Yes, wholeheartedly I am agreeing. But, I am saying that the moral solution is not to kill the child as some sort of act of mercy, but to heal the parents who make the child's life misery. As I mentioned, the problem is systemic, and authorities being uneducated and ignorant of the causes, unable to discern right from wrong, thereby using their power to oppose true justice, are empowering the evil to thrive upon the world — Serving Zion
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↪iolo
If we are social creatures, it's about propaganda. — schopenhauer1
Yes it is, but obviously the way you think about the word “race” precludes any such distinction. I don’t think of race that way. There are obvious physical differences between humans from different areas of the world, when these physical differences are passed on to offspring they are being passed along by genes. Thats genetics, though maybe not in the same sense you mean.
Anyway, I don’t have much more to add that I didnt say already, so address any of that or do not at your discretion. — DingoJones
I am wondering if others who have lost their religion have found a path out of this sense of loss and underlying chaos and would care to share. — dazed
It doesn’t happen. It’s statism all the way down. Socialism is merely the siren song of despots. — NOS4A2
Right, the worst excesses of socialism was really capitalism. Even if they never quite reached “true socialism”, they did it in its name, and here are the results. — NOS4A2
Look at Korea. The south developed with capitalism, while the north developed with socialism. One is prosperous, the other is impoverished and despotic. The same in west and east Germany. It’s really as simple as that. — NOS4A2
Here is a list of states, both past and current, that claim socialism in their constitutions. Which of these in particular would you says has the accepted the human need as a human right? — NOS4A2
Natural rights can be prevented, including legally, but it's seen as morally wrong to prevent them.
Legal rights can be prevented--physically, for example, but it's illegal to prevent them. — Terrapin Station
↪iolo I'm pointing out there isn't a clear line between various cultures and you reply with "our culture", "our language" and us vs. them and how it shouldn't change: that is a interpretation of culture as monolithic par excellence.
I'm not answering your question because I'm not going to speak for an entire "culture" as to what they should do. That would be hubris. — Benkei
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↪iolo Culture isn't monolithic and certainly not defined by language alone. Western culture overarches several languages. At the same time the culture in my city is distinct from other areas in the Netherlands, which is still Dutch culture. And just look at the history of the development of the guitar (or most any other instrument for that matter) that cultural differences are fluid. Cultures exchange, change, copy and merge over time.
Given how culture has comes about, resistance to cultural change is misplaced. — Benkei
↪iolo Yes I agree about the airbrushing of history, my family comes from Huddersfield by the way, so Yorkshire a region with its own traditions and history. Going back to identity though, we don't have an equivalent to the Eisteddfod, and we can't shut the knobs out, because they come from England (actually I suspect France with William the conqueror). So we're stuck with them. — Punshhh