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Originally posted by C0ckney View Posti too feel strongly that history is best viewed through rose tinted glasses.
Originally posted by Elok View PostOkay, I actually did read all of that post, though it hurts my eyes a little. You might try smaller paragraphs--not less said overall, just break it into smaller bits to be easier on the eyes.
I think you're over-generalizing in many cases, and in some spots I don't even get what you mean; for example, I didn't marry my wife out of career considerations. My big problem at the present is that I don't have a career, or prospects for a career. I suppose you're saying that's the problem, but really a lot of it seems the inevitable consequence of technological progress and increasing education. The world was a lot less complex "back in the day," but that's because back in the day they didn't have computers, airplanes, decent medicine, telecommunications, in many cases indoor plumbing...you can't turn back the clock now, so it seems pointless to complain about it.
Originally posted by Elok View PostThere are actually plenty of people, liberal and conservative, complaining about the impact of "social media" on social behavior. I'm the wrong person to talk to about that, since as an Aspie I rarely socialize in the first place, but I think a lot of the concern is overblown. It's a weird and, to me, baffling way of living to constantly check Facebook status or send text messages, but I haven't read anything indicating that people, young or old, have lost actual social skills as a result. If people feel lonely and electronics aren't doing anything for them, they'll have a face-to-face talk with somebody. If they don't have somebody, they'll find somebody. It might not be a perfect existence, but if rural American life was all that great William Jennings Bryan would never have had a career.
If you don’t think people are changing, ask older people, especially those who work in schools. I’ve been talking to a lot of my old teachers about this, and they say the kids are changing every year. They interact differently and they have shorter attention spans. There are more social outcasts than before, and lots more gamers that have poor social skills. I’ve talked to a counselor that told me she has visibly seen social skills get worse and worse with kids, and she blames messenger and Facebook. I mean look at these forums. We have all these people that go here for their socializing instead of doing it in real life.
Originally posted by Elok View PostI believe this place is so snarky primarily because we're a fairly closed, static community. We get maybe one or two new, active members per year. The rest have been around for a while, we've gone over a lot of the major topics of discussion, and we all pretty much know what everybody thinks. For example, if I criticize the wealthy, DinoDoc will jump down my throat, while mentioning gay marriage will cause BK to appear and tell everyone that gay sex causes cancer of the booty and anyway gay people don't know how to be monogamous. Actually, when BK's active he invariably shuts down any attempt at serious discussion by jacking threads onto his pet issues. That's another reason.
Originally posted by DaShi View PostIt's all about presentation, not substance. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/03/ma...1&ref=magazine
Originally posted by Bugs ****ing Bunny View PostYou quoted my "This is just a jew-baiting away from...." and yet completely failed to grasp the significance.
Originally posted by Cort Haus View PostI read your post, Curtis. All of it.
As C0ckney said, the past isn't quite as wonderful as you paint it. Even Karl Marx recognised that Capitalism was ultimately progressive. That isn't progressive as in people having too much sex - that's progressive in that people live better, healthier, and less painful lives - which they do. Not all people of course. In my city, the 1840's were brutal and horrific for most ordinary folk, which is why Marx, who witnessed it all, thought that something better must follow the capitalism that he saw. What happened is that the pain of early industrialism did eventually create better living conditions.
I'm not saying that there aren't specific problems with the way things are now, but those ancestors of ours would probably swap their lives for ours in an instant, given the opportunity.
But as for your comments on the ancestors, that’s a whole different issue. According to liberal theory, we should be infinitely happier than our ancestors. We have more freedoms and much more in terms of material comforts. We should just be bursting with joy every day. Yet the rate of depression and suicide is appalling in the OECD countries. This is mostly because of religion’s lack of presence in our lives and because the liberal lifestyle is unfulfilling. We’re supposed to pursue happiness for ourselves, but the pursuit of happiness means that we’re pursuing the happiness we don’t have, whether it’s a promotion, a bonus, or that big new house. It is also because we’re accustomed to whatever we are brought up in. We’re used to this environment and it seems normal to us, despite its many comforts.
