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Irrational Atheists

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  • S Stan Shannon

    It is rather typical of humanist eliteism to assume that the universe, which has not yet revealed itself to even be understandable to the human mind, is some how obligated to conform to the rationality of Russell. I should think that a truly rational mind would be capable of tolerating the notion that the universe is not so obligated.

    Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization

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    73Zeppelin
    wrote on last edited by
    #38

    Ah yes, here comes the little peep from the peanut-gallery apologist crowd. Good job, thanks for coming out. Don't call us, we'll call you.


    S 1 Reply Last reply
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    • I Ilion

      J4amieC wrote:

      my ADD wont allow me to read all that... is there cliff notes?

      Why I Am Not A Christian (Cliff's Notes Version) by Bertrand Russell Christians are stoopid! The End.

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      DemonPossessed
      wrote on last edited by
      #39

      Ilíon wrote:

      Why I Am Not A Christian (Cliff's Notes Version) by Bertrand Russell Christians are stoopid! The End.

      Looks like you're trying as hard as you can to prove him right.

      Furthermore, in Galileo's time and for quite some time afterwards, the "scientific evidence" was *against* heliocentrism. - Ilion

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      • A AndyKEnZ

        Couldn't help smile when a I saw some dolt call atheists irrational, perhaps they should read this: http://users.drew.edu/~jlenz/whynot.html[^] Why I Am Not A Christian by Bertrand Russell If there is an educated response provide the link and I'll read it.

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        Edmundisme
        wrote on last edited by
        #40

        Here is a rebuttal by Dr. Ravi Zacharias titled "Why I am not an atheist." It's an MP3. This is part 1, I can't seem to find a link to part 2... Agree or disagree, I think you'll find it interesting. He's an extremely articulate speaker. http://htod.cdncon.com/o2/rzimht/MP3/LMPT/131-1.mp3[^] I think you'll find him surprisingly fair.

        modified on Friday, February 22, 2008 2:35 PM

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        • I Ilion

          You made good points, but the matter goes even deeper and exposes (once again) the *irrationality* and illogic of the 'atheist' (generic) ... and also exposes the fact that he (generic) doesn't merely "lack belief that there is a God," that he is not indifferent to the issue; that, in fact, he (generic) is every bit the "theist" that you and I are, but that he hates God, whereas you and I are trying to love God. Consider: if our 'atheists' *actually* believed what they say they believe, it wouldn't bother them the least little bit even were it true that Christians were trying to forceably indoctrinate their children [ignoring the small matters: 1) that "atheism" tends to the state of childlessness, 2) it's *impossible* to force anyone to be a Christian]. For, after all, were 'atheism' the truth about the nature of reality, then it wouldn't *matter* in the least whether a person were an 'atheist' or a Christian: all die, and that's the end of the matter. From their *own* claimed point of view we see that it is an act of irrationality to oppose *any* religion (per se). Apparently, they don't believe what they believe.

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          Patrick Etc
          wrote on last edited by
          #41

          Ilíon wrote:

          1. it's *impossible* to force anyone to be a Christian

          *giggles* Read a history book or 25 and then make that statement. Forced conversions at sword/spear/gunpoint are a fundamental feature of human history.


          It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity. - Albert Einstein

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          • 7 73Zeppelin

            Ah yes, here comes the little peep from the peanut-gallery apologist crowd. Good job, thanks for coming out. Don't call us, we'll call you.


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            Stan Shannon
            wrote on last edited by
            #42

            A truly rational mind would appreciate the importance of not merely the peanut-gallery, but the apology also.

            Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization

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            • D DemonPossessed

              Ilíon wrote:

              Consider: if our 'atheists' *actually* believed what they say they believe, it wouldn't bother them the least little bit even were it true that Christians were trying to forceably indoctrinate their children

              So since atheists do not believe in God, they should not care that children are forcibly indoctrinated to believe in God? Excellent argument!

              Ilíon wrote:

              he (generic) is every bit the "theist" that you and I are, but that he hates God, whereas you and I are trying to love God.

