Gay scientists isolate 'Christian Gene'
-
Stan Shannon wrote:
Knowing truth would mean the end of human discovery. No more question, no more exploration. Having questions is a good thing for a human mind. Having truth is rather meaningless. What the hell would we do with truth? Put it on a shelf and admire it?
:laugh: :laugh: :laugh: What good or use is "discovery" it it never gives us truth? What good are these "questions?" What in the hell use are they? What can we do with them? We can't even put them on a shelf to admire them, as they are literally immaterial. ;P
Ilíon wrote:
What good or use is "discovery" it it never gives us truth?
Because it gives us something interesting to do. Have you ever solved a Rubics cube? The fun part is the solving - not the little cube with the sides all the same color. I could have just gone to the store and bought one that looked like that.
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all. Freedom is not something you express with your genitals, it is something you express with your mind.
-
Ilíon wrote:
What good or use is "discovery" it it never gives us truth?
Because it gives us something interesting to do. Have you ever solved a Rubics cube? The fun part is the solving - not the little cube with the sides all the same color. I could have just gone to the store and bought one that looked like that.
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all. Freedom is not something you express with your genitals, it is something you express with your mind.
Stan Shannon wrote:
Because it gives us something interesting to do.
Stan, I understood, from the start, that this where you must end up. Why do you think I kept questioning you?
Stan Shannon wrote:
The fun part is the solving ...
In the context of "question" or "discovery," what is "solving?" It is, of course, "getting truth." So, once again: What good or use is "discovery" it it never gives us truth? Seemingly, the only answer is: "It alleviates our boredom." It would seem that "discovery" doesn't really mean 'discovery,' but rather, 'activity.'
-
I think you have a paranoia about secularists that is immune to reason. You seem to have trouble distinguishing liberty from oppression.
Stan Shannon wrote:
Thats is a good example of how the process works. Use any false claim to demonzie the opposition, to make it appear that normal, traditional appeals to a creator are examples of an aberation of our culture in order to legitimize their own desire to control the agenda. The truth is that there is nothing in our current foreign policy that can be even remotely associated with biblical prophesy aside from a few out of context quotes.
You don't seem to keep up with many of the developments on the religious right. Much of the support for Israel on the religious right is because of a belief that the restoration of Jewish control of Palestine is a necessary precondition for the second coming. Historically, Christians have been hostile to the Jews. The love affair they currently have is for reasons of prophesy. http://jmm.aaa.net.au/articles/10336.htm[^]
The Christian right is also solidly behind Israel. White evangelicals are significantly more pro-Israeli than Americans in general; more than half of them say they strongly sympathise with Israel. (A third of the Americans who claim sympathy with Israel say that this stems from their religious beliefs.) Two in five Americans believe that Israel was given to the Jewish people by God, and one in three say that the creation of the state of Israel was a step towards the Second Coming.
http://sparkfactory.com.au/nfn/?page_id=103[^]
John Carson
John Carson wrote:
I think you have a paranoia about secularists that is immune to reason. You seem to have trouble distinguishing liberty from oppression.
No trouble at all. Civilization IS oppression, and it cannot be avoided. Liberty is not being free to stick your penis wherever you please, it is being free to participate in how tyranny ultimately becomes defined. Secular humanist are the very same class of humanity who, a thousand years ago, would have been using the church to rationalize their control of society, to set its rules and standards. The goal is the control. The agenda is merely a means to achieve it. It is a process that has happened in every single human civilization and it is now happening in ours despite all the safeguards against it. Am I paranoid about that? You're goddamned right I am.
John Carson wrote:
You don't seem to keep up with many of the developments on the religious right.
