tags: null
      +mentions: [
        "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
        "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
      ]
      +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
      +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
      +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
      +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
      +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
      +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
      -id: 326450
      -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
      +ranking: 0
      +commentCount: 0
      +upVotes: 0
      +downVotes: 0
      +visibility: "visible             "
      +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
      +editedAt: null
      +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
        date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
      }
      +"title": 326450
    }
    2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
      +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
      +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
      +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
      +image: null
      +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
      +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
      +body: """
        There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
        \n
        You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
        \n
        Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
        \n
        I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
        \n
        I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
        """
      +lang: "en"
      +isAdult: false
      +favouriteCount: 0
      +score: 0
      +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
        date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
      }
      +ip: null
      +tags: null
      +mentions: [
        "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
        "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
      ]
      +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
      +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
      +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
      +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
      +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
      +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
      -id: 326490
      -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
      +ranking: 0
      +commentCount: 0
      +upVotes: 0
      +downVotes: 0
      +visibility: "visible             "
      +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
      +editedAt: null
      +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
        date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
      }
      +"title": 326490
    }
    0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
      +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
      +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
      +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
      +image: null
      +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
      +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
      +body: """
        I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
        \n
        Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
        """
      +lang: "en"
      +isAdult: false
      +favouriteCount: 0
      +score: 0
      +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
        date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
      }
      +ip: null
      +tags: null
      +mentions: [
        "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
        "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
      ]
      +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
      +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
      +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
      +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
      +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
      +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
      -id: 326543
      -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
      +ranking: 0
      +commentCount: 0
      +upVotes: 0
      +downVotes: 0
      +visibility: "visible             "
      +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
      +editedAt: null
      +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
        date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
      }
      +"title": 326543
    }
  ]
  -id: 31957
  -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
  -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
  +cross: false
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +ranking: 1705854792
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
    date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
  }
  +__isInitialized__: true
   …2
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
5 DENIED ROLE_USER
null
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authorization\Voter\RoleHierarchyVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
6 DENIED moderate
App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
  +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
  +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
    +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
    +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
    +image: null
    +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
    +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
    +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
    +url: null
    +body: "It’s wild."
    +type: "article"
    +lang: "en"
    +isOc: false
    +hasEmbed: false
    +commentCount: 109
    +favouriteCount: 179
    +score: 0
    +isAdult: false
    +sticky: false
    +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
      date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
    }
    +ip: null
    +adaAmount: 0
    +tags: null
    +mentions: null
    +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
    +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
    +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
    +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
    +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
    +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
    +children: [
      3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
      1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          On the one hand, you’re right.\n
          \n
          I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
          \n
          On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
          \n
          Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 4
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
        -id: 326450
        -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326450
      }
      2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
          \n
          You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
          \n
          Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
          \n
          I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
          \n
          I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
        -id: 326490
        -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326490
      }
      0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
          \n
          Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
        -id: 326543
        -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326543
      }
    ]
    -id: 31957
    -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
    -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
    +cross: false
    +upVotes: 0
    +downVotes: 0
    +ranking: 1705854792
    +visibility: "visible             "
    +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
    +editedAt: null
    +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
      date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
    }
    +__isInitialized__: true
     …2
  }
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +parent: null
  +root: null
  +body: """
    You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
    \n
    > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
    \n
    It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
    \n
    Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
    """
  +lang: "en"
  +isAdult: false
  +favouriteCount: 19
  +score: 0
  +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
    date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +tags: null
  +mentions: [
    "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
  ]
  +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
  +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
  -id: 326187
  -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
  +ranking: 0
  +commentCount: 0
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
    date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
  }
  +"title": 326187
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
7 DENIED edit
App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
  +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
  +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
    +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
    +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
    +image: null
    +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
    +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
    +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
    +url: null
    +body: "It’s wild."
