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Posted
59 minutes ago, Lord Ratner said:

If you want to have a philosophical discussion, just say so. You aren't coming off as obvious as you think you are.

 

So... is there a difference between killing a human in a war and killing them to steal their car? Why

 

Is there a moral difference between killing a deer for food, and drowning a cat in a pond because you like the sounds they make as they die? Why?

Homeslice just wants to drink a beer, fvck his horse, and catch an episode of “will it euthanize.”

Why are we picking on him?
 

 

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Posted
3 minutes ago, jice said:

Homeslice just wants to drink a beer, fvck his horse, and catch an episode of “will it euthanize.”

Why are we picking on him?
 

 

Nah…you just can’t have a conversation outside of your own emotions.  I used to be that way a long time ago.  How was that steak dinner or chicken sandwich the other day?

.

Posted (edited)
14 minutes ago, HeloDude said:

Nah…you just can’t have a conversation outside of your own emotions.  I used to be that way a long time ago.  How was that steak dinner or chicken sandwich the other day?

.

Lighten up. 
 

Delicious? I don’t share your belief; don’t see your point. 
 

Like I said, weird hill. If that’s the one you choose to look down on us from, I don’t think many will bother to charge it. 
 

Cheers. 

Edited by jice
Meat is delicious.
Posted
29 minutes ago, jice said:

Lighten up. 
 

Delicious? I don’t share your belief; don’t see your point. 
 

Like I said, weird hill. If that’s the one you choose to look down on us from, I don’t think many will bother to charge it. 
 

Cheers. 

Careful…some will call you a murderer.  Oh and it’s a good thing to actually think outside societal of current cultural norms.  If we didn’t, gay marriage would still be illegal.  Just one example of many.

https://www.peta.org/media/news-releases/new-peta-billboards-proclaim-meat-is-murder/

Posted
35 minutes ago, HeloDude said:

Depends on how bad you need that car I suppose.  A lot of people get killed in war that I’m sure didn’t necessarily need to die for objectives to be achieved.

And though I’m morally against bringing drawn out suffering to an animal, for some people it’s what they want to do.  Like I said a while back, I don’t support what this DoD guy did…but it does beg the question of why things are legal and why things aren’t.

As for this being a philosophical discussion, I thought that was obvious but I guess it wasn’t…next time I’ll say so.

 

Okay, now this is a bit confusing. You don't consider rights and laws to be synonymous, but now it's also not a moral connection?

 

What exactly is a right? If the animal does not have a right to avoid unnecessary suffering, what makes it immoral?

46 minutes ago, HeloDude said:

but it does beg the question of why things are legal and why things aren’t.

Why they are or aren't is simple, because whatever the ruling legislative body is, decided to make it a law.

I assume you meant what should or should not be a law, and in that case I think the general guiding principle is that things that have a negative effect on the society, which results in people uninvolved in the act having a reduced level of human flourishing, are things that we should make illegal. Murder is a pretty obvious one. Driving over the speed limit is less obvious, however the in arguable correlation with accident severity makes for an acceptable argument.

Drug use is another great example, and one where the libertarians start crashing into the limitations of their own philosophy, mostly because libertarians have the luxury of not living around drug addicts. Do what you want with your own body starts to fall apart when the drug you are taking causes psychotic outbreaks that end with bystanders being hurt or killed. Punishing the drug user after the fact does little to help the person who was killed her their family. On secondary level, accepting that we have chosen to live in a society that provides services for those who are most in need, allowing people to take a drug that will overwhelmingly put them in a position of need is a threat to the solvency of that system. Thus drug laws.

 

Prostitution is yet another area where those in favor of legalization have seldom had any direct experience with actual prostitution. There are some places like Amsterdam that have done what they can to clean up the industry, yet even they have struggled. And somewhere like America, the world of prostitution is one of the clearest examples of predators taking advantage of prey. Yet again, libertarians operate on assumptions that do not jive with reality. In this case, that all humans are capable of protecting themselves. This is simply not true, and many of the women who "voluntarily" sell their bodies are usually under the predatory influence of a sociopathic male. Again, it's a bit difficult to frame this within the context of rights and morals because you have not yet defined what you consider a right. If anything you just confused me more.

 

Oh, and they are also usually hopelessly addicted to drugs, another inconvenient reality for the legalization movement.

37 minutes ago, HeloDude said:

Depends on how bad you need that car I suppose.  A lot of people get killed in war that I’m sure didn’t necessarily need to die for objectives to be achieved.

This is either moral relativism or you're intentionally dodging the question, which means you aren't at all interested in the philosophical discussion. When someone talks about stealing a car, do you feel it is reasonable to assume they are referring to someone who desperately needed the car for a moral use? If you tell me that you are honestly posing that as a rational response, I will believe you, but I will have to be much more meticulous in explaining arguments that normal people do not usually require clarifications on.

