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#177 Nov 03 2011 at 3:34 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
Could you repeat that in English?
Why when you've just demonstrated you can't read English?
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#178 Nov 03 2011 at 3:40 PM Rating: Good
It's always amusing that any argument that Gbaji can't counter is "irrelevant".
#179 Nov 03 2011 at 4:08 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Nilatai wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Nilatai wrote:
The problem is, the kids parents are stupid. What makes you think parents will be any better at choosing what their kid learns in school than the already inept school boards? Last I checked, school boards were made up of kids' parents!!


Ah... So because people are too stupid to make good choices for themselves, lets take their choices away. It's for their own good!

It's that or let your country continue down it's slow path towards a second dark age. Are you so blind to see people in your country are getting dumber by the decade? Especially when it comes to scientific literacy.


Ah... well! If the stake of the country's survival is at stake, I guess that whole "liberty" thing is just overrated. By all means, let's give up our liberty to those who will make better choices for us than we will..... NOT! Sorry, I happen to believe that whatever dumbing down may be occurring is being caused by the increase of a government that protects the public from the consequences of their own choices. We need less of that, not more.

OH NOEZ, NOT YOUR LIBERTY!

Seriously, do you even know what that word means? And if you do, do you seriously believe it is what you have?


Besides, when the shoe is on the other foot you're all for it. Abortion for example, you're all for taking away that liberty aren't you? If it fits in with your right-wing agenda it's fine, but otherwise it's against your personal freedoms?

Edited, Nov 3rd 2011 6:11pm by Nilatai
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#180 Nov 03 2011 at 4:24 PM Rating: Decent
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Technogeek wrote:
It's always amusing that any argument that Gbaji can't counter is "irrelevant".


It's even more amusing when someone assumes that when I (correctly) point out an irrelevant argument this somehow means that I can't counter it.

When the argument you are using works equally well for either position being taken, your argument is irrelevant with regard to those positions. Joph's argument that it's ok to have a public school system which allows only one type of sex ed curriculum because parents can always home school or send their kids to private school applies equally well regardless of which one type of sex ed curriculum is being taught. Thus, it's "irrelevant" if one is trying to argue for a specific type to be the one that is taught.

I thought I explained this clearly enough in my initial response, but apparently not.
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#181 Nov 03 2011 at 4:38 PM Rating: Decent
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Nilatai wrote:
OH NOEZ, NOT YOUR LIBERTY!

Seriously, do you even know what that word means?


Yes, I do. Probably far better than you.

Quote:
And if you do, do you seriously believe it is what you have?


I believe I'll have less of it if we adopt the kind of policies you seem to endorse.


Quote:
Besides, when the shoe is on the other foot you're all for it. Abortion for example, you're all for taking away that liberty aren't you?


No, I'm not. However, I can understand and respect the position of those who oppose elective abortion and do not see their position as in opposition to my own position with regards to the principles of liberty.

But then, I *do* understand what liberty means from a societal standpoint. I know that it means that we agree to allow government to infringe on our liberties to the extent that those actions infringe on the liberties of others. The restriction is on additional infringement, but not that necessary minimal amount. The argument against abortion is that a fetus has a right to live, and in exactly the same way that the government can infringe my right to pick up a gun and shoot someone in the head because that act infringes the right of the other guy *not* to be shot in the head, the government can infringe the right of the woman to end a pregnancy because it infringes on the right of the fetus to live.


I may disagree with the specifics of when that fetus gains an overriding right to live, but I don't disagree at all with the basic premise being argued. It's absolutely in keeping with the principles of classical liberalism. There is no contradiction here.

Quote:
If it fits in with your right-wing agenda it's fine, but otherwise it's against your personal freedoms?


No. That's the way you measure things, but not me. For me, it's fine if the infringement is made to protect someone else from having their rights infringed upon. But it's *not* fine if the infringement is made purely to improve someone else's life. My positions are 100% consistent if you understand the principle I'm operating on. But unfortunately, somewhere along the line, many people have been taught that rights are benefits, and they've lost the ability to distinguish between actions by government which protect actual rights and those which act just to provide goodies to select groups of people (usually political supporters of the party(s) which provide the goodies).


