Hey, I bet you didn't think this was how your thread was going to go? Are you pleased it took this turn? — counterpunch
I always counted it as something we continue to fail at. — Valentinus
You weren't angry? It took you 14 minuets to respond to a post that required no response. You were plenty angry. So, again, do you think that expressing anger is indicative of low EQ? — counterpunch
Isn't being angry is indicative of nervousness more than low EQ? — SpaceDweller
Shawn had every reason to be angry with my post, yet chose not to express it. — counterpunch
Do you think being angry is indicative of low EQ? — counterpunch
Then why don't you like being angry? Do you not deserve to be satisfied? — counterpunch
You must be quite angry and yet have contained yourself. I think it's okay to tell an asshole like me, to go fuck myself. Why didn't you? — counterpunch
Then, yes. It was presumptuous!
lol. — counterpunch
I imagine you've done extensive research on semiotics, and are going to reference Jung or Nabakov. Perhaps throw in some Sassure. This should be interesting. — counterpunch
But would empathy help you navigate through an ethical dilemma? — frank
I think what you're saying is that you think people should be more empathetic. — frank
I always thought empathy was the initial impulse behind ethics. — Tom Storm
Professional ethics is mostly about duty. You should have the courage to be a whistleblower. Don't take kickbacks. That sort of thing. — frank
Can you have ethics without empathy? — Monitor
The word importance implies a moral fact. — Monitor
Perhaps the realization that as a social animal, the lives of other people are important to us. — Monitor
No kidding. Nor do you want to. — Xtrix
But one of the greatest (and easily overlooked) ways of keeping people apart is by encouraging the internalization of "rugged individualism" as an ideal. — Xtrix
I really don't know what you mean by this. Are you describing a reality or are you describing an attitude about the poor? — Xtrix
I don't think you're understanding that quotation.
Martin Luther King isn't say that being poor is individualistic, he's exposing a common attitude taken by those in power: they decry socialism and encourage "rugged individualism." In reality, it's actually the reverse of that -- i.e., what we actually have is socialism for the rich, where they get tax cuts, subsidies, bailouts, and protections, while the poor are told to be rugged individuals who shouldn't be asking for handouts from the "Welfare state." — Xtrix
Who said being poor was "individualistic"? What are you talking about? — Xtrix