A wage is payed to me for my labor. Do you think it should be payed to someone else? — NOS4A2
I am well aware that roads aren’t free, and I use them because I pay taxes. What I don’t agree to is the coercive and involuntary arrangement. — NOS4A2
I don’t remember the argument but sure I’ll try to defend it. — NOS4A2
I use roads all the time. — NOS4A2
Consider a madman with a gun shooting up a neighborhood. What are your individual chances of being harmed? — tim wood
And of what value that? If both good, then both. — tim wood
Is it an exercise of freedom to increase rather then decrease the chances of that? Or is that again just stupidity? — tim wood
I shall take a lesson from published reports of people, sick with Covid or recovered from it, who wish to God they had gotten vaccinated. — tim wood
Now just wtf is your point? — tim wood
By taxing my income, my property, they confiscate the fruits of my labor. — NOS4A2
I did not request those services. So why should I have to pay for them? — NOS4A2
How did that work out for them in the end? — Kenosha Kid
The options aren't my spawn or no one though: if there's one thing I'm sure of, it's that by the time there's a shortage of humans, it'll be too late anyway. — Kenosha Kid
I am a stepfather to two kids. It pains my parents because I'm an only child myself, but I don't feel like having selfish genes is a good reason to reproduce. If I had none, I would have liked to adopt. — Kenosha Kid
You are suggesting that you are immune from the tribal mentality of the groups you describe and that you have figured out why I'm believing as I am. — Hanover
It might interest you to know that if a meeting is divided into an area with maskers and non-maskers, I'd most certainly be in the non-mask section. I also voted 100% Republican last election, except for the presidential race, which I abstained from. This is just to say that your psychoanalysis is incorrect, your grouping theory is incorrect — Hanover
I've also not suggested telling people they're idiots will help the situation, but I also don't think it will hurt. — Hanover
When did vaccinations participation become a "lifestyle choice"? I take lifestyle choices to be things like what we eat, our forms of recreation, and things that meaningfully affect our day to day lives. If you want to ride a motorcycle without a helmet to feel the wind through your hair and you ride to live and live to ride, that could be characterized as a lifestyle choice, even if it's extremely risky. Whether to spend 5 minutes getting a vaccine isn't a lifestyle choice. I'd call that "getting a vaccination." — Hanover
my question back to you is why do you single out the Covid vaccination as the single vaccine we can avoid and proclaim it's off limits, but as to measles and whooping cough you allow that we can impose these on our children? Why can't I proclaim those vaccines as "lifestyle choices" so that I can take those too outside the purview of societal control? — Hanover
If only the helmetless rider were insulated such that the consequences of his riding were his alone. Then he could cogently argue his "freedom." As to dangers, whatever danger the vaccine presents - and I am unaware of any danger the vaccine itself presents - it is less than miniscule against the real hazard of Covid and its ability to mutate and spread. — tim wood
The effect on other people. — tim wood
if I wear a mask and stand 6 feet away from you, and you wear a mask and stand 6 feet away from me, the chances that I'm going to get the virus from you or you from me is about zero. You have two things going for you. One, you have a mask, which is going to prohibit the virus' small droplets from travelling very far. And two, even if I didn't wear a mask and stand 6 feet away, the odds are also that you wouldn't get it.
The implication being that, if someone is imposing on another, it can still be wrong despite the person being exploited perhaps not minding. I wanted to use a different example than the usual one I use about slavery, but it is similar. A slave who may not know they are being imposed upon unjustly, may not seem to care. This doesn't mean the slaveowner is thus absolved of doing the imposing or should keep persisting. This goes back to what khaled (you) said earlier about the absolute subjective nature of ethics, as I interpreted him/you:
I don’t think “how bad they have it objectively” makes sense. How bad one has it is always a subjective assessment. — schopenhauer1
Subjective at what point in time? Is a summative statement the one that should be used or the in-the-moment?
This leads then to the factors that seem to indicate we shouldn't quite take the summative statement (Scenario 1 and 2)... — schopenhauer1
I think cultural groups are basically self-reinforcing with their social pressures. — schopenhauer1
No, you can't say that is happier, because that is a post-hoc "answer". — schopenhauer1
I find it hard to rationalise how another consumer could help matters. — Kenosha Kid
What say you? — Roger Gregoire
How would you like to be born now — hypericin
The lunatic anti-vax, anti-mask fringe have blood on their hands in this matter. — Wayfarer
Engaging in discussions about the validity of complementary or even contradictory inferences can support an effective response. However, it is not feasible to engage meaningfully within 280 characters or if value judgments are ascribed to only certain positions. Public health means that the consensus view may have blindspots, so we must encourage healthy debate and dialogue. Debate was stifled during covid-19 in the name of fear. We witnessed social media platforms censoring scientific views and positions, only later to rescind those bans (e.g. the lab leak hypothesis). But equally we have seen misinformation proliferate on social media platforms. How to manage, foster, and regulate social media businesses must be part of future disaster planning.
Public health means going on TV and saying that the Governor is failing, not that people are failing. Yet, over and over, we heard experts lament that it was private gatherings and bad people, and not bad systems and weak leadership that failed. The inattention to the structural and network risks including structural racism that increased risks for some and not others is antithetical to public health. Shame-based messaging has no role in a pandemic. — Monica Gandhi, Vinay Prasad, and Stefan Baral writing in the BMJ
At what point should we wait till we decide that safety takes precedence over freedom of choice? — SteveMinjares
They can know it but in a very simple way... It is not the same when you are more mature and can understand it more deeply. — javi2541997
So what do you think is the solution to this and why I am seeing it bad? — javi2541997
The reason for the masks (and eventual possible shutdowns) is to protect the unvaccinated. https://www.yahoo.com/news/nih-director-acknowledges-mask-mandates-141636429.html
That is, the very people hell bent on keeping the economy going and whining about masking are the cause of the interruptions with the economy and the cause for increased masking.
