Let’s take a closer look at some of Rand Paul’s policy positions, just for the fun of it. On the Civil Rights Act, we already know he’s been forced to r..."/>
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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
Rand Paul's Policy Positions
Friday, May 28, 2010 2:20 PM
ANTHONYT
Freedom is Important because People are Important
Saturday, May 29, 2010 7:53 AM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Quote:you do not believe in liberty, freedom of thought or expression.. or you would not be advocating government supervision of peoples beliefs
Saturday, May 29, 2010 7:55 AM
Quote:But to 'trash' America for things the government does is essential. Every dirty little deed that our government does and has done needs to be railed against with shame and righteousness, so that all such behavior stops and never starts again.
Saturday, May 29, 2010 12:39 PM
FREMDFIRMA
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: One last time: The government does not regulate what you eat, who you associate with, your thoughts, beliefs, or expression. It regulates how you BEHAVE with respect to the freedom of others. If you want to debate reality, that would be worthwhile. Debating claims that are patently fales is not.
Saturday, May 29, 2010 7:32 PM
ANTIMASON
Quote:Originally posted by AnthonyT: "you cannot gain liberty, by sacrificing the liberty of another" Hello, Actually, you can. That's all law is. Law is the process of sacrificing one liberty to assure a greater liberty. It is the role of government. Every law limits freedom and reduces a liberty. We hope to balance laws so that the greatest liberty is retained by the greatest number of people.
Quote:For instance, in a completely free society, you could arbitrarily cave my skull in with a rock. In our society, it was determined that the freedom to exist free from violent assault exceeded the freedom to brain someone. Hence, a law sacrificed your liberty (to brain me) to gain mine (to live.)
Quote: So you see, I love Freedom so much that I'm willing to lose the tiny Freedom to refuse service to a particular race in order to preserve the Freedom of that race to do business and get the things they need to live their lives.
Saturday, May 29, 2010 7:43 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: I believe in freedom of thought or expression, and the expression part is SPECIFICALLY protected.
Quote: The government does not supervise people's beliefs, it only constrains how they ACT UPON THEM in order to attempt to protect the LIBERTY of all, as opposed to the liberty of some to oppress others.
Quote: One last time: The government does not regulate what you eat, who you associate with, your thoughts, beliefs, or expression.
Quote: It regulates how you BEHAVE with respect to the freedom of others. If you want to debate reality, that would be worthwhile. Debating claims that are patently fales is not.
Saturday, May 29, 2010 8:09 PM
Sunday, May 30, 2010 5:52 AM
Quote:self ownership, responsibility, coupled with cooperation by mutual consent
Quote: its an act of aggression to use force, or coercion, by a collective(whether large or small), to take away any individuals life, liberty, or property. you seem to suggest its a neccessary evil to compromise one liberty for another.. what youre actually doing is granting someone else the power to use force, to take another individual, or group of individuals liberties.
Quote: no, because by killing you i would then be robbing you of your liberties.
Quote: is he required to serve them?
Quote: FDA, the FCC, DEA.. the DOE
Sunday, May 30, 2010 7:04 AM
KANEMAN
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: By the way, in an interview with a Russian journalist, Paul just said he wants to block citizenship to children born in the States to illegal immigrant parents. Score one more for an illogical, bigoted ideology! "I'm just right. Kinda like the sun rising in the east and the world being round...its not a need its just the way it is." The Delusional "Hero", 3/1/10
Sunday, May 30, 2010 2:01 PM
Quote: Anthonyt- Hello, I would love to live in a world where laws were not necessary. It is a dream, a perfect jewel of thought.
Quote: In my world, people's liberties sometimes clash. When that happens, someone is going to settle it. We have authorized a government to settle it for us, and we have created laws to that end.
Quote: It is true that all laws are backed at the point of a gun. Including the laws that protect me, my family, my property, etc.
Quote: I agree that the government sticks its hands in many pots it should not. Nobody should ever tell me what I can or can't do with my own body. The government does. That's a problem. Nobody should ever tell me that I can't enter into mutually agreeable contracts. The government does. That's a problem.
Quote: I see these problems. This is why I am a Libertarian. I want these freedoms restored. I don't want a community to trap or starve an undesirable group of people, though. The only way to keep that from happening, other than wishful thinking, is to make a law about it.
Quote: Can you think of an alternative, without creating a law, that would have prevented the WWII Japanese incident I described to you?
Sunday, May 30, 2010 2:43 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: Which would be great, if that worked. It doesn’t.