    +type: "article"
    +lang: "en"
    +isOc: false
    +hasEmbed: false
    +commentCount: 109
    +favouriteCount: 179
    +score: 0
    +isAdult: false
    +sticky: false
    +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
      date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
    }
    +ip: null
    +adaAmount: 0
    +tags: null
    +mentions: null
    +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
    +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
    +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
    +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
    +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
    +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
    +children: [
      3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
      1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          On the one hand, you’re right.\n
          \n
          I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
          \n
          On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
          \n
          Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 4
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
        -id: 326450
        -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326450
      }
      2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
          \n
          You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
          \n
          Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
          \n
          I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
          \n
          I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
        -id: 326490
        -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326490
      }
      0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
          \n
          Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
        -id: 326543
        -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326543
      }
    ]
    -id: 31957
    -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
    -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
    +cross: false
    +upVotes: 0
    +downVotes: 0
    +ranking: 1705854792
    +visibility: "visible             "
    +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
    +editedAt: null
    +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
      date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
    }
    +__isInitialized__: true
     …2
  }
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +parent: null
  +root: null
  +body: """
    You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
    \n
    > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
    \n
    It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
    \n
    Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
    """
  +lang: "en"
  +isAdult: false
  +favouriteCount: 19
  +score: 0
  +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
    date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +tags: null
  +mentions: [
    "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
  ]
  +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
  +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
  -id: 326187
  -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
  +ranking: 0
  +commentCount: 0
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
    date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
  }
  +"title": 326187
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
8 DENIED moderate
App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
  +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
  +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
    +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
    +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
    +image: null
    +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
    +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
    +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
    +url: null
    +body: "It’s wild."
    +type: "article"
    +lang: "en"
    +isOc: false
    +hasEmbed: false
    +commentCount: 109
    +favouriteCount: 179
    +score: 0
    +isAdult: false
    +sticky: false
    +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
      date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
    }
    +ip: null
    +adaAmount: 0
    +tags: null
    +mentions: null
    +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
    +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
    +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
    +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
    +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
    +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
    +children: [
      3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
      1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          On the one hand, you’re right.\n
          \n
          I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
          \n
          On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
          \n
          Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 4
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
        -id: 326450
        -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326450
      }
      2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
          \n
          You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
          \n
          Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
          \n
          I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
          \n
          I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
        -id: 326490
        -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326490
      }
      0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
          \n
          Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
        -id: 326543
        -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326543
      }
    ]
    -id: 31957
    -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
    -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
    +cross: false
    +upVotes: 0
    +downVotes: 0
    +ranking: 1705854792
    +visibility: "visible             "
    +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
    +editedAt: null
    +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
      date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
    }
    +__isInitialized__: true
     …2
  }
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +parent: null
  +root: null
  +body: """
    You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
    \n
    > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
    \n
    It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
    \n
    Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
    """
  +lang: "en"
  +isAdult: false
  +favouriteCount: 19
  +score: 0
  +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
    date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +tags: null
  +mentions: [
    "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
  ]
  +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
  +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
  -id: 326187
  -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
  +ranking: 0
  +commentCount: 0
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
    date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
  }
  +"title": 326187
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
9 DENIED ROLE_USER
null
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authorization\Voter\RoleHierarchyVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
10 DENIED moderate
App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
  +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
  +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
    +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
    +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
    +image: null
    +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
    +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
    +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
    +url: null
    +body: "It’s wild."
    +type: "article"
    +lang: "en"
    +isOc: false
    +hasEmbed: false
    +commentCount: 109
    +favouriteCount: 179
    +score: 0
    +isAdult: false
    +sticky: false
    +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
      date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
    }
    +ip: null
    +adaAmount: 0
    +tags: null
    +mentions: null
    +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
    +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
    +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
    +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
    +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
    +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
    +children: [
      3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: null
        +root: null
        +body: """
          You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
          \n
          > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
          \n
          It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
          \n
          Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 19
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
          date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
        -id: 326187
        -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
          date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326187
      }
      1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525}
      2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
          \n
          You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
          \n
          Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
          \n
          I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
          \n
          I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
        -id: 326490
        -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326490
      }
      0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
          \n
          Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
        -id: 326543
        -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326543
      }
    ]
    -id: 31957
    -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
    -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
    +cross: false
    +upVotes: 0
    +downVotes: 0
    +ranking: 1705854792
    +visibility: "visible             "
    +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
    +editedAt: null
    +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
      date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
    }
    +__isInitialized__: true
     …2
  }
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
  +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
  +body: """
    On the one hand, you’re right.\n
    \n
    I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
    \n
    On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
    \n
    Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
    """
  +lang: "en"
  +isAdult: false
  +favouriteCount: 4
  +score: 0
  +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
    date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +tags: null
  +mentions: [
    "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
    "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
    "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
  ]
  +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
  +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
  -id: 326450
  -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
  +ranking: 0
  +commentCount: 0
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
    date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
  }
  +"title": 326450
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
11 DENIED edit
App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
  +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
  +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
    +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
    +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
    +image: null
    +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
    +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
    +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
    +url: null
    +body: "It’s wild."
