Maybe because there are other factors. :roll: — frank
It seems very safe to stake out the claim that "Prior to the Civil War, most Americans were racist". it's also safe to stake out the claim that Americans were racist after the civil war. — Bitter Crank
The English did not introduce slavery because they were racists. They bought sold, and transported slaves because it was profitable. Slavery is old school -- going back a very long ways. — Bitter Crank
Racism isn't a requirement for developing a slave system. — Bitter Crank
The 3/5 compromise counted the slaves along with whites, just subtracting 40% of their numerical weight. The purpose was to reduce the represented population of the slave-holding states. — Bitter Crank
As to the 3/5s compromise, you need to do some research; — tim wood
Thomas Jefferson, slave owner, probably did not count Sally Hemings as sub-human when he had sex with her. — Bitter Crank
any modern racism, you have to go to some trouble to understand and define the terms. — tim wood
Prior to the 1890s, southern blacks were accumulating wealth and learning how to navigate the political system. — frank
Jim Crow was a violent movement intended to bring that progress to an end and reverse it. — frank
White supremacists believed that the association of whites with black would destroy white culture, so their racism was (is) about what they see as self-preservation. — frank
The southern fascism you refer to only hurt black people. Does that give a hint as to why the rest of the country did not care?
— ZhouBoTong
It's a myth that racism only exists in the southeast. — frank
Prior to the Civil War, most Americans were racist and made no effort to hide it.
— ZhouBoTong
How are we establishing that, exactly?
(I just quoted that because it was the first thing there's an issue with.) — Terrapin Station
the sword of abrupt climate breakdown now looms ever larger as governments are rendered impotent. — xraymike79
. For one, racial segregation was an outgrowth of slavery,
— Echarmion — frank
It wasnt a simple outgrowth from slavery. — frank
It was an outgrowth of anxiety associated with the 1890's economic depression coupled with the failure of southern progressives, socialists, and communists to deliver support to the poverty stricken, leading to the rise of southern demagogues who resorted to race baiting, which led to a violent take-over by white supremacists who passed laws to reduce black votership from 50-70% to 3%. — frank
which led to a violent take-over by white supremacists who passed laws to reduce black votership from 50-70% to 3%. — frank
If the rest if the US had given a fuck while the South descended into fascism, Jim Crow wouldnt have happened. — frank
There weren't slaves in the US 60 years ago.
The claim was that it's connected to slavery. — Terrapin Station
You're taking the claim unreasonably literally. — Echarmion
Kind of like a natural evil of necessity; thus, we survived not in spite of our evil and. violence but because of it. Even our cooperation was for a better hunt and kill. — PoeticUniverse
I did not say that evil was not evil. It is, obviously.
I said that the evils in our evolution are required if we are to not go extinct. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Compare the evil in our extinction with the evils we produce to maintain our evolution and you will see why we have to tolerate the evils that our evolution forces upon us in our seeking the fittest. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
In the way I think, there is no conflict between god and nature/evolution. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
That is why it is true that we live in the best of all possible worlds, given that it is the only possible world. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Yes love fades but what doesn't? A truism that people who enjoy their work are fully aware of. Don't you think? — TheMadFool
If you do what you love, you'll never work a day in your life — Marc Anthony
Yes love fades but what doesn't? — TheMadFool
Our human traits are a product of natural selection, made for surviving and reproducing. If you are unable to survive very long and/or reproduce, now what? How similar are you to that worker ant who loses the queen? What should you do now? — Purple Pond
It's survival of the fit, not the fittest. — Artemis
I can see why they'd do that in Nebraska. Give them a year in college, y'know? — thewonder
From what I know, in the States, you have to be 18 to marry unless you're in Nebraska where you have to be 19. — thewonder
but I honestly can't see how the fuss about it is motivated by anything other than that a person either is or knows some unscrupulous characters. — thewonder
This is false. No state allows 12 year olds to marry. — Hanover
I call it the "realism fetish" and I hate it.
The realism fetish has become more prominent in the last couple decades.