              You are literally unable to comprehend that someone could not believe in God, but yet you imagine yourself to be logical, and imagine yourself to win debates with atheists. You are absolutely pathetic and laughable. :laugh:

              Furthermore, in Galileo's time and for quite some time afterwards, the "scientific evidence" was *against* heliocentrism. - Ilion

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              IamChrisMcCall
              wrote on last edited by
              #43

              DemonPossessed wrote:

              So since atheists do not believe in God, they should not care that children are forcibly indoctrinated to believe in God? Excellent argument!

              If you don't believe in peanuts, who cares if your kids spend 5 minutes a year thinking about imaginary peanuts? Yeah, absolutely you shouldn't care, which is why it's so puzzling that you do.

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              • E Edmundisme

                Here is a rebuttal by Dr. Ravi Zacharias titled "Why I am not an atheist." It's an MP3. This is part 1, I can't seem to find a link to part 2... Agree or disagree, I think you'll find it interesting. He's an extremely articulate speaker. http://htod.cdncon.com/o2/rzimht/MP3/LMPT/131-1.mp3[^] I think you'll find him surprisingly fair.

                modified on Friday, February 22, 2008 2:35 PM

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                Ilion
                wrote on last edited by
                #44

                Edmundisme wrote:

                This is part 1, I can't seem to find a link to part 2...

                Perhaps here: RZMI (downloads)[^]

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                • S Stan Shannon

                  A truly rational mind would appreciate the importance of not merely the peanut-gallery, but the apology also.

                  Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization

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                  73Zeppelin
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #45

                  Now you sound like the Shithead.


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                  • I IamChrisMcCall

                    DemonPossessed wrote:

                    So since atheists do not believe in God, they should not care that children are forcibly indoctrinated to believe in God? Excellent argument!

                    If you don't believe in peanuts, who cares if your kids spend 5 minutes a year thinking about imaginary peanuts? Yeah, absolutely you shouldn't care, which is why it's so puzzling that you do.

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                    73Zeppelin
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #46

                    IamChrisMcCall wrote:

                    If you don't believe in peanuts, who cares if your kids spend 5 minutes a year thinking about imaginary peanuts? Yeah, absolutely you shouldn't care, which is why it's so puzzling that you do.

                    What an irrelevant and useless analogy.


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                    • I IamChrisMcCall

                      Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                      I suspect that has somewhat more to do with the fact that no one is trying to encourage your kids to pray to Ganesh in school.

                      No offense, but this isn't it and you know it. I'm Catholic, and Christian theology in public life is predominately Protestant. There is much in recent history to support bad blood between our sects, yet I don't get upset at the idea of some sliver of Protestant theology making its way into the lives of kids. Because I know that I can take them to Mass and they forget all about it. A ten-minute talk with your kids, one time, would head all of the attempted religious indoctrination off at the pass. What you're upset about is the implication by religious people that you are lacking. That you are evil. News flash: you probably are lacking and you probably are evil. If you're not, then get over it. Life is too short to worry about whether or not some person you've never met thinks you're going to imaginary Hell.

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                      Vincent Reynolds
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #47

                      IamChrisMcCall wrote:

                      No offense, but this isn't it and you know it. I'm Catholic, and Christian theology in public life is predominately Protestant. There is much in recent history to support bad blood between our sects, yet I don't get upset at the idea of some sliver of Protestant theology making its way into the lives of kids. Because I know that I can take them to Mass and they forget all about it. A ten-minute talk with your kids, one time, would head all of the attempted religious indoctrination off at the pass.

                      No offense, but what Christian theology in public life? Your kids aren't asked to pray in school (unless you're sending them to parochial school, of course). When someone in government tries to bring religion overtly into their job -- Ashcroft, for instance -- their behavior is seen as wrong. (Secular government of religious men, right?) Outside of government, who gives a rat's ass? Street corner preachers, atheist college professors with book deals -- it just doesn't matter. School, however -- public school, anyway -- is a government institution, and should not include Christian theology outside studies of comparative religion. That was my point.

                      IamChrisMcCall wrote:

                      What you're upset about is the implication by religious people that you are lacking. That you are evil.

                      Again, I don't give a rat's ass what atheists, Christians, Buddhists, Muslims, or Scientologists think of my beliefs, my completeness as a human being, or my likely disposition in the hereafter. I'm comfortable in my philosophy (I'm not an atheist, by the way), and being damned by someone's God in which I do not believe -- by proxy, no less -- means nothing to me.