Quote: And who, precisely, would you have ENFORCE that(voluntary cooperation)? IF it’s all self-ownership and responsibility and mutual consent, there is nothing to stop anyone from killing anyone else...complete ”mutual consent” among humans is a fantasy
Quote:]I would say, as long as they behaved in a civil manner, “yes” (require a black man to serve the Klan).
Quote: I wasn’t aware there was such a thing as “hate speech legislation”. If there were, I think it would have caused an uproar, and I can’t find anything about it on the internet. If proposed, surely it wouldn’t have passed. Freedom of speech trumps almost everything in that regard.
Quote: If you are going to say the Civil Rights Act limits who you “associate with” by not allowing businesses to deny customers, it’s not an argument, to me. That’s not “association”.
Quote: We owned a business...there were many customers we didn’t like individually and would never “associate” with; letting them buy our product had nothing to do with “associating” with them.
Quote: The argument is fallacy as far as I’m concerned.
Quote: It’s equally hard to debate with someone who believes everyone should have the right to steal liberties from others because they insist only “self ownership, responsibility, coupled with cooperation by mutual consent” should constrain people
Quote: I’m with Anthony: “I don't want a community to trap or starve an undesirable group of people, though. The only way to keep that from happening, other than wishful thinking, is to make a law about it.”
Quote: I also think the government overreaches and wish there were a more middle ground, but what the government did under Dumbya DEFINITELY encroached on our civil liberties, and that’s the worst example in recent times I can think of.
Quote: And I, too would like to hear a VIABLE alternative, not just one where people are personally responsible. The vast majority of people are NOT.
Quote: To me, such a world is exactly as Anthony said: Eutopia, not realistic.
Sunday, May 30, 2010 4:11 PM
Sunday, May 30, 2010 5:46 PM
KWICKO
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)
Quote:Originally posted by antimason: hey, if Americas so bad, get the hell out
Sunday, May 30, 2010 5:56 PM
Quote: you know, the US constitution doesnt say anything about abortion.
Sunday, May 30, 2010 6:11 PM
Quote:Originally posted by antimason: what like the south? they were called Jim Crow LAWS, as in 'the government instituted and inforced discrimination by way of law'. listen to what im saying.. private business were mandated, by government, TO DISCRIMINATE, whether they wanted to or not are you familiar with the fugitive slave act? notice.. that was a LAW. people have been indoctrinated to think private citizens were responsible for segregation.. when in fact, it was by DECREE at the behest of GOVERNMENT
Quote:yes, you should have the liberty to decide what do to with your body, because its your property.
Quote: what about my friends? can i pick my friends? what about what i read or write? this is at the heart of this debate- do you have the right to discriminate who you choose to associate with? a business is private property! youre suggesting that i need the governments permission to make choices that are mine alone to make. im not a racist, but should i be told by the government that i need black friends?
Quote: It is absolutely true that what you put into your body is as much your own business as what you take out of it.
Sunday, May 30, 2010 6:37 PM
Quote:Originally posted by antimason: Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: You ARE joking, aren’t you? It just wasn’t as accepted publicly, but believe me there were tons of abortions going on back then, too. Women just weren’t in a position to decide for themselves, so they either took concoctions to abort or went to the streets where prostitutes hung out where it was available, or did things to themselves that would prevent pregnancy, or left the baby on a doorstep. Sex has always been around and always will be; unplanned pregnancy has always and always will; we’re just more confused about it than some other societies. if it has always happened, why did it need to become federal law? it didnt need to be federally acknowledged Quote: Saying Michelle Obama is bent on “prohibiting” you from anything is bad debate. Nobody’s outlawing salt, etc., they’re trying to EDUCATE us poor slobs and our deadly eating habits. Big difference. i can educate myself, thank you. you know the body needs some salt.. right? this is the problem with you liberals... LET ME DECIDE FOR MYSELF! i dont need some do-gooder telling me that cigarettes, or trans fats are harfull to me, therefore should be prohibited. that is MY CHOICE! you cant tell me the left hasnt pursued these issues legislatively, just take a look at CA or NY
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: You ARE joking, aren’t you? It just wasn’t as accepted publicly, but believe me there were tons of abortions going on back then, too. Women just weren’t in a position to decide for themselves, so they either took concoctions to abort or went to the streets where prostitutes hung out where it was available, or did things to themselves that would prevent pregnancy, or left the baby on a doorstep. Sex has always been around and always will be; unplanned pregnancy has always and always will; we’re just more confused about it than some other societies.