I don't need to keep up with it, I live right in the middle of it. I was born and raised in the middle of it. I live in the very heart of the evangelical fervor you are so afraid of. And I'm telling you, it ain't there. The only radicals I know, the only people who really feel like their beliefs should be promoted and protected by the state are secularists, not religious people. I grew up hearing people discuss Israel and the last days and Armegeddon and all the rest of that revalations stuff. Many people I know do feel that Israel is part of biblical predictions. But that isn't why they vote the way the do and that isn't why our foreign policy is what it is. In fact, many if not most people I know who talk about that stuff are old school FDR democrats. Israel is one of our allies. They are as free and democratic a society as they could possibly be given the circumstances. You do not abandon such a relationship under threat. You just don't. And that is the basis for American support of Israel, and has nothing to do with the bible. In fact, if you wish to come and look for yourself, I will give you a hundred dollars for every church you can find that is actively promoting any such agenda. (That is, trying to influence US foreign policy via the political system in order to help Israel win Armegeddon or whatever)
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out a
-
Ilíon wrote:
Certainly, the secularists don't care about "gay rights" (whatever that vacuuous phrase means at any particular usage of it), except as one tool in their attempts to demolish traditional society.
I wonder what you think motivates this desire to "demolish traditional society". If not a concern for gay rights and other standard items on the liberal agenda, what then?
Ilíon wrote:
More importantly, secularists do not respect "gays" as persons. Just look at how quickly they *always* play the "faggot card" when opposed by someone who may be (or whom they think they can portray as being) "gay" or as in some way associated with "gays."
Name me one out of the closet gay person of whom that has been true.
John Carson
John Carson wrote:
I wonder what you think motivates this desire to "demolish traditional society".
In order to rebuild it with themselves as the sole authority.
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all. Freedom is not something you express with your genitals, it is something you express with your mind.
-
John Carson wrote:
I wonder what you think motivates this desire to "demolish traditional society".
In order to rebuild it with themselves as the sole authority.
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all. Freedom is not something you express with your genitals, it is something you express with your mind.
Stan Shannon wrote:
In order to rebuild it with themselves as the sole authority.
To what end?
John Carson
-
Stan Shannon wrote:
In order to rebuild it with themselves as the sole authority.
To what end?
John Carson
The same end as always - to have exclusive control of how oppression is defined.
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all. Freedom is not something you express with your genitals, it is something you express with your mind.
-
Stan Shannon wrote:
Because it gives us something interesting to do.
Stan, I understood, from the start, that this where you must end up. Why do you think I kept questioning you?
Stan Shannon wrote:
The fun part is the solving ...
In the context of "question" or "discovery," what is "solving?" It is, of course, "getting truth." So, once again: What good or use is "discovery" it it never gives us truth? Seemingly, the only answer is: "It alleviates our boredom." It would seem that "discovery" doesn't really mean 'discovery,' but rather, 'activity.'
Actually, I think you need to get some sleep, dude.
Ilíon wrote:
I understood, from the start, that this where you must end up. ?
Than all you had to do is ask. My personnal view of the universe is that it is kind of a game. Our goal is to seek the truth. Once someone actually discovers the truth, the game is over. The winner gets to be God in the next round. Knowing that probably means I'm the winner this round.
Ilíon wrote:
In the context of "question" or "discovery," what is "solving?" It is, of course, "getting truth."
I'm not sure I agree with that. I always have more fun trying to solve a problem than I do having the solution. My motivation is the fun of being mentally engaged. Once I have the solution, I'll probably just go watch Oprah or something. Thats probably why I enjoy arguing with all the rest of you morons so much. ;)
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all. Freedom is not something you express with your genitals, it is something you express with your mind.
-
The same end as always - to have exclusive control of how oppression is defined.
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all. Freedom is not something you express with your genitals, it is something you express with your mind.
Stan Shannon wrote:
The same end as always - to have exclusive control of how oppression is defined.
Putting to one side the nonsensical terms in which your frame your answer, people don't campaign against those who currently hold power unless the two groups have different agendas in some respect. If gay rights is not a real point of difference, what is?
John Carson
-
John Carson wrote:
I think you have a paranoia about secularists that is immune to reason. You seem to have trouble distinguishing liberty from oppression.
No trouble at all. Civilization IS oppression, and it cannot be avoided. Liberty is not being free to stick your penis wherever you please, it is being free to participate in how tyranny ultimately becomes defined. Secular humanist are the very same class of humanity who, a thousand years ago, would have been using the church to rationalize their control of society, to set its rules and standards. The goal is the control. The agenda is merely a means to achieve it. It is a process that has happened in every single human civilization and it is now happening in ours despite all the safeguards against it. Am I paranoid about that? You're goddamned right I am.
