If ceding territory ends the war (even has only a good chance of doing so) then that's a huge positive. To counter that there'd need to be a massive negative. All you've given thus far to weigh against it is the "punish Putin" argument and the "Ukraine is better than Russia" argument. — Isaac
Yeah, it's a clowncar of absurd self-serving slogans. That's why I only drop in for the occasional disparagement. — ZzzoneiroCosm
In the stomach and the soul. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Censors throughout history — NOS4A2
Whether it's a gun or an ear, the physics of causation is the same. — Michael
If the cells are a part of me, and if sound affects the cells, and if speech is sound, then speech affects me. — Michael
Was the point that Trump isn't responsible for Jan 6? — Tate
It’s nothing like saying that. Do you think mechanical soundwaves convert themselves to nerve impulses? — NOS4A2
We just learned that what words mean and do is solely up to your discretion my dear readers. — Tobias
The US government has a terrible history. Terrible. You acknowledge this.
— Xtrix
Yes. — ssu
waving the "US is bad" flag. — ssu
As to who we should understand the botched and weak to be... If it's some set of human beings - no matter how numerically insignificant a set - then this is an evil teaching. — ZzzoneiroCosm
I think he felt like the botched and the weak stood in the way of humankind's evolution. And literally felt it would benefit humankind to do them in.
Monstrous. — ZzzoneiroCosm
He's a monster. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Any political party suggesting we should infuse our society with deadly weapons to make it safer would be considered morons and immediately lose power. — Baden
And anyone suggesting our government might try to kill us would honestly raise mental health alarm bells. — Baden
You're avoiding any type of discussion. — Tzeentch
Perhaps provide some good reasons why you put all your faith in the United States government. — Tzeentch
America has long been a country of guns. It has not long been a country of school shootings. — Moses
Just put a little bandaid over it and trust that your government won't do it again, eh? — Tzeentch
There's always been a high supply of guns in the US, gun ownership levels are consistent since at least the 1970s; the number of school shootings has increased drastically since the 2010s. Numbers have been very high in recent years. Peak levels. I suspect a mental health crises. — Moses

You bore me. — I like sushi
We can talk about how likely it is for a government to misbehave to where a large part of the citizenry is willing to take up arms against it, but if that were to happen the army isn't going to stop it. — Tzeentch
Well … no. When it comes to homocides the US is WAY ahead. I have actually looked at the stats too you know ;)
True, around 80% of those are gun related — I like sushi
It addresses all that. The US is no more violent, has no more mental illnesses, and has no more crime than other developed countries. And even excluding the US, the same pattern emerges; the more guns there are the more mass shootings there are. Which is fucking obvious. — Michael
This is a philosophy forum so it might be worth considering that the US has a different culture to other cultures around the world.
I am being rational. — I like sushi

it is. — Moses
blaming it all on gun culture is not accurate. — Moses
he showed many red flags. — Moses
we all want these shootings to stop but the enforcement aspect is very very difficult. — Moses
Like I said, what if guns were taken out of circulation yet the degree of violence continued with cases of stabbings that effectively made little difference to the kill count? — I like sushi
My point is why everyone is obsessed with this debate rather than focusing more carefully on what drives someone to kill in the manner they do in the US whilst in other countries this kind of thing is rare. — I like sushi
It is exactly what would stop it. — Tzeentch
Given the actions of governments world-wide over the past few years I would beg to differ. — Tzeentch
All proletarians are wage-laborers, but not all wage-laborers are proletarians. — Moliere
Woah, a pro war puff piece in The Atlantic. What a surprise! — Isaac
bourgeoisie/proletariat and specifically *not* employer/worker. — Moliere
The proletariat are thems who are paid just enough to live and make sure their kids live long enough to become workers themselves and start the process all over again. If you have more than that then even if you have nothing to sell but your labor you're a worker -- but not a proletarian. — Moliere
1. By bourgeoisie is meant the class of modern capitalists, owners of the means of social production and employers of wage labour.
By proletariat, the class of modern wage labourers who, having no means of production of their own, are reduced to selling their labour power in order to live.
