All you’re essentially saying is that he’s good at the manipulation of his base (not the sharpest tools in the shed).
— praxis
All I'm saying is that he won, because he is the sharpest tool in the shed in some important respects. — Jake
I meant Democrats should NOT make climate an identity issue. — DiegoT
The results were zero polyps, zero cancers, all good. — Bitter Crank
Who knew a grouchy old socialist would take the Democratic Party by storm?
I can live in peace while stirring up hornet's nest, but am I accomplishing anything that is worth disturbing the peace of others? — Jake
On one hand, the group needs shared assumptions to hold it together, and such assumptions may be serving a useful purpose even if technically they are not fully logical. Religion comes to mind as an example.
On the other hand, the group also needs to be protected from placing too big of a bet on assumptions which are not aligned with reality. — Jake
Speaking purely philosophically, it seems somewhat questionable that, as philosophers, we should accept the utter wrongness of Nazism as a matter of faith without making any attempt to see all sides of the question. — Jake
↪praxis So you're saying that global warming didn't climb to the top. It was chosen for its emotional appeal on both sides. It feeds the liberal's need to... — frank
How did global warming climb to the top of the pile? — frank
Argument by ridicule is a really pathetic, short-sighted tactic. — unenlightened
I am at having to address his doom mongering nonsense over and over and over and over... — karl stone
The Amish: The group consensus keeps saying that modifying "more is better" is impossible, while blatantly ignoring the real world evidence that some among us have already long ago done so, and continue to do so successfully. While it's very unlikely that we'll all become Amish, what the Amish have proven is that it's possible to have fulfilling human lives without totally surrendering to the dangerous pursuit of more and more and more without limit. — Jake
I think it's a reasonable criticism to take on board and address in relation to my own ideas. It's entirely central to my plan that political and capitalist economic interests see the advantages in this approach - and adopt it voluntarily. There are vast potential benefits unlocked by recognizing the relation between the validity of the knowledge bases of action and the consequences of such action. i.e. knowing what's true and doing what's right - and it's important they do not feel it's a threat to the bottom line - else it just won't happen. — karl stone
Nor does science culture have a superior understanding of reason, given that they are still selling us an outdated "more is better" paradigm from the 19th century in spite of clear compelling evidence (thousands of hydrogen bombs) that we simply aren't ready for more and more power without limit. — Jake
Praxis: You keep trying to have it both ways. You can't claim that they are saying Trump "encourages political violence" but "makes no claim that Trump directly caused the MAGA bomber...." Encourage? That's causation. — LD Saunders
Praxis: Quit assuming nonsense. Jesse Dollamore, or some name like that, just posted a video yesterday from his site about how Trump's speech caused the violence. Numerous news shows say the same thing, as well as numerous articles that have been posted all over the web. The Young Turks, CNN, MSNBC, they all have been saying it, for days. If you are too lazy to find these postings, then that's not my problem, it is yours. — LD Saunders
People tend to abuse all valuable resources and not just knowledge...
— praxis
True, but knowledge is the source of the powers that we abuse. — Jake
At the least we might test ourselves before proceeding to see if we are ready for more power. Can we get rid of nuclear weapons? — Jake
In the past when the scale of powers was modest, we could afford to make mistakes. — Jake