And I'm well aware that in Europe, that assumption of "liberty" has become so ubiquitous that most of you have never even heard of the classical liberty argument, but that's your loss, not your gain. We haven't quite fallen to that ludicrous point yet, and I will fight as long as I can to avoid doing so. Because once you do, it stops being about liberty and simply becomes about dueling self-interest. I don't want to live in a society where that is the case.

Edited, Nov 3rd 2011 3:40pm by gbaji
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#182 Nov 03 2011 at 5:09 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Ah... So because people are too stupid to make good choices for themselves, lets take their choices away. It's for their own good!

Suddenly home schooling and private schools are illegal?
Irrelevant. I could make the exact same point towards any curriculum requirements in public school. You want your kid to be taught comprehensive sex ed, well... private schools and home schooling aren't illegal, is they?

So you admit it's not some great loss of liberty. That's good. Now we can drop that stupid emotional canard and maybe talk like grown-ups.

Quote:
What is meaningful, on the other hand, is pointing out that as long as our tax dollars are funding our public education, there is always going to be an added opportunity cost to utilizing any other form of education which is not funded with that money.

So it goes with many things. There's an opportunity cost to buying a book rather than checking one out at the library. There's an opportunity cost to hiring private security at my business rather than relying solely on the police.

That said, when someone wants to inject kids into society who've been taught creationism and abstinence-only education, I don't have many worries about them paying a premium on that.

Quote:
And forgive me, but when someone justifies deliberately structuring our public school system in a way so as to minimize choices parents by declaring that they'd make dumb choices anyway, I'm going to bring up the whole liberty thing.

The other day, I called the fire department because of a grease fire. They were trying to use some godless chemical foam to put it out but I insisted that they use good ole fashioned American water. Supposedly their "experts" knew better than me and said water was a poor choice but I demanded that these were my tax dollars and my liberty was at stake if they were going to use their godless foam chemicals with my tax dollars.

Eventually my house burned down as did my neighbor's and I blamed the liberals.

Edited, Nov 3rd 2011 6:10pm by Jophiel
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#183 Nov 03 2011 at 5:25 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Nilatai wrote:
OH NOEZ, NOT YOUR LIBERTY!

Seriously, do you even know what that word means?


Yes, I do. Probably far better than you.
I'm going to assume you're going by this definition: "The state of being free within society from oppressive restrictions imposed by authority on one's way of life."

gbaji wrote:
Quote:
And if you do, do you seriously believe it is what you have?


I believe I'll have less of it if we adopt the kind of policies you seem to endorse.
Yes, universal healthcare, the right to abortion, the right for homosexuals to get married. All things you oppose, they're very restrictive, aren't they, gbaji?


gbaji wrote:
Quote:
Besides, when the shoe is on the other foot you're all for it. Abortion for example, you're all for taking away that liberty aren't you?


No, I'm not. However, I can understand and respect the position of those who oppose elective abortion and do not see their position as in opposition to my own position with regards to the principles of liberty.

But then, I *do* understand what liberty means from a societal standpoint. I know that it means that we agree to allow government to infringe on our liberties to the extent that those actions infringe on the liberties of others. The restriction is on additional infringement, but not that necessary minimal amount. The argument against abortion is that a fetus has a right to live, and in exactly the same way that the government can infringe my right to pick up a gun and shoot someone in the head because that act infringes the right of the other guy *not* to be shot in the head, the government can infringe the right of the woman to end a pregnancy because it infringes on the right of the fetus to live.


I may disagree with the specifics of when that fetus gains an overriding right to live, but I don't disagree at all with the basic premise being argued. It's absolutely in keeping with the principles of classical liberalism. There is no contradiction here.
No, the foetus isn't alive, it's a parasite until it's born. I thought you were about liberty though, why are you all about oppressing the rights of women?

gbaji wrote:
Quote:
If it fits in with your right-wing agenda it's fine, but otherwise it's against your personal freedoms?


No. That's the way you measure things, but not me. For me, it's fine if the infringement is made to protect someone else from having their rights infringed upon. But it's *not* fine if the infringement is made purely to improve someone else's life. My positions are 100% consistent if you understand the principle I'm operating on. But unfortunately, somewhere along the line, many people have been taught that rights are benefits, and they've lost the ability to distinguish between actions by government which protect actual rights and those which act just to provide goodies to select groups of people (usually political supporters of the party(s) which provide the goodies).
So you really don't get that rights aren't inalienable at all? The only rights you have are the ones you either 1) are allowed to have, or 2) fight your **** off to keep. I think you're full of ****, personally.


gbaji wrote:
And I'm well aware that in Europe, that assumption of "liberty" has become so ubiquitous that most of you have never even heard of the classical liberty argument, but that's your loss, not your gain. We haven't quite fallen to that ludicrous point yet, and I will fight as long as I can to avoid doing so. Because once you do, it stops being about liberty and simply becomes about dueling self-interest. I don't want to live in a society where that is the case.

