Why should reason be superior to say, love? — Olivier5
Nietzsche was no idiot and he is basically at the root of Nazism. As an atheist, I think it is tempting to just throw off our Christian tradition, like he tried to do, now that we don't believe in gods anymore, but what do we replace it with? The cult of the leader? Some übermensch delirium?
Christianity had the advantage of protecting the poor and powerless, somewhat. I think that's why it was so popular. To 'come back' to pre-christian paganism would mean very little and would deny this advantage. We absolutely need to keep this aspect of Christianity -- compassion -- as we move on to other creeds. — Olivier5
I am ambivalent about the idea of a pagan revival. The Nazis had this fascination for Siegfried and shit, and look where that led them. — Olivier5
You just failed your language comprehension test :D — I like sushi
Well then, watch Vikings. I believe it's quite well done from a ethnographic standpoint. Of course it's entertainment and not a history book but there's a brave attempt at reconstructing a pagan, nordic worldview in that show. It's based on the sagas about Ragnar Lothbrok and his sons. — Olivier5
No offense, but that was a long time ago.
BTW, I really enjoyed the series Vikings, as well as the Last Kingdom, which is more pro-Brit while Vikings evidently focuses more on the Viking side of things. — Olivier5
The assumption from some here is apparently that, if you're not anglo-saxon, you have no agency whatsoever. — Olivier5
Sweden/Finland joining NATO might even have a positive influence on NATO. — jorndoe
Again, you seem to be simply assuming some kind of threshold. Why is the number of children starving to death acceptable, but the number of children bombed not? — Isaac
So it seems to be a numbers game for you, yet lacking in actual numbers. — Isaac
Exactly what I've been arguing. The intention matters. So the mere fact that Russia have brutally invaded Ukraine is insufficient ground for belief that they have any intention of brutally invading Finland. — Isaac
Just as the fact that the US 'recklessly' (to use your judgement) invaded Iraq is insufficient ground for belief that they have any intention of 'recklessly' invading Finland. — Isaac
All we have by way of intention is that Russia intends to carry out a military response if Finland join NATO. So using intention as your guide, the one thing to avoid would be joining NATO. — Isaac
There is, if anything, better evidence for the opposite effect. — I like sushi
As for effects on IQ there was no conclusive evidence for a positive or a negative effect. — I like sushi
Hey Chris, be aware that people living in very secure conditions often don't care about the risks others are incurring. So take a guy like Streetlight. He lives in Australia. The Ukrainian resistance to Russia may mean a number of things to him, e.g.: 1) high oil prices; and 2) a risk of nuclear war. So from his very secure viewpoint, the Ukrainian resistance is a bad thing, because it may endanger his own security. And Sweden's joining NATO would also be bad for him, for the same reasons.
From his POV, if only those damn Europeans could stop their ridiculous fighting, so that the security of Australians is not endangered and oil prices could go down, now that'd be nice. — Olivier5
No. We are talking about Finland's and Sweden's reasons for trying to join NATO. And I was pointing at the war in Ukraine as proof that Russia can't be trusted to be a good neighbour, thus that Finland and Sweden had good reasons to join NATO. Then you wrote something irrelevant about the US. — Olivier5
Last I checked the Russians were bogged down fighting a fifth-rate power, with GPSs duct taped to the dashboard of their planes, — Streetlight
Joining a club of war criminals whose actions percipitated a deadly war seems like a bad waybto defend yourself. — Streetlight
Oh go have a sop about it cry baby.
You're the advocating the acceleration of Russian antagonism while wearing the hat of 'security'. — Streetlight
From the "mind your manners" to swearing and ad hominems. Well done. — Benkei
I obviously know more than you do which is why you get aggressive without offering any type of argument. — Benkei
Or I could like, not. There is every reason to disrespect a bunch of morons — Streetlight
You don't give a fuck because you don't want to accept the choice you're making is between two evils. — Benkei
It is and you'd be better off not joining NATO and lobby for an independent EU military alliance in which all EU members and their citizens would have a democratic say. — Benkei
And of course it's a great argument for security to think: Russia invaded because of concerns of NATO expansion. In respose, we should expand NATO more. — Streetlight
You underestimate to what extent the US sets NATO's agenda. — Benkei
And breach of air space is something that has been going on for decades. The US does it too. Both countries test response times of fighter jets and radar range. — Benkei
Around 4,000 Iraqi civilians were killed in the first few days of the US invasion, so if we're doing a like-for-like, they beat Russia hands down. — Isaac
You asked a question and I answered it. Now you seem very upset to have had it pointed out that your preferred murderers and rapists are nice enough to leave you alone. — Streetlight
The only reason to prefer a US alliance over a Russian alliance is because the US is our thug. — Benkei
Yeah because you benefit from them doing so elsewhere. — Streetlight
So Olivier5's simplistic argument that because Russia has killed people in Busha it is a threat to Finland is nonsensical. — Isaac
Yes. At one point — Streetlight
Look at what the Americans did in Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan — Isaac
Ought to do? From an ethical standpoint, or from a geopolitical, strategic planning standpoint? Let's assume the latter, as ethical considerations have limited applicability in politics.