Quote: Saying Michelle Obama is bent on “prohibiting” you from anything is bad debate. Nobody’s outlawing salt, etc., they’re trying to EDUCATE us poor slobs and our deadly eating habits. Big difference.
Quote: Quote: Oh, wow, I just got to the rest of the post. Obviously a waste of time to try to discuss or debate with you. “you claim to be soo concerned about” abortion, how many unwanted babies have YOU adopted lately? i am against abortion.. its my opinion. the difference being, im not advocating making my opinion federal law, like you are. ive always said the states should decide.. since the issue of when a life begins, and when a person has legal rights, is actually a legitimate question
Quote: Oh, wow, I just got to the rest of the post. Obviously a waste of time to try to discuss or debate with you. “you claim to be soo concerned about” abortion, how many unwanted babies have YOU adopted lately?
Quote: Quote: Anyone who starts out in a discussion with “I think all this feigned outrage from all you guilt ridden white liberals is very telling” isn’t someone who has an open enough mind to discuss anything with. its ok, ill sum it up in a nutshell. im not telling people what to think, but you are. if youre for government, youre for coercion. my ideas of liberty dont coerce anyone, i dont care what someone does to themself*. liberals however, DO
Quote: Anyone who starts out in a discussion with “I think all this feigned outrage from all you guilt ridden white liberals is very telling” isn’t someone who has an open enough mind to discuss anything with.
Quote: Quote: Nonetheless, I’ll debate a couple of your points: “The Jim Crow laws were state and local laws in the United States enacted between 1876 and 1965. They mandated de jure racial segregation in all public facilities.” The argument Rand Paul was making was about FEDERAL laws, and the fact that some places were racist and instituted the Crow laws locally and statewide was WHY the federal government had to step in. To ensure equal treatment across the country. I reject your argument. it was state and local governments that instituted segregation. hypothetically, if your holy government hadnt segregated society, its possible we would have never needed the civil rights act.
Quote: Nonetheless, I’ll debate a couple of your points: “The Jim Crow laws were state and local laws in the United States enacted between 1876 and 1965. They mandated de jure racial segregation in all public facilities.” The argument Rand Paul was making was about FEDERAL laws, and the fact that some places were racist and instituted the Crow laws locally and statewide was WHY the federal government had to step in. To ensure equal treatment across the country. I reject your argument.
Quote: Quote: Businesses provide something, the owner doesn’t have to “associate” with his customers, in fact few do, relatively speaking. They can “associate” with anyone they choose. I reject your argument. no they cant.. the civil rights act prevents them from reserving the right to serve whomever they choose.
Quote: Businesses provide something, the owner doesn’t have to “associate” with his customers, in fact few do, relatively speaking. They can “associate” with anyone they choose. I reject your argument.
Quote: Quote: Businesses thrived for a long, long time when there was discrimination. I saw no sign they were suffering because they didn’t allow black people in their establishments; I reject that argument. did it occur to you that its because whites couldnt shop at block stores, and vice versa? do you doubt that once segregation was eliminated, that blacks shopped at stores they otherwise could not have? understand, that it was the government which intervened in an otherwise free market
Quote: Businesses thrived for a long, long time when there was discrimination. I saw no sign they were suffering because they didn’t allow black people in their establishments; I reject that argument.
Quote: Quote: Oh Jezus, a rabid ideologue Tea Bagger. Heaven help us. hey Niki, remind me how great socialisms working over in Europe. Greece anyone
Quote: Oh Jezus, a rabid ideologue Tea Bagger. Heaven help us.
