What constitutes truth anyway? — Jesting Pilate
Statistics say that 25 percent of all internet searches are related to porn. — TaySan
All this unwanted sexual imagery was one of the (many) reasons I quit social media. — TaySan
That, my friend, is a very limiting belief because it prevents you learning anymore from what I have to offer. Everybody (both stupid and smart) has something to teach you that you do not know. — Thinking
I wonder where the Freemasons lie in that picture because I understand that they began in the building trade. It makes me wonder about the whole nature of the symbolic within building design and the imagery underlying traditions, including the esoteric. — Jack Cummins
How do you build the best belief for the most empowered individual? Answer below. — Thinking
I doubt he would have agreed with this statement by Hume, though: — Ciceronianus the White
Not reason itself, but the supression of emotions/passions in search of pure objectivity. — WaterLungs
Which would make it an off-hand conclusion on his part, absent any thoughtful consideration and evidence. He was an unabashed apologist. — Ciceronianus the White
We speak not strictly and philosophically when we talk of the combat of passion and of reason. Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions, and can never pretend to any other office than to serve and obey them. — David Hume
It is possible that you are dreaming the very same experiences that you are now having. — Aoife Jones
Loving your country, culture and people doesn't mean you would have to hate other countries and their people and cultures. — ssu
One can be a thief by virtue of stealing. — SophistiCat
One can be a kind person by virtue of having a kind character. — SophistiCat
These are examples where being who you are is up to your decisions or your character. — SophistiCat
By the way, the "nationalist" community in N.I. is composed of those who historically opposed British colonialism and oppression. Are they the moral equivalent of racists? No. Your analysis, at best, lacks nuance. — Baden
What unites these identification categories is that belonging is, by and large, not up to you. — SophistiCat
But given all that, racism is still the deeper moral insult imo in part for the reasons I've outlined above. — Baden
For the historian, they are pretty much the same thing. From the National Socialists of Hitler, to the famous signs in the UK of my youth "No Blacks, No Irish, no Dogs", to the incident in New Orleans my attention was drawn to recently. — unenlightened
Well, you are just reiterating the received wisdom that unenlightened is questioning. And the question is normative, not anthropological. Racism is just as easy to explain in anthropological terms as nationalism (at least at the just-so story level). But how is it that racism is less acceptable than nationalism or ethnocentrism, when they are so similar? — SophistiCat
George Orwell's wrote a nice essay on this subject: Notes on Nationalism.
"The nationalist not only does not disapprove of atrocities committed by his own side, but he has a remarkable capacity for not even hearing about them."
"Nationalism is not to be confused with patriotism.... Patriotism is of its nature defensive, both militarily and culturally. Nationalism, on the other hand, is inseparable from the desire for power." — Tom Storm
You could generalize 'nationalism' further to any group identifier, including sports team, religious group, hipster groups etc etc... I think we have a need to identify with groups, and will do it regardless. For all the negative that is associated with it, it also motivates and mobilizes to transcend the purely individual/selfish. Doing away with all of it also would imply doing away with some of the positive aspects of it.
So why do we still tolerate Nationalism is a bit like asking why do we still tolerate the rain? Because it will rain regardless of us tolerating it — ChatteringMonkey
nationalism can unite people across a number of different boundaries like race or class. — BitconnectCarlos
It makes sense... It makes no sense — NOS4A2
Why on earth would they do this, — TheMadFool
In this case, accusing the entire royal family is rather unusual don't you think? — TheMadFool
To what end, if not to (set into motion or contribute to some movement to) get said power to behave differently, in such a way said power hurts less (inflicts less suffering) or helps more (enables more enjoyment)? — Pfhorrest
↪unenlightened You're well named. — Bartricks
I do not believe the state is entitled to do anything to us that we would not be justified in doing to each other in the state's absence. So, if there is no state I am still entitled to defend myself against attack, and I am still entitled to keep the food I grew and stop you from taking it from me, and I am still entitled to others keeping up their ends of bargains we've voluntarily entered into, and so on. — Bartricks
First, I have made a case — Bartricks
I make an argument that, say, Xing is immoral. — Bartricks
Even if so, "society" and "state" are not synonyms. — Pfhorrest
another projection from our Dunning-Kruger highlight reel: — 180 Proof
Odd thing is that in Victorian times pink was for boys and blue for girls... — Banno
if there is no state I am still entitled — Bartricks
If you insist on debating the premise anyway, try giving an argument against it instead of just saying the equivalent of "nuh uh" or acting like this is some novel complete nonsense that nobody in their right mind would legitimately defend. — Pfhorrest
I guess I've just always come to the usual conclusions - why should I care what is written in any holy book?
— Tom Storm
In terms of divinely authority, I agree 100%. But the stories are great. — norm
As BitterCrank and 180Proof said, history got us here. The global economic system is blocking any way out, not American neo-nazis. — frank
So I guess you're saying BLM should just shut up and go home because they already lost. — frank