So yes, if one of us were put into a farming community in 1840, we wouldn’t like it because we’re not tough enough for that kind of work and we’re addicted to our conveniences. But this doesn’t mean that they were worse off than we were. If they were transplanted into our society, I don’t know how they’d react. On the one hand, they would be thankful for its many comforts. But I think they would ultimately find it an unfulfilling lifestyle. They wouldn’t understand why we spend and borrow so much.
The men would have a very difficult time adjusting to the white-collar workplace. They’d be too tough for that kind of work and would probably have to work in a factory or something of the sort. But even then that wouldn’t be as fulfilling to them as working their own land. It’s not like there’s room for the small farmer in this society.
The kids would become accustomed to this society and have a set of problems totally foreign to the parents’ understanding. They probably wouldn’t go to church and they would be rebellious and disrespectful. The girls would be promiscuous and the boys would be weak, and they couldn’t be punished the normal way, since that is considered inhumane in liberal society. They couldn’t be appreciative of what they had since it would be all they’re used to. They would suffer from anxiety and depression and turn to alcoholism and drugs.
There is more to life than freedom and material comforts. This is something that lies outside the liberal philosophy. And the pursuit of happiness, the accumulation of wealth and material possessions is ultimately not a fulfilling lifestyle. This is why I believe that religion keeps resurging in the US despite the fact that it is the most classically liberal country. Especially without much history and a corporate manufactured culture, Americans find this liberal lifestyle very unsatisfying and continue to turn to religion for guidance. So I want a state and a people that don’t buy into liberalism. Of course their quality of life will be higher than their ancestors of the 1940s, we have the technology, but the pursuit of wealth won’t be our goal. We’ll be more than willing to sacrifice the fancy house, clothes, car, and plasma screen TV for our cultural and national goals, whether it’s getting rid of the garbage that’s on TV or fighting terrorists abroad.
Originally posted by DriXnaK View PostI don't think I've ever seen someone write that much before in their posts. I read one sentence and decided I was bored of it already.
Originally posted by Thoth View PostThe phrase you're looking for is "TLDR".
Oh, and you'll all happy to know that I'm starting to go to conservative forums for an audience. It actually has been much less successful than my time here. At least here, a few people are willing to read what you have to say and to have an intelligent discussion with you. I went to one forum called conservativesforum.com. Apparently it's the #1 American conservative forum online. I made a brief post there introducing myself and my beliefs. It wasn't bad at all, although in the last sentence I was a little too opinionated and said you libertarians are too concerned with material comforts to make sacrifices for what's worthwhile. Within 10 minutes I was banned from the forum. I can't even access a single page from the website.
Next I went to conservativecave.com. I introduced myself, asking if I could find any conservatives who don't worship the free market. People were furious. But they were so much less intelligent than the people on this forum. There's a lady who is convinced that only Christian nations 'do well with capitalism' as well as a guy who doesn't think the Scandinavian countries are atheist because they practice viking and norse religion. He's also convinced that all of Japan's economic gains are a result of stealing American technology. A few people told me to go to the Libertarian forums, even though I specifically accused them of being too libertarian. Anyways, if you want some entertainment, just check it out. http://www.conservativecave.com/index.php/topic,49273.0.html
I agree with many of the American conservative's problems with academia. It has an overwhelmingly liberal (and sometimes Marxist) bias, as well as far too much faith in science, progress, and 'rationality' (sometimes the most obvious truths can't be proven by statistics or in an academic study and don't seem rational, but that doesn't mean they aren't true). But man, their anti-intellectualism really gets me down sometimes.Last edited by curtis290; October 5, 2010, 03:45.
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What does that mean? To look ‘something’ read?
http://www.conservativecave.com/index.php/topic,49273.0.html
Nice job. It took 4 pages before any of them figured out you were trolling.Libraries are state sanctioned, so they're technically engaged in privateering. - Felch
I thought we're trying to have a serious discussion? It says serious in the thread title!- Al. B. Sure
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Glad to see Chris found a place that accepts him.“As a lifelong member of the Columbia Business School community, I adhere to the principles of truth, integrity, and respect. I will not lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do.”
"Capitalism ho!"
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Originally posted by Al B. Sure! View PostThis guy claims to be familiar with my postings over the years yet claims that I'm a liberal
Oh and I'm not Black, dude.