Sunday, May 30, 2010 6:48 PM
Quote:Originally posted by antimason: Quote: So you see, I love Freedom so much that I'm willing to lose the tiny Freedom to refuse service to a particular race in order to preserve the Freedom of that race to do business and get the things they need to live their lives. so lets say you are a restuarant owner, and you happen to be a black guy(since theyve become the stereotypical victim in this whole hypothetical scenario). and in comes the Arian brotherhood, the KKK, Neo Nazis of America.. lets say it was just a big old get together. is he required to serve them? now its not illegal to form an association such as these, so long as they do not commit an act of aggression towards me and violate my liberties. what youre advocating is using government to coerce this individual, this black guy, to do business with the Klan. not by consent, but by force. i just cannot agree to that, but i understand the position you take- its resulted in the dillemma we have today!! using coercion to take away the liberties of others
Sunday, May 30, 2010 7:06 PM
Quote:Originally posted by antimason: Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: I believe in freedom of thought or expression, and the expression part is SPECIFICALLY protected. so theres no such thing as 'hate speech legislation'? art, expression.. intellectual ideas are acts of speech. likewise, someones opinion is also protected by the 1st amendment, including the right of an individual to refuse to consent to an agreement which is not mutual
Quote:The United States federal government and state governments are broadly forbidden by the First Amendment of the Constitution from restricting speech. See, e.g., Gitlow v. New York (1925), incorporating the free speech clause. Generally speaking, the First Amendment prohibits governments from regulating the content of speech, subject to a few recognized exceptions such as defamation[33] and incitement to riot.[34] Even in cases where speech encourages illegal violence, instances of incitement qualify as criminal only if the threat of violence is imminent.[35] This strict standard prevents prosecution of many cases of incitement, including prosecution of those advocating violent opposition to the government, and those exhorting violence against racial, ethnic, or gender minorities. See, e.g., Yates v. United States (1957), Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969). Under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, employers may sometimes be prosecuted for tolerating "hate speech" by their employees, if that speech contributes to a broader pattern of harassment resulting in a "hostile or offensive working environment" for other employees.[36] See, e.g., Meritor Savings Bank v. Vinson (1986), Patterson v. McLean Credit Union (1989). In the 1980s and 1990s, more than 350 public universities adopted "speech codes" regulating discriminatory speech by faculty and students.[37] These codes have not fared well in the courts, where they are frequently overturned as violations of the First Amendment. See, e.g., Doe v. Michigan (1989), UWM Post v. Board of Regents of University of Wisconsin (1991), Dambrot v. Central Michigan University (1995), Corry v. Stanford (1995). Debate over restriction of "hate speech" in public universities has resurfaced with the adoption of anti-harassment codes covering discriminatory speech.[38]
Quote: Quote: The government does not supervise people's beliefs, it only constrains how they ACT UPON THEM in order to attempt to protect the LIBERTY of all, as opposed to the liberty of some to oppress others. it most certainly does. you do not have the liberty to force me to do anything i do not want to; and yet politicians do it every time they pass a law takes away my life liberty or property without my consent. and i know you are for universal medicine, so its a bit hard to believe youre truly for personal liberty Quote: One last time: The government does not regulate what you eat, who you associate with, your thoughts, beliefs, or expression. so im just imagining the FDA, the FCC, DEA.. the DOE?
Quote: Quote: It regulates how you BEHAVE with respect to the freedom of others. If you want to debate reality, that would be worthwhile. Debating claims that are patently fales is not. its hard to have a debate with someone who believes you can preserve or 'create' liberties, by stealing them from others
Sunday, May 30, 2010 7:24 PM
Quote:Originally posted by antimason: Quote: Anthonyt- Hello, I would love to live in a world where laws were not necessary. It is a dream, a perfect jewel of thought. me too.. which ought to be the ideal, what we strive for. Quote: In my world, people's liberties sometimes clash. When that happens, someone is going to settle it. We have authorized a government to settle it for us, and we have created laws to that end. laws should only exist to protect an individuals life, liberty and property. i acknowledged that government exists for this purpose.. but this purpose ONLY
Quote:Quote: It is true that all laws are backed at the point of a gun. Including the laws that protect me, my family, my property, etc. i think to say that is misleading. is it true that if one individual, or group of people, violate your rights, the 'government' has the authority to defend your liberties? yes. but this government does not have the right to use force, in my defense, to violate the liberties of the group attempting to take mine. i wouldnt call the 2nd amendment liberty 'backed by the barrel of a gun'. 'gun', implies force.. when instead the government is being used to uphold liberties, in the event that an individual cannot protect his/her own property from unwanted aggression, coercion or fraud.
Sunday, May 30, 2010 7:31 PM
Quote: theyre called 'hate-crime' laws, they prohibit private individuals from engaging in discrimination based on race, ethnicity, religion and sex orientation. Canada, a liberal haven, has hate-speech legislation based on this same concept, whereas people can actually go to JAIL for saying things which 'may' incite tensions within certain communities. you really need to look into it. what an individual believes, what he says, and who he chooses to associate with are all tied to what actually comes from his mouth; not just his actions
Monday, May 31, 2010 9:00 AM
Quote:transitive senses: 1 : to join as a partner, friend, or companion 2 : to keep company with : ATTEND 3 : to join or connect together : COMBINE 4 : to bring together or into relationship in any of various intangible ways (as in memory or imagination) intransitive senses : 1 : to come or be together as partners, friends, or companions 2 : to combine or join with
Quote: but that was the exception, not the rule. once again.. you do not believe in liberty, freedom of thought or expression..