You still think people's lived in the USA are better than those of the lives in Europe? Because you hold "personal liberty" far, far higher than "personal well being"? That seriously does make so little sense to me it is unreal.
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#184 Nov 03 2011 at 5:28 PM Rating: Decent
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Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Ah... So because people are too stupid to make good choices for themselves, lets take their choices away. It's for their own good!

Suddenly home schooling and private schools are illegal?
Irrelevant. I could make the exact same point towards any curriculum requirements in public school. You want your kid to be taught comprehensive sex ed, well... private schools and home schooling aren't illegal, is they?

So you admit it's not some great loss of liberty.


Nope. Just showing that your counter argument is irrelevant to the question of whether or not there's a loss of liberty involved. There absolutely is a loss of liberty when you take my tax dollars from me, then provide an education containing curriculum I don't agree with, and the only alternative is that I can always throw away the money I already paid for the public education, and then spend even more money/time on private education or homeschooling.

Give me a tax credit (not deduction) for the exact amount I pay for those things, and you've got a deal! Strange that liberals don't want to give up their tax dollars when indoctrinating children is on the line though!

Quote:
That's good. Now we can drop that stupid emotional canard and maybe talk like grown-ups.


How about we start with you dropping the ridiculously flawed logic?

Quote:
Quote:
What is meaningful, on the other hand, is pointing out that as long as our tax dollars are funding our public education, there is always going to be an added opportunity cost to utilizing any other form of education which is not funded with that money.

So it goes with many things. There's an opportunity cost to buying a book rather than checking one out at the library. There's an opportunity cost to hiring private security at my business rather than relying solely on the police.


So you agree that if I'm paying for some public service, I ought to have some say in how that service operates? Just checking, cause you seem to be veering off course again.

Quote:
That said, when someone wants to inject kids into society who've been taught creationism and abstinence-only education, I don't have many worries about them paying a premium on that.


If the premium is that they are unprepared for life and therefore fail, then that's great. But the problem is that this doesn't tend to happen. Despite all that great education and knowledge held by liberal thinkers, for some bizarre reason, folks who are taught creationism and abstinence-only still seem to manage to be quite successful in life. They run thriving businesses, and... worst of all... they are members of happy families who aren't as likely to become dependent on the government! (oh the horror!!!).

What you're advocating isn't allowing the natural consequences of what someone teaches to their children to occur, but rather deciding first that what they're teaching is wrong/bad/stupid, but since the natural world doesn't support your assumption by hurting those people, you've decided to have the government step in and do it instead! Because despite all the social statistics and whatnot, there must be some trick going on here, because your college professors all told you what children should be taught, and they're not doing it right, but for some reason their lives aren't turning out horribly like you think they should. So let's make it more expensive for them to do what they're doing artificially since nature isn't being kind enough to do the right thing.


What a load of self-righteous crap!

Quote:
The other day, I called the fire department because of a grease fire. They were trying to use some godless chemical foam to put it out but I insisted that they use good ole fashioned American water. Supposedly their "experts" knew better than me and said water was a poor choice but I demanded that these were my tax dollars and my liberty was at stake if they were going to use their godless foam chemicals with my tax dollars.

Eventually my house burned down as did my neighbor's and I blamed the liberals.


This would be a wonderful analogy, except that the folks who want to put the fire out in a different way, don't end out with their homes burning down. In fact, their methods often work as well, or better than the methods the "experts" think they should use. And this apparently infuriates those experts and all of their followers who don't want to think that they could possibly be just wrong or anything.

Cart leading horse Joph. I honestly don't give a rats *** what we teach in sex ed, but if sufficient numbers of people disagree over what should be taught, then we ought to have some system for managing that instead of just fighting from on high for a "winner take all" government solution. That's a great way to ensure that half of the damn population is pissed off, is all.
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#185 Nov 03 2011 at 5:34 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Ah... So because people are too stupid to make good choices for themselves, lets take their choices away. It's for their own good!