    +type: "article"
    +lang: "en"
    +isOc: false
    +hasEmbed: false
    +commentCount: 109
    +favouriteCount: 179
    +score: 0
    +isAdult: false
    +sticky: false
    +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
      date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
    }
    +ip: null
    +adaAmount: 0
    +tags: null
    +mentions: null
    +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
    +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
    +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
    +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
    +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
    +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
    +children: [
      3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: null
        +root: null
        +body: """
          You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
          \n
          > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
          \n
          It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
          \n
          Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 19
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
          date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
        -id: 326187
        -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
          date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326187
      }
      1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525}
      2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
          \n
          You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
          \n
          Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
          \n
          I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
          \n
          I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
        -id: 326490
        -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326490
      }
      0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
          \n
          Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
        -id: 326543
        -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326543
      }
    ]
    -id: 31957
    -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
    -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
    +cross: false
    +upVotes: 0
    +downVotes: 0
    +ranking: 1705854792
    +visibility: "visible             "
    +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
    +editedAt: null
    +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
      date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
    }
    +__isInitialized__: true
     …2
  }
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
  +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
  +body: """
    On the one hand, you’re right.\n
    \n
    I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
    \n
    On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
    \n
    Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
    """
  +lang: "en"
  +isAdult: false
  +favouriteCount: 4
  +score: 0
  +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
    date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +tags: null
  +mentions: [
    "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
    "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
    "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
  ]
  +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
  +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
  -id: 326450
  -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
  +ranking: 0
  +commentCount: 0
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
    date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
  }
  +"title": 326450
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
12 DENIED moderate
App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
  +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
  +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
    +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
    +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
    +image: null
    +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
    +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
    +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
    +url: null
    +body: "It’s wild."
    +type: "article"
    +lang: "en"
    +isOc: false
    +hasEmbed: false
    +commentCount: 109
    +favouriteCount: 179
    +score: 0
    +isAdult: false
    +sticky: false
    +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
      date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
    }
    +ip: null
    +adaAmount: 0
    +tags: null
    +mentions: null
    +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
    +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
    +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
    +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
    +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
    +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
    +children: [
      3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: null
        +root: null
        +body: """
          You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
          \n
          > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
          \n
          It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
          \n
          Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 19
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
          date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
        -id: 326187
        -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
          date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326187
      }
      1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525}
      2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
          \n
          You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
          \n
          Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
          \n
          I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
          \n
          I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
        -id: 326490
        -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326490
      }
      0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
          \n
          Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
        -id: 326543
        -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326543
      }
    ]
    -id: 31957
    -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
    -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
    +cross: false
    +upVotes: 0
    +downVotes: 0
    +ranking: 1705854792
    +visibility: "visible             "
    +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
    +editedAt: null
    +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
      date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
    }
    +__isInitialized__: true
     …2
  }
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
  +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
  +body: """
    On the one hand, you’re right.\n
    \n
    I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
    \n
    On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
    \n
    Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
    """
  +lang: "en"
  +isAdult: false
  +favouriteCount: 4
  +score: 0
  +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
    date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +tags: null
  +mentions: [
    "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
    "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
    "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
  ]
  +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
  +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
  -id: 326450
  -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
  +ranking: 0
  +commentCount: 0
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
    date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
  }
  +"title": 326450
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
13 DENIED ROLE_USER
null
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authorization\Voter\RoleHierarchyVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
14 DENIED moderate
App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
  +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
  +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
    +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
    +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
    +image: null
    +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
    +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
    +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
    +url: null
    +body: "It’s wild."