This isn't a right versus left battle. It's an irresponsible/ignorant versus responsible/informed battle, with the former wanting to protect their right to be irrational. — Hanover
Yes, I guess it is positive to teach them what violence is without taboos. — javi2541997
So if we take this from the roots we can avoid conflict situations in the future. — javi2541997
It is not the right way when we see a kid suffering of domestic violence and then say the usual: "let's put him in a psychologist" — javi2541997
children tend to be innocent in these issues and complex aspects. Sometimes they are linving/making violence when they don't truly know what they are doing.
There are cases where children live domestic violence but they don't get the situation until they become older. — javi2541997
We have to develop a better educational system and teach how bad the violence is. — javi2541997
khaled and Isaac same person, slightly different writing style? haha — schopenhauer1
Is the boss wrong in what he is doing? Is he being exploitative of someone's comparative willingness to work? Is this just? Is this too much of an imposition? I would say yes to all of this, EVEN THOUGH the willing-worker doesn't see it as a problem. — schopenhauer1
The interviewer walks away and is satisfied that this is a perfectly accurate self-assessment.. but is it?
There are the immediate phenomenological aspects to life that is the "lived experience" and then there are abstractions of this lived experience, in some remove from daily goings-on. It could be demonstrably shown that humans overestimate their positive experiences when put in the non-usual mode of evaluating their WHOLE life with one sentence. — schopenhauer1
So a person on the fence who is thoughtful might never give the true answer, because then they are the weird "Negative Nancy" or "Debbie Downer" (or put in X pejorative here). — schopenhauer1
People have cognitive biases to distort what their experiences are when recalling them. They become cherry-picked, confused, etc. So sure we can say that in their evaluation they sounded like they were content with the situation, but then not be living the situation they are describing (see Scenario 2). — schopenhauer1
One cannot sensibly talk about those things of which nothing can be said. — Banno
If so, what then is the analogue of that in the realm of epistemic authority, standing next to religion the way capital stands next to the state?
The media, perhaps? Should they be a fourth option in the OP’s question? — Pfhorrest
Some Americans believe the vaccine has a nano tracking device in it. Like, they really believe that. — frank
I think it's because a lot of vaccines do result in herd immunity that a lot of people assumed this would be the case as well. — Benkei
Apparently you haven't met any of them. — frank
I'm not sure which problem you mean. — frank
Nothing about the epidemiology or appropriate responses to covid-19 has been simple. Consequently, perspectives have varied even among highly trained and experienced professionals systematically evaluating the same data. Engaging in discussions about the validity of complementary or even contradictory inferences can support an effective response. However, it is not feasible to engage meaningfully within 280 characters or if value judgments are ascribed to only certain positions. Public health means that the consensus view may have blindspots, so we must encourage healthy debate and dialogue. Debate was stifled during covid-19 in the name of fear. We witnessed social media platforms censoring scientific views and positions, only later to rescind those bans (e.g. the lab leak hypothesis). But equally we have seen misinformation proliferate on social media platforms. How to manage, foster, and regulate social media businesses must be part of future disaster planning...
...Public health means going on TV and saying that the Governor is failing, not that people are failing. Yet, over and over, we heard experts lament that it was private gatherings and bad people, and not bad systems and weak leadership that failed. The inattention to the structural and network risks including structural racism that increased risks for some and not others is antithetical to public health. Shame-based messaging has no role in a pandemic. — Stefan Baral, epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, writing in the BMJ
It becomes almost a religious thing for some people to defy all the medical advice. — frank
Official statements by Pfizer and Moderna at the start of vaccination. — Benkei
So you wouldn't consider, for example, masturbation a moral issue? — baker
Many moral duties are about cultivating good moral sense to protect people from harm later on, they're not necessarily about harm at the time. — Isaac
Outstanding dialogue, you guys. Well done. — Mww
we're well aware of your ideological stance and the resulting confirmation bias. God forbid fact-based decision making. — Benkei
When the vaccines were introduced, they made clear the efficacy against the spread of the disease was not certain. — Benkei
I'm not even sure what you disagree with, as it's almost a truism what I said. — ChatteringMonkey
I say if you don't work, you don't eat. — Book273
Whatever is true 'in the absence of a subject' is by definition unknown. In fact I'm going to call into question that there is a domain of facts that exist in the absence of any subject. — Wayfarer
what you're appealing to as 'objective in the absence of any subject' is just the common-sense view that the world is real independent of any act of observation. — Wayfarer
what is the nature of mathematical reasoning? What of the inner processes of judgement, that we use all the time to arrive at conclusions about the nature of things? I don't see that, and many other facets of reason, as being empirical in nature. — Wayfarer
There is an enormous volume of literature on just these kinds of questions. Many books have been written on it. — Wayfarer
Honestly, hand-on-heart, not trying to be confrontational or condescending, there really is something you're not seeing in this argument. What it takes is a kind of shift of perspective, something like a gestalt shift. — Wayfarer
Surely you don't expect us to all be scientific scholars on every subject and post on a science journal level or shut up. — ChatteringMonkey
Aah right, you are generally distrustful of people making an argument about human nature, promoting a defeatist attitude, put me in that box and thought I deserved a good beat-down. — ChatteringMonkey
as soon as the ice-age came to pass and conditions were such that we could have enough population and density, cultural evolution took off all across the world in multiply isolated locations, and the rest is history. — ChatteringMonkey
