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bribed by easy access to our welfare state, don't you think? -- j
.
gonna have, whether it's Detroit, Boston,
Phoenix, LA, Brooklyn, Queens.....
the hope and change will be complete. -- j
.
Not Disney World.
Those are truly fighting words.
What will parents promise their kids in order to get them to shut up if there's no Disney?
.
Uh oh -- I better cool it. I've got enough folks who hate me without football fans as well. It is rather brutal, though, for just being a game. The head trauma looks as if it claiming the lives of many retired players. It's almost as if we say to them, "Here's millions of dollars. In exchange, you'll give away 20 years of life."
when the shrinks approach in their white coats! -- j
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stuff is work! -- j
.
that's how! . these people are real athletes!!! -- j
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long stride that I shocked my upper thighs into serious
pain . . . pissed 'em all off when I accepted a car ride
down the boulevard to catch up with the kids running
distance for conditioning. . never lived it down. . but I
could hardly climb stairs for the pain in my legs. -- j
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neuropathy, and I have never known why. -- j
.
pense), but not to force the results on others; that
is, they should not be free to drive drunk, and there
are cases where irresponsible behavior in public
(leaning up against people, etc.) due to drunken-
ness should be punished. Since alcohol can do
damage to the drinker, I do not think alcoholic
drinks should be given to minors (except maybe
in special cases, such as maybe if a doctor
recommends it as some sort of emergency
medecine). I think that the repeal of the Eight-
eenth Amendment was incomplete; Repeal still
allows states to have their Probibition; it should
have been repealed outright.
Of course if people are morally and ethically bankrupt and totally relativist in thinking about culture then a militant nutcase subculture looks much more vibrant and appealing to them than the limp washcloth that they have made of their own culture. So I suppose I should not be surprised.
and overeating. . we're still losing it, gradually. . down 20
at the moment. -- j
.
Both, IMHO. I haven't specifically read her book, but I've listened to enough of her interviews on talk radio to conclude in my own mind that Geller is a bit over-the-top, but she has a valid point.
"It appears cross-waving apples are being used to distract us from sword-waving oranges."
Further investigation reveals Netflix software predicts I'll like it and halfway like it a lot with three-and-a-half stars.
Since you can remember a character with a name like that, I guess you like that movie even more.
I'll go add that to my Netflix queue.
Hear me roar!
Someone pass that Pulitzer, please.
Good one!
The best point that you made was one of self-control and education. I heartily agree with both.
I support banning sales of alcohol to minors simply from the standpoint that medical studies show a disparate impact with potentially lasting negative effects on the brains of those who drink alcohol before their bodies (and especially minds) have matured. This applies to most currently illegal drugs as well. Medical studies also show the dangers of alcohol not only in the short term with impaired reasoning capabilities, but also in the long term with permanently-impaired functions and actual destruction of brain matter - not to mention the kidneys and liver. When all these are combined with the other negative effects that happen as a result of impaired judgement such as drunk driving and domestic abuse, I think there is a strong case to be made for limitations on the sale of alcohol - even to adults - and which has nothing to do with religion. Should personal rights be taken into account? Absolutely. But the trick in this case is what you perfectly point out: responsibility. And in the case of this irresponsibility, others often feel the effects and have their rights infringed.
If I could give tkstone 6 thumbs up I would.
Hillary Clinton comes to mind. She's not at all abashed about accusing her political opponents of waging a war on women, yet she has no problem persecuting the women her husband raped and abused. Nor does she have any problem accepting financial largesse from the very countries which oppress women. She's worse than a hypocrite.
Still, all those Southern Baptists did not threaten me with a beheading for failing to convert or beat me up for failing to grow a beard.
I recall when a sheriff's deputy asked me to taste some excellent peach-flavored moonshine.
He said they had smashed the still of a moonshiner who really took pride in his work.
I'm sure that moonshiner built another somewhere else.
That county is still dry.
I was a small time newspaper reporter/photographer in that dry county.
I was in awe of marijuana plants standing twice my 6-foot height in a field as wide as an average house when I was with county mounties, who made a raid on a young man's home deep in the boonies.
The suspect got off really light with a possession plea bargain.
Yeah, as if he could actually smoke all the pot I saw!
It can pay off to save the legal process money by pleading guilty when you're caught red-handed.
The negative effects of alcohol consumption seem to transcend mere religious prohibitions, don't you think?
Objecting to the source of any particular law is to avoid the validity or invalidity of the principle itself. I always start with the principle and work forwards to establish the potential validity of the philosophy as a result.
I wholly agree with you that sentencing in today's age has become too lenient. But having seen the effects of domestic violence - of which nearly all is the result of alcohol - I can't simply agree to the notion that it is in society's best interest to just deal with the effects - especially when the effects are multi-generational.
You're content to punish the masses for what a few do rather than punish the ones that do it? You were against the repeal of Prohibition even though it proved completely ineffective at preventing the sale of alcohol and led to the rise of modern organized crime?