    +type: "article"
    +lang: "en"
    +isOc: false
    +hasEmbed: false
    +commentCount: 109
    +favouriteCount: 179
    +score: 0
    +isAdult: false
    +sticky: false
    +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
      date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
    }
    +ip: null
    +adaAmount: 0
    +tags: null
    +mentions: null
    +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
    +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
    +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
    +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
    +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
    +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
    +children: [
      3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: null
        +root: null
        +body: """
          You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
          \n
          > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
          \n
          It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
          \n
          Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 19
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
          date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
        -id: 326187
        -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
          date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326187
      }
      1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          On the one hand, you’re right.\n
          \n
          I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
          \n
          On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
          \n
          Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 4
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
        -id: 326450
        -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326450
      }
      2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613}
      0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
          \n
          Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
        -id: 326543
        -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326543
      }
    ]
    -id: 31957
    -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
    -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
    +cross: false
    +upVotes: 0
    +downVotes: 0
    +ranking: 1705854792
    +visibility: "visible             "
    +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
    +editedAt: null
    +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
      date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
    }
    +__isInitialized__: true
     …2
  }
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
  +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
  +body: """
    There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
    \n
    You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
    \n
    Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
    \n
    I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
    \n
    I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
    """
  +lang: "en"
  +isAdult: false
  +favouriteCount: 0
  +score: 0
  +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
    date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +tags: null
  +mentions: [
    "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
    "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
    "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
  ]
  +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
  +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
  -id: 326490
  -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
  +ranking: 0
  +commentCount: 0
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
    date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
  }
  +"title": 326490
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
15 DENIED edit
App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
  +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
  +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
    +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
    +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
    +image: null
    +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
    +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
    +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
    +url: null
    +body: "It’s wild."
    +type: "article"
    +lang: "en"
    +isOc: false
    +hasEmbed: false
    +commentCount: 109
    +favouriteCount: 179
    +score: 0
    +isAdult: false
    +sticky: false
    +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
      date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
    }
    +ip: null
    +adaAmount: 0
    +tags: null
    +mentions: null
    +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
    +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
    +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
    +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
    +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
    +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
    +children: [
      3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: null
        +root: null
        +body: """
          You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
          \n
          > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
          \n
          It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
          \n
          Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 19
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
          date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
        -id: 326187
        -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
          date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326187
      }
      1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          On the one hand, you’re right.\n
          \n
          I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
          \n
          On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
          \n
          Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 4
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
        -id: 326450
        -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326450
      }
      2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613}
      0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
          \n
          Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
        -id: 326543
        -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326543
      }
    ]
    -id: 31957
    -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
    -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
    +cross: false
    +upVotes: 0
    +downVotes: 0
    +ranking: 1705854792
    +visibility: "visible             "
    +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
    +editedAt: null
    +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
      date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
    }
    +__isInitialized__: true
     …2
  }
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
  +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
  +body: """
    There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
    \n
    You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
    \n
    Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
    \n
    I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
    \n
    I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
    """
  +lang: "en"
  +isAdult: false
  +favouriteCount: 0
  +score: 0
  +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
    date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +tags: null
  +mentions: [
    "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
    "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
    "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
  ]
  +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
  +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
  -id: 326490
  -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
  +ranking: 0
  +commentCount: 0
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
    date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
  }
  +"title": 326490
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
16 DENIED moderate
App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
  +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
  +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
    +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
    +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
    +image: null
    +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
    +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
    +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
    +url: null
    +body: "It’s wild."
    +type: "article"
    +lang: "en"
    +isOc: false
    +hasEmbed: false
    +commentCount: 109
    +favouriteCount: 179
    +score: 0
    +isAdult: false
    +sticky: false
    +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
      date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
    }
    +ip: null
    +adaAmount: 0
    +tags: null
    +mentions: null
    +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
    +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
    +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
    +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
    +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
    +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
    +children: [
      3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: null
        +root: null
        +body: """
          You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
          \n
          > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
          \n
          It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
          \n
          Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 19
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
          date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
        -id: 326187
        -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
          date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326187
      }
      1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          On the one hand, you’re right.\n
          \n
          I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
          \n
          On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
          \n
          Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 4
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
        -id: 326450
        -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326450
      }
      2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613}
      0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
          \n
          Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
        -id: 326543
        -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
          date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326543
      }
    ]
    -id: 31957
    -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
    -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
    +cross: false
    +upVotes: 0
    +downVotes: 0
    +ranking: 1705854792
    +visibility: "visible             "
    +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
    +editedAt: null
    +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
      date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
    }
    +__isInitialized__: true
     …2
  }
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
  +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
  +body: """
    There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
    \n
    You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
    \n
    Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
    \n
    I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
    \n
    I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
    """
  +lang: "en"
  +isAdult: false
  +favouriteCount: 0
  +score: 0
  +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
    date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +tags: null
  +mentions: [
    "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
    "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
    "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
  ]
  +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
  +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
  -id: 326490
  -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
  +ranking: 0
  +commentCount: 0
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
    date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
  }
  +"title": 326490
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
17 DENIED ROLE_USER
null
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authorization\Voter\RoleHierarchyVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
18 DENIED moderate
App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
  +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
  +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
    +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
    +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
    +image: null
    +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
    +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
    +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
    +url: null
    +body: "It’s wild."
