Well, it was DIRECTLY followed by an assertion of intellectual laziness in the premise of the article, as your quote so helpfully shows. Perhaps if you were a bit less lazy you might have caught that?
> It is not about how I feel but the meanings of words.
Ah! An interesting assertion, considering that what you have repeatedly described as "an example of laziness" from the article could easily be described in another way, as my other reply to you hints at. For example, we could say it was "stubbornness" [1] or "passivity" [2] or even "dysfunction" [3] with as much justification as you use "laziness." So on what basis do you choose the one, and not another?
[1] "the quality of being determined to do what you want and refusing to do anything else" https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/stubb...
[2]: "the quality of being passive, where "passive" is defined as "not acting to influence or change a situation" https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/passi...
[3]: "a problem or fault in a part of the body or a machine" https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/dysfu...