Suddenly home schooling and private schools are illegal?
Irrelevant. I could make the exact same point towards any curriculum requirements in public school. You want your kid to be taught comprehensive sex ed, well... private schools and home schooling aren't illegal, is they?

So you admit it's not some great loss of liberty.


Nope. Just showing that your counter argument is irrelevant to the question of whether or not there's a loss of liberty involved. There absolutely is a loss of liberty when you take my tax dollars from me, then provide an education containing curriculum I don't agree with, and the only alternative is that I can always throw away the money I already paid for the public education, and then spend even more money/time on private education or homeschooling.

Give me a tax credit (not deduction) for the exact amount I pay for those things, and you've got a deal! Strange that liberals don't want to give up their tax dollars when indoctrinating children is on the line though!

This can apply to everything that's taught in public schools. What about the parents that don't think science is important? English? Their only option is home schooling.
#186 Nov 03 2011 at 5:39 PM Rating: Excellent
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ITT: We discover that telling kids about contraception is indoctrination.

Protip: Abstinence only education doesn't work. The USA has what is essentially the highest teen pregnancy rate in the world.
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#187 Nov 03 2011 at 5:45 PM Rating: Decent
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Nilatai wrote:
I'm going to assume you're going by this definition: "The state of being free within society from oppressive restrictions imposed by authority on one's way of life."


Close enough. I'm sure you'll make the mistake of thinking that "free" has a monetary meaning though. Hint: it doesn't.

Quote:
gbaji wrote:
I believe I'll have less of it if we adopt the kind of policies you seem to endorse.
Yes, universal healthcare, the right to abortion, the right for homosexuals to get married. All things you oppose, they're very restrictive, aren't they, gbaji?


Universal health care is not liberty. It's security. The cost is liberty. The Right to abortion I've already discussed. The Right to marry is not the same as the government providing benefits for marrying. You've mistaken "government paying for things I want" with "goverment staying the hell out of my life". I'm always surprised at the sheer volume of indoctrination required to get people to equate those two things and then continue to cling to that comparison even after someone like me points out just how opposite they are.

Liberty is the state of an authority not telling you what to do. All of the things you listed require an authority control what you get. That's not liberty. Those are state granted benefits, not freedom.


Quote:
gbaji wrote:
I may disagree with the specifics of when that fetus gains an overriding right to live, but I don't disagree at all with the basic premise being argued. It's absolutely in keeping with the principles of classical liberalism. There is no contradiction here.
No, the foetus isn't alive, it's a parasite until it's born.


Lol. So you support elective abortion right up to the moment of birth?

Do you even realize that this is a cop out? You adopt this assumption because it makes you feel better about the political position you've taken. I get it. But do you? I mean, for someone so enlightened and free, you sure do cling to your dogma stronger than any religious fundamentalist I've ever met.

Quote:
I thought you were about liberty though, why are you all about oppressing the rights of women?


I'm not. I am, however, about recognizing that this is a case of opposing rights in the first place. I'm not hiding from the issue by adopting an extreme position. You are.

gbaji wrote:
So you really don't get that rights aren't inalienable at all? The only rights you have are the ones you either 1) are allowed to have, or 2) fight your **** off to keep. I think you're full of sh*t, personally.


I think you don't know what rights are. In fact, I know that you don't know what rights are. You can parrot a definition, but when applying it to real world situations, you do so incorrectly every single time. And it's not a question of what rights you do have right now, but which ones you should have. And that's based on an application of principles. I just find it interesting that you've basically given up on even trying to find a common principle with regards to rights, presumably because you live in a society in which there are no principles involved. You get what your government gives you, and you thank your government for it, and are careful not to ask "please sir, may I have another?".

You've given up. I haven't. I know that misery loves company, so you want desperately for us evil conservatives in the US to stop talking about rights and principles and liberties so you don't feel so bad every time you see the difference, but that's not going to happen. You'll just have to learn to live with it.


Quote:
You still think people's lived in the USA are better than those of the lives in Europe? Because you hold "personal liberty" far, far higher than "personal well being"? That seriously does make so little sense to me it is unreal.



Those who are willing to give up essential liberty for a little security will soon find themselves with neither.


