maninthemarble wrote:no human alive is fit to rule over another human being. if you believe that then you are mistaken.
Are parents unfit to tell their kids what they should and should not do?
...careful, I'm setting up a trap of my own....
maninthemarble wrote:no human alive is fit to rule over another human being. if you believe that then you are mistaken.
Ray 2 wrote:Here's a good tidbit on why our math scores are lower than other countries:
A lot of European and Asian countries essentially don't allow students to continue on into high school if their grades aren't up to snuff. And it gets weeded down to eventually, the smartest people these countries have being the ones taking the tests.
In the US, we try to give everyone, regardless of their intelligence, willingness to learn, or capacity to even bother, a fair shot. We have people taking the tests that probably shouldn't be taking them. If that doesn't help, how is it whenever there's the whole comparison tests between the best of the best students from all over the world, the US's students keep up pretty well?
So, the whole 8th grade math scores thing is based off of the amount of people taking it. Less people, with a better capacity for the subject, is obviously going to pull up the scores for the country using that system.
Demosthenes wrote:Whether or not it was recently, or even on this continent, anarchy has been tried before, but strangely enough it is always replaced with government. That leaves me with two possibilities. (1) Having a structured government is superior to anarchy, or (2) there are people who want to be leaders, and when they see people living in anarchy, they organize it and gain power for themselves. This second option was the point I was trying to make about having too much faith in other humans . . . how can you expect people not to try to lead, when history proves that some will? If anarchy were tried again, one of those two possibilities I gave would just happen again. I think it's more practical to just try to keep a government that the citizens find favorable.
circles in your concrete wrote:"letting" something happen is neither right nor wrong. it's nothing.
maninthemarble wrote:if he is going to be directly responsible for their deaths, then yes, he should die.
there is nobody making an argument that saddam is not an evil man. the thing we are saying is by lowering yourselves to saddams level and slaughtering innocents in order to seek him out, you are doing evil as well.
no, it's not. not killing an innocent is never wrong, regardless of the consequences. it's wrong to kill an innocent person. period.
I agree. Actually, if you look at the archaeological record, you'll see that "society" as we think of it is impossible without some form of leadership. For a society to develop, people have to be able to have time to develop it. This kind of time is not granted in a place where you are hunting for food daily, because no one else is helping you out. There has to be some kind of organized gathering and distribution in order for people to have the free time necessary to set up a society.
No, it's letting it happen. It's standing back, it's refusing aid, it's a huge number of actions that directly affect someone.
We are attacking to protect our people from further attacks, we are attacking to remove a man from power who has a huge track record of ruling by oppression, fear, and generally inhumane means.
Prove they're innocent. Everyone is guilty of something. Guilt is a very subjective term.
your own ghost wrote:i don't have the link handy but i can show you some 500 odd historical examples of freedom working.
we've been over this. you're wrong.
ha. you are attacking to gain control over the most powerful nation in a US hostile region and it's oil reserves. you will install another dictator, or regime, that will be no more friendly to the people of iraq then hussein.
the us has a storied history of supporting violent dictators [ pinochet, anyone ] until it no longer suited their needs. to say that you are attacking to remove a "bad man" is politically ignorant. you are attacking because the elite in washington feel that this should be planet USA.
by that logic i could kill you or anyone else and not be held responsible for it. the people in question are innocent of any direct forcible crime against their murderers. that's wrong. period.
it is a result of sanctions which were designed to make the people weak, to not give them what they want and need until their government decided to be more cooperative
We shouldn't have doctors, because if they make a mistake (like not properly matching organs), an innocent patient can die. It is immoral to do anything that might cause harm to an innocent person. It doesn't matter that the doctor is not trying to make that mistake, they're actually trying to save the patient. My extreme ideology will not allow for the risk involved, so we just shouldn't have doctors.
"Hey, I can't prove it right now, but this is how it is," is not a valid argument.
While we have been over this before, you did just shy of jack and squat to actually convince me that I was wrong.
By observing a situation, you are changing it. Basic logic and quantum mechanics, if you want to get picky. Your personal bias is highlighting the parts of the situation you want to see, and are therefore changing what the situation is to you.
There is no such thing as a "non-action." By doing "nothing," you are doing something. Deal with it.
Hey, yeah, you're right. I mean, Saddam only kills his own people. It's obvoiusly none of our business. And of course, your magical psychic powers can acurately fortell the future enough to see what will come after the war is over. How could I forget? My bad.
Yeah, and the people in the WTC were innocent of the same thing, and the people in Iraq who are living in fear of their ruler are innocent of the same thing, and like it or not, this war will remove the man responsible for the condition of the people in his country.
So, it's wrong, but let's not do anything about it? What kind of logic is that?
BTW: Honestly, we can't all just get together and "talk it over" with a person like Hussein. It doesn't work. That isn't an option.
your own ghost wrote:We shouldn't have doctors, because if they make a mistake (like not properly matching organs), an innocent patient can die. It is immoral to do anything that might cause harm to an innocent person. It doesn't matter that the doctor is not trying to make that mistake, they're actually trying to save the patient. My extreme ideology will not allow for the risk involved, so we just shouldn't have doctors.
clever, but i have to point out a thing you forgot to include. i choose to go to the doctor, and i choose to have him perform potentially life threatening surgery, just like i choose to go bungee jumping, or sky diving, or on a roller coaster or whatever.
i do not choose to get murdered [ in general ] and neither will the innocent iraqui citizens who the us kills in the forthcoming war.
your own ghost wrote:going back to your driving example, if you hit and kill a pedestrian while driving, you will be punished for it. bush will not. furthermore, if you knew while driving to work today you would hit and kill 3000 pedestrians, would you still do it?
In order to make the court into a reality, however, many riders were
added, leading to concerns that the court will be just a paper tiger.
And there are some notable absentees.
The United States... ha[s] still not ratified the Rome statute
and the administration of US President George W. Bush is even
considering revoking its signature.
your own ghost wrote:my belief, which i do apply consistently, is that it is wrong to iniate force against somebody else. for that reason, driving, not a forceful action, although dangerous, is not "wrong". indiscriminately firing my gun in a crowded shopping mall, however, is.
your own ghost wrote:1. the fact that it is pre-emptive
your own ghost wrote:2. the fact that it will result in the death of innocent people due to american negligence.