John Carson wrote:
You don't seem to keep up with many of the developments on the religious right.
I don't need to keep up with it, I live right in the middle of it. I was born and raised in the middle of it. I live in the very heart of the evangelical fervor you are so afraid of. And I'm telling you, it ain't there. The only radicals I know, the only people who really feel like their beliefs should be promoted and protected by the state are secularists, not religious people. I grew up hearing people discuss Israel and the last days and Armegeddon and all the rest of that revalations stuff. Many people I know do feel that Israel is part of biblical predictions. But that isn't why they vote the way the do and that isn't why our foreign policy is what it is. In fact, many if not most people I know who talk about that stuff are old school FDR democrats. Israel is one of our allies. They are as free and democratic a society as they could possibly be given the circumstances. You do not abandon such a relationship under threat. You just don't. And that is the basis for American support of Israel, and has nothing to do with the bible. In fact, if you wish to come and look for yourself, I will give you a hundred dollars for every church you can find that is actively promoting any such agenda. (That is, trying to influence US foreign policy via the political system in order to help Israel win Armegeddon or whatever)
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out a
Stan Shannon wrote:
No trouble at all. Civilization IS oppression, and it cannot be avoided. Liberty is not being free to stick your penis wherever you please, it is being free to participate in how tyranny ultimately becomes defined.
I regard this as utter nonsense, but it is a view that you have expressed many times before and I can see no reason to believe that I can persuade you of its error when all previous attempts (by myself and others) have failed.
Stan Shannon wrote:
I don't need to keep up with it, I live right in the middle of it.
No you don't. You live in a specific geographical region and what happens in your neighbourhood does not define what happens in the evangelical movement as a whole.
Stan Shannon wrote:
Many people I know do feel that Israel is part of biblical predictions. But that isn't why they vote the way the do and that isn't why our foreign policy is what it is.
There are reasons for supporting Israel that have nothing to do with prophecy and many people support Israel on those non-prophetic grounds. However, many others do support Israel on prophetic grounds. This is plain from the statements of various evangelical leaders. The fact that it may not be happening in your home town is beside the point.
Stan Shannon wrote:
In fact, if you wish to come and look for yourself, I will give you a hundred dollars for every church you can find that is actively promoting any such agenda. (That is, trying to influence US foreign policy via the political system in order to help Israel win Armegeddon or whatever)
What will you accept as evidence?
John Carson
-
Stan Shannon wrote:
The same end as always - to have exclusive control of how oppression is defined.
Putting to one side the nonsensical terms in which your frame your answer, people don't campaign against those who currently hold power unless the two groups have different agendas in some respect. If gay rights is not a real point of difference, what is?
John Carson
John Carson wrote:
people don't campaign against those who currently hold power unless the two groups have different agendas in some respect. If gay rights is not a real point of difference, what is?
The only true campaign is between those who wish the power to define oppression to be centralized in the hands of an elite, and those who wish it to be distributed thinly into the ranks of the public at large. Forcing a change in public attitudes and legal definitions towards sodomy, for example, would merely be a demonstration of power, not a goal in and of itself. If you can achieve that, you can achieve anything you please. My suspicion is that the real goal ultimately is the entrenchment of overall Marxist ideals. That is, centralized economic control, a thorough desconstruction of western traditions and the construction of a shiny new civilization with no borders, no races, no cultural distinctions of any kind. But I certainly don't think it will end there. The end will be the enslavement of the entire human race to the will of a tiny elite minority.
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all. Freedom is not something you express with your genitals, it is something you express with your mind.
-
Stan Shannon wrote:
No trouble at all. Civilization IS oppression, and it cannot be avoided. Liberty is not being free to stick your penis wherever you please, it is being free to participate in how tyranny ultimately becomes defined.
I regard this as utter nonsense, but it is a view that you have expressed many times before and I can see no reason to believe that I can persuade you of its error when all previous attempts (by myself and others) have failed.