Quote: which ought to be the ideal, what we strive for
Quote: theyre called 'hate-crime' laws, they prohibit private individuals from engaging in discrimination based on race, ethnicity, religion and sex orientation
Quote:” I don't want a community to trap or starve an undesirable group of people, though.” that just shows your lack of faith in people, to make the correct decisions without being nannyied by the collective. once again, you believe in using force to take someones life liberty and property.
Quote: the 'vast majority of people are not responsible?' well GEE, i wonder why? could it be that statists have taught people that they arent personally responsible for themselves
Quote:i would more correctly call mine a Paradise.
Monday, May 31, 2010 10:16 AM
Monday, May 31, 2010 10:22 AM
Quote:no, i would more correctly call mine a Paradise..
Quote:And you can see them there, On Sunday morning They stand up and sing about what it's like up there They call it Paradise I don't know why You call someplace Paradise, kiss it goodbye
Monday, May 31, 2010 2:14 PM
Quote:Originally posted by AnthonyT: Hello, Mr. Mason, I understand what you are advocating, and I admit the ideal has appeal. Just understand this: People have PROVEN what they are prepared to do to one another. It is not a GUESS. It is not a lack of FAITH. It is looking at what has happened ALREADY. In your Paradise, entire regions have killed entire ethnicities. Races of people have been trapped by denying them gasoline, transportation, and perhaps even access to roads and pieces of property that they might try to cross on foot. They have been starved by denying them access to groceries and restaurants. Law abiding members of the race sat down and died. Others fought for what they needed and were stopped by the only intervention of government that you endorse. Those that died were not buried. Government has no such function, and the individuals who passively murdered them had no compunction. Many of the dead had no inheritors. No one to claim them or their property. Even those that might like to make a claim couldn't get to them, for no one would let them use the gasoline, or cross the land. Their bodies were often erected on stakes and displayed in wicker cages, along with signs that say, "THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS TO NIGGERS, SPICS, CHINKS, AND DINKS!" Only the birds tended to them, and then only to eat their eyes. This is your Paradise. No one broke any laws, or violated anyone's liberty. This country of yours may not be perfect, but hey, what country is? I will enjoy a little bit less Paradise than you are prepared to live with. I have faith that mankind will do what it has already done. You have faith that mankind will spontaneously do something different. Which of us is taking the greater leap? --Anthony
Monday, May 31, 2010 2:30 PM
DREAMTROVE
Monday, May 31, 2010 2:56 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: And there is the core of anti's entire philosophy: America is only for the Americans HE thinks are worthy. He's all about "freedom" and "liberty" and free speech and your freedom to believe what you want and do what you want - UNLESS you disagree with something that America does. THEN, you have to get the hell out. Love it or leave it, eh?
Quote: Anti, look back at some of your diatribes. You rant on and on and on about "leftists" and "liberals" and try to demean and belittle entire groups of people based solely on their political leanings, and then you go on long rants about how it's not fair that anyone should do the same to you or any of your particular groups.
Quote: Why on Earth would you expect us to live up to a standard your completely unwilling and unable to live up to yourself? And why should we listen to any of your pablum about "freedom" when you'd have us "free" only insofar as we believe exactly what YOU say we should?
Monday, May 31, 2010 3:19 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: You know, it also doesn't say anything about "god", either.
Quote: Obviously you'd have no problem outlawing religion then, right?
Monday, May 31, 2010 3:47 PM
Quote: Kwicko- (on abortion) Until you become pregnant, anyway, right? You're real big on personal rights and property, until someone else (or some fetus) wants to lay claim on them, apparently...
Quote: I'm not saying you have to be friends with your customers, no. You seem to be conflating providing a service (such as sales) with being best buddies. I don't buy it. I'm not friends with very many of my customers. It's not a requirement that they be my friends in order for me to do my job and sell them what they want.
Quote: Again, why your cracks about abortion, then? Whose business is it if a woman takes a few live cells out of her body? Isn't it HER body, HER property? Shouldn't you be PRO-choice? You come across as being quite anti-choice. Maybe you're just not communicating your positions effectively.
Monday, May 31, 2010 4:25 PM
Quote:Originally posted by antimason: thats true, it has happened all throughout human history. but there has also never been a true libertarian society. do you know why? because when you kill someone, you violate their right to 'life'. as i said, you have the right to life, liberty and property, no matter who you are. when an individual, or a group of people, commit acts of aggression, they violate someone elses right to life, liberty and the pursuit of property
Monday, May 31, 2010 4:34 PM
Quote: Kwicko- And I don't need some right-wing do-gooder telling me that religion is my savior, either, or that the ten commandments of some horsheshit religion belong enshrined in a courthouse, or that a woman can't have an abortion if she so chooses, either. And you can't tell me that the right hasn't pursued these issues legislatively; just take a look at Oklahoma or Alabama!