Yeah. I place a hell of a lot more weight on liberty than personal well being. Because I know that when you give up the former for the latter, eventually you lose the latter as well, because you don't have the former to keep what you have from being taken from you anymore.
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#188 Nov 03 2011 at 5:47 PM Rating: Decent
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Nadenu wrote:
This can apply to everything that's taught in public schools. What about the parents that don't think science is important? English? Their only option is home schooling.


When the number of those parents become such a majority that the science curriculum has to be renamed to "non-science plus" in order to trick people into supporting it, you'll have a point.
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#189 Nov 03 2011 at 5:50 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
That's a great way to ensure that half of the damn population is pissed off, is all.
So we're pretending there is a solution in the world to pretty much any debate that will appease the vast majority. Are you going to ask for it when you sit on Santa's lap this year? Have you been a good little boy and eaten all your vegetables and practice counting to ten?

Ainsi nous feignons il y a une solution dans le monde à joli beaucoup de n'importe quelle discussion qui apaisera la grande majorité. Êtes vous allant demander elle quand vous vous asseyez sur Santa' ; recouvrement de s cette année ? Avez-vous été un bon petit garçon et avez-vous mangé tous vos légumes et pratique comptant à dix ?

So täuschen wir dort sind eine Lösung in der Welt zu ziemlich genau jeder möglicher Debatte vor, die die überwiegende Mehrheit beschwichtigt. Sind Sie gehend, um sie zu bitten, wenn Sie auf Santa' sitzen; s-Schoss dieses Jahr? Sind Sie ein guter kleiner Junge gewesen und gegessen Ihrem ganzem Gemüse und Praxis, die bis 10 zählen?

Così stiamo fingendo là siamo una soluzione nel mondo a praticamente tutto il dibattito che calmerà la vasta maggioranza. Siete che andate chiedere esso quando vi sedete su Santa' giro di s questo anno? Siete stato un buon ragazzino ed avete mangiati tutte le vostre verdure e pratica che contano a dieci?

Estamos fingiendo tan allà somos una solución en el mundo a bonito mucho cualquier discusión que apaciga a la gran mayorÃa. Es usted que va a pedir él cuando usted se sienta en Santa' ¿regazo de s este año? ¿Usted ha sido un buen niño pequeño y ha comido todos sus vehÃculos y práctica que contaban a diez?

従って私達は大半をなだめるほとんどあらゆる討論へである世界の解決そこにふりをしている。 Santa'で置かれるときそれを頼むことを行っているある; 今年sのラップか。 よく小さい男のåã€10に数えているあなたの野菜および練習すべて食べたか。

Edit: My apologies, I forgot you had a reading impediment so out of the kindness of my heart I had what I posted translated to a few different languages. Maybe you can read one of them.

Edited, Nov 3rd 2011 7:56pm by lolgaxe
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#190 Nov 03 2011 at 5:58 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Nope. Just showing that your counter argument is irrelevant to the question of whether or not there's a loss of liberty involved. There absolutely is a loss of liberty when you take my tax dollars from me, then provide an education containing curriculum I don't agree with, and the only alternative is that I can always throw away the money I already paid for the public education, and then spend even more money/time on private education or homeschooling.

There's a "loss of liberty" any time any tax dollars are spent how you don't like. Most times you don't even have the option of an alternative. Cry me a river.

Quote:
Give me a tax credit (not deduction) for the exact amount I pay for those things

Give me a tax credit for every single thing I don't like or feel like paying for. Oh, wait, that's retarded.

Quote:
So you agree that if I'm paying for some public service, I ought to have some say in how that service operates?

Sure. Should you have complete say in how it operates even to the extent of it operating contrary to the public good? Nah.

Quote:
If the premium is that they are unprepared for life and therefore fail, then that's great.

But it's not great. An uneducated populace is detrimental to the society as a whole.

Quote:
What a load of self-righteous crap!

...said the guy crying giant crocodile tears about "liberty" to justify pressing his conservative social engineering Smiley: smile
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Wow. Regular ol' Joph fan club in here.
#191 Nov 03 2011 at 6:08 PM Rating: Excellent
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Nilatai wrote:
ITT: We discover that telling kids about contraception is indoctrination.

The benefit of having been here forever is the stories. Lemme tell you about the time Gbaji embarrassed himself by insisting that there were schools teaching "contraception only" sex ed as a vast liberal agenda.
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#192 Nov 03 2011 at 6:23 PM Rating: Excellent
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I just have trouble understanding the whole abstinence-only thing.

