However, Individual-1 is a proven traitor and so it's incumbent on the +81 million of us who weren't brain-dead enough to have voted in 2020 to reelect this malfeasant venal man-baby to make an "unprecedented" example of him. :victory: :mask:
FYI – I'm (we're) waiting on pending indictments to drop in (one at least before the midterm elections in November)
• Federal DoJ investigation of "2020 fake electors conspiracy"
• Federal DoJ investigation of "2020-2021 J6 insurrection conspiracy and obstruction of justice"
• Fulton County, GA DA's investigation of "2020 suborning election fraud & fake electors conspiracy"
• (pending) New York State AG investigation of "2002-2016 tax, insurance, bank, etc fraud ..." for which Individual-1 & co are currently being civilly sued by the NYS AG
• Federal DoJ investigation of "2021-2022 espionage, obstruction of justice, etc ..."
• (so far – stay tuned!)
— 2022-23 Trumpster fire
as well as release (leak) of Putin's Bitch's embarrassing & damning tax returns – also (I hope) before the midterm elections – along with the J6 Select Committee's Preliminary Report. — 180 Proof
Based on what? I still see Republicans defending him or arguing that prosecuting him could lead to violence, which in bait-speak is saying people should riot if Trump is prosecuted — Benkei
Is there any real interest to do anything about Trump — baker
Why the colossal failure of the US justice system and the American public in general? — baker
But if Trump will in fact face punishment (including jail time), what does that mean for America?
A civil war, for sure. — baker
Sure. Since I've been here, it's pretty much Bartricks insisting the mind is indivisible and ignoring all criticisms of his arguments, all the while insisting that others don't actually read books, etc. It's a sit-com where watching any episode prepares you for all the others. Variations on a theme. — Pie
My contention is quite simple: My mind is distinct from yours but that means there are at least 2 minds which shouldn't be possible if mind is indivisible. — Agent Smith
My contention is quite simple: My mind is distinct from yours but that means there are at least 2 minds which shouldn't be possible if mind is indivisible. — Agent Smith
What exactly do you mean when you say the mind is divisible and also indivisible? I get that in one way it is and in another way it isn't. How exactly? Danke in advance. — Agent Smith
I'm not sure if I follow. Speaking for myself, if the mind is divisible in any way at all, and you claim it is from a "mind perspective", then that's it, the debate comes to an end then and there. — Agent Smith
What's the end game, if we were to grant you the indivisibility of mind ? Do you turn the crank on your logic machine until God pops out? — Pie
The conclusion follows as a matter of logic.
Sorry if the conclusion is inconvenient, but there you go - the truth sometimes is. — Bartricks
How are you addressing anything I said? Why am I writing posts explaining my argument again and again and again, when you don't seem to be able to address it? — Bartricks
If you really are published on this, then tell us the title of your book or article — Janus
Perhaps we should distinguish between a sense of human entitlement (lords and masters, gifted this garden by god) from the adoption of norms governing claims (we ought to be rational). — Pie
Conservatives are (in my experience) less likely to care about the treatment of pigs and chickens. That's anecdotal, and I'm willing to adjust my prejudice. I connect this more generally to a conservative reluctance to see the human species as continuous with the rest of the animal kingdom. In practical terms, this might manifest as a resentment of protections of an endangered species, if they interfere with profit. — Pie
the largely Christian notion of humanity as masters of nature — Janus
I think that from the existential situation it's enough to say that it doesn't matter if its relative or universal -- the choice remains. It's because freedom is forced on us by our very existence that we find these questions. — Moliere
I think even here that Nietzsche could say the same -- let the philosophers have their truth in their academies where they commune with the forms. No one is moved by these thoughts anymore -- objective or subjective, humans desire and do things from desire. — Moliere
No moral law or form could possibly hold sway, except on a small individual basis or, in the case of communities, with the use of violence.
Being moral must include not just recognition of the existence of competing needs but a commitment to satisfying the needs of the other as well as oneself. — Banno
He's continuing to delete perfectly normal posts of mine. What the heck? — Tate
The world is unpredictable and the human world is radically unpredictable, and folks can make a case for lying, for torture, for war, and all manner of things that in themselves have objective negative value, but might possibly have positive consequences. — unenlightened
But I don't see how good and bad can exist independent of the shared personal preferences of a community. — Yohan
[....]because God does not exist on high, will also not exist -- so why bother, if you're not immortal, to live with a code for a world that doesn't exist, that will not exist, and is even counter to the type of being you are? — Moliere
As it is, baseless subjectivity is the defect being explored. Dedication to principles for a kingdom of ends that will eventually be is one way human beings carry on, ethically -- they even convince themselves that if they repeat certain patterns to themselves that they have contact with Forms or Eternal Good or something. We're an odd, irrational species. — Moliere
But it's not a satisfying one, from what I can see. Who even understands it but a handful of nerds who like to read? — Moliere
Moral reason generally has no middle ground and makes no exceptions outside the case of an ethical dilemma. — Merkwurdichliebe
Now, do you think that moral reasons are grounded in self-interest or not? — Bartricks
I dunno how courts calculates damages that have to be paid to the wronged party. — Agent Smith
For the sake of amusement — Ennui Elucidator
one of the marks of a moral reason is that it is grounded in interests other than one's own. — Bartricks
If i have reason to do something due to it serving some of my ends, then we describe that reason as an instrumental or practical reason, not a moral reason. — Moliere
The point is just that when the ground of the reason for action is some consideration that is not to do with one's self - not to do with promoting one's own interests - it can qualify as a moral reason. — Moliere
If you'd taken the trouble to read what I said on the subject, then you'd know that I do not know what an 'existential ethics' is.
But anyway, my point - whether you're interested in it or not - is that one of the marks of a moral reason is that it is grounded in interests other than one's own.
Make of that what you will. — Bartricks
"Flatter" me, Merkwurdichliebe, and show me where this conception goes wrong — 180 Proof
When an agent seeks to help her own welfare by helping, harming or ignoring the welfare of another, the agent does so by instrumental reasoning.
When an agent seeks to help the welfare of another whether or not her own welfare is helped, the agent does so by moral reasoning.
Why did you say 'exactly'? I was correcting you. You think moral reasons 'are' instrumental reasons. They're not. — Bartricks