Quote: Will you let the states decide whether you can have freedom of speech as well, or freedom of religion, a free press, the right to own a gun, whether or not cruel and unusual punishments should be used?
Quote: Why do you want only the states to decide the issues YOU want them to decide, and you're fine with the federal government guaranteeing your gun rights and your military protection?
Quote: As for when a person has "legal rights"... well, if you're going strictly by the Constitution, only once they're "natural-born citizens". So fetuses, not so much with the rights. Just sayin'.
Quote: But you JUST SAID you wanted the state and local governments to be the sole arbiters of what was allowed in the states! So you admit that state and local governments instituted segregation, and then you endorse state and local governments setting the laws, and no federal oversight at all. Right?
Quote: It wasn't *MY* "holy government" which segregated society; it was YOUR state and local governments which did that. And you're saying that they were the ones in the right.
Quote: Again, you're conflating "serve" with "associate". I can sell you an item without becoming your friend.
Quote: Yes, once segregation was ended, blacks were free to shop at stores where they earlier were not allowed to even enter, much less shop
Quote: And it's ludicrous to call it a "free market" if you're deliberately excluding entire groups of people from shopping in your "free market" stores. It's "free" to shop there only for prescribed ethnic groups, which you seem to be advocating
Quote: About as well as capitalism's working here, it seems. Massive debt, huge deficits under "conservative" leadership of the last 8 years, financial collapse, disappearing middle class, disparity of wealth distribution not seen since before the Great Depression... Yeah, we're a real model of a modern booming economy!
Quote: Meanwhile, the powerhouse economies right now seem to be India and Chine, both heavily socialized economies, far more socialist than America's.
Quote:Originally posted by antimason: Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: You know, it also doesn't say anything about "god", either. its right there in the declaration of independence, that 'We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator(capital C) with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.'
Quote: Quote: Obviously you'd have no problem outlawing religion then, right? 1st amendment- 'Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble' actually, sounds to me like government goes too far in prohibiting the excercise of religion
Monday, May 31, 2010 4:45 PM
Quote:Originally posted by antimason: Quote: Kwicko- (on abortion) Until you become pregnant, anyway, right? You're real big on personal rights and property, until someone else (or some fetus) wants to lay claim on them, apparently... when does that fetus have legal rights? its a legitimate question. if a doctor, through malpractice whatever, harms or accidentally kills the fetus of a pregnant woman, that doctor can be held legally liable. now why is that? if its not considered living, under the law,(until whatever arbitrary date YOU decide), there would be no repercussions. but there are. so people inherently know that a fetus is a living person. deciding where the Law should come down is a perfectly legitimate question.
Quote: if there were a farm of fetus' being grown outside of actual female wombs, are the fetus' entitled to any legal representation? or are they free to be experimented with? the question may sound rediculous to some, but its the slippery slope that we ought to consider
Quote: Quote: I'm not saying you have to be friends with your customers, no. You seem to be conflating providing a service (such as sales) with being best buddies. I don't buy it. I'm not friends with very many of my customers. It's not a requirement that they be my friends in order for me to do my job and sell them what they want. EXACTLY! so why dont you apply that to what im saying: why would a racist, private business person need to be 'buddies' with a customer? they dont. im not conflating, im revealing the reality of things- that hypothetical racist store owner, that your soo worried about, would likely consent and make the transaction or contract anyway, regardless of their opinions. you seem to want the government in the middle anyways, even when they violate the liberties of the private businessman and his/her property rights
Quote: Quote: Again, why your cracks about abortion, then? Whose business is it if a woman takes a few live cells out of her body? Isn't it HER body, HER property? Shouldn't you be PRO-choice? You come across as being quite anti-choice. Maybe you're just not communicating your positions effectively. what ive said is that i dont believe Roe v. wade should be federal law. yes, i am against abortion, but if a state or community want to set a precedent, under the 10th amendment they should have the right to decide. something no one seems to ask in this is what about the fathers rights? save for the virgin Mary, a woman cannot have a baby solely by divine intervention- generally, it takes two consenting individuals to create that life. can the father choose to terminate the baby without the mothers consent? most certainly not.. but i suppose its ok the other way around? beyond that, will that fetus not become an individual itself? when does a childs garauntee to life begin? its a bit different then telling someone they can destroy their life if they choose to do drugs or ride without a seat belt, because there is another life at stake
Quote: Kwicko- 1) Do you often confuse the Declaration of Independence with the United States Constitution? It's okay; I see conservatives conflate the two all the time.