Kind of a weird aside, but I grew up in a conservative small town, and went to a religious school for most of my early education. We still learned about condoms and other birth control methods. I mean, obviously, they empathized the abstinence part. It was more in line with the Bible, can't get diseases or pregnant if you don't have sex, blah blah, etc. but that didn't stop them from teaching us the other stuff as well.

Still don't understand why it is such a big deal now if it wasn't then. Maybe I just lived in a bubble. Smiley: rolleyes
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#193 Nov 03 2011 at 6:25 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Nilatai wrote:
I'm going to assume you're going by this definition: "The state of being free within society from oppressive restrictions imposed by authority on one's way of life."


Close enough. I'm sure you'll make the mistake of thinking that "free" has a monetary meaning though. Hint: it doesn't.
LOL UR FUNNY.

gbaji wrote:
Quote:
gbaji wrote:
I believe I'll have less of it if we adopt the kind of policies you seem to endorse.
Yes, universal healthcare, the right to abortion, the right for homosexuals to get married. All things you oppose, they're very restrictive, aren't they, gbaji?


Universal health care is not liberty. It's security. The cost is liberty. The Right to abortion I've already discussed. The Right to marry is not the same as the government providing benefits for marrying. You've mistaken "government paying for things I want" with "goverment staying the hell out of my life". I'm always surprised at the sheer volume of indoctrination required to get people to equate those two things and then continue to cling to that comparison even after someone like me points out just how opposite they are.

Liberty is the state of an authority not telling you what to do. All of the things you listed require an authority control what you get. That's not liberty. Those are state granted benefits, not freedom.
You do know I support "the government paying for things I want", because I already pay them taxes to do what I want, right? I don't think you understand what taxes are supposed to be for...


gbaji wrote:
Quote:
gbaji wrote:
I may disagree with the specifics of when that fetus gains an overriding right to live, but I don't disagree at all with the basic premise being argued. It's absolutely in keeping with the principles of classical liberalism. There is no contradiction here.
No, the foetus isn't alive, it's a parasite until it's born.


Lol. So you support elective abortion right up to the moment of birth?

Do you even realize that this is a cop out? You adopt this assumption because it makes you feel better about the political position you've taken. I get it. But do you? I mean, for someone so enlightened and free, you sure do cling to your dogma stronger than any religious fundamentalist I've ever met.
Sure, why not? The foetus isn't contributing anything to society, Comrade.

No, what I've said, is that a foetus isn't alive. The woman is, her rights supersede it's. Simple!

gbaji wrote:
Quote:
I thought you were about liberty though, why are you all about oppressing the rights of women?


I'm not. I am, however, about recognizing that this is a case of opposing rights in the first place. I'm not hiding from the issue by adopting an extreme position. You are.
Except you support a blanket ban on abortion, that's not extreme at all, right? It wouldn't have huge social ramifications, none of them positive, at all? Thought not, let's get on with banning it!

gbaji wrote:


I think you don't know what rights are. In fact, I know that you don't know what rights are. You can parrot a definition, but when applying it to real world situations, you do so incorrectly every single time. And it's not a question of what rights you do have right now, but which ones you should have. And that's based on an application of principles. I just find it interesting that you've basically given up on even trying to find a common principle with regards to rights, presumably because you live in a society in which there are no principles involved. You get what your government gives you, and you thank your government for it, and are careful not to ask "please sir, may I have another?".

You've given up. I haven't. I know that misery loves company, so you want desperately for us evil conservatives in the US to stop talking about rights and principles and liberties so you don't feel so bad every time you see the difference, but that's not going to happen. You'll just have to learn to live with it.
How are you this naive? You believe in rights and principles at the expense of people, which is fucking retarded!


gbaji wrote:
Quote:
You still think people's lived in the USA are better than those of the lives in Europe? Because you hold "personal liberty" far, far higher than "personal well being"? That seriously does make so little sense to me it is unreal.


Those who are willing to give up essential liberty for a little security will soon find themselves with neither.


Yeah. I place a hell of a lot more weight on liberty than personal well being. Because I know that when you give up the former for the latter, eventually you lose the latter as well, because you don't have the former to keep what you have from being taken from you anymore.
Nice quote, did you google it yourself? It's funny you know I don't seem to remember ever living in a dictatorship because I have a national health service. That being said, some of the best national health services can be found in countries run by dictators. I mean, look at Cuba!

