Here's another one:
JT: Let's say the French see an influx of Islamic immigrants, who come in and say: "You don't give us enough handouts", like, "you're being racist", and they are rioting - what are the French supposed to think?
D: I don't know! I'm not French, I'm American, we were talking about America! Why are we going overseas again?
JT: But it's all intertwined! It's the same situation, they just speak a different language. I don't know why this is so hard for you.
D: Because it's not the same situation. Those countries are in dramatically different situations. You can't compare them.
JT: That's like you saying a man ate a sandwich in France and a man ate a sandwich in America, but these are not the same situation.
D: We're not talking about a basic thing like eating and consuming food! We're talking about the complex interactions and crossraods between culture and demographics and economy and geography. These are very high-level social issues that manifest themselves in far different ways across countries. We're not just talking about eating food.
JT: You speak pretty, my friend, but you haven't convinced me.