Well that was surely the intended effect of his speech - to demonstrate, to others, how people will interpret 'german idealism' as Nazism (which incidentally isn't alll that different from the actual tale of Nazism, but that's another story.) — csalisbury
But why did he do that? Obviously to be recognized by his online community as a master troll. (That's obvious to me anyway, what do you think?) — csalisbury
I don't think democracy means the people realize their will immediately in the house/senate/congress, but I think the idea is they force the elected body to make compromises. It never works all that well, but it's like that Churchill quote, it's better than the alternative. It's obvious that the people often act against their own interests, and shouldn't simply be able to materialize their ephemeral passions as policy; but it's also obvious that a governing body of enlightened rulers will grow corrupt and decadent if they have no one else to answer too. Democracy is a forced tension between the two groups, I guess. — csalisbury
Local reps wouldn't try to get pork into bills if voting had nothing to do with results. You have to deliver at some level. The whole point, imo, is that everyone tends toward corruption so you have to force government to cater to people. And they do, they cater. Because they're up for re-election. I have no starry-eyed belief that this system works well, or that elected officials cater beyond the bare minimum. I just think it makes a certain antagonism (ppl vs government) internal to the system and I think that's nice, and works better than any other system.there is no connection between voting and what happens in the government.
I don't really get it but I'll chalk it up to just another senile drama queen fag making mountains of molehills — csalisbury
...Especially people who care about strangers
Who care about evil and social injustice...
Do you only care about the bleeding crowd?
How about a needy friend
I need a friend
It became unhealthy — Bitter Crank
The thing to which people object in all of the discourse about isms and phobias is that it retains the raw flavor of youth who have JUST DISCOVERED that bad things happen to good people, (or worse, good things happen to bad people), that life is unfair, that individuals contain a host of contradictory values (and are still good people), etc. etc. etc. — Bitter Crank
I don't know how you would remove those forces antithetical to family without a forceful, planned intervention (as you say, that would be that leftist way of treating things.) — csalisbury
Stop buying trash, stop watching shitty Marvel and Disney movies, cancel your HBO subscription, throw away all of your garbage newspapers, log off of FaceBook, and learn about your traditional music, cooking, and spirituality. Go to church. Read a book. Individuals have to take an interest in culture, and demonstrate that they're no longer interested in its destruction. — The Great Whatever
Cooking? That's a chore. I'll order a takeaway. — Sapientia
In my view Bannon is a symptom of the change in the public discourse. It is more offensive than before.What I'd need to jump on the hang Bannon bandwagon is some real evidence that Bannon has real plans to push forth anti-Jewish policy. In truth, the liberal agenda is far less kind to Israel, and I see that as a real threat to Jews, far more than the evangelicals who fully support Israel but who believe I'm going to straight to hell. All this trying to decipher what goes on in the hearts of politicians isn't real interesting to me. I'm well aware they care only for themselves anyway. My concern is pragmatic. I trust they're all scoundrels regardless of stripe. You don't need to prove that to me. — Hanover
Cooking isn't a chore, it's a cultural art with a rich history that blends culture, personal creativity, and sensuality. — The Great Whatever
To some it's an art, to others it's a chore. You and your cultural snobbery don't get to dictate what it is or isn't to anyone. — Sapientia
Did I ever say I got to? — The Great Whatever
Why are you so defensive? — The Great Whatever
Whether or not you consider it a chore has no bearing on its value as an art. — The Great Whatever
How bizarre to object that one person cannot decide what something is, on grounds that you have another opinion of it. But then, what makes an individual an authority on any subject, and why should individual reactions be the litmus for what is and isn't an art? — The Great Whatever
Your tone was dictatorial. Do this, stop that, throw that away... I think of it as an art, so it's an art, and not a chore... — Sapientia
Because I don't like your attitude, nor what you said, nor the way that you said it. Because I found it objectionable. And because some of what you've said is indirectly about me. — Sapientia
Do you really think that I'm the only person for which it is more of a chore than an art? It's neither one nor the other in any absolute sense. I wouldn't say that cooking is an art, I'd say that there is cooking and then there is the art of cooking. — Sapientia
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