Seriously, if the choice is between paying some extra taxes and making sure everyone gets healthcare, or having the "freedom" to die because my taxes aren't going to anything that helps me personally? I know which one I'd choose.
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#194 Nov 03 2011 at 6:41 PM Rating: Good
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gbaji wrote:
Nadenu wrote:
This can apply to everything that's taught in public schools. What about the parents that don't think science is important? English? Their only option is home schooling.


When the number of those parents become such a majority that the science curriculum has to be renamed to "non-science plus" in order to trick people into supporting it, you'll have a point.

No, I have a point now.

Since you're so fond of anecdotal "data", I'm willing to bet I know more parents than you just because I've got two kids of my own and I interact with more parents (school functions, sporting functions, etc.) And the talk always turns to the kids and usually school. And also let me point out that my experience with these parents spans almost a generation, since my oldest is 21 and my youngest is 9. In that time, I may have met one mom that was against sex ed in school. That means the majority of parents I know are for it. And none of us were tricked into thinking it was something it's not. Hell, even back in the dark ages of the 70's and 80's *I* was taught in school about condoms, the pills, the peepee goes into the other peepee...

And I'll be honest here and say that I saw something shiny and I've lost my train of thought, but I think I was going with something that supports most parents wanting sex ed. in the schools.

Or maybe they want more wine in schools. Both?
#195 Nov 03 2011 at 6:44 PM Rating: Excellent
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Nadenu wrote:
Since you're so fond of anecdotal "data", I'm willing to bet I know more parents than you just because I've got two kids of my own and I interact with more parents (school functions, sporting functions, etc.)
That make you an expert, therefore less qualified to interpret the data than him.
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#196 Nov 03 2011 at 6:45 PM Rating: Good
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lolgaxe wrote:
Nadenu wrote:
Since you're so fond of anecdotal "data", I'm willing to bet I know more parents than you just because I've got two kids of my own and I interact with more parents (school functions, sporting functions, etc.)
That make you an expert, therefore less qualified to interpret the data than him.

Smiley: laugh
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#197 Nov 03 2011 at 6:45 PM Rating: Excellent
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lolgaxe wrote:
Nadenu wrote:
Since you're so fond of anecdotal "data", I'm willing to bet I know more parents than you just because I've got two kids of my own and I interact with more parents (school functions, sporting functions, etc.)
That make you an expert, therefore less qualified to interpret the data than him.

I just can't win. Smiley: glare
#198 Nov 03 2011 at 6:53 PM Rating: Good
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No one can, because whatever stance you take gbaji will google the opposite and then spew it at you.
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Solrain wrote:
WARs can use semi-colons however we want. I once killed a guy with a semi-colon.

LordFaramir wrote:
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#199 Nov 03 2011 at 7:42 PM Rating: Decent
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lolgaxe wrote:
gbaji wrote:
That's a great way to ensure that half of the damn population is pissed off, is all.
So we're pretending there is a solution in the world to pretty much any debate that will appease the vast majority. Are you going to ask for it when you sit on Santa's lap this year? Have you been a good little boy and eaten all your vegetables and practice counting to ten?


No. But there are solutions to some debates which can produce more satisfactory results for a greater number of people. And in this particular case, where you have some parents who want their kids to be taught comprehensive sex ed, and other parents who want their kids to be taught abstinence only sex ed, but the current system requires that both sets of parents send their kids to the same school, there's a pretty obvious and easy solution.

Just because not all problems have good solutions does not mean that no problems can be solved. This happens to fall into the latter category. In fact, most of our arguments about curriculum can be solved (or at least mitigated significantly) via the implementation of school vouchers instead of our current public school system. And there are a bunch of other good reasons to implement vouchers as well.


How long until you grasp that I'm not actually advocating for *either* curriculum?
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#200 Nov 03 2011 at 7:43 PM Rating: Good
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Again, devil's advocate. Wishy washy and annoying.
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LordFaramir wrote:
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#201 Nov 03 2011 at 7:46 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
But there are solutions to some debates which can produce more satisfactory results for a greater number of people.
And those solutions are, coincidentally, things you agree with. Funny how that works out.
gbaji wrote:
How long until you grasp that I'm not actually advocating for *either* curriculum?
Not nearly as long as it takes you to realize anything correctly. Smiley: smile
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