    +type: "article"
    +lang: "en"
    +isOc: false
    +hasEmbed: false
    +commentCount: 109
    +favouriteCount: 179
    +score: 0
    +isAdult: false
    +sticky: false
    +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
      date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
    }
    +ip: null
    +adaAmount: 0
    +tags: null
    +mentions: null
    +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
    +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
    +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
    +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
    +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
    +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
    +children: [
      3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: null
        +root: null
        +body: """
          You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
          \n
          > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
          \n
          It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
          \n
          Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 19
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
          date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
        -id: 326187
        -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
          date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326187
      }
      1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          On the one hand, you’re right.\n
          \n
          I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
          \n
          On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
          \n
          Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 4
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
        -id: 326450
        -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326450
      }
      2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
          \n
          You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
          \n
          Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
          \n
          I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
          \n
          I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
        -id: 326490
        -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326490
      }
      0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567}
    ]
    -id: 31957
    -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
    -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
    +cross: false
    +upVotes: 0
    +downVotes: 0
    +ranking: 1705854792
    +visibility: "visible             "
    +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
    +editedAt: null
    +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
      date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
    }
    +__isInitialized__: true
     …2
  }
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
  +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
  +body: """
    I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
    \n
    Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
    """
  +lang: "en"
  +isAdult: false
  +favouriteCount: 0
  +score: 0
  +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
    date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +tags: null
  +mentions: [
    "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
    "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
    "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
  ]
  +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
  +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
  -id: 326543
  -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
  +ranking: 0
  +commentCount: 0
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
    date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
  }
  +"title": 326543
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
19 DENIED edit
App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
  +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
  +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
    +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
    +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
    +image: null
    +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
    +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
    +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
    +url: null
    +body: "It’s wild."
    +type: "article"
    +lang: "en"
    +isOc: false
    +hasEmbed: false
    +commentCount: 109
    +favouriteCount: 179
    +score: 0
    +isAdult: false
    +sticky: false
    +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
      date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
    }
    +ip: null
    +adaAmount: 0
    +tags: null
    +mentions: null
    +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
    +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
    +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
    +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
    +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
    +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
    +children: [
      3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: null
        +root: null
        +body: """
          You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
          \n
          > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
          \n
          It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
          \n
          Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 19
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
          date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
        -id: 326187
        -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
          date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326187
      }
      1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          On the one hand, you’re right.\n
          \n
          I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
          \n
          On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
          \n
          Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 4
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
        -id: 326450
        -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326450
      }
      2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
          \n
          You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
          \n
          Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
          \n
          I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
          \n
          I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
        -id: 326490
        -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326490
      }
      0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567}
    ]
    -id: 31957
    -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
    -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
    +cross: false
    +upVotes: 0
    +downVotes: 0
    +ranking: 1705854792
    +visibility: "visible             "
    +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
    +editedAt: null
    +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
      date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
    }
    +__isInitialized__: true
     …2
  }
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
  +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
  +body: """
    I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
    \n
    Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
    """
  +lang: "en"
  +isAdult: false
  +favouriteCount: 0
  +score: 0
  +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
    date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +tags: null
  +mentions: [
    "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
    "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
    "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
  ]
  +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
  +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
  -id: 326543
  -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
  +ranking: 0
  +commentCount: 0
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
    date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
  }
  +"title": 326543
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
20 DENIED moderate
App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567
  +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
  +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578
    +user: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\User {#2020 …}
    +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
    +image: null
    +domain: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Domain {#2289 …}
    +slug: "Are-Americans-more-prone-to-conspiracy-theories-than-people-in"
    +title: "Are Americans more prone to conspiracy theories than people in other countries?"