 

As for the war hypothetical, was that also confusing? Did you not understand the concept of killing someone as an act of war in accordance with societally accepted rules of warfare? Again, I just need to know how pedantic you require me to be in order to have this philosophical discussion.

 

Not going to lie, considering this:

2 hours ago, HeloDude said:

Some of you don’t seem capable of having an actual philosophical discussion outside of what is legal vs illegal.

It really doesn't seem like you are engaging in good faith. 

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Posted
8 minutes ago, Lord Ratner said:

 

Okay, now this is a bit confusing. You don't consider rights and laws to be synonymous, but now it's also not a moral connection?

 

What exactly is a right? If the animal does not have a right to avoid unnecessary suffering, what makes it immoral?

Why they are or aren't is simple, because whatever the ruling legislative body is, decided to make it a law.

I assume you meant what should or should not be a law, and in that case I think the general guiding principle is that things that have a negative effect on the society, which results in people uninvolved in the act having a reduced level of human flourishing, are things that we should make illegal. Murder is a pretty obvious one. Driving over the speed limit is less obvious, however the in arguable correlation with accident severity makes for an acceptable argument.

Drug use is another great example, and one where the libertarians start crashing into the limitations of their own philosophy, mostly because libertarians have the luxury of not living around drug addicts. Do what you want with your own body starts to fall apart when the drug you are taking causes psychotic outbreaks that end with bystanders being hurt or killed. Punishing the drug user after the fact does little to help the person who was killed her their family. On secondary level, accepting that we have chosen to live in a society that provides services for those who are most in need, allowing people to take a drug that will overwhelmingly put them in a position of need is a threat to the solvency of that system. Thus drug laws.

 

Prostitution is yet another area where those in favor of legalization have seldom had any direct experience with actual prostitution. There are some places like Amsterdam that have done what they can to clean up the industry, yet even they have struggled. And somewhere like America, the world of prostitution is one of the clearest examples of predators taking advantage of prey. Yet again, libertarians operate on assumptions that do not jive with reality. In this case, that all humans are capable of protecting themselves. This is simply not true, and many of the women who "voluntarily" sell their bodies are usually under the predatory influence of a sociopathic male. Again, it's a bit difficult to frame this within the context of rights and morals because you have not yet defined what you consider a right. If anything you just confused me more.

 

Oh, and they are also usually hopelessly addicted to drugs, another inconvenient reality for the legalization movement.

This is either moral relativism or you're intentionally dodging the question, which means you aren't at all interested in the philosophical discussion. When someone talks about stealing a car, do you feel it is reasonable to assume they are referring to someone who desperately needed the car for a moral use? If you tell me that you are honestly posing that as a rational response, I will believe you, but I will have to be much more meticulous in explaining arguments that normal people do not usually require clarifications on.

 

As for the war hypothetical, was that also confusing? Did you not understand the concept of killing someone as an act of war in accordance with societally accepted rules of warfare? Again, I just need to know how pedantic you require me to be in order to have this philosophical discussion.

 

Not going to lie, considering this:

It really doesn't seem like you are engaging in good faith. 

Whoa—you wrote a lot man, which I appreciate, but I don’t have the time to go over each detail.

Big picture:

If it’s something you could do on your own, by yourself on an island, it’s a right.  Now if we’re waking about what is a “government protected right” that’s a totally different animal (very little pun intended).  If the government can suspend the “right” then you never has it in the first place or you never needed the government to physically allow you to do it anyway.  Have you seen how Adams in NYC wants to suspend the “right to shelter”…yeah, that’s because it was never a right to begin with.

The truck piece—if you’re saying if the difference between you and your family staying alive or dying came down to killing someone for a truck and you wouldn’t do it then I don’t believe you…and also look what our government leaders do…they have us kill propel all day long to (theoretically) make our lives better, safer, etc.  Keep in mind that society might want to hold you responsible for taking another person’s life (because…wait for it…humans have rights).  But if you can defeat those who want to take you in then it’s irrelevant.  It’s kind of like of like during WW2…if by some weird chance Japan would have defeated the US with an unconditional surrender after we had already dropped an atomic bomb, do you not think their leaders would have tried and/or executed some of our leaders?  But the winners call the shots.  Hence why very few people were ever held accountable for atrocities committed against the Native Americans.  Trust me, it’s not because the Native Americans didn’t want to.

Prostitution and drug use should totally be legal even though I’m morally against both.  If you disagree, then when are we going to ban alcohol for the same reasons?  

So going back to the animals piece—it has been shown that we can survive without eating animals, so we do we need to do it if it harms the animal?

Side discussion…kind of messed up how I can donate a kidney for free but if I’m not allowed to sell mine if I agree to the terms.  With both examples, I’m out one kidney, but with one, I’m at least getting something else out of it.

Posted
On 10/9/2023 at 12:37 AM, HeloDude said:

Ever go hunt coyotes?  They’re not “protected” and I know people who shoot them for the fun of it.  Sure one can argue that they’re destructive, but I can make that same argument for a lot of wild animals that are “protected”.