Stan Shannon wrote:
I don't need to keep up with it, I live right in the middle of it.
No you don't. You live in a specific geographical region and what happens in your neighbourhood does not define what happens in the evangelical movement as a whole.
Stan Shannon wrote:
Many people I know do feel that Israel is part of biblical predictions. But that isn't why they vote the way the do and that isn't why our foreign policy is what it is.
There are reasons for supporting Israel that have nothing to do with prophecy and many people support Israel on those non-prophetic grounds. However, many others do support Israel on prophetic grounds. This is plain from the statements of various evangelical leaders. The fact that it may not be happening in your home town is beside the point.
Stan Shannon wrote:
In fact, if you wish to come and look for yourself, I will give you a hundred dollars for every church you can find that is actively promoting any such agenda. (That is, trying to influence US foreign policy via the political system in order to help Israel win Armegeddon or whatever)
What will you accept as evidence?
John Carson
John Carson wrote:
I regard this as utter nonsense, but it is a view that you have expressed many times before and I can see no reason to believe that I can persuade you of its error when all previous attempts (by myself and others) have failed.
I know you do. And I consider it a fundamental truth. A basic, undeniable fact of human societies. Every single political principle I embrace proceeds from that singular fact. It was ultimately the very basis for the American Revolution and the rationale for our form of government.
John Carson wrote:
No you don't. You live in a specific geographical region and what happens in your neighbourhood does not define what happens in the evangelical movement as a whole.
I have lived in virtually every part of the American heartland, Oklahoma, Alabama, Utah and Indiana. I have done business in virtually every place in between. I know the hearts and minds of the American people about as well as any one possibly could. Oh, and I also have a very large extended family representing virtually every religious point of view imaginable.
John Carson wrote:
However, many others do support Israel on prophetic grounds.
Of course there are. And there always has been. I found a Zionist phamplett published in the early 20th century among other religious papers of one of my wife's grandparent's. It is clear that even than the Zionist movement recognized that American christians might be friendly towards their goals. But it is ridiculous to believe that the creation of Israel was for anything other than strategic cold war purposes. Is it possible that the American public might have been comfortable with it due to underlieing evangelical zeal? Well, perhaps, but that is not why any one was voting the way they were or why the government did what it did. Then or now.
John Carson wrote:
What will you accept as evidence?
A recording or video of an identifiable preacher actually saying from the pulpit that his congregation should vote for candidate X because candidate X will send AMerican forces into help Israel fight the battle of Armegeddon (or some other similar prophecy), and a confirmation from candidate X that he actually supports that policy for that reason.
The only conspiracies that concern me
-
John Carson wrote:
I regard this as utter nonsense, but it is a view that you have expressed many times before and I can see no reason to believe that I can persuade you of its error when all previous attempts (by myself and others) have failed.
I know you do. And I consider it a fundamental truth. A basic, undeniable fact of human societies. Every single political principle I embrace proceeds from that singular fact. It was ultimately the very basis for the American Revolution and the rationale for our form of government.
John Carson wrote:
No you don't. You live in a specific geographical region and what happens in your neighbourhood does not define what happens in the evangelical movement as a whole.
I have lived in virtually every part of the American heartland, Oklahoma, Alabama, Utah and Indiana. I have done business in virtually every place in between. I know the hearts and minds of the American people about as well as any one possibly could. Oh, and I also have a very large extended family representing virtually every religious point of view imaginable.
John Carson wrote:
However, many others do support Israel on prophetic grounds.
Of course there are. And there always has been. I found a Zionist phamplett published in the early 20th century among other religious papers of one of my wife's grandparent's. It is clear that even than the Zionist movement recognized that American christians might be friendly towards their goals. But it is ridiculous to believe that the creation of Israel was for anything other than strategic cold war purposes. Is it possible that the American public might have been comfortable with it due to underlieing evangelical zeal? Well, perhaps, but that is not why any one was voting the way they were or why the government did what it did. Then or now.
John Carson wrote:
What will you accept as evidence?