    +url: null
    +body: "It’s wild."
    +type: "article"
    +lang: "en"
    +isOc: false
    +hasEmbed: false
    +commentCount: 109
    +favouriteCount: 179
    +score: 0
    +isAdult: false
    +sticky: false
    +lastActive: DateTime @1728812063 {#2025
      date: 2024-10-13 11:34:23.0 +02:00
    }
    +ip: null
    +adaAmount: 0
    +tags: null
    +mentions: null
    +comments: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2314 …}
    +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2164 …}
    +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2042 …}
    +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2072 …}
    +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2136 …}
    +badges: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#2046 …}
    +children: [
      3 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: null
        +root: null
        +body: """
          You can read “The Paranoid Style In American Politics” from 1964 for some insight: [harpers.org/…/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli…](https://harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)\n
          \n
          > American politics has often been an arena for angry minds. In recent years we have seen angry minds at work mainly among extreme right-wingers, who have now demonstrated in the Goldwater movement how much political leverage can be got out of the animosities and passions of a small minority. But behind this I believe there is a style of mind that is far from new and that is not necessarily right-wing. I call it the paranoid style simply because no other word adequately evokes the sense of heated exaggeration, suspiciousness, and conspiratorial fantasy that I have in mind. In using the expression “paranoid style” I am not speaking in a clinical sense, but borrowing a clinical term for other purposes. I have neither the competence nor the desire to classify any figures of the past or present as certifiable lunatics. In fact, the idea of the paranoid style as a force in politics would have little contemporary relevance or historical value if it were applied only to men with profoundly disturbed minds. It is the use of paranoid modes of expression by more or less normal people that makes the phenomenon significant.\n
          \n
          It’s written at a higher than 6th grade target, so it might be a challenge for anyone who’s not used to that. Please give it a good faith effort to read.\n
          \n
          Thinking about it, the low literacy rate in the US might be an aggravating factor. Something like half of US adults cannot read at a 6th grade level. That’s going to hurt their ability to deal with complex topics.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 19
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1727237094 {#1430
          date: 2024-09-25 06:04:54.0 +02:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1574 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1588 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1584 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1580 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1585 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1654 …}
        -id: 326187
        -bodyTs: "'/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':19 '/the-paranoid-style-in-american-poli':16 '1964':11 '6th':223,274 'abil':283 'adequ':106 'adult':269 'aggrav':262 'american':8,20 'among':41 'angri':28,36 'animos':64 'anyon':233 'appli':188 'arena':26 'behind':72 'believ':75 'borrow':137 'call':96 'cannot':270 'certifi':162 'challeng':231 'classifi':153 'clinic':134,139 'compet':148 'complex':287 'conspiratori':115 'contemporari':180 'deal':285 'demonstr':49 'desir':151 'disturb':194 'effort':246 'evok':107 'exagger':112 'express':125,204 'extrem':42 'fact':165 'factor':263 'faith':245 'fantasi':116 'far':84 'figur':155 'forc':174 'give':241 'go':279 'goldwat':52 'good':244 'got':60 'grade':224,275 'half':266 'harpers.org':15,18 'harpers.org/archive/1964/11/the-paranoid-style-in-american-politics/)':17 'heat':111 'higher':221 'histor':183 'hurt':281 'idea':167 'insight':14 'less':208 'level':276 'leverag':57 'like':265 'literaci':254 'littl':179 'low':253 'lunat':163 'main':40 'make':212 'men':191 'might':228,259 'mind':29,37,81,121,195 'minor':70 'mode':202 'movement':53 'much':55 'necessarili':91 'neither':146 'new':86 'normal':209 'often':23 'paranoid':5,99,126,170,201 'passion':66 'past':158 'peopl':210 'phenomenon':214 'pleas':240 'polit':9,21,56,176 'present':160 'profound':193 'purpos':143 'rate':255 'read':3,248,271 'recent':31 'relev':181 'right':44,93 'right-w':92 'right-wing':43 'seen':35 'sens':109,135 'signific':215 'simpli':101 'small':69 'someth':264 'speak':131 'style':6,79,100,127,171 'suspici':113 'target':225 'term':140 'think':249 'topic':288 'us':258,268 'use':123,199,237 'valu':184 'wing':94 'winger':45 'word':105 'work':39 'would':177 'written':218 'year':32"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4607763"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705774552 {#1429
          date: 2024-01-20 19:15:52.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326187
      }
      1 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1525
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1616 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          On the one hand, you’re right.\n
          \n
          I wrote that bit because when I was reading the linked article, it felt harder to read and understand than what I’m used to. So it wasn’t really coming from malicious elitism.\n
          \n
          On the other hand, I want to live in a world where people don’t feel insulted (even when it was by accident, like here!) and just completely stop listening. I know I do it too, but it sucks.\n
          \n
          Especially with the “elitism” facet. Sometimes other people actually *are* better than us on whatever topic. That’s okay. Like if we were talking about math and you were like “This uses some complex algorithms so it might be hard to follow if you haven’t done more than algebra in a few years” I’m not going to be mad. What would I even be mad *about*?
