Whoever is elected will be reliably committed to the articles of faith of the dominant capitalist paradigm. The economy is not democratic -- it's plutocratic. The millions of extremely rich, very rich, and merely rich income groups will be well taken care of. Fuck the food stamp crowd; fuck the must-drive-old-car-crowd; fuck the must-work-3-jobs crowd; fuck the priced-out-of-housing crowd; fuck 'em all! — Bitter Crank
The most important development will be the end of the tradition of people from the privileged upper middle classes being groomed for a life in politics. Eton and Oxford are responsible for perpetuating this.
It looks as though this might now be happening. — Punshhh
They never do. — Christoffer
wrestling fights between individuals and media covering who wore the best clothes and so on. — Christoffer
Could devolve into becoming just like presidential elections and wrestling fights between individuals and media covering who wore the best clothes and so on. — Christoffer
I'm not that well read-up on British politics so I didn't know that they did that. — Christoffer
Tories just leave and start their own new party and leave the incompetent and stupid parts to drive Tories into the ground? I think they would have tremendous success if they did that at this time. — Christoffer
My point is that explanations in terms of intent do not apply to dishbrain. Talk of intent is part of a different language game. — Banno
My suspicion is that for some act to count as intentional, the organism might in some sense have done otherwise. — Banno
I don't want to upset your apple cart mon ami. — Agent Smith
Indeed it can! — Agent Smith
You're describing an ideal morality, not "intelligence." You can be an evil genius. — Hanover
Ok, I am fine if you prefer to go with your 'immoral,' label rather than my stupid, moronic and evil labels.Because they are immoral. — Hanover
Why are you now offering additional reasons for the South's loss of the war when you previously argued it was due their having adopted an evil system? — Hanover
See: https://scholars.law.unlv.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1418&context=nlj, particularly page 7 and footnote 20. Rape of black women was legal during times of slavery. — Hanover
You didn't. You presented a justice prevails because it is just argument which is essentially the same thing. It argues that as long as we fight for righteousness we will prevail. — Hanover
If my point is obvious, then why do you argue otherwise? I have submitted that the majority will is irrelevant when deciphering morality. — Hanover
How does this contradict the idea that a democracy can be tyrannical? — Hanover
Trump as the political incarnation of free energy. — Banno
It was certainly immoral and wrong, but trying to preserve an economic system that resulted in great wealth doesn't point to a lack of intelligence. — Hanover
I think more mundane causes can be given for their loss. — Hanover
I wish that were the case. It would mean that we need only sit back and wait for those unjust nations in existence today to finally become enlightened. — Hanover
And such is subjectivism. It means rape was moral when the population said it was. If morality is an opinion, then it is fluid. Should rape fall into favor, it will be moral, as you are relying upon the majority to tell you good from bad. — Hanover
Again, whether you intend for this or not, you are arguing a theistic view, where nations rise and fall on the basis of their aligning themselves with good or evil. — Hanover
I don't know if the oppressed outnumbered the oppressors or not, but it's screamingly irrelevant. Had there been one more Nazi than the sum total of the oppressed, then the Nazis would still have been wrong. Had there been a single man mistreated, scapegoated for the crimes of others, with only a single person objecting on his behalf, that person would have been right and the rest wrong. — Hanover
Maybe read some de Tocqueville: — Hanover
Take some time to work through your position. It's just not making sense. You are arguing that it is logically impossible for the empirical reality of a tyrannical democracy to exist. That is, you are suggesting it is impossible that the majority of people would vote to oppress a smaller number of people, as if to suggest all laws, as long as there is a 51% consensus must be just by definition. This
argument is defeated by actual history. — Hanover
That is, the will of the majority of the people can be advanced by the enslavement and even murder of a minority. That is not a hypothetical construct. It is the very history of the US. — Hanover
I agree. I think it's reasonable to know a good person by their deeds and not just what they say. Actions speaker louder than words. Hypocrites use words to signal virtue they don't actually themselves embrace pretending to be something they're not. Good people say and do in harmony. They practice what they preach.
Its a simple thing but an important one. — Benj96
This is more related to our lack of authentic documentation from earlier than about 6000 years ago.