Quote: 2) You have no idea what anyone means when they say "creator", even if they write it with a capital "C". I refer to my Dad quite a bit, who is quite literally (along with my Mom) my "creator"; that doesn't mean they are my gods.
Quote: You want to argue about what's in the Constitution by talking about what's in the Declaration of Independence. Great. I can argue about what's in the Bible by citing the Sears catalog, too, okay?
Quote: So there ARE parts of the Constitution you wouldn't just toss out when they become a thorn in your side, eh? I had to check, because you seem to be dismissing lots of it out whenever it disagrees with your narrow world view.
Monday, May 31, 2010 4:56 PM
Quote: Originally posted by Kwicko: If you read the Constitution and go by the explicitly narrow views taken by not only the Bush administration, but the state of Arizona, as well as Rand Paul and several other "libertarians", you'll see that THEY claim that any legal or citizenship rights are ONLY for legal United States citizens.
Quote: So, by the narrow view YOUR people want to hold to, that fetus has no legal rights until it's born. Sorry, but that's the way they want to interpret it. Until birth, that fetus is not a citizen, and has none of the rights and protections afforded citizens by the Constitution. Sucks to be a fetus, I s'pose.
Quote: What if they're fetuses taken from illegal aliens? What rights do they have then?
Quote: History is calling you a liar and an idiot. You say this would never happen, except for all those years and uncounted thousands of times it DID happen.
Quote: Take the fetus out of the mother and implant it in the father, then. See how that works out. Or maybe raise it in that fetus farm you have out in FantasyLand™!
Monday, May 31, 2010 6:09 PM
Quote:Originally posted by antimason: Quote: Kwicko- 1) Do you often confuse the Declaration of Independence with the United States Constitution? It's okay; I see conservatives conflate the two all the time. do you not know of the prerequisite document that led to the bill of rights and constitution?
Quote: Quote: 2) You have no idea what anyone means when they say "creator", even if they write it with a capital "C". I refer to my Dad quite a bit, who is quite literally (along with my Mom) my "creator"; that doesn't mean they are my gods. thats true, i believe ive made that very same point before. however, youre parents are not MY Creator. therefore, you have no more say over my life, or my liberties, then i do over yours
Quote: Quote: You want to argue about what's in the Constitution by talking about what's in the Declaration of Independence. Great. I can argue about what's in the Bible by citing the Sears catalog, too, okay? youre blinding yourself if you dont think its relevant. its like denying that christianity was the dominant religion of our founders
Quote: Quote: So there ARE parts of the Constitution you wouldn't just toss out when they become a thorn in your side, eh? I had to check, because you seem to be dismissing lots of it out whenever it disagrees with your narrow world view. you make me laugh. you probably think the commerce clause gives you permission to tax me for someone elses healthcare. give me a break
Monday, May 31, 2010 6:27 PM
Quote:Originally posted by antimason: Quote: Originally posted by Kwicko: If you read the Constitution and go by the explicitly narrow views taken by not only the Bush administration, but the state of Arizona, as well as Rand Paul and several other "libertarians", you'll see that THEY claim that any legal or citizenship rights are ONLY for legal United States citizens. and yet.. we cannot indefinately detain an illegal, hold him without trial, bail. they still have rights
Quote: Quote: So, by the narrow view YOUR people want to hold to, that fetus has no legal rights until it's born. Sorry, but that's the way they want to interpret it. Until birth, that fetus is not a citizen, and has none of the rights and protections afforded citizens by the Constitution. Sucks to be a fetus, I s'pose. all human beings have rights, citizens or not
Quote: Quote: What if they're fetuses taken from illegal aliens? What rights do they have then? same as you would. the right to citizenship is different
Quote: Quote: History is calling you a liar and an idiot. You say this would never happen, except for all those years and uncounted thousands of times it DID happen. it happened most recently under government supervision. it was a government mandate friend. look back at the private business which were forced to segregate against their will. and i know youve been away, but its 2010, its not 1850 anymore- things have changed a bit thank you
Quote: Quote: Take the fetus out of the mother and implant it in the father, then. See how that works out. Or maybe raise it in that fetus farm you have out in FantasyLand™! is it just over your head? ok ill stop
Tuesday, June 1, 2010 5:57 AM
Tuesday, June 1, 2010 6:30 AM
Tuesday, June 1, 2010 7:47 AM
WULFENSTAR
http://youtu.be/VUnGTXRxGHg
Tuesday, June 1, 2010 8:11 AM
Tuesday, June 1, 2010 8:13 AM