                      IamChrisMcCall wrote:

                      News flash: you probably are lacking and you probably are evil. If you're not, then get over it. Life is too short to worry about whether or not some person you've never met thinks you're going to imaginary Hell.

                      I'm not the one getting upset. That would be Ilíon.

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                      • 7 73Zeppelin

                        Now you sound like the Shithead.


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                        Stan Shannon
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #48

                        All I can say is that the only thing that trully horrifies me is the spectre of a society that cannot happily tolerate intellectual competition from the various peanut galleries. I've decided that I am actually a monistic idealist.[^] I arrived at these tenants on my own, and was quite surprised to recently discover there is actually an entire philosophy dedicated to these ideas. As with everything else, there are those who are trying to make yet another religion out of it. But for me it is just an interesting way of thinking about the universe, no religion necessary. You just never know what kinds of interesting insights might pop out of the occassional peanut gallery.

                        Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization

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                        • V Vincent Reynolds

                          IamChrisMcCall wrote:

                          No offense, but this isn't it and you know it. I'm Catholic, and Christian theology in public life is predominately Protestant. There is much in recent history to support bad blood between our sects, yet I don't get upset at the idea of some sliver of Protestant theology making its way into the lives of kids. Because I know that I can take them to Mass and they forget all about it. A ten-minute talk with your kids, one time, would head all of the attempted religious indoctrination off at the pass.

                          No offense, but what Christian theology in public life? Your kids aren't asked to pray in school (unless you're sending them to parochial school, of course). When someone in government tries to bring religion overtly into their job -- Ashcroft, for instance -- their behavior is seen as wrong. (Secular government of religious men, right?) Outside of government, who gives a rat's ass? Street corner preachers, atheist college professors with book deals -- it just doesn't matter. School, however -- public school, anyway -- is a government institution, and should not include Christian theology outside studies of comparative religion. That was my point.

                          IamChrisMcCall wrote:

                          What you're upset about is the implication by religious people that you are lacking. That you are evil.

                          Again, I don't give a rat's ass what atheists, Christians, Buddhists, Muslims, or Scientologists think of my beliefs, my completeness as a human being, or my likely disposition in the hereafter. I'm comfortable in my philosophy (I'm not an atheist, by the way), and being damned by someone's God in which I do not believe -- by proxy, no less -- means nothing to me.

                          IamChrisMcCall wrote:

                          News flash: you probably are lacking and you probably are evil. If you're not, then get over it. Life is too short to worry about whether or not some person you've never met thinks you're going to imaginary Hell.

                          I'm not the one getting upset. That would be Ilíon.

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                          Stan Shannon
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #49

                          Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                          School, however -- public school, anyway -- is a government institution

                          No it isn't, at least not in a Jeffersonian society. The government has simply declared them to be its own so that it can control what is taught. Thats known as 'political indoctrination' in most parts of the world.

                          Please excuse my refusal to participate in the suicide of western civilization

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                          • I IamChrisMcCall

                            DemonPossessed wrote:

                            So since atheists do not believe in God, they should not care that children are forcibly indoctrinated to believe in God? Excellent argument!

                            If you don't believe in peanuts, who cares if your kids spend 5 minutes a year thinking about imaginary peanuts? Yeah, absolutely you shouldn't care, which is why it's so puzzling that you do.

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                            DemonPossessed
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #50

                            IamChrisMcCall wrote:

                            If you don't believe in peanuts, who cares if your kids spend 5 minutes a year thinking about imaginary peanuts? Yeah, absolutely you shouldn't care, which is why it's so puzzling that you do.

                            That is only puzzling to you and Ilion because you have trouble understanding even the most basic concepts related to religion and atheism, yet try to argue about it and only succeed in making fools out of yourselves. There is a bit more to Christianity than believing in an imaginary God. There is the fear of going to hell if you don't follow the commandments from the Bible. There is the teaching that a morally perfect God sacrificed his own son to himself. So it stands to reason that atheists do not want children indoctrinated with that. The fact that you say that atheists shouldn't care is ludicrous and even most Christians would be intelligent enough not to try to argue that.

