Coming from somebody who said the fetus is a human but you would personally kill it is asked by the mother.. — Gregory
The mother has rights over her body, not someone else's — Gregory
You do use sophistry. The mother has no right over something that is not her body. Child's body, it's rights. — Gregory
LBC radio got a caller once who had voted for the UK to leave the EU. He cried down the phone (“What have I done to my country?”) because he felt so strongly that he’d made a mistake.
How far from such feelings are advocates for these restrictions and mandates? Do they dare consider what they’ve done? It doesn’t seem so to me. — AJJ
Life must be assumed to have rights. — Gregory
There are no counter rights of the mother. — Gregory
When this is not accepted morality slips into nihilism — Gregory
So there is the sophism. — Gregory
The one and only issue is whether the pre-born should be considered human. — Gregory
It's about what we are willing to respect. — Gregory
You are willing to kill the pre-born even if there might be human rights there. — Gregory
Abortion supporters don't care if there might be rights involved. — Gregory
They want some kind of false liberation in order to be "free". — Gregory
It's ridiculous that you are willing to end a beating heart just because you can't find a logical proof that it is human. — Gregory
There is no logical proof for anything about rights in that way. — Gregory
We come from a family tree of hominids. It's about what we should respect as honorable responsible people. — Gregory
Pro-choice people are like people in free fall trying to grab on to anything they can to keep it going — Gregory
Abortion advocates have trouble defending their positions without resorting to sophism. — Gregory
From a legal stand point this needs to be cleared up. — Rxspence
Consider it: you’re not a good person. — AJJ
I assume you advocate for these policies, so arguably you share some of the blame for these deaths. — AJJ
especially when natural immunity can offer better protection than some vaccines, — NOS4A2
Always consider the possibility that if one is unable to convince others with rational arguments, one's arguments might not be as rational and objective as one thinks. — Tzeentch
Society’s interest is its own continuation — NOS4A2
. And nowhere does it state that we have to mandate people to take a vaccine and deny them access to society if they do not. — NOS4A2
It’s a simple moral decision. — NOS4A2
some individuals are trying to impose their will on other individuals, which is closer to the spirit of war than any defense of fundamental rights. — NOS4A2
Society is composed of individuals. — NOS4A2
The interests of the individual is the interest of society at large. — NOS4A2
. . .no one, including the state, can know what “the interest of society” is. — NOS4A2
That’s what we’re dealing with here: the interest of some group, in this case the interest of the state and those who seek to gain from the exercise of state power. — NOS4A2
For me, I engage them only in the company of a third party or audience, not to persuade them but to expose the falsity of such claims before witnesses and hopefully to provoke others to question prevalent, uninformed gossip, conventional wisdom and stupifying conspiracies. Like a good gadly, I try to plant seeds of doubt in as many heads as the occasion allows. 'Shaming stupidity' (or rodeo clownin' the bulls***) is how I roll online as well as off. :smirk:
Philosophy does not serve the State or the Church, who have other concerns. It serves no established power. The use of philosophy is to sadden. A philosophy that saddens no one, that annoys no one, is not a philosophy. It is useful for harming stupidity, for turning stupidity into something shameful.
— Gilles Deleuze — 180 Proof
According to an article in The Atlantic, the ACLU has come out in favour of COVID Vaccine Mandates: — Wayfarer
Regarding the ninth of November, on the other hand, I think the physical evidence for controlled demolition is completely overwhelming. To even begin to change my mind on that I'd need to see a plausible explanation for the collapse of building 8 minus 1 - office conflagration isn't plausible. — bert1
I don't think this answers the objections I raised about the distinction between the daily life and meta determinism problem. You will still act in such a way that people can choose. — schopenhauer1
I struggle with it because of the stakes. — Xtrix
Right but this just has all the problems with hard determinism. — schopenhauer1
Is it even worth it to engage with these people? — Xtrix
A while ago, wasn't one of the main anti-vaxxer arguments the fact that the FDA hadn't approved the vaccines yet? Funny how they haven't changed their stance...it's almost as if they can't be persuaded by evidence and reason. — Xtrix
Your rights stop when you effect others with your body. — Xtrix
another possible — AJJ
Resources wasted on policing illicit 'sex work' should be repurposed to investigating, breaking-up trafficking networks and prosecuting traffickers-pimps, not only nationally but through international coordination. — 180 Proof
And so I don’t wish to see the driving of cars mandated and it’s reasonable for people to decline using them. — AJJ
Yes, the government doesn’t own anyone’s body. The legitimacy of government authority over someone’s body has never been justified. It’s as simple as that. — NOS4A2
We can’t just surrender that power because, for the time being, it only affects people we disagree with. — NOS4A2
It's dangerous, and the only normal response should be embarrassment and retraction.
Again -- not holding my breath. — Xtrix
Assuming that people should be able to make their own health decisions, should be able to decide what they don’t want to inject into their body, the problem with vaccine mandates is that it forces or coerces people into putting biological agents into their body that they otherwise might not want to. I think parents ought to decide how to protect their children when it comes to vaccination. I don’t think the government should. — NOS4A2