I love pets…I just don’t love hypocrisy when it comes to the law. 

I have not hunted coyotes personally.  Same for feral pigs or other over-populated pests and predators that pose a threat to livestock, personal pets, crops, etc.  It may be semantics, but I don't called culling those kinds of threats to the above mentioned assets "hunting for sport".  There's certainly not any hypocrisy when compared with a dog fighting scheme with losers being strangled.  Really? 

Me going out with a valid license and taking a white-tail for my own consumption or to donate to someone in need and reporting the harvest to proper authorities so I don't exceed my limit is hunting for sport in my opinion.  Our ancestors hunting for food to survive is just "hunting".  😁  Discussing the "rights" of those feral pigs or predators like coyotes is a non-starter when their population has become a threat and been allowed to increase to such levels, sometimes by the misguided but well-meaning actions of animal rights advocates and politicians.

Equating the dog fighting idiot with battery cables to farmers, landowners or helpful gun-owners going out to reduce the over-population of a species that is causing harm is pretty far off the mark.

 

Posted

I reverse read the last two pages of this thread and was genuinely shocked to see that HeloDude’s multi post libertarian flex stemmed from essentially defending a dude who killed dogs with jumper cables. 

What the actual fuck?

And libertarians wonder why they get no traction politically. 

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Posted
12 hours ago, kaputt said:

I reverse read the last two pages of this thread and was genuinely shocked to see that HeloDude’s multi post libertarian flex stemmed from essentially defending a dude who killed dogs with jumper cables. 

What the actual fuck?

And libertarians wonder why they get no traction politically. 

Then you didn’t read very well…I said I don’t support him or what he did and I find it immoral.  But I find a lot of things immoral that are not illegal.  And if animals can be killed for our enjoyment and pleasure, why are some protected and not others?  If I find abortion immoral should every woman who has an abortion be put in jail?

Posted
57 minutes ago, arg said:

 

I'm not good enough to be in the army, but smashing the large explosive rocket like that seems unsmart.  Where's our local arty dude?

Posted
I'm not good enough to be in the army, but smashing the large explosive rocket like that seems unsmart.  Where's our local arty dude?

It won’t go off or launch or anything… SRBs are fired by electrical impulse (Needs some level of voltage).


The danger is when they do launch all that abuse will have cracked the solid booster in some way so as it launches/burns it will explode. Not as likely since the way they are hitting it is mostly in line with the booster propellant so it’s transmitting energy through the length of the motor but still.

Same reason you can’t use a rocket/missile that’s green dropped more than 3 ft. It’s actually a warning in most TMs.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Posted
On 10/4/2023 at 4:20 PM, HeloDude said:

Ummm, I’m all about hunting animals and then eating them.  And I don’t know how many people who like to hunt are trying to kill people and eat them.  A little devils advocate here, but I think you need a better argument.

I got no problem with meat (sts) or hunting for food. I do have a problem with intentional disregard for life and causing suffering for the sake of a more powerful entity's pleasure. Surely you can distinguish this. Tell me you can see the difference between these two things. FFS.

On 10/4/2023 at 5:06 PM, HeloDude said:

Words matter though.  And there are millions of people in this country that do make that argument…PETA members for example.  There are even those that are telling us that the Kentucky Derby is cruel to animals.  I don’t support what this guy did whatsoever, but if you can kill animals for sport alone, it only goes to show that there is no such thing as “animal rights”.

No animals don't have "rights" in the same sense that humans do. But then again, there is no golden tablet floating out there in the universe that enshrines what rights humans have either. But I also know you know the difference between trophy hunting and torturing an animal to death. Those things are different. I know you know that.

Posted
On 10/8/2023 at 8:57 AM, Lord Ratner said:

Why are people in the military allowed to murder, yet I cannot murder my neighbor for playing loud music? 

Ummm, point of order. People in the military are not allowed to murder.

murder

1 of 2

noun

mur·der ˈmər-dər 
 
pluralmurders
: the crime of unlawfully and unjustifiably killing a person
Posted
11 hours ago, ViperMan said:

Ummm, point of order. People in the military are not allowed to murder.

Hmm... Debatable.

Posted
13 hours ago, ViperMan said:

I got no problem with meat (sts) or hunting for food. I do have a problem with intentional disregard for life and causing suffering for the sake of a more powerful entity's pleasure.

Can’t you survive and live a healthy life without eating meat? Also we should ban hunting because sometimes you can’t find the animal you’ve shot and they only go on to suffer in the wilderness…maybe we should only be able to eat meat that’s raised on a farm to ensure no additional suffering?  Are you also against fishing for fun?…or do you enjoy luring in fish (no pun intended) just to trick and harm them by piercing their mouths only to throw them back in the water when you’ve had your fun?  Sometimes their mouths get pretty torn up if the