                            Furthermore, in Galileo's time and for quite some time afterwards, the "scientific evidence" was *against* heliocentrism. - Ilion

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                            • I Ilion

                              You made good points, but the matter goes even deeper and exposes (once again) the *irrationality* and illogic of the 'atheist' (generic) ... and also exposes the fact that he (generic) doesn't merely "lack belief that there is a God," that he is not indifferent to the issue; that, in fact, he (generic) is every bit the "theist" that you and I are, but that he hates God, whereas you and I are trying to love God. Consider: if our 'atheists' *actually* believed what they say they believe, it wouldn't bother them the least little bit even were it true that Christians were trying to forceably indoctrinate their children [ignoring the small matters: 1) that "atheism" tends to the state of childlessness, 2) it's *impossible* to force anyone to be a Christian]. For, after all, were 'atheism' the truth about the nature of reality, then it wouldn't *matter* in the least whether a person were an 'atheist' or a Christian: all die, and that's the end of the matter. From their *own* claimed point of view we see that it is an act of irrationality to oppose *any* religion (per se). Apparently, they don't believe what they believe.

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                              Chris Meech
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #51

                              Ilíon wrote:

                              Apparently, they don't believe what they believe.

                              the above is the most irrational thing, you've drivelled.

                              Chris Meech I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar] Donate to help Conquer Cancer[^]

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                              • C Chris Meech

                                Ilíon wrote:

                                Apparently, they don't believe what they believe.

                                the above is the most irrational thing, you've drivelled.

                                Chris Meech I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar] Donate to help Conquer Cancer[^]

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                                Ilion
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #52

                                Since I don't drivel and don't say irrational things, your assessment is, well, as shallow as you are. ;P

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                                • I Ilion

                                  Since I don't drivel and don't say irrational things, your assessment is, well, as shallow as you are. ;P

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                                  Chris Meech
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #53

                                  Got another one. Just like fishing with dynamite as my grand pappy taught me. :)

                                  Chris Meech I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar] Donate to help Conquer Cancer[^]

                                  I 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • C Chris Meech

                                    Got another one. Just like fishing with dynamite as my grand pappy taught me. :)

                                    Chris Meech I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar] Donate to help Conquer Cancer[^]

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                                    Ilion
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #54

                                    Chris Meech wrote:

                                    Just like fishing with dynamite as my grand pappy taught me.

                                    Seemingly, it would be a betrayal of your heritage to behave as a rational and logical man?

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                                    • V Vincent Reynolds

                                      IamChrisMcCall wrote:

                                      No offense, but this isn't it and you know it. I'm Catholic, and Christian theology in public life is predominately Protestant. There is much in recent history to support bad blood between our sects, yet I don't get upset at the idea of some sliver of Protestant theology making its way into the lives of kids. Because I know that I can take them to Mass and they forget all about it. A ten-minute talk with your kids, one time, would head all of the attempted religious indoctrination off at the pass.

                                      No offense, but what Christian theology in public life? Your kids aren't asked to pray in school (unless you're sending them to parochial school, of course). When someone in government tries to bring religion overtly into their job -- Ashcroft, for instance -- their behavior is seen as wrong. (Secular government of religious men, right?) Outside of government, who gives a rat's ass? Street corner preachers, atheist college professors with book deals -- it just doesn't matter. School, however -- public school, anyway -- is a government institution, and should not include Christian theology outside studies of comparative religion. That was my point.

                                      IamChrisMcCall wrote:

                                      What you're upset about is the implication by religious people that you are lacking. That you are evil.

                                      Again, I don't give a rat's ass what atheists, Christians, Buddhists, Muslims, or Scientologists think of my beliefs, my completeness as a human being, or my likely disposition in the hereafter. I'm comfortable in my philosophy (I'm not an atheist, by the way), and being damned by someone's God in which I do not believe -- by proxy, no less -- means nothing to me.

                                      IamChrisMcCall wrote:

                                      News flash: you probably are lacking and you probably are evil. If you're not, then get over it. Life is too short to worry about whether or not some person you've never met thinks you're going to imaginary Hell.

                                      I'm not the one getting upset. That would be Ilíon.