I'm a fan of fiction, of fantasy in its broadest sense. I want to see what people can imagine. If I want realism I can just walk outside and observe. — Terrapin Station
I honeslty suspect for the French petition to have been motivated by a persecution complex on the part of French intellectuals who were unwilling to deal with some of the more lecherous habits of their peers. — thewonder
If you do what you love, you'll never work a day in your life
— Marc Anthony — TheMadFool
What do you think of my reply to Gnostic Christian Bishop? — TheMadFool
God is not let off the hook if one believes in such an imaginary entity. He would have created evolution and would be culpable for that formula being good or evil. Most religious blame us while ignoring that we can only be and do what a god would have put into our natures. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Most religious blame us while ignoring that we can only be and do what a god would have put into our natures. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Hey doc, sounds great. How long does the effect of a dose last? How many years can one stretch out the 100 doses? — Bitter Crank
We all admit that children can't be responsible for their decisions, what makes most adults any better?
— ZhouBoTong
I don't agree with the first part of that — Terrapin Station
Why do you believe that you should be able to decide for others that they shouldn't be allowed to decide to risk and take their own lives this way? — Terrapin Station
Descartes' idea that being omnipotent involves being able to do anything at all.
Imagine a person who can do anything logically possible. Well, that person has a lot of power, to be sure. But they do not have as much as one who can also do the logically impossible. So I think true omnipotence involves the latter. — Bartricks
But God cannot lie, because it goes against his nature. Therefore, that presents a contradiction. A similar example would be the logical possibility of making a mistake – God can’t do this either. — philorelkook
Question: Can an omnipotent being create a stone which he cannot lift?
Answer: SORRY, CANNOT COMPUTE. THE PREMISE DOES NOT CONFORM TO VALID LOGICAL PARAMETERS. — BrianW
This is like a modern twist on the Lysistrata. — StreetlightX
3. Political lesbianism is a viable option for feminism. — Bridget Eagles
1. If feminist, heterosexual women should not make choices that put men in positions of power, then political lesbianism is a viable option for feminism.
2. Feminist, heterosexual women should not make choices that put men in positions of power.
3. Political lesbianism is a viable option for feminism. — Bridget Eagles
I'd have to read more about it, but what did Perdue Pharma do that should make them liable for anything? — Terrapin Station
If they did let physicians know it, then it would be up to physicians to inform their patients, and then it's up to the patients to take the risk or not. — Terrapin Station
But wouldn't it have been pretty soon apparent in the medical community that it's not less addictive? — Terrapin Station
How could an all-loving god allow the sadistically exquisite variety in means of death? — TheMadFool
When misery / tragedy strikes, they argue that they deserve nothing better - this is what they truly always deserve. When they, on the other hand, manage to avoid negative events in their lives, it is always the result of God's "mercy". — Daniel C
I think the POE and free will have more to do with Christianity. — TheMadFool
So yes, I think we are farther away from substantial reform now than we were during Nixon's administration. — Bitter Crank
Conservatives were unhappy about Social Security, Unemployment, and Disability programs (1930s), and challenged the programs in court. — Bitter Crank
However, the US isn't alone in all this. I think a lot of people in other countries have also had very disappointing experiences in the last 50 years. The US isn't an exception to the rest of the world. — Bitter Crank
1. If moral values are my values, then if I value something necessarily it is morally valuable. — Bartricks
And you realize you - you - just insulted me, yes? — Bartricks
I just didn't want you to get too discouraged by the infinite loop of assertions and insults, hidden beneath the occasionally decent argument, that is bartricks. — ZhouBoTong
What I am asking you is very simple. If you were to draw a Venn Diagram of these two sets of things, would they be disjoint, would they overlap somewhat (some items are in both sets, some are only in one or the other), or would they be identical? — EricH
Adequate restorative justice for so much death and damage is difficult to imagine. — Bitter Crank
, which is likely a big part of the "rules" I am referring to.It will probably take a civil war to get from "for profit production" to "for need production". — Bitter Crank
The point of severe retributive justice is to insure that a person committing a capital crime doesn't, and can't, re-offend. — Bitter Crank
For a corporation severe retributive punishment serves the same purpose: to make sure that agents who operated the corporation can not again engage in conspiracies which caused great harm to large numbers of people. — Bitter Crank
One of the teams prosecuting Purdue said that it was essential that the Purdue company be dissolved and the Sackler Family stripped of its wealth. The reason, he said, is that we need to make sure that Purdue and the Sacklers don't just move their operation overseas and continue to do to people in the third world what they have done to people in the United States. — Bitter Crank
The Sacklers / Purdue conducted a particularly cynical operation--NOT in the production of opiates, but in the marketing, promotion, and distribution of Opiates. — Bitter Crank
Sure enough: some "pain clinics" were producing an extraordinary volume of opiate sales. — Bitter Crank
Above board doctors do not normally over-supply patients with opiates, for several reasons. One is that opiates may be used for suicide. Two, the opiates are easy to sell on the street. Three is that patients who take opiates for an extended period of time (needed or not) are likely to be addicted. Fourth, and not the least reason, is for recklessly handing out narcotic Rx a doctor may lose his license to practice.
