Yeah, can't have too many christian channels. Still waiting for one small homo-friendly network but that probably will not be until hell freezes over!
Have you seen HGTV lately?
Yeah, can't have too many christian channels. Still waiting for one small homo-friendly network but that probably will not be until hell freezes over!
Have you seen HGTV lately?
In current society, political DOES mean about Republicans & Democrats, both in the context of my post and your own analogy. What part of "Republicans & Democrats are about people influencing each other to obtain control" do you not agree with?The word "political" does not mean "about Republicans and Democrats", it means "about the affairs of state" or more simply, about people influencing each other to obtain control.
Actually I get my news from a mix of sources and nowhere near as much from FNC as you may think.kstuart said:PS Like most people, it seems you get your news from only source.
Huh?kstuart said:Competition has nothing to do with it, when every company in an industry gets funds.
Unless you're talking about old "Pit" threads, give some examples where I've said that or similar. I suppose the couple times I quoted Charlie looking into the camera and telling us he'd never allow pornography on Dish Network (circa 1997) and then making it available 6 months late could fall into that catagory.kstuart said:But at least your are consistent, the above is still your same rant about "everyone was angels in the past, but now they are all being corrupted and becoming devils".
Why do you have to tinkle all over my posts so often? Again, be specific. How about some examples of my "poor knowledge of history" lack of experience with human nature" ? Oh, ok I admit, those few times I stuck up for you and your right to discourse over some piddling thing I can't even remember now might, in retrospect, might be considered a temporary lapse of judgment about human nature - yours!kstuart said:Of course, anyone who thinks that, must have a poor knowledge of history, no experience with human nature, and a lack of grounding in metaphysics.
thereby meaning that just because you are not talking within the context of an election, does not mean that the conversation is not "political".The word "political" does not ONLY mean "about Republicans and Democrats", it means "about the affairs of state" or more simply, about people influencing each other to obtain control.
Ok, that I agree with.Sorry, I could have been a little clearer by adding the word "only":
thereby meaning that just because you are not talking within the context of an election, does not mean that the conversation is not "political".
But that I don't agree with. While the odds today are more highly in favor of it being politically motivated, it isn't always, which is why morally and ethically motivated statements can get overlooked or misconstrued.kstuart said:For example, all statements by all government officials and all media pundits about the so-called "bailouts", are "political".
I don't think we have an argument there, although I don't know the specifics of the situation you speak nor even the state(s) involved.kstuart said:One might note that the Senator for the state containing the Toyota plant was seen frequently on TV, giving all sorts of ideological reasons not to loan money to GM/Ford/Chrysler, but his state did not apply any of that analogy to the billions of breaks they gave Toyota with taxpayer money.
That is "politics".
While I can't dispute that corruption in politics is far from a new concept - Chicago being a convenient current example - I'll stick to my position that the state of moral and ethically inspired accountability and responsibility today is vastly worse than even a generation ago but I'm not sure that I've been all that out-spoken about it in the general forums here. Possibly more so recently since we no longer have anyplace dedicated to such topics but not to the extent you claim. In any event you're correct. I do believe things are worse - much worse and not likely to get better anytime soon. Your attempt to dissuade, at least me of that, is far from convincing.kstuart said:PS The "people used to be ethical and moral, and now they are not" concept is something that I have heard you apply to situations a couple of times before - not constantly - maybe every year or so, you get outraged ( quite rightfully ) about someone's bad behavior, and then state that things are getting worse in that respect. In reality, our age of the Internet and 24-hour News Channels brings every pimple into view, and the sort of people who got away with selling Senate seats in the 1950's, would nowadays end up more in the spotlight...
The important thing and the point I'm trying to make is that seeing the objective truth in any given act or statement has become more difficult for many because the traditionally accepted guidelines used to quantify the state of anything have become so subjectively corrupt by political correctness that anyone can make a case for anything and the masses can't discern the difference.
I think this is where we disagree.
The most fundamental aspect of human society is:
Those who don't know the answer to a question, also do not know which proposed answer is correct.
Example :
You are walking in a business district, and you realize that you have an appointment at 2 pm, but you forgot your watch. Two men are about to pass you, and you ask for the time. One looks at his watch and says " 1:50 pm " and the other looks at his and says " 2:05 pm ". Are you late ? Which is correct ?
You might guess that the man with the expensive suit and expensive watch might have the more accurate time, but on the other hand, my wife's expensive dress watch is always wrong, while I have had $10 watches that are within a second.
In society, it is not unusual for people to believe the "fanciest" person. A recent study showed that only 25% of the recommendations made by medical doctors have any basis in science whatsoever.
I think that confusing "traditionally accepted guidelines" and "objective truth" is dangerous (as well as unfounded). Traditionally accepted guidelines are arbitrary conventions designed to make social interaction go more smoothly. We drive on the right side of the road, and then everyone knows where to drive to avoid crashing into everyone else. But there is no "objective truth" to that. People are not "evil" in the England because they drive on the left side of the road.
A more profound analogy (one of my favorites because we can see for ourselves the difference and subsequent impact), is when 99.99% of people using the "traditionally accepted guidelines" assumed the world was flat. The objective truth of course was that it was not flat and obviously some of that .01% must have applied what you describe as the more "dangerous" thought process and thus here we are.
<Snip>...
The idea that "people used to think the earth was flat" started with a 19th Century novel, that was hugely popular at the time. The novel included primitive people who thought the earth was flat.
In actuality, there is no actual evidence that most ancient people thought the earth was flat. We do have surprisingly old maps indicating a curved Earth.
So, the idea that "people used to think the earth was flat" is kind of a thought virus passed from one person to another.
kstuart said:Like the example of the person without a watch, people have no way of knowing the answer - we cannot go back 20,000 years ago - so they believe credible things they are told.
True but rarely is there a guarantee - in the end most decisions are based on odds.kstuart said:( By the way, your strategy of "asking a third person" is a good one, but there is still the possibility that the two that agree are both wrong. )
No argument here and I believe this is just one small example of the huge hidden cancer that has eaten away at our democratic process for decades.kstuart said:Another bigger example is the commonly held beliefs " eating fat is bad for your health " and " eating fat makes you fat ". The actual origin of these ideas is not based in any scientific studies whatsoever. Instead, it came from a 1970's Senate Subcommittee that was trying to come up with dietary guidelines ( for misguided altruistic reasons ), and found itself in the middle of a war between lobbyists from various agricultural industries. Rather than abandoning the idea of the guidelines ( which would have been the correct course of action ), instead they altered the guidelines to please the lobbyists (surprise, surprise), and came up with the "evils of fat".
How do you know all this stuff?kstuart said:( By the way, the lack of scientific evidence was discovered by medical researcher Dr. Diana Schwarzbein, and the origin of the "bad fat" concept was revealed by science journalist Gary Taubes in the New York Times Magazine article a few years back called "The Big Fat Lie", and expanded upon in his recent book. )
Well whether they thought it was flat or just that it could not circumvented, I guess you're right, as I still think world exploration (and therefore history) was effected to some degree by the common, erroneous belief and that IMO makes it more than "trivial".kstuart said:Despite all this being exposed, people still think that primitives thought the earth was flat, and every media person still talks about "cutiing your fat intake". The flat earth myth is trivial, but the dietary one is certainly not, and trillions of dollars rest on the fact that the media accept whatever the medical establishment tells them, and ignore Taubes' impeccably researched and documented article and book.