Dark splotches on a computer screen that appear to move. Amazing evidence. — jgill
I think now it's politically correct for authorities to remind that we don't know. Like not jumping to conclusions or so. — ssu
I think I'd respond by saying you're doing counting, which is neither addition nor quaddition. — Moliere
I ask you to add 68+57.
You confidently say "125."
The skeptic asks, "How did you get that answer?" — frank
(2) the kids are significantly more developed conscious beings than the fertilized eggs — Bob Ross
No. It is very clear that drinking is always bad for the child, and the CDC clearly reflects that: https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/fasd/alcohol-use.html#:~:text=There%20is%20no%20known%20safe,exposed%20to%20alcohol%20before%20birth. — Bob Ross
When pregnant:
Eating some junk food should not be illegal.
Drinking should be illegal.
Smoking should be illegal. — Bob Ross
I agree with this sort of legality: if one is pregnant, then they have to consider the child and, thusly, cannot use drugs; and that absolutely should be criminal if they do. — Bob Ross
I agree with this sort of legality: if one is pregnant, then they have to consider the child and, thusly, cannot use drugs; and that absolutely should be criminal if they do. — Bob Ross
My example is absolutely analogous to the principle of which chiknsld explained in their post about people having a right to make their own decisions about their bodies; and, in turn, is going to be analogous to abortion for my conversation with them insofar as I think my example demonstrates an example where that principle is clearly false, which breaks it.
I never claimed that they were equivalent to abortion, but, rather, that they are analogous. You seem to think, and correct me if I am wrong, that for something to be analogous it must be equivalent.
My example is absolutely analogous to the principle of which chiknsld explained in their post about people having a right to make their own decisions about their bodies; and, in turn, is going to be analogous to abortion for my conversation with them insofar as I think my example demonstrates an example where that principle is clearly false, which breaks it. — Bob Ross
Most of what you said, with all due respect, is completely irrelevant and demonstrates a misunderstanding of hypothetical situations. It simply does not matter how frequent the situation occurs in reality: that’s why it is called a hypothetical. — Bob Ross
180 said women should have abortion on demand even in the third trimester, and that it is basically slavery to give the fetus any consideration other than that it can be terminated at will. — ToothyMaw
If the woman’s bodily autonomy totally overrides the rights of the fetus then why isn’t she allowed to drink alcohol while pregnant? — ToothyMaw
Let's say there's just me and a little kid at a pool (and I don't know this kid)(no lifeguards: nothing other than us two). I am dangling my feet in the water and the kid starts drowning in the deep end. I am the only one around that could save this little kid, but I don't want to risk getting an ear infection and since this matter (i.e., the potential ear infection) pertains to my body I think that I have the right to not consent to saving this kid. — Bob Ross
Oh no, his feelings. Poor guy. — NOS4A2
The notion that Trump is pressuring Reffensperger to “find” votes is just another hoax. — NOS4A2
I think what is key in this dilemma is who the worker owes more loyalty: his family or the miner's trade union (another kind of family) — javi2541997
I suspect that many people don't want to lower their standard of living despite the fact that there is evidence/consensus of anthropogenic climate change. — Agree-to-Disagree
I don't know whether he is a rapist or not. But surely your past and present presidents were capable of other terrible things if not worse than rape. — Hailey
Except if you understand these parables you will understand that "the master" is the God of Israel, and therefore the violence is not only approved but it is also a foretelling (or at the very least, a severe warning about what may happen). — Leontiskos
Except if you understand these parables you will understand that "the master" is the God of Israel, and therefore the violence is not only approved but it is also a foretelling (or at the very least, a severe warning about what may happen). — Leontiskos
There is nothing in the text to support your thesis that this event indicates a failure or moment of weakness on Jesus' part. On the contrary. — Leontiskos
Pacifists don't talk this way. — Leontiskos
So then you think it is moral to threaten to do things that you believe to be immoral, which is a difficult thing to maintain. — Leontiskos
It seems to me that at the very least Jesus was a deeply complex figure, and that simple interpretations therefore cannot stand. — Leontiskos
But if you are familiar with the four canonical gospels then you must be aware of when Jesus instructed his disciples to sell their cloaks to buy swords (Luke 22:36); — Leontiskos
" or when Jesus made a whip out of cords to drive the money changers out of the Temple (John 2:15-17)"
; or when Jesus foretells that, "the master of that slave will come on a day when he does not expect him and at an hour that he does not know, and will cut him in pieces, and put him with the unfaithful" (Luke 12:46, NRSV);
or when Jesus, speaking about a grievous sinner, says, "it would be better for him if a great millstone were hung round his neck and he were thrown into the sea."
I find that those who make such claims have almost invariably never read the New Testament. — Leontiskos
Serious question for you: have you ever read the New Testament in its entirety? I find that those who make such claims have almost invariably never read the New Testament. — Leontiskos
If it is enough for a jury, the jury is biased. — Mikie
More no, than yes. We certainly dream or hallucinate our realities. But freewill is real. So the ability to create change anywhere is a matter of awareness.
Anything is possible, and you're both The Architect and Neo from The Matrix trilogy. — Bret Bernhoft
More simply, reality is mind/mental. — Bret Bernhoft