There is the sunk-cost fallacy, but that is more about investments. I don't know if it's refers to popularity like OP wants.
machinin
Why not husband/wife?
I've seen the argument that it is actually better to cripple the bridge than take it out completely. As it is, Russia still has to expend significant resources to protect a symbol that has very little strategic military value. Once it's destroyed, those resources are freed up to use elsewhere. I think I agree with that. It can be destroyed later as a final triumph.
Apparently the people don't care enough to stop their soldiers from burning kids alive. Why should I care what happens to them?
After burning those kids alive, honestly, I've given up caring what happens to the people in Israel.
Stop enabling the genocide? Please?
Thanks, that's a useful description.
Pretty ingenious.
There was the question of why Vance would work for someone he had called Hitler. His public statements are they here was convinced after Trump's first term that Trump was a good president.
In fact, there are private texts stating that Vance believed Trump's presidency was a failure. This was new information. It made it clear that he wasn't convinced by Trump's presidency.
It probably doesn't make much difference to most voters, but it is significant information.
I didn't understand how the OP did this:
Create an Apple account with [email protected]
Is that just a spoofed email? What would be the steps to do that?
Is the statement that it is a semi-liquid more or less confirmed? That is what I'm saying.
Is the moon's diameter and composition enough to create a semi-molten rock? Or could this phenomenon be better explained by a loose set of rocks, which also displays characteristics of a liquid when in movement.
150TB doesn't seem like a lot for a whole university. Am I missing something?
Perhaps the closest term is "cognitive dissonance." I don't think current usage best fits your description, although the original event that inspired the term certainly does.
https://www.simplypsychology.org/cognitive-dissonance.html