if each parent has two children, the growth rate should stay stagnant. — god must be atheist
When one gives up smoking, or the ghost, who does one give it to? — unenlightened
Are you grateful for these gratuities or not? — 180 Proof
Under many black codes freed men weren't allowed to bear arms, — NOS4A2
I think it is as worthy of questioning as systems of slavery, feudalism, and caste. — Xtrix
But that is not what it means now. — Andrew4Handel
I just love irony. But if they were Conservative values, I question whether Conservative values exist anymore here in God's Favorite Country. — Ciceronianus the White
. . . absurdity and stupidity don't seem, to be a worthy goals of philosophy. — Ciceronianus the White
Crash mass consumption — 180 Proof
What’s as interesting as whether or not this narrative is true (unlikely but possible) is considering who desperately wants it to be true and why. — Baden
ourse Friedman was too clever not to see this — Xtrix
it always allows proponents to claim we need more actions to get closer to that ideal in order to see the promised results — Xtrix
I'd prefer to see much quicker reaction and, ultimately, the overthrowing of corporatism (and capitalism) altogether, in favor of real democracy (i.e., extending to the workplace as well) -- but I'm also a pragmatist. — Xtrix
at or beyond a critical threshold, — 180 Proof
aggregately decoupling the means of consumption from the means of production. — 180 Proof
It feels that the whole internet is now just a bunch of people taking offense at something. — Andrew4Handel
Yes this does make a lot of sense. I suppose that regardless of whether or not the exitance of an object can be "checked" or not, doesn't change the fact that it did exist. — Bradaction
Well, what my question is getting at is what, exactly, is claimed? And before anything can be claimed as stolen, it must first be determined what was stolen. — tim wood
The state is only a consequence of the development of technique (being a technique in itself). — darthbarracuda
We are likely just boringly representative of the clever and the charming. — Baden
It seems as individuals grow more powerless, alignment to states and political parties and ideologies becomes a means of satiating their will to power. — Tzeentch
So, you think those wars for freedom were fought to protect your liberty and not those you disagree with. — T Clark
I don't think you and I are going to get anywhere with this discussion. — T Clark
If you're saying that because others restrict speech we think is valid, we should do the same, I disagree. — T Clark
hat's pretty much the argument used whenever speech is censored by those in power. — T Clark
How can "property," correctly understood, be theft? — tim wood
Never heard of it and I don't think this diminishes me. There are lots of things I don't care know about. — Tom Storm
The main point was me trying to point out that "the West" is basically an ethnic history as well. There is no The West and "ethnic history". — schopenhauer1
after they conquered them and people just "accepted" the way things are. — schopenhauer1
First read the back and forth in the OP, and if you can, rephrase in your mind what you think the main contention is. — schopenhauer1
That Western history is no different than other "ethnic" history. It IS "ethnic" history. And we can argue all day on ethnic vs. national, if you want. When one culture is definitely "different" than another we can talk about ethnic differences for sure.. We can rename it "national policy" if you want. — schopenhauer1
Right, nations with a state.. not nations being violent, that's all. — schopenhauer1
I find it funny that "Western" nations only accept other nations as long as they participated in the idea of "nations with a state" (nationalism) that persisted from the 1600s-1900s. Any peoples outside this time lost their window to do this. Also odd. — schopenhauer1
Not on whether Israel's violence is justified. It's a bit of a dick move to accuse me of that. — schopenhauer1
I still think Israel is justified — schopenhauer1
I mean, ethnicity is more than purely biology.. It's a culture, habits, behaviors, and a way of life. — schopenhauer1