— universeness — Hanover
Slavery existed in the US only 150 years ago, it still exists in parts of the world today, and woman are considered chattel in parts of the world today. I'm not referencing unknown, ancient civilizations. — Hanover
The fact that slavery and misogyny still exist in our world today, should simply enhance your determination to help eradicate both, whenever and wherever it is identified. Do you agree?Unfortunately egalitarianism is s fairly modern invention — Hanover
The American South did not create slavery because they were stupid. — Hanover
In any event, you miss the point terribly. The point was that the role of the majority is irrelevant in determining morality. — Hanover
don't employ scapegoating in any shape or form,
— universeness
Again, you miss the point terribly. You argued that Hitler was an example of a minority will over-ruling majority will, resulting in an evil that wouldn't have existed had he more concerned himself with Germany's will and not his own. — Hanover
(1) you're factually incorrect to assert that Hitler was subjugating the majority because the subjugated (Jews among many others) were a minority, not a majority, and (2) a democracy can be tyrannical. — Hanover
Unfortunately egalitarianism is s fairly modern invention, meaning there was a time in our not so distant past that women were considered men's property. The same holds true for certain races. Caste systems allow subjugation as do religious systems to this day. — Hanover
You are attempting to defend your subjectivist position by arguing that your moral positions are subjective but that they are universal, meaning that they so happen to be moral because of a universal consistency in human preference and thought. — Hanover
The problem with your position is that it is an empirical statement and it is wrong. From nation to nation, culture to culture, time period to time period, there are fundamental distinctions in what is considered right and wrong, including the issue of rape.
What we need to say is rape is wrong, regardless of where it happens, when it happens, or which dictator says it is. That is moral realism and it demands objectivity.
Democracy can legalize slavery. It cannot make it moral. That is the point. — Hanover
Democracy can legalize slavery. It cannot make it moral. That is the point. — Hanover
The Jews were a minority. In any event, why are we counting numbers here? Are you suggesting if we scapegoated a sufficiently few for the common good, then the scapegoating was moral? — Hanover
And so rape would be good if humans so defined it as good? This sounds like subjectivism and subject to the many problems associated with it. — Hanover
Except to the extent they might have an enlightend sense of selfishness, where they feed their narcissistic ego through apparent acts of kindness. That is to say, your focus on the psychological motivation seems less significant than focusing on the intent generally as well as the behavior.
For example, if Hitler's motivation was truly that he thought Aryan supremecy would result in a greater good for the world, he still would have been evil, even though his motivation would include advancement of his community generally, would not be narcissistic under this description, and would be just as evil. — Hanover
Schrodinger intended his cat analogy as a joke. — T Clark
Why would it be my job to determine what Christians' "main tool of judgement" is. Why would I care. — T Clark
I don't think the idea of "evil" is false as such, just not useful. It's not a word I use very often. — T Clark
If 15000 children's deaths can be prevented. And we see all children on the planet as deserving protection. Then it's imperative to try and do so. Otherwise we are just spectators observing bad and good things being done but not actively contributing to it ourselves or worse... Being manipulated by bad people and liars to do their bidding for them unbeknownst to ourselves. — Benj96
No. The evil act is done to the child — 180 Proof
We are fragile, and so we are fearful. And of those whose fragility is exploited and abused, there are some who are destroyed psychologically. One can see it sometimes in the eyes, a deadness, — unenlightened
I think this can end if we can make people less fragile and less afraid.Their strength is to project their own weakness onto the world and punish the world for it. This is hell, because it can never end, and there is no one left to save. Pity the pitiless! — unenlightened
I think this is fundamentally correct but ignorance is not the only reason and ignorance is sometimes not an excuse if you could have easily become aware by just making a little effort.There is a category of harmful actions that we commit out of ignorance, which is seperate from evil.
Then there is a category of harmful actions we knowingly and purposefully commit. That is evil. Such actions are always accompanied by some form of justification, which I regard as self-deceit. — Tzeentch
The evil in me was foul, but I loved it. I loved my own perdition and my own faults, not the things for which I committed wrong, but the wrong itself. — St. Augustine (Confessions Book II, section 4)
You and I agree that evil, to the extent it exists at all, is human. Maybe that's the difference between us - I don't believe there is such a thing. Evil is just something we call the worst human behavior. I've never seen it as a religious thing. — T Clark
No. Self-victimization doesn't make sense. — 180 Proof
That being said, the worst thing a person can do is hurt a child. — T Clark
I think the purpose of human society is to raise and protect children. Why else go to all this trouble? — T Clark
Not common to me. Do you think masochism is an act of evil?"Quick & dirty" is just a common phraase. — 180 Proof