A recording or video of an identifiable preacher actually saying from the pulpit that his congregation should vote for candidate X because candidate X will send AMerican forces into help Israel fight the battle of Armegeddon (or some other similar prophecy), and a confirmation from candidate X that he actually supports that policy for that reason.
The only conspiracies that concern me
Stan Shannon wrote:
I have lived in virtually every part of the American heartland, Oklahoma, Alabama, Utah and Indiana. I have done business in virtually every place in between. I know the hearts and minds of the American people about as well as any one possibly could. Oh, and I also have a very large extended family representing virtually every religious point of view imaginable.
I simply don't buy it. The fact is that there are plenty of statements by evangelicals on this point and plenty of opinion poll support showing that voters take this prophetic stuff seriously. I'm not saying it dominates US policy (which has been pro-Israel since before the prophecy angle became signficant), but it is now a factor with a significant part of the Republican base.
Stan Shannon wrote:
But it is ridiculous to believe that the creation of Israel was for anything other than strategic cold war purposes.
I think it was for a variety of reasons beside the cold war, but I don't think it had much to do with prophecy. That has only become politically significant more recently.
Stan Shannon wrote:
A recording or video of an identifiable preacher actually saying from the pulpit that his congregation should vote for candidate X because candidate X will send AMerican forces into help Israel fight the battle of Armegeddon (or some other similar prophecy), and a confirmation from candidate X that he actually supports that policy for that reason.
a) Telling a congregation who to vote for loses a church its tax advantages. Most are cautious not to. b) I never suggested anything about fighting the battle of Armegeddon, just that they want Israel to hold all lands on which it has a historical claim (which includes the West Bank) because this is considered to be a precondition for the second coming.
John Carson
-
BoneSoft wrote:
We all know it's not about truth, nobody has claimed that it is. It's the never ending pursuit of understanding. Nobody will ever know the truth about anything (Heisenberg). Only a fool would try to discount science on those grounds. And only a fool would continually assume that our view of science is as simplistic and rudimentary as yours.
What a fool you continuously insist upon acting! "We all know it's not about truth, nobody has claimed that it is." You acknowledge that 'science' isn't about truth -- while falsely claiming that "we all know" this and that no one has claimed otherwise. You all continuously claim otherwise ... even as you deny you are doing so. You (singular and plural) have your panties in a twist precisely because I am "insulting" ( :rolleyes: ) this "science" thingie. THEN: "It's the never ending pursuit of understanding." Then you demonstrate your inability to even think ratinally. Apparently, for you scientistes "understanding" is a wholly meaningless term. Apparently, you scientistes imagine that one can have "understanding" without actually having knowledge. THEN: "Nobody will ever know the truth about anything (Heisenberg)." Then, using a very faulty "argument-by-authority," you make a self-refuting assertion. The very claim is a truth-and-knowledge-claim. It happens to be false, but it is, nonetheless, the claim to know some truth -- in fact, and even more damning, it is the claim to know a universal truth. What absolute *fools* humans make of themselves when they refuse to reason! "Only a fool would try to discount science on those grounds." Only a fool would imagine that *your* "science" even matters at all -- "understanding" without knowledge. Of what use is that to anyone? This "science" thingie sounds just like something 13-year-olds arguing about different versions of the "Superman universe" might care about; certainly like nothing an adult would care about. But then, I do frequenly say that "Science is a toy for little boys." LASTLY: "And only a fool would continually assume that our view of science is as simplistic and rudimentary as yours." You (singular and plural) continuously demonstrate that your view of "science" is one that only a fool could entertain.
Ilíon wrote:
Science is a toy for little boys.
Hehehe...Ilíon, I didn't know you had such a filthy mind!
"We were backstage, playing Monopoly. Totally forgot there was a show, so sorry we are late." - Maynard James Keenan
-
BoneSoft wrote:
We all know it's not about truth, nobody has claimed that it is. It's the never ending pursuit of understanding. Nobody will ever know the truth about anything (Heisenberg). Only a fool would try to discount science on those grounds. And only a fool would continually assume that our view of science is as simplistic and rudimentary as yours.
