Okay, but how many of those suicidal tendencies are caused by shame over Sarah Palin?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
I'm not sure one should dismiss God anymore
Collapse
X
-
-
Originally posted by Kitschum View PostThe suicide rate in Scandinavia isn't that different from Canada and US.
Sweden: 13.2
Canada: 11.6
Norway: 11.4
US: 11.1
Denmark: 10.6
When the allegedly high suicide rate in Scandinavia has been brought up I've heard it explained as an artifact of how the statistics are recorded. Suicide is considered to be shameful in some cultures, so in some countries suicides aren't/weren't recorded correctly. I can't vouch for that but it seems plausible.
Edit: And the darkness. The eternaaaaall darkkkknessssss consuuuuumessss meeeOriginally posted by Kitschum View PostOh sh but look at this. It seems Alaska's suicide rate is kind of high after all! Alaskans kill themselves at double the rate of Swedes.
http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_7584821
So tell me again, why do so many people in the OECD countries suffer from depression and commit suicide? Since they have more political freedoms and a much higher quality of life than their predecessors, why have these things become commonplace? Suicides used to be extremely isolated incidents, yet now they happen all of the time. According to liberal theory and its notions of "progress" we should be jumping up and down for joy, shouldn't we? Since we have many more consumer goods available to us than our parents, grandparents, and great grandparents, and their ancestors? Since we have more political freedoms? Seems like a blatant contradiction to me.
It's because they've lost God, community, and values, and only have the market and the drive to make more money. It is just a poor way to live, no matter the freedoms it offers or the material comforts it provides.
Comment
-
Originally posted by curtis290 View PostPoint taken. Why then are people committing suicides in these places despite their comfortable lives? They didn't before. I bet if we look at suicide statistics, we'll find that they aren't recorded before a certain (relatively recent) date, because suicide is a relatively new phenomenon. Of course it's always been around, but never has it been this popular.Last edited by giblets; October 21, 2010, 09:53.
Comment
-
Yeah, people used to have more class and "die of melancholy."
Comment
-
Originally posted by gribbler View PostSo, I guess since infant mortality statistics have only existed for a relatively short period, infant mortality is a relatively new phenomenon?Originally posted by Elok View PostYeah, people used to have more class and "die of melancholy."
But none of you have really answered my argument. If we have all of these great individual rights and so many material comforts, more than ever before in history, how could suicide and depression be so prevalent? Shouldn't we all be jumping for joy that our lives are so great?
And how many religious people commit suicide? How many suffer from depression? Countless psychological studies have shown that religious people tend to have a greater sense of well-being than the non-religious. And why do people continue to become religious in the face of modernization (contrary to what most thought several decades ago)? It's because the modern, liberal lifestyle lacks meaning (maximize your wealth/happiness until you die), and religion continues to serve a vital role in providing people with a sense of meaning, morality, and community in their lives. These are basic, fundamental human needs, common sense and philosophy show that this is obvious. Yet these things aren't easily quantified or empirically proven and they don't fit into the liberal conception of society based on contract-making individuals, maximizing their wealth/happiness, so liberals just don't get it.
Comment
-
Originally posted by curtis290 View PostThey didn't take suicide statistics because it wasn't common. It's a poor analogy. We obviously know that infant mortality rates were high before modern medicine. And we know that suicide was much rarer then than it was now.
But none of you have really answered my argument. If we have all of these great individual rights and so many material comforts, more than ever before in history, how could suicide and depression be so prevalent? Shouldn't we all be jumping for joy that our lives are so great?
And how many religious people commit suicide? How many suffer from depression? Countless psychological studies have shown that religious people tend to have a greater sense of well-being than the non-religious. And why do people continue to become religious in the face of modernization (contrary to what most thought several decades ago)? It's because the modern, liberal lifestyle lacks meaning (maximize your wealth/happiness until you die), and religion continues to serve a vital role in providing people with a sense of meaning, morality, and community in their lives. These are basic, fundamental human needs, common sense and philosophy show that this is obvious. Yet these things aren't easily quantified or empirically proven and they don't fit into the liberal conception of society based on contract-making individuals, maximizing their wealth/happiness, so liberals just don't get it.
And hell, if people feel better if they're religious, and a large number of people choose to be religious if they have the right to make a choice, how is that not just another example of individuals maximizing their wealth/happiness? And why should people who like religion have a problem with a society based on contract-making individuals maximizing their happiness, as long as they're free to practice their religion of choice?
Comment
-
Originally posted by curtis290 View PostThey didn't take suicide statistics because it wasn't common. It's a poor analogy. We obviously know that infant mortality rates were high before modern medicine. And we know that suicide was much rarer then than it was now.One day Canada will rule the world, and then we'll all be sorry.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Elok View PostI always took fear to mean the entirely sensible fear one feels in the face of something enormous, powerful and incomprehensible. Even if you don't think it will hurt you in any way, it's natural to feel fear when confronting the unfamiliar and uncontrollable.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
Comment
-
Originally posted by David Floyd View PostNot life altering consequences. What parent would watch their kid die after getting hit by a car because they were playing in the street? Even though the kid was suffering the consequences of not listening to his parents, the parents still love their child and would certainly call an ambulance.
Now as far as hell goes. I don't know if there is such a thing as it is described in the Bible. I don't read the Bible as literally as some. I think the Bible helps us live and gives us hope and a purpose. Some of it isn't literally true. That said, you should live your life as though hell is real.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
Comment
-
Originally posted by David Floyd View PostFaith isn't evidence of anything, unless you also mean that Santa Claus exists because kids believe he does.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
Comment
-
Originally posted by gribbler View PostAnd hell, if people feel better if they're religious, and a large number of people choose to be religious if they have the right to make a choice, how is that not just another example of individuals maximizing their wealth/happiness? And why should people who like religion have a problem with a society based on contract-making individuals maximizing their happiness, as long as they're free to practice their religion of choice?
Comment
Comment