Yes, sexual debauchery definitely was also in the list. I highly advise you to start by reading this article: http://people.uncw.edu/kozloffm/glubb.pdf — Agustino
Yes it was the harems. — Agustino
What is enjoyable or pleasurable needn't be "good" for a person
— Arkady
In which case it is immoral. Desire for something other than the good is immoral. — Agustino
Kudos to PayPall for cancelling it's operations center plans in NC.
— Bitter Crank
I know this is way off-topic, but for the love of god, people: "its" is for the possessive. "It's" is a contraction of "it is." I give non-native English speakers a bit of a pass on this, but you're from the American Midwest, where English is the lingua franca (sort of). >:o — Arkady
At what point does a political revolutionary, a "patriot", become a "terrorist"? — darthbarracuda
I don't think the liberty of people should be affected, but rather that real justice ought to exist, and people who do such things be punished for it. The problem in the West is that we live in a society which no longer punishes breaking the law properly. Or it punishes the wrong people for the wrong reasons. It punishes the guy who steals a chicken with years in jail, while it leaves the one who steals millions of dollars and causes thousands of people to lose their jobs unpunished. — Agustino
...there no longer exists a code of honor, and social structures do not exist to properly enforce it. That's why we end up with such weak leaders who are unworthy and immoral people. — Agustino
We have a growing middle class — Agustino
The problem with this is that they end up treating people (women for example) as means to an end, instead of ends in themselves, and my whole point is that people are ends in themselves and ought to be treated as such. — Agustino
...Trump is right on this point - there just is no respect for politicians anymore... — Agustino
These are issues that can be resolved by returning to traditional Western virtues. — Agustino
Sexual responsibility and appreciation of human life should be promoted, like they have always been promoted in all healthy societies through human history. — Agustino
The destruction of moral values was the beginning of the collapse of the Roman Empire as well. — Agustino
This woman's right to choose is bullshit. If it's my baby, I have as much of a right to chose whether they are born as the mother does. Exclusive rights for women on this issue why? They can't have the baby without the man, and therefore they can have no exclusive rights over what happens with the baby. If they don't want to have a baby, and if they don't want to take the risk that comes with sex, they shouldn't have sex. It's quite simple. — Agustino
I don't understand why people want to have their cake and eat it too... — Agustino
Respect for gay people (though not unquestioned approaches towards the morality of homosexuality) should also keep being promoted. Gay people, because they are first and foremost human beings, deserve to be respected and treated with dignity. Nevertheless, this does not mean that their moral choices with regards to homosexuality should not be questioned. — Agustino
Regarding gay marriage, I don't understand what's the need for it. — Agustino
As many of you are probably aware, there was a huge data dump/leak/sharing extracted from one of the largest law firms in Panama, which inculcates a huge number of politicians/children-of-rich/rich/divine rulers of world for money laundering. Here's the link. — discoii
the media is completely silent. An hour ago, I went to CNN, MSNBC and Fox news websites and searched for "Panama Papers" and nothing at all came up, (CNN suggested some tourist hotspots when I visit there). — swstephe
We can set up a regression where the actions of this moment were determined by the conditions of the immediate prior moment, and so on. How far into the past? Practically, we can't determine pre-existing conditions very far back, so let's just stick with everything since one's individual conception. [...]
For most of us, most of the time, our behavior is a combination of external determination and internal decision, mixed together somewhat so it isn't crystal clear at any given moment why we are doing what we are doing.
— Bitter Crank
If the argument sketched in your first paragraph is sound, then the claim in your last paragraph (with which I agree) is false. It would rather follow from it that everyone, all of the time, has their behavior entirely determined by conditions outside of their control (since they were conditions that already held prior to the time of their conception). — Pierre-Normand
You must be very privileged if you think that all those things you describe comes without costs or with as much as you purport here. — schopenhauer1
None of the things you so poetically describe there actually come in the idealistic ways in which you convey them in your list (one suggested great moment after another) — schopenhauer1
For every person who has their ideal mate, there is a sad lonely person. — schopenhauer1
Intellectual discovery- I think most of us here value this. — schopenhauer1
Great sex- Well, besides sexually transmitted disease, this comes with the cost similar to love. Some people have a lot of it, some get none or very little. — schopenhauer1
No doubt, your greatest defense for all this is to probably say that the person not experiencing any of these things is just not trying hard enough or is simply not seeing the joy. — schopenhauer1

I mean suffering, not little whiny bitching about having to fill up your gas tank) — darthbarracuda
P4. Producing something worthwhile is itself worthwhile. — Sapientia
? It seems like that life as an end in itself can be asserted, and then one has to stop. "End in itself" can't be proven, can it?"that life in general is an end-in-itself" — Thorongil
It just makes me wonder why you then go on to say that it is perfectly acceptable to force another person to go through these trials, unnecessarily. — darthbarracuda
... they 1.) want a child, 2.) believe deeply that their child will come out fine. — darthbarracuda
The first argument is one of selfishness and desire, one that makes a child out to be an aesthetic object rather than a human being. — darthbarracuda
The Spectator opposed: — jamalrob
↪Bitter Crank I'm picking up what you're putting down. — Shevek
we're much more likely to see our commodities, our property, as extensions of not only our ego but of our self-constructed identities. — Shevek
Edward Bernays, the father of modern public relations, penned the following in his book Propaganda: — Shevek
But let me ask: if it were shown that sympathy for ISIS and Islamic ultra-conservativism were significantly higher among Muslims than among other people, would you want to suppress this fact for fear it would cause bigotry? — jamalrob
There are all sorts of angles here one can look at to determine whether it makes sense to require people to serve all comers. — Hanover

For example, if a baker didn't want to bake a wedding cake with two grooms on it, then the law would protect their right from a lawsuit or other sanction for that discrimination. — Hanover
If you read that research more carefully you'll see that what it shows is that recent Western intervention has opened up space for the spread of terrorist activities that have a special character owing to the historical development of Islamic culture and ideology. — jamalrob
One of the very common alternative narratives has the same effect, structures real events in the same way, and is equally shallow. The idea is that the acts of ISIS, al Qaeda, the Taliban, and Palestinian terrorists are the rage of the oppressed, that the West (and its allies) has made them crazy. It ignores the logic of Islamism and how it fits historically in the specific circumstances of the Middle East. — jamalrob
Whether it's accurate, true, complete bullshit, or whatever doesn't ultimately matter as long as it's captivating, and people are willing to watch it and take it seriously. So that it really depends on your faith in the viewer to decide the quality of the news, in my view. — Wosret
I suggested studies that showed that people's values are not significantly altered by media exposure. — Wosret