What a fool you continuously insist upon acting! "We all know it's not about truth, nobody has claimed that it is." You acknowledge that 'science' isn't about truth -- while falsely claiming that "we all know" this and that no one has claimed otherwise. You all continuously claim otherwise ... even as you deny you are doing so. You (singular and plural) have your panties in a twist precisely because I am "insulting" ( :rolleyes: ) this "science" thingie. THEN: "It's the never ending pursuit of understanding." Then you demonstrate your inability to even think ratinally. Apparently, for you scientistes "understanding" is a wholly meaningless term. Apparently, you scientistes imagine that one can have "understanding" without actually having knowledge. THEN: "Nobody will ever know the truth about anything (Heisenberg)." Then, using a very faulty "argument-by-authority," you make a self-refuting assertion. The very claim is a truth-and-knowledge-claim. It happens to be false, but it is, nonetheless, the claim to know some truth -- in fact, and even more damning, it is the claim to know a universal truth. What absolute *fools* humans make of themselves when they refuse to reason! "Only a fool would try to discount science on those grounds." Only a fool would imagine that *your* "science" even matters at all -- "understanding" without knowledge. Of what use is that to anyone? This "science" thingie sounds just like something 13-year-olds arguing about different versions of the "Superman universe" might care about; certainly like nothing an adult would care about. But then, I do frequenly say that "Science is a toy for little boys." LASTLY: "And only a fool would continually assume that our view of science is as simplistic and rudimentary as yours." You (singular and plural) continuously demonstrate that your view of "science" is one that only a fool could entertain.
Oh my God you are an idiot. I give up, I can't talk to you. Learn the concept of 'degrees of certainty' and I'll reconsider. We know nothing completely, we know lots of things to a degree of certainty determined by experimentation. I couldn't give a rats ass what you think of science, it's not like you are in a position of any influence. I was interested in having a rational debate, but since you speak as if you have had a severe head wound and are trying to prove that you still have brain function, it's taken this long to determine that you have absolutely no idea what you're talking about. I'm done. Feel free to post some incoherent insulting response, I know you have to have the last word.
Try code model generation tools at BoneSoft.com.
-
John Carson wrote:
people don't campaign against those who currently hold power unless the two groups have different agendas in some respect. If gay rights is not a real point of difference, what is?
The only true campaign is between those who wish the power to define oppression to be centralized in the hands of an elite, and those who wish it to be distributed thinly into the ranks of the public at large. Forcing a change in public attitudes and legal definitions towards sodomy, for example, would merely be a demonstration of power, not a goal in and of itself. If you can achieve that, you can achieve anything you please. My suspicion is that the real goal ultimately is the entrenchment of overall Marxist ideals. That is, centralized economic control, a thorough desconstruction of western traditions and the construction of a shiny new civilization with no borders, no races, no cultural distinctions of any kind. But I certainly don't think it will end there. The end will be the enslavement of the entire human race to the will of a tiny elite minority.
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all. Freedom is not something you express with your genitals, it is something you express with your mind.
Stan Shannon wrote:
The only true campaign is between those who wish the power to define oppression to be centralized in the hands of an elite, and those who wish it to be distributed thinly into the ranks of the public at large. Forcing a change in public attitudes and legal definitions towards sodomy, for example, would merely be a demonstration of power, not a goal in and of itself. If you can achieve that, you can achieve anything you please. My suspicion is that the real goal ultimately is the entrenchment of overall Marxist ideals. That is, centralized economic control, a thorough desconstruction of western traditions and the construction of a shiny new civilization with no borders, no races, no cultural distinctions of any kind. But I certainly don't think it will end there. The end will be the enslavement of the entire human race to the will of a tiny elite minority.
Wow. :omg: :omg: :omg: You really are paranoid. I could seek clarification but...it is clearly hopeless.
John Carson
-
Oh my God you are an idiot. I give up, I can't talk to you. Learn the concept of 'degrees of certainty' and I'll reconsider. We know nothing completely, we know lots of things to a degree of certainty determined by experimentation. I couldn't give a rats ass what you think of science, it's not like you are in a position of any influence. I was interested in having a rational debate, but since you speak as if you have had a severe head wound and are trying to prove that you still have brain function, it's taken this long to determine that you have absolutely no idea what you're talking about. I'm done. Feel free to post some incoherent insulting response, I know you have to have the last word.