From a strategic standpoint, the Russian attempted invasion of Ukraine and the extent of war crimes committed there by their troops is an objective reminder that Russia is a very very dangerous neighbour. Finns have excellent reasons to be concerned, therefore.
If this is agreeable, then the question becomes: is joining NATO likely to improve Finland's security from the obviously significant risk of a potential Russian military operation, or not?
The answer to this question is in my view positive, which is why I do support my own nation's membership in NATO. Being part of it means that Russia cannot attack you without attacking the rest of NATO. It provides very strong security. — Olivier5
As for effects on IQ there was no conclusive evidence for a positive or a negative effect. — I like sushi
Are we our personality? Are we a soul? Are we our brain? What makes the real us? — TiredThinker
Your "core values", whatever those are, and whatever definition you attach to that expression, wouldn't play a role in a situation in which you find yourself in possession of power and opportunity that you could exploit. (Please keep track of the nuances here). While not all in power would usurp it, when some do, that core values would have nothing to do with it. That's why cybersecurity, surveillance, and monitoring are effective means of combating corruption. They (the people in charge of tracking) would give zero credits to your wholesome goodness. — L'éléphant
those who wouldn't are defined by their core values, someone expressing it every day, every moment, someone who lives by their values won't abandon them if given power, merely empower those values as they are an integral part of their identity."not all in power would usurp it"
Muchas gracias señor/señorita for the suggestion.
Would you like to discuss hyperreality? I've come across the idea in connection with the use of psychedelics. It's been described by people who were tripping as "realer than real". That makes it possible that this world we experience as normal people not under the influence of mind-bending drugs is a simulation/illusion; in a sense, with mind-altering drugs, we wake up and catch a glimpse of the real world!
Fascinating, wouldn't you agree? — Agent Smith
We can't tell the difference between reality and illusion. — Agent Smith
What would happen to a nuclear missile that got shot down? — Metaphysician Undercover
No, the lack of agreeing with you is remarkable. again, unless you're claiming yourself to be infallible, then disagreeing with you is not the same as lacking understanding. — Isaac
So you didn't choose the experts you cite? Remarkable! who did choose them then? — Isaac
Which fringe departments would those be? — Isaac
Again, unless your claim is that you are infallible, people disagreeing with you about the fallout is not the same as then naively disregarding it. — Isaac
Yes. Successful negotiation does not rely on the lack of lies (thank God!) otherwise no negotiation would ever take place and the world would be at constant war. All politicians lie. — Isaac
Once more. Disagreeing with you about the difference is not the same as being unable to spot it, unless you are infallible. — Isaac
OK, so there are 41 million Ukrainians. By what means did you come to your conclusion about what they all want? Did you ask all of them? What about future Ukrainians, do they get considered, and if so, by whom? — Isaac
That would confirm that there was a brutal war going on. In what way would that confirm which was the best solution to stop it? — Isaac
Ah yes, the famous 'consensus'. How was it you measured this again? — Isaac
And why would you go with the consensus? Explain to me the mechanism by which a more popular idea is rendered more likely to be right. — Isaac
And you measure people's capacities in that respect how, exactly? Let me guess...is it the extent to which they agree with you? — Isaac
No. I advocate that they surrender to a dictator who wants to secure his regime against foreign interference (and is willing to use brutal force to do so). — Isaac
No. I can't get that into my skull because I disagree. Again, something many experts in the field also do. — Isaac
If you restrict solutions only to those which currently exist, how do you suppose society evolves? — Isaac
You're simply assuming a negotiated settlement would result in Putin having complete control over Ukraine. There's no ground for you to assume that's the only possible outcome. — Isaac
You see why it's difficult to take you seriously? Everything you think is black and white is assumed, without question, to be so, yet you accuse others of black-and-white thinking without even a hint of humility about the hypocrisy inherent there. — Isaac
A perfect summary. Do you actually know what 'nuance' means in this context? You're claiming the 'nuance' - the subtle and complex effects and implications that are not immediately apparent - is the simple, uncomplicated reality you see in front of you. — Isaac
In any situation in which experts disagree, laymen must, at the very least, agree that it is possible to rationally hold one of the viewpoints held by any of the disagreeing experts. — Isaac
Ha! No, unfortunately not. Apparently advocating any strategy other than throwing more Ukrainians under Putin's tanks so we can gloat when he loses, is literally working for the FSB. I've been assured that this is "nuance" (↪Christoffer ). — Isaac