Quote:"Paul lives in Libertarian La-La Land, where a purist philosophy leads people to believe in the purest nonsense.” Surely, Mr. Robinson, you know the difference between capital L Libertarian Party members, and those of us who are members of the two major parties, or of no party at all. The Tea Party is not a libertarian movement. It’s a hodgepodge of populist beliefs, like those always accompanying economic downturns. Classical liberalism, on the other hand, has lasted centuries. It was a natural fit for an Agrarian Era, with self-sustaining farmers, frontiersmen, and shop keepers. When the Industrial Era arrived, these individualists railed against “wage labor.” They wanted no part of centralized industry and its abuses. Corporate excesses fed Progressive Era reformers, who promoted one-size-fits-all government to address the sins of the Robber Barons. But we know you make common cause with us on cultural concerns like gay rights, and you share our non-interventionist views on foreign policy—though many of you avert your eyes as Barack Obama places young men and women in harm’s way in Afghanistan. Of course, Rand Paul was ridiculous questioning four-decade-old settled law that recognized slavery and segregation as conditions justifying the coercive power of the state to prohibit discrimination. We libertarians could give you a long list of things, like fighting crime and enforcing contracts, we regard as appropriate for state intrusion. We just insist the use of government power be minimal, consistent with individual liberty and responsibility. If you want a short explanation of a what a libertarian really is, here’s one from a self-described “libertarian Democrat” who used to be one of you: Get the government out of my bank account, out of my bedroom, away from my body, and out of the backyards of the rest of the world (we should lead by example, not military force.)
Wednesday, June 2, 2010 6:38 PM
Quote:Originally posted by Kwicko: And YOUR "god" has fuck-all to do with me and MY world. And YOUR "creator" is not the same creator the founders believed in.
Quote: You're blind if you think the Founding Fathers were hardcore religious fanatics, too. They rarely went to church services, Washington disdained them and quit going entirely, and others railed about the idiocy of believing in Jesus as anyone's personal god or savior. They didn't believe what you think they believed.
Quote: Not nearly as much as you make others laugh, trust me. You think the Civil Rights Act says you have to have black friends!
Quote: And, of course, you think there's something WRONG with the very idea of having any black friends in the first place!
Wednesday, June 2, 2010 7:02 PM
Quote: KWICKO- Not according to the Justice Department, they don't. If non-citizens had rights, we couldn't torture them. They don't, so we do. If they had rights, we couldn't assassinate them. They don't; so we do. Hell, now we even greenlight assassinations OF AMERICAN CITIZENS, so you can't even argue that a citizen really has those rights, can you?
Quote: Actually, it STOPPED happening under government supervision. You missed that part, or you like to conveniently gloss over it and obfuscate the obvious. You love states' rights and laud the states' perfection in deciding their own destinies, and then you want to slam the states for enacting such discriminatory laws, which it took the FEDERAL government to override and do away with. Segregation was your beloved states exercising their "rights" the way they felt their people wanted them to. The big bad federal government telling them to knock that shit off was the part you really can't take.
Quote: And it wasn't 1850, either. I know you're desperate and you feel backed into a corner, so you're trying to paint a picture that just isn't coming into focus for you, but that was in the 1960s. Not exactly ancient history. And the REASON things have changed was because the federal government changed them! How can you not pound that through your head?
Quote: still think my favorite argument of yours was, "I'm an individual! Quit lumping me in with all these other groups! All you liberals are the same! You always try to put me into a group! That's the problem with all liberals!"
Wednesday, June 2, 2010 7:14 PM
Quote: Niki- Okay, if that's libertarianism, I'm more libertarian than liberal. I agree with most of what he wrote, especially the quoted part. But Kaneman is not, not by that explanation, not at all. He's Rand Paul, no problem with corporate, excesses and all, anti-government in virtually every single way, and in my opinion existing in the same kind of La-La Land.
Quote: Anyone who thinks the Tea Party represents libertarian values has their head up their ass. "Gay rights"?? You gotta be kidding.
Quote: And I maintain that their leaders, and many of the followers, ARE racist, whether they recognize it or not. Kaneman is a prime example.
Quote: But if he means STATE POWER by "power of the state", then I disagree. It was individual STATES which fostered segregation, and in things such as that, I'm quite willing to recognize the FEDERAL government to intervene.
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