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                                      Ilion
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #55

                                      Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                      ... means nothing to me.

                                      And yet, here you are ... *acting* as though this all matters in some way to you.

                                      Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                      I'm not the one getting upset. That would be Ilíon.

                                      Are you blind? Or is it that you can't read?

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                                      • I Ilion

                                        You made good points, but the matter goes even deeper and exposes (once again) the *irrationality* and illogic of the 'atheist' (generic) ... and also exposes the fact that he (generic) doesn't merely "lack belief that there is a God," that he is not indifferent to the issue; that, in fact, he (generic) is every bit the "theist" that you and I are, but that he hates God, whereas you and I are trying to love God. Consider: if our 'atheists' *actually* believed what they say they believe, it wouldn't bother them the least little bit even were it true that Christians were trying to forceably indoctrinate their children [ignoring the small matters: 1) that "atheism" tends to the state of childlessness, 2) it's *impossible* to force anyone to be a Christian]. For, after all, were 'atheism' the truth about the nature of reality, then it wouldn't *matter* in the least whether a person were an 'atheist' or a Christian: all die, and that's the end of the matter. From their *own* claimed point of view we see that it is an act of irrationality to oppose *any* religion (per se). Apparently, they don't believe what they believe.

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                                        Vincent Reynolds
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #56

                                        Ilíon wrote:

                                        Consider: if our 'atheists' *actually* believed what they say they believe, it wouldn't bother them the least little bit even were it true that Christians were trying to forceably indoctrinate their children

                                        Consider: if our 'conservatives' actually believed what they say they believe, it wouldn't bother them the least little bit even if it were true that Marxists were trying to forcibly indoctrinate their children.

                                        Ilíon wrote:

                                        1. that "atheism" tends to the state of childlessness

                                        That's funny. You do know that "be fruitful and multiply" isn't just an edict from on high; it's also an expression of biological imperative.

                                        Ilíon wrote:

                                        1. it's *impossible* to force anyone to be a Christian].

                                        True, but it is possible to force someone to act like a Christian, which seems to be all the God-botherers really care about.

                                        Ilíon wrote:

                                        For, after all, were 'atheism' the truth about the nature of reality, then it wouldn't *matter* in the least whether a person were an 'atheist' or a Christian: all die, and that's the end of the matter.

                                        Have you read Dawkins? He makes the argument that if you take away the afterlife, all you have is your short time here, and you are more inclined to treasure every moment. Religion is full of talk that the inevitable misery and suffering of this world doesn't matter (or, more cruelly, is a "test"), and all will be well after you die. Which of these beliefs sounds more likely to create a feeling that life doesn't matter? How many suicide bombers are atheists?

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                                        • V Vincent Reynolds

                                          Ilíon wrote:

                                          Consider: if our 'atheists' *actually* believed what they say they believe, it wouldn't bother them the least little bit even were it true that Christians were trying to forceably indoctrinate their children

                                          Consider: if our 'conservatives' actually believed what they say they believe, it wouldn't bother them the least little bit even if it were true that Marxists were trying to forcibly indoctrinate their children.

                                          Ilíon wrote:

                                          1. that "atheism" tends to the state of childlessness

                                          That's funny. You do know that "be fruitful and multiply" isn't just an edict from on high; it's also an expression of biological imperative.

                                          Ilíon wrote:

                                          1. it's *impossible* to force anyone to be a Christian].

                                          True, but it is possible to force someone to act like a Christian, which seems to be all the God-botherers really care about.

                                          Ilíon wrote:

                                          For, after all, were 'atheism' the truth about the nature of reality, then it wouldn't *matter* in the least whether a person were an 'atheist' or a Christian: all die, and that's the end of the matter.

                                          Have you read Dawkins? He makes the argument that if you take away the afterlife, all you have is your short time here, and you are more inclined to treasure every moment. Religion is full of talk that the inevitable misery and suffering of this world doesn't matter (or, more cruelly, is a "test"), and all will be well after you die. Which of these beliefs sounds more likely to create a feeling that life doesn't matter? How many suicide bombers are atheists?

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                                          Ilion
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #57

                                          Simple logical reasoning seems out of your grasp.

                                          V 1 Reply Last reply
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