I didn’t think it was funny really. I did find the comment about contacting the FBI funny though — I like sushi
I don’t think things are any different now to any other time (speaking quite generally of course!). Outrage must necessarily go hand-in-hand with what is deemed “funny” or “tasteless”. Comedy I believe, works at its premium when both the “jovial” and the “tasteless” combine creating what I can only describe in brief as an inner-jolt brings the most horrendous ideas into safe realm where we can see ourself, through others, a most peculiar and ridiculous nature that both humiliates and informs; meaning the shock of the unexpected narrative presents confusion and we laugh because of the conflict and this seems to present something akin to a sense of priming ourselves for “exploration”? — I like sushi
As for Comedy and Tragedy it is easy enough to tell the difference. Comedy he framed as being, roughly speaking, “bad things happening to bad people” and Tragedy as being “bad things happening to undeserving/‘good’ people”. — I like sushi
I feel maybe that this thread is focused more on what is or isn’t “offensive” rather than the underlying nature of “Comedy”. — I like sushi
Of course I mention this due to dipping in and out of different ideas and perspectives on Aristotle’s “Poetics,” literary critique, psychological and neurological research, and Nietzsche’s work related to this area. What has grabbed by attention lately is the argument around what Aristotle meant by “Kartharsis”. — I like sushi
The sponge joke was moderately funny. I thought the Julius Caesar joke was not funny. Not offensive, just not funny.
I prefer things like The Soup Nazi from Seinfeld. Or, The Dingo Ate Yo Baby. — Bitter Crank
You have a positive, upbeat view of the future. Hang on to that. — Bitter Crank
Anyway, that's probably what you meant by thinking crazy -- following your dreams. — Bitter Crank
And, just for your information, not all old people are thinking sanely. Some of us are stark raving mad. Crazy young people and insane old people are an unhealthy combo. — Bitter Crank
For that reason, such jokes are usually shared only among very close friends who know their audience and know one another's true opinions. It's entirely different to tell an insensitive joke in private where you respect the sensitivities of those who might be offended as opposed to insisting that you have the right to say whatever you want to whoever you want. — Hanover
I was looking for a specific joke, not a generalization so that I could see if I would laugh or not. I'm not particularly sensitive, so if I didn't think it was funny, maybe it wasn't. I don't know really because you've not shared the joke. — Hanover
An AIDS joke isn't really funny to those who've watched their friends buried, a 9/11 joke isn't really funny for those New Yorkers who once worked in the Twin Towers, and the Vietnam War isn't funny to those who can't hold onto any relationships. — Hanover
For the record, I was born in 1966, which makes me one of the first citizens of Gen X. As one of its eldest statesmen, I can say that it is was and remains the finest generation. It was the last generation that considered tattoos only acceptable for those who once served in the military, lived in trailer parks, or served time in prison. When I was born, as the record reveals, the world was in black and white. Today we have cell phones and pornography availability previously unimaginable. The transition has been flawless for my generation of survivors. We are also the funniest and best looking generation, each and every one of more clever than the rest. My accession to moderator on this forum is precisely the type of success my generation has come to expect. — Hanover
There is no alternative to eventual death. You are a young man and you are thinking about what great accomplishments you can achieve. That is the way you should be now. Soon enough life grinds down our idealism, our aspirations, our hopes and dreams. Don't despair -- that is how we get from rough to smooth and polished. With any luck, you will become a brilliant gem before you exit. — Bitter Crank
I really don't know what you're talking about with this observation. — Hanover
First, regardless of Kennedy's political affiliations, the fact that she is a public figure in today's extremely polarized social climate means that she is going to be exposed to some scary, violent and threatening comments. If it were you regularly receiving legitimately threatening messages from some unbalanced-sounding individuals, how would you react? I assume with caution, Even if you knew that most of them were not to be taken seriously, could you afford not to be on your guard? — Joshs
Unfettered desires are a voracious malignancy which can kill us off before we come close to satisfaction. — Bitter Crank
