The law is the law though and my bias is (to repeat) that I think carrying guns around is not the norm in my life experience (even for police). The US is the US though. — I like sushi
Maybe? It would take only one of the two persons in our example to stop imposing and there'd be no conflict. — Tzeentch
Reason sure is a great councillor. My issue is that most humans seem to lack a propensity for it, and those who desire power (which are those who inevitably come to power) possess it least of all. — Tzeentch
You're not gonna get off scot-free with that metric shit ton you pulled. lol. :smile: — Caldwell
If there is a 'metric shit ton' I guess I can find something, so I'll look. — I like sushi
I found something that basically agreed with what I said — I like sushi
Often such accounts have agendas as people usually have agendas to push especially when the topic involves controversial items such as firearms in the US and protests. — I like sushi
Three teenagers from the indigenous Binjari community recently escaped from one of Australia’s internment facilities, the “Centre for National Resilience”. The authorities had initially rounded them up and interned them, it appears, for the non-crime of being in contact with covid-positive people, not because they carried any virus or posed any sort of threat.
The facility seems a frightening place, to me, especially for children. No visitors, no toys, no care-packages, round the clock confinement, and an ever-present police force—one wonders the point of it all if it is not an exercise in totalitarianism. According to Washington Post correspondent, Robyn Dixon, who was forced to stay there, "the feeling is part trailer camp, part hospital, part prison". At least the good officials there provide propaganda on how to maintain insanity during your internment:
“Tip: Instead of looking at this quarantine as ‘prison,’ try seeing it as a time to get to know yourself again, reflection, media detox and so on.”
No wonder they escaped. According to Obergruppenführer Michael Gunner, “all of them had tested negative for Covid the day before”. So why not just let them go? They had yet to finish their arbitrary sentence. And the threat was so grave that officials determined a police manhunt was required. They set up police checkpoints, checked registrations and car trunks, and scoured the areas until the young people were found.
The penalty is likely to be severe them. Prisoners are subject to fines and extended quarantines if they flout the rules, and all of it "at your own expense".
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/australasia/australia-covid-quarantine-howard-springs-b1967561.html?amp — NOS4A2
If they'd left him alone a tragedy might have been averted. — frank
Yes.
Is the refusal to go around someone who is standing there minding his own business the imposition?
— James Riley
Yes.
Is it the individual, or society that says sidewalks are made for walking, not standing? And if it is society that says it, is that society imposing upon my right to stand my ground?
— James Riley
Societies don't impose. Individuals in that society do. In many instances, it is the societal structure that gives those individuals the power to do so. — Tzeentch
If one lets it turn into one. Sure. — Tzeentch
Whenever one's desires are cast on other individuals, impositions almost always follow. — Tzeentch
What's the source of such a right? — Tzeentch
It's not matter of cardinal order. Unless you want to argue that limiting one's ability to trespass is an imposition. At which point we are using "impose" in an unnatural way in order to support some ideal or dogmatic sense of personal permanent right of way. — Cheshire
Well, the individual was there before society, so who was the first to impose? — Tzeentch
Rittenhouse just barely missed getting a Darwin Award. :grimace: — frank
Does Y need to "beat" X or just restrain X? I'm not arguing that, if the choice was only between banning and not banning, with no other option, that banning would not be preferable. Deletion is another option, which restrains the person, while rejecting the material and not the person. — Janus
Truth need not tip it's hat to BS.
— James Riley
Of course not; that's why I said it should be deleted. — Janus
To me this amounts to " You think you're a man; I'll show you what a man is"; in other words playing the same game in reverse. — Janus
Banning them might just make them double down, which won't be the forum's problem, because they are gone from here, but it may become a greater problem for their partners, family or society. — Janus
So in the Netherlands, they would convict someone of manslaughter for an action that was in direct defense of the defendant's life? — frank
Were I to wield one out on the town, I might just get picked up by the cops. — jorndoe
Toting a shotgun across your back would be equally intimidating. — Hanover
But your idea that the state should violate my rights because someone else is violating another's is absolutely absurd and nonsensical. — NOS4A2
defend another's rights from those who would violate them — NOS4A2
But your idea that the state should violate my rights because someone else is violating another's is absolutely absurd and nonsensical. — NOS4A2
"Why is there something rather than nothing?" was "And if there were nothing? You'd still be complaining!" — Cuthbert
My alternative to a state that violates the rights it purports to protect is a state that doesn’t violate the rights it purports to protect. — NOS4A2
not being American is a hindrance. — Tobias