Try code model generation tools at BoneSoft.com.
BoneSoft wrote:
Oh my God you are an idiot. I give up, I can't talk to you.
I've given up. All I do now is confess my undying love for him.
"We were backstage, playing Monopoly. Totally forgot there was a show, so sorry we are late." - Maynard James Keenan
-
Stan Shannon wrote:
The only true campaign is between those who wish the power to define oppression to be centralized in the hands of an elite, and those who wish it to be distributed thinly into the ranks of the public at large. Forcing a change in public attitudes and legal definitions towards sodomy, for example, would merely be a demonstration of power, not a goal in and of itself. If you can achieve that, you can achieve anything you please. My suspicion is that the real goal ultimately is the entrenchment of overall Marxist ideals. That is, centralized economic control, a thorough desconstruction of western traditions and the construction of a shiny new civilization with no borders, no races, no cultural distinctions of any kind. But I certainly don't think it will end there. The end will be the enslavement of the entire human race to the will of a tiny elite minority.
Wow. :omg: :omg: :omg: You really are paranoid. I could seek clarification but...it is clearly hopeless.
John Carson
There simply no way that you can deny that the power of oppression is more centralized now than it once was in American society. When the federal court system, for example, declared locally defined sodomy codes unconstitutional that was a use of centralized authority being used to destroy decentralized authority. How else could you possibly define it? Even if you believe that sodomy is some kind of liberty, you cannot deny that the decision came from a centralized authority which had not previously existed. How is merely observing that obvious fact paranoia? You want to describe it as paranoia simply because you wish to continue the farce that currently exist within American politics. We are trading our Jefferonian liberty of local government rule for libertarian liberties of personnel hedonism. And people such as yourself are relentless defining any attempt to criticize that as some kind of paranoid, demented religious tyranny of some kind. It isn't. You are trying to help destroy Jeffersonian society. That is a simple fact. And you are doing it quite purposefully fully knowledgeable that everything I am saying is true.
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all. Freedom is not something you express with your genitals, it is something you express with your mind.
-
:laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: Will you be my science project? Troy D. Hailey - genius, or cretin? :laugh: :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
"We were backstage, playing Monopoly. Totally forgot there was a show, so sorry we are late." - Maynard James Keenan
If you haven't already, try googling for Troy. Interesting read indeed. He's a bigger wanker than I thought!
-- Kein Mitleid Für Die Mehrheit
-
Stan Shannon wrote:
I have lived in virtually every part of the American heartland, Oklahoma, Alabama, Utah and Indiana. I have done business in virtually every place in between. I know the hearts and minds of the American people about as well as any one possibly could. Oh, and I also have a very large extended family representing virtually every religious point of view imaginable.
I simply don't buy it. The fact is that there are plenty of statements by evangelicals on this point and plenty of opinion poll support showing that voters take this prophetic stuff seriously. I'm not saying it dominates US policy (which has been pro-Israel since before the prophecy angle became signficant), but it is now a factor with a significant part of the Republican base.
Stan Shannon wrote:
But it is ridiculous to believe that the creation of Israel was for anything other than strategic cold war purposes.
I think it was for a variety of reasons beside the cold war, but I don't think it had much to do with prophecy. That has only become politically significant more recently.
Stan Shannon wrote:
A recording or video of an identifiable preacher actually saying from the pulpit that his congregation should vote for candidate X because candidate X will send AMerican forces into help Israel fight the battle of Armegeddon (or some other similar prophecy), and a confirmation from candidate X that he actually supports that policy for that reason.
a) Telling a congregation who to vote for loses a church its tax advantages. Most are cautious not to. b) I never suggested anything about fighting the battle of Armegeddon, just that they want Israel to hold all lands on which it has a historical claim (which includes the West Bank) because this is considered to be a precondition for the second coming.
John Carson
John Carson wrote:
The fact is that there are plenty of statements by evangelicals on this point and plenty of opinion poll support showing that voters take this prophetic stuff seriously.