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 4
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705782566 {#1666
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@JungleJim@sh.itjust.works"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1711 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1692 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1686 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1680 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1683 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1702 …}
        -id: 326450
        -bodyTs: "'accid':64 'actual':89 'algebra':130 'algorithm':115 'articl':19 'better':91 'bit':11 'come':38 'complet':69 'complex':114 'done':127 'elit':41,84 'especi':81 'even':59,145 'facet':85 'feel':57 'felt':21 'follow':122 'go':138 'hand':4,45 'hard':120 'harder':22 'haven':125 'insult':58 'know':73 'like':65,100,110 'link':18 'listen':71 'live':49 'm':30,136 'mad':141,147 'malici':40 'math':106 'might':118 'okay':99 'one':3 'peopl':54,88 're':6 'read':16,24 'realli':37 'right':7 'sometim':86 'stop':70 'suck':80 'talk':104 'topic':96 'understand':26 'us':93 'use':31,112 'want':47 'wasn':35 'whatev':95 'world':52 'would':143 'wrote':9 'year':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610066"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705782566 {#1561
          date: 2024-01-20 21:29:26.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326450
      }
      2 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1613
        +user: App\Entity\User {#263 …}
        +entry: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Entry {#1578 …2}
        +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
        +image: null
        +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1620 …}
        +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
        +body: """
          There are different reading levels, but I don’t know a lot about them because I’m not in education.\n
          \n
          You can probably recognize it even if you never thought about it before. “See spot run” or “Green eggs and ham” are very simple texts. Something like “the Great Gatsby” or “the Hobbit” are more complex, and a 2nd grader would struggle to read them even if they technically know how to read.\n
          \n
          Technical manuals, works on a specialist topic, or … my knowledge fails me a little here, but like more complicated novels, may be more advanced. More advanced in vocabulary, sentence structure, and things like symbolism, metaphor, or whatever cool shit House of Leaves was doing.\n
          \n
          I don’t know how legit this site is, but it seems to cover the topic [www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)\n
          \n
          I think this is a sample of a text written at the 6th grade level [www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/…/reading](https://www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading) . I looked it up when that article about how most adults can’t read and comprehend at that level was going around.
