Merit begging is the merit equivalent of asking for trust feedback, which has an equivalence to trust farming (or attempting to buy reputation).
untrustworthy behavior = negative tag
asking for/buying trust/reputation = untrustworthy behavior
buying accounts = trying to buy reputation
begging for merit = trying to ask for reputation
These correspondences should be accepted by all members... but unfortunately, some do not view it this way (typically account traders).
Your syllogism is soundly stated.
As for “some do not view it this way”,
who cares? Should the henhouse and its maintainers fret even a whit over the opinions of foxes? (With apologies to foxes, who may be sly, but were never execrable sub-animals as are spammers and account traders.)
Another example for you - nullius, who I noticed has given you merit and is a poster on threads you start, has "Tips welcome" in her signature - is that considered begging?
s/her/his/ (Note: I did not fill out the “Gender” field in my forum profile, because I have a sex, not a “gender”. I have now filled it out anyway.)
Jet Cash is not responsible for my behaviour. Whyever would you ask the
recipient of merit and replies to answer for their author?
I should have stopped right there. But in case you don’t understand the difference between begging for merit/trust/reputation and the socially innocuous, long-established custom of a tipjar for voluntary recompense of those who give freely, I began to spell it out for you. It started something like this: “Social rules and the like are neither mechanistic nor oversimplified in their derivations; and working backwards from a single disconnected abstraction never produces good results for anything....” Then, it got long—
very long. At some point, it crossed paths with actmyname’s syllogism on untrustworthy behaviour, as quoted above; go reread that, then try to explain how a tipjar demonstrates untrustworthiness.
Whereas I am neglecting replies to other people, and I also doubt the productiveness of explaining the aforestated difference to someone who does not get it, or pretends not to.