As I have alrady said, that is absolutely true. But that does not necessarily translate into reasons people vote for who they do. Christian fundamentalims has been a part of American society since our earliest beginnings. But it was never associated with politics. There is now an obvious association of those traditions with the republicans. But it is merely because the other side has been taken over by a virulent anti-Christian fundamentalism all its own that has driven this group into politics out of self defense. But that group represents a very small minority within the republic fold, and even then they are not in control of any aspect of the agenda. The democrats, on the other hand, are completely controlled by their radical fringe elements. They use the most out of context propaganda imaginable to obfuscate their own extremism. They continuously use the spectre of Christian fundamentalism as something that Americans should be concerned about as a distraction from their own obvious extremism. Are there christian fundamentalists? Yes. Are they generally associated with Republicans? Yes. But what you are essentially proposing is that we Americans stand by and allow an important part of our traditional culture to be driven into extinction while you build an inherently socialistic culture in their place. Well, I'll take the Christian fundamentalist any day. They have always been with us and have done us little harm. And what if they do try to take over? Well, than we will have two totalitarian groups fighting to destroy one another while we Jeffersonians wait in the wings to reassert true Jeffersonian democracy.
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all. Freedom is not something you express with your genitals, it is something you express with your mind.
-
Actually, I think you need to get some sleep, dude.
Ilíon wrote:
I understood, from the start, that this where you must end up. ?
Than all you had to do is ask. My personnal view of the universe is that it is kind of a game. Our goal is to seek the truth. Once someone actually discovers the truth, the game is over. The winner gets to be God in the next round. Knowing that probably means I'm the winner this round.
Ilíon wrote:
In the context of "question" or "discovery," what is "solving?" It is, of course, "getting truth."
I'm not sure I agree with that. I always have more fun trying to solve a problem than I do having the solution. My motivation is the fun of being mentally engaged. Once I have the solution, I'll probably just go watch Oprah or something. Thats probably why I enjoy arguing with all the rest of you morons so much. ;)
The only conspiracies that concern me are the ones I am completely unaware of. By the time I find out about it, its probably a done deal. Nothing in the entire universe is more useless than morality without authority. A morality free of hypocrisy is no morality at all. Freedom is not something you express with your genitals, it is something you express with your mind.
Stan Shannon wrote:
Actually, I think you need to get some sleep, dude.
[goes to look at self in the mirror; returns and re-reads what was written] Well, dude, that's certainly an opinion. However, that opinion/statement doesn't appear to correspond to reality.
Stan Shannon wrote:
Than all you had to do is ask.
I *did* ask. That's how we made our journey of discovery (and we actually discovered something). Stan, unlike most of the regulars here, you don't throw a snit-fit when your beliefs/opinions and statements are questioned -- you apparently are willing to *think* about your beliefs. By drawing you out, the odds are greater that you will continue to think about what you've said -- for, after all, *you* said it. That is, the odds are greater that you will be dissatisfied with your beliefs as you currently hold them, so you will eventually seek to refine them.
Stan Shannon wrote:
My personnal view of the universe is that it is kind of a game. Our goal is to seek the truth. Once someone actually discovers the truth, the game is over. The winner gets to be God in the next round. Knowing that probably means I'm the winner this round.
And yet, the world still exists.
Ilíon wrote:
Ilíon: What good or use is "discovery" it it never gives us truth? . Stan: Because it gives us something interesting to do. Have you ever solved a Rubics cube? The fun part is the solving - not the little cube with the sides all the same color. . Ilíon: In the context of "question" or "discovery," what is "solving?" . It is, of course, "getting truth."
Stan Shannon wrote:
I'm not sure I agree with that. I always have more fun trying to solve a problem than I do having the solution. My motivation is the fun of being mentally engaged. Once I have the solution, I'll probably just go watch Oprah or something.
I didn't ask "For what phychological reason(s)/cause(s) does one engage in "discovery?""
Stan Shannon wrote:
Thats probably why I enjoy arguing with all the rest of you morons so much. ;)
Speak for the kiddies.