You're discrediting the great chemistry between Will Smith's character and Sonny, which means you're missing out on a good chunk of the movie experience.
Lemmy is designed to solve only one of Reddit's problems, and by solve, I mean make it so it does not require complete abandonment of the platform when things go bad. The things you're complaining about exists because Lemmy works very similar to Reddit in a lot of things, so the discourse will also go down the same path eventually.
The same thing will happen if you look for other Reddit alternatives unless it is not only specifically designed to avoid them but also succeed in doing so.
The motive could be as simple as asking for a job while not being fluent in English or not being confident in their English skills. People look for the worse in people way too much sometimes.
You're right, but that's wanting something that the guy you're replying to is powerless to change by himself. Simply arguing against using gig economy delivery services without fixing the underlying cause for why they need to use it doesn't solve the problem.
An extreme counterexample is required in response to your extreme mischaracterization of the guy's argument. I'm just continuing down your logic of exaggerating the argument to the point of being nonsensical. It turns out you only like it when you do it to other people, but not when its done to you.
You're discrediting the great chemistry between Will Smith's character and Sonny, which means you're missing out on a good chunk of the movie experience.