A fair amount of corruption has to be in place for the drug producer, distributor, clinic, doctor, and druggist to be able to move very large quantities of narcotic drugs. We can rest assured that where opiate overdoses are resulting in sharp increases in ODs, the problem is stacked up several layers deep. — Bitter Crank
Thanks! It's even adaptable to your favorite interpretation:
Pilot wave theory: An invisible river guides the boat.
Many Worlds: There is a boat on each fork of the river.
Copenhagen: There is no river until you launch the boat.
RQM: In your reference frame there is a boat on the river.
QBism: You should believe there is a boat on the river.
Consciousness causes collapse: Your mind creates the river. And the boat.
Instrumentalism: We don't talk about the river. — Andrew M
So are insurance companies. So are distributors. They too should be subject to punishment. — Bitter Crank
Most people who have taken opioids for pain have not experienced such a pleasant effect from the drugs that they return for more, again and again. They stop taking the drugs as soon as pain diminishes. There is a subset of people for whom opioids (and maybe other drugs like nicotine, alcohol...) produce pleasures which they can not resist. They are dead-ringers for addiction. This is not a recently discovered phenomenon. — Bitter Crank
When you mentioned Nuremberg, I heard 'crimes against humanity'. — JosephS
Did Nazi Germany sign onto any treaties that would have supported the sort of penalties they faced? — JosephS
I was hoping that this was going to be a proposal on how we could augment/modify our ex post facto jurisprudence in the wake of monstrous harm. — JosephS
As a thought exercise, what bounds might cordon these retroactive applications of law? — JosephS
For one possible physical picture, consider a river that forks around an island. You could represent the river symbolically as:
River = left fork + right fork — Andrew M
No; this is the very same thread, just in a different place.... — Banno
A couple big problems with it:
* Agnosticism isn't a stance about proof.
* It seems to conflate knowledge and proof.
* It seems ignorant of the fact that empirical claims aren't provable. — Terrapin Station
Agnostic atheism is a term given to agnostic atheists by people outside the group who noticed that the group claim to be agnostics but live their lives as atheists. — TheMadFool
My point is that, as long as there are "things" to learn and do they must be Finite and if you have an infinite amount of time it is categorical that you run out of things, so the only way to not face that problem is to have an infinite capacity and that would make you God. — Filipe
The problem for the OP is how an instrument that is Newtonian can ever prove that some other event is NOT Newtonian in nature. — TheMadFool
I would like to know how can you prove these laws, but not using devices that use the the same laws. — Fernando Rios
We don't have God but we do have a most effective substitute - the CCTV camera. — TheMadFool
Ever heard of the Age of Enlightenment? — Artemis
See this sort of contradicts your other statement suggesting morality is a "subjective opinion." What is it now? Is the Holocaust actually bad or is that just your "opinion"? — Artemis
Here's the real problem with moral relativism (the idea that morality is just "opinions") — Artemis