However in all seriousness I've seen you implcitly refer to yourself as White and as nonWhite. What is your selfidentification? If I recall right you father is Syrian or Lebanese Arab right?
@Curtis: CC stands for Creative Commons. It lets you pick and choose whcih rights you withold and which you give away to any work registered under it.Last edited by Heraclitus; October 4, 2010, 04:48.Modern man calls walking more quickly in the same direction down the same road “change.”
The world, in the last three hundred years, has not changed except in that sense.
The simple suggestion of a true change scandalizes and terrifies modern man. -Nicolás Gómez Dávila
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Originally posted by curtis290 View PostI believe in a political system that does not worship economic growth or necessarily speedy technological progress for the populace as a whole, so I believe that economic gains can and should be sacrificed for the good of the nation. In such a state, people are tougher and less concerned with the prospects of economic growth…they’re willing to sacrifice not getting that fancy new car if it means new sets of night-vision goggle for a few soldiers.Solomwi is very wise. - Imran Siddiqui
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You could try actually writing something interesting. The current post is utter crap.Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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Originally posted by Heraclitus View Post@Curtis: CC stands for Creative Commons. It lets you pick and choose whcih rights you withold and which you give away to any work registered under it.
Originally posted by Solomwi View PostI believe in a political system that does not worship economic growth or necessarily speedy technological progress for the populace as a whole, so I believe that economic gains can and should be sacrificed for the good of the nation. In such a state, people are tougher and less concerned with the prospects of economic growth…they’re willing to sacrifice getting that fancy new car if it means new sets of night-vision goggles for a few soldiers.
Originally posted by Oerdin View PostYou could try actually writing something interesting. The current post is utter crap.
Oh, and you all should check out the link http://www.conservativecave.com/index.php/topic,49273.0.html. I got banned from the forum without warning or explanation (even after emailing the administrator twice asking why I was banned). Now I can't even access it from my computer. I did leave a last post under davis788 in the introductions section that should be worth reading, but I haven't seen it since I got banned on that computer as well. The right in this country disgusts me. They can't engage in any kind of intellectual discourse and think about big-picture questions. The answer to everything is always lower taxes and smaller government. And if you disagree with them on economic issues, you're not a 'real' conservative and they will ostracize you.
I am a social conservative first and foremost, and I believe in a strong foreign policy. This, in my opinion, makes me a conservative. And just like Republicans from the Bretton Woods era, I have a reasonable view on states and markets. But since I don't buy into their Reaganomics bulls##t I'm not one of them, and even trying to talk about my point of view enrages them. Also, my request for membership was banned at freeconservatives.com and nopc.com, the two other big conservative forums. It's ridiculous. They don't even want to listen to anyone who doesn't think just like them. Atheist libertarians who emphasize individual rights and don't believe in foreign policy are accepted there, as are conservative Christians whose primary concern are social issues. But when you get a social conservative who isn't a total libertarian, he's some kind of heretic. My hope is that the crisis will change their minds.
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Originally posted by curtis290 View PostThis is what I mean. You can't even mention one thing about it? Offer some sort of comment? Something you specifically disagreed with?Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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Check out the last few pages of the thread that curtis linked to:
We're allowing you to remain just for the sheer entertainment of our general membership. I doubt that you'll make it through the weekend.You are in my opinion a troll pretending to be a conservative,you have no rational thought process and that is demonstrated by your random and contradictory outbursts.oh, for heaven's sake. why are we still feeding this guy? every reply he makes increases his google index score because he put his silly little blog URL in his sig.
I quit reading his **** when I saw the phrase "economic egalitarianism". first of all, it's redundant. second of all, it makes it clear that this little princess just had his first few classes in philosophy 101, and suddenly thinks that he understands the world.
somebody needs a hobby. or a girlfriend. or a phukpuppet. but he definitely needs something.
Curtis, out of curiosity, are you from Detroit?"Flutie was better than Kelly, Elway, Esiason and Cunningham." - Ben Kenobi
"I have nothing against Wilson, but he's nowhere near the same calibre of QB as Flutie. Flutie threw for 5k+ yards in the CFL." -Ben Kenobi
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Originally posted by Solomwi View Post12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
Stadtluft Macht Frei
Killing it is the new killing it
Ultima Ratio Regum
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