I agree in part with the idea that warm memories of days gone by are often romanticized, but I don't agree that they can be dismissed as entirely false. Some good things are lost and not all progress is good. To say otherwise suggests a perfect world where evolution constantly corrects, and that simply is not so. — Hanover
Whenever people start talking about "the good old days" I have to ask, would this have been taken as a funny joke if it was a letter mailed to some 51-year-old woman in the 19th or 20th century? I would figure, probably not. Why do you think differently? — Judaka
As an old man, I am very offended by jokes that are not funny. I want to hear politically incorrect jokes that have a decided improper edge to them. — Bitter Crank
Don't wait till you are rich enough to retire. All us fascinating geriatric storehouses of knowledge, hilarious sarcasm, wisdom, and so forth will be dead. Better start doing it now. — Bitter Crank
The only reason I would ever get offended is if the joke is not really funny (I have the Jerry Seinfeld sensibilities). The more potentially offensive a joke is, the funnier it needs to be in order to be justified. This copypasta is a good example. It is BARELY funny. So if 1 out of 100 people might take it seriously, it not even close to worth it. Notice what most people find funny is the idea that "this 51 year old lady is so dumb and out of touch that she actually thinks NAVY seals are on their way to kill her". So are we laughing at her for being stupid or fearing for her life? Either way, I think even the worst sitcom is funnier.
Uh oh, I might sound like an old person. Haha. — ZhouBoTong
It's also obvious from this woman's claims that she's not a reasonable person to be taking her as representative of either old people or 51-year-old women. One of her posts in the thread reads "I said online radicalisation of angry white men had to stop". Based on that and the fact that she's taking a copypasta so seriously, I think it's fair to say she fits the extreme leftist stereotype and for them, getting offended over nothing is basically a political position. — Judaka
I'm not sure whether sending copypasta death threats to political speakers should really be taken as a joke or not but the overreaction is more typical of leftists than old people and I think that's what's going on here. — Judaka
All for the chicks and the money. — Hanover
Do you believe everyone has faith or am I just being ridiculous? — OpinionsMatter
Edit: but to understand the symbol you need to have background knowledge. So it can only travel around in a specific environment and die outside of it. — Brett
Initially a meme does seem to be just an idea, but then it’s also regarded as carrying besides ideas, behaviour, style, symbols and practices. But then is a symbol just a metaphor for an idea? Which it may very well be, and that’s it’s advantage and power. — Brett
I think history can illustrate my point better. Take calculus for example. Both Leibniz and Newton developed the idea independent of each other. There was a huge controversy on the invention of calculus precisely because people had the notion of memes back then. People thought calculus had a origin and then caused an infection. It turns out that this wasn't the case. Both Newton and Liebniz had little idea what the other was doing. What do you think of memes now? — TheMadFool
Do you believe that children should have legal access to military grade weapons such as machine guns, rocket launchers, surface to air missiles etc? How about adult civilians? — Jake
human ability to manage power is limited. — Jake
It's not just weapons, but any power of sufficient scale to crash civilization. And yes, it matters. The more powers of such scale which are in play, the greater the chance that one of them will slip from our control. — Jake
The President can order a massive strike without consulting with anybody. A single person who has lost their mind a single time, game over. — Jake
Luck. Forgive the pun, but it's a game of Russian roulette. The argument of the group consensus (which you are articulating well) is that the bullet chamber has always been empty before, so it will always be empty in the future too. But that's not how Russian roulette works, and not how reality works either. — Jake
Sorry, but you appear to know nothing about the training that launch officers get. I heard a story on NPR just a few days ago about a launch officer who merely asked "who double checks the president?" and he was drummed out of the service and is now driving a truck for living. The whole MAD system demands on each side having high confidence the other side will launch. Anybody who shows a hit of doubt is shown the door. — Jake
And yet the airways are filled to overflowing with endless worry about a billion smaller things. — Jake
What I'm asking readers to focus on is that the knowledge explosion feeds back upon itself, and thus is accelerating. So what we'll see going forward are ever greater powers coming online at an ever faster pace. If we were to plot that line on a graph against the plodding incremental (at best) development of human wisdom and maturity we see the two lines diverging at an accelerating rate. — Jake
