I think the time has come for all of us to return to constitutional monarchies, with one life-time ruler whose powers are limited by the Constitution, but who is in charge of the country and does not have to worry about losing power as much as rulers do in democracies. — Agustino
Who's judging what is improper?The improper usage of science or scientific claims
Perceived by whom?when the topic is perceived as beyond the scope of scientific inquiry
Who says how much is 'sufficient' and how are they judging this?contexts where there is insufficient empirical evidence to justify a scientific conclusion
What is 'excessive'?an excessive deference to the claims of scientists
What does 'reliable' mean here?the view that science is the only reliable source of knowledge
It is a common stance amongst the secular intelligentsia, — Wayfarer
My view that morality is a matter of preference is not a matter of fact. It is a matter of what is the most useful way of looking at the issue. It's a matter of preference. Yes - I am serious. — T Clark
When I talk about the Moon (or apples, or cats), am I really just talking about a particular mass of particles? There's more to it than that. — Michael
The decimation of Native Americans was a result of diseases accidentally brought from the Old World, they weren't murdered by Whitey. — gurugeorge
Out of our regard to them we gave them two Blankets and an Handkerchief out of the Small Pox Hospital. I hope it will have the desired effect. — William Trent, William Trent's Journal at Fort Pitt
The Indian wars under the government of the United States have been more than 40 in number. They have cost the lives of about 19,000 white men, women and children, including those killed in individual combats, and the lives of about 30,000 Indians. The actual number of killed and wounded Indians must be very much higher than the number given... Fifty percent additional would be a safe estimate. — Census Bureau 1894
Basically, since we're all benefiting from some elements of stolen goods in the past (and that would include the "minorities"), it all pretty much cancels out — gurugeorge
The reality is that all the factors contribute to "actually making" things - capital, ideas, labour, etc. And ideally, they all get paid compensation for the relative non-redundancy of their contribution to the final value of the product. — gurugeorge
Hmm. So you have adopted a moral position and you demand the science must find a way to support it? — apokrisis
As I say, this area was also my specialist subject about 30 years ago (while oddly enough, computer science was where I was focused just before that). — apokrisis
Imported? What do you think all those cheese plants in Wisconsin are for? — Bitter Crank
It clearly seems at present to be a bigger ,more worrisome phenomenon than the presence of a small minority of students who are affiliated with hard right , neo-nazi, white nationalist/supremacist type organizations . — Dachshund
And terrorism, go to the Global Terrorist data base, and you find that worldwide the overwhelming majority of suicide terrorist attacks are committed by Islamic extremist groups". — Dachshund
that different ethnic groups commit crimes at different rates. You can go to the Bureau of Justice Statistics. Look it up on their website. The homicide rate among African-American is about seven or eight times higher than it is among European Americans". — Dachshund
The kind of vocational interest tests of the kind your high school guidance counsellor gave you were given to millions of people, and men and women give different answers to what they wanna do for a living, and how much time they wanna allocate to family versus career and so on. — Dachshund
capitalist societies are better than communist ones. — Dachshund
Hi. I haven't looked into this deeply (disclaimer), but I'm surprised if it's the case that scientific theories include terms like 'self' and 'free will.' — mrcoffee
And what is it that we call a person's 'self'? Can we pin down the word? Do we want to? — mrcoffee
To say "there are evidence-based theories which suggest..." doesn't seem right. Theories don't suggest, they posit. Perhaps you mean 'there is evidence that suggests...'? — Janus
For me, scientific theories are knowledge only in the sense of knowing how, not in the sense of knowing that. The observations that underpin a theory are knowings that, and the actualities that are observed in experiments designed to test the predictions of a theory are knowings that. — Janus
You are trying to impose a law that is useless. — charleton
It's discrimination for the sake of it. — charleton
If every single person who was mentally ill, incapable of rational choice, or with any significant mental disability it would make no difference to the outcome of any election, as they are few in number and have a limited choice in candidates.
Unless you are trying to disallow millions of voters what is the point of discriminating against the most vulnerable people in society? — charleton
I assume that you too have an age limit in mind though? One that is not completely arbitrary? — charleton
There is a key difference between age and mental capacity which makes your analogy false. Age is wholly a linear spectrum where we have a clear case of growing capability. The same cannot be said of "mental disabilities" — charleton
The idea that you would give insult to (maybe) millions of people to prevent them voting is horrific. — charleton
I'm not saying that. What I would suggest is that even the mentally ill have political interests, and their voice is as valid as any one else. — charleton
Passing a test with all its problems is not a valid way to disenfranchise people. — charleton
The only qualification has to be the ability to register, and choose. — charleton
And you believe in God? — Agustino
Oh for crying out loud, this is just PC cult indoctrination. — gurugeorge
in fact most investments of capital fail, — gurugeorge
if you trace it back to its origins, it's some form of original acquisition out of the state of nature. — gurugeorge
wealth mostly comes either from the fiat creation of currency (which is basically a kind of legalized Ponzi scheme) or by people transforming things from less preferred to more preferred uses (which is the normal process of capitalism). — gurugeorge