Or are you just an idiot that likes to ask ridiculous questions with the insinuation that some other person might not be able to hold a more nuanced position than you merely because you cannot.?
Contrary to what you may surmise, I absolutely reject the notion that government can issue permits to engage in commerce. Yes, you can choose to drink. You can make your own moonshine if you choose. The question is where, when, and how much to drink before the effects of that alcohol render you incapable of making sound decisions. Once you are no longer capable of making sound decisions, you - by virtue of inebriation - give up your right of self-determination. Laws limiting alcohol consumption don't infringe on your rights by telling you not to drink - they warn you that if you do, you may lose your rights, and second that you then become a danger to others. Rights exist because we are conscious, but they are maintained only by self-discipline and judgement. If we intentionally disregard and override our self-determination to place it in the hands of a third-party, we intentionally void our claim to rights until such a time as we regain our senses.
"You're content to punish the masses for what a few do rather than punish the ones that do it?"
If I pass a law that prohibits people from jumping off bridges onto the rocks below, am I really infringing on their right to choose to jump? Not in the slightest. I'm merely trying to inform them that the repercussions for such are very negative. You seem to look at all laws as infringements on rights rather than warnings about negative repercussions. While there certainly are examples of laws that do penalize what should be unrestricted behaviors, I've never seen a right to intoxication being validated in either the Bill of Rights or a modern courtroom. I have, however, seen the results of broken homes and abuse cause by alcoholism - of people abusing their choices, intentionally inhibiting their self-control, and then taking that out on others through force. Should those people be individually punished? Absolutely. But unless the law applies equally to all, I can't very well claim just laws.
You do present a valid question about how far society can go in proscribing human behaviors - even behaviors acknowledged to be self-destructive. So as a follow-up question, do you believe society has a responsibility to warn of self-destructive behaviors through proscribed law, or should society merely suffer the consequences and give in to the perception of unlimited application of choice?
"You were against the repeal of Prohibition even though it proved completely ineffective at preventing the sale of alcohol and led to the rise of modern organized crime?"
I said nothing of the sort and would ask that you not put words in my mouth. Organized crime has existed from time immemorial and traffics in the sorts of goods that society has criminalized for whatever reason. I would note that slavery and human trafficking is greater now than it has ever been. Should we attribute its rise to the victory by the North in the Civil War? Or should we more properly attribute it to the desires of some to seek material wealth using force and coercion?
"Or are you just an idiot that likes to ask ridiculous questions with the insinuation that some other person might not be able to hold a more nuanced position than you merely because you cannot.?"
-1. I ask questions to cause people to check their premises - not to insinuate or burden with nuance. You are certainly welcome to challenge my assertions. I will see little reason to revise them unless there is a sound argument to do so. When you do, however, you will gain more traction by sticking to assertions backed up by empirical evidence and persuasive argument rather than vitriol.
So which of the alcohol laws I cited limit consumption? None. They are all directed at commerce. But nice try.
-1. I was not the one who charged that Christians are trying to infringe on people's liberties. That argument was made by you and I responded by asking for an example. I went on to further ask you to explain if the laws have a sound basis regardless of their source. You answered neither question.
I would further ask why you downvoted me without replying to any of the arguments. I give -1 not because people disagree, but when they are disagreeable and resort to ad hominem and character assassination instead of sticking to the policy debate.
"So which of the alcohol laws I cited limit consumption? None. They are all directed at commerce."
So let me ask you two questions.
1. Do you support the sale of alcohol to minors?
2. Do you agree that when one loses the ability to reason, one loses the ability to claim full exercise of rights as a result.
Neither of these two policy questions have anything to do with religion, but both very much apply to the application of liquor laws.
The last paragraph was in reference to the original assertion that "To be fair these laws have been on the books for christian churches for years." I simply assert that to call into claim the source of rationale is not nearly as solid as challenging the validity of the rationale itself.
"They are the Christian version of Sharia."
If you equate the two, you have no comprehension of Sharia. I met a family once in Cyprus who was from Iran about twenty years ago. They were seeking religious asylum in Canada to escape from Sharia. The woman told me of a day she had gone outside with makeup on and two boys not more than 12 had rode up to her on bicycles and slashed her face with razor blades held between their knuckles before they rode off. I don't see Christians doing that, do you?
I am not advocating for Christianity, and certainly not for Islam. I merely point out that there are vast differences between the two. It is an absolute fallacy of inclusion to simply lump them both in under "religion" and call them the same thing. I would argue exactly the same were it Hindu, Buddha, or Wiccans. One is encouraged to look at the principles and examine each in detail.
What I would note is that I did not say that the example you gave was not without merit, I then went on to ask if the law itself - regardless of the background of the implementer - had merit. My point was that of a fallacy of association: you are associating "religion" wholesale with bad policy instead of examining the policy first. Now if one wants to argue that part of that argument is being made in my observations in this post, I can see that might have some validity. But the focus of my argument is to point out that the individual policies which make up Sharia law are dangerous because they directly conflict with the US Constitution. I don't see that from any other ideology here in the United States.