          """
        +lang: "en"
        +isAdult: false
        +favouriteCount: 0
        +score: 0
        +lastActive: DateTime @1705783669 {#1596
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +ip: null
        +tags: null
        +mentions: [
          "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
          "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
          "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
        ]
        +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1621 …}
        +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1557 …}
        +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1558 …}
        +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1565 …}
        +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1563 …}
        +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1564 …}
        -id: 326490
        -bodyTs: "'/english-level-test/reading)':156 '/reading':153 '/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':136 '2nd':59 '6th':149 'adult':167 'advanc':97,99 'around':178 'articl':163 'complex':56 'complic':92 'comprehend':172 'cool':111 'cover':131 'differ':3 'educ':20 'egg':39 'even':26,66 'fail':84 'gatsbi':50 'go':177 'grade':150 'grader':60 'great':49 'green':38 'ham':41 'hobbit':53 'hous':113 'know':10,70,121 'knowledg':83 'leav':115 'legit':123 'level':5,151,175 'like':47,90,106 'littl':87 'look':158 'lot':12 'm':17 'manual':75 'may':94 'metaphor':108 'never':29 'novel':93 'probabl':23 'read':4,64,73,170 'recogn':24 'run':36 'sampl':142 'see':34 'seem':129 'sentenc':102 'shit':112 'simpl':44 'site':125 'someth':46 'specialist':79 'spot':35 'structur':103 'struggl':62 'symbol':107 'technic':69,74 'text':45,145 'thing':105 'think':138 'thought':30 'topic':80,133 'vocabulari':101 'whatev':110 'work':76 'would':61 'written':146 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com':152,155 'www.oxfordonlineenglish.com/english-level-test/reading)':154 'www.weareteachers.com':135 'www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/](https://www.weareteachers.com/reading-levels/)':134"
        +ranking: 0
        +commentCount: 0
        +upVotes: 0
        +downVotes: 0
        +visibility: "visible             "
        +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610393"
        +editedAt: null
        +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705783669 {#1604
          date: 2024-01-20 21:47:49.0 +01:00
        }
        +"title": 326490
      }
      0 => App\Entity\EntryComment {#1567}
    ]
    -id: 31957
    -titleTs: "'american':2 'conspiraci':6 'countri':12 'peopl':9 'prone':4 'theori':7"
    -bodyTs: "'wild':3"
    +cross: false
    +upVotes: 0
    +downVotes: 0
    +ranking: 1705854792
    +visibility: "visible             "
    +apId: "https://lemmy.world/post/10955154"
    +editedAt: null
    +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705768392 {#1709
      date: 2024-01-20 17:33:12.0 +01:00
    }
    +__isInitialized__: true
     …2
  }
  +magazine: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\Magazine {#1575 …}
  +image: null
  +parent: Proxies\__CG__\App\Entity\EntryComment {#1705 …}
  +root: App\Entity\EntryComment {#1595}
  +body: """
    I don’t think we’re really on the same page. Literacy and intelligence aren’t the same thing. But if you take nothing else away from this, I think you got the “higher reading levels are more complex” thing. Maybe.\n
    \n
    Also I think you have a typo and one of your `can` should be `can’t`
    """
  +lang: "en"
  +isAdult: false
  +favouriteCount: 0
  +score: 0
  +lastActive: DateTime @1705785581 {#1559
    date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
  }
  +ip: null
  +tags: null
  +mentions: [
    "@someguy3@lemmy.world"
    "@jjjalljs@ttrpg.network"
    "@anarchy79@lemmy.world"
  ]
  +children: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1611 …}
  +nested: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1630 …}
  +votes: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1628 …}
  +reports: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1599 …}
  +favourites: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1625 …}
  +notifications: Doctrine\ORM\PersistentCollection {#1617 …}
  -id: 326543
  -bodyTs: "'also':42 'aren':15 'away':26 'complex':39 'els':25 'got':32 'higher':34 'intellig':14 'level':36 'literaci':12 'mayb':41 'noth':24 'one':50 'page':11 're':6 'read':35 'realli':7 'take':23 'thing':19,40 'think':4,30,44 'typo':48"
  +ranking: 0
  +commentCount: 0
  +upVotes: 0
  +downVotes: 0
  +visibility: "visible             "
  +apId: "https://ttrpg.network/comment/4610902"
  +editedAt: null
  +createdAt: DateTimeImmutable @1705785581 {#1550
    date: 2024-01-20 22:19:41.0 +01:00
  }
  +"title": 326543
}
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
21 DENIED ROLE_ADMIN
null
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authorization\Voter\RoleHierarchyVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details
22 DENIED ROLE_MODERATOR
null
"Scheb\TwoFactorBundle\Security\Authorization\Voter\TwoFactorInProgressVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"Symfony\Component\Security\Core\Authorization\Voter\RoleHierarchyVoter"
ACCESS DENIED
"App\Security\Voter\EntryCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\EntryVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MagazineVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageThreadVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\MessageVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\NotificationVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\OAuth2UserConsentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostCommentVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\PostVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
"App\Security\Voter\UserVoter"
ACCESS ABSTAIN
Show voter details