That's true, but you might want to read up on how many times these systems have come within an inch of failure. As just one example, during the Carter Administration somebody mistakenly inserted a training tape in to the NORAD early warning system which caused the generals to call the National Security Advisor to tell him that a Russian first strike was underway. One could write a book full of other examples. — Jake
However, the system obviously does work most of the time. What you're not getting is that this is not good enough, and powers of such vast scale require a record of perfection. A single failure of a single such power a single time is sufficient to crash the system, making all the many beneficial accomplishments of the knowledge explosion largely irrelevant. That is, the very long era when we could make mistakes, learn from them, and try again.... is over. It's not the 19th century anymore. — Jake
The technology races ahead at breakneck speed while our philosophy creeps along at it's usual glacial pace, falling ever farther behind. The fact that most people including national leaders running for President are bored by nuclear weapons should prove beyond any doubt that we simply aren't ready for the scale of powers the knowledge explosion will generate. — Jake
So as we harvest the many benefits of ever more powerful technology we should keep in mind that as we do so we are traveling ever deeper in to a new era which won't be as forgiving as the past. — Jake
Are you doubting here, or saying it might? — Brett
But, um, it would be we the insane who would be doing the engineering. — Jake
In any case, notice the entire emphasis on 'mastery' and 'control' of nature - as befits a technological culture. But what is lost in all of this are the original questions of philosophy, which are not instrumental or technological in nature, but are concerned with the question of meaning, in the largest sense. But that kind of questioning is almost unknown in our technological culture, so much so that the question itself is no longer even understood. — Wayfarer
Because I’m not sure if everyone’s desires are good for everyone else. It may also be unrealistic to expect all your desires to be fulfilled and lead to problems down the road for others. — Brett
I don’t know if I can agree with the idea about all ideas being healthy. Yes in a healthy individual, but otherwise trouble.
8h — Brett
Not all of our desires are healthy, nor should all of them be realised. — Brett
Technology can realise the most powerful, influential and possibly destructive forces we can imagine. The atomic bomb served what desire in who? — Brett
So I have to think about whether technology can create a desire that wasn’t there in the first place. — Brett
Yes. My father never desired a mobile phone. — Brett
That's because we have only had two or three hundred years to accomplish the task of our self-destruction (compliments of the massive cheap energy of fossil fuels which are now becoming less and less cheap to access). Hopefully we can pull back before it is too late; but I don't think it's looking too promising. — Janus
True they cause disasters for us; but it is we who are causing greater disasters for ourselves as well as the rest of nature on this planet at least. — Janus
That’s not a definition. :razz: — Noah Te Stroete
Here is where the true nature of your (and when I say 'your' I am also referring, by implication, to the collective we) ignorance is so beautifully and ironically betrayed. Yes, if we destroy ourselves it will be because we weren't smart enough; because we thought that our place in nature is determined by ourselves. — Janus
But you said that you (by which I assumed you meant the collective 'we') understood everything about dirt, which would seem to be a contradiction. Or were you talking just about yourself? If so, are you a soils scientist or something like that? — Janus
We don't manipulate the laws of nature: at best we manipulate natural materials in accordance with our understanding of the laws governing their behavior. — Janus
The point is that understanding the behavior of natural materials, the small picture, does not give us the big ecological picture regarding our place in nature, and the inevitable consequences of our over-exploitative manipulations. — Janus
If you think it is possible to "understand everything about something" or "know all the properties of dirt" or that you can, without consequences "do anything I wish with the dirt as long as it can be done with the dirt" it shows how little you understand nature, not to speak of possessing mastery of it, and I think you are unknowingly in line for a very rude shock. — Janus
Let's try this. Perhaps you could summarize what you think my argument is. If you wish. Or we could forget it and move on. Agree to that too. — Jake