ad ho·mi·nem (ˈ)ad-ˈhä-mə-ˌnem. -nəm. : appealing to feelings or prejudices rather than intellect. an ad hominem argument. : marked by or being an attack on an opponent's character rather than by an answer to the contentions made
- “Bet you never even heard of Tatum or Bird.”
- “(posts a link to artists who had committed murder)”
- “Nitwit.”
- An ad hominem attack on this user’s level of musical knowledge (saying they probably don’t know about Tatum or Parker) with no evidence to base this ad hominem attack on, doing absolutely nothing to disprove any of this person’s claims with actual facts or actual intellectual argument-making, doing nothing to actually address the subject
- an ad hominem attack on the character of rap artists, conflating criminal behavior of a small sample size of the totality of such artists with musical legitimacy, as though those two things are related, and,
- in the same sentence in which you accuse someone of an ad hominem attack, your rebuttal is simply insulting his intelligence by calling him, “Nitwit.”
If avoiding flagrant, egregious hypocrisy is at all a concern for you, it is best to avoid accusing someone of something you literally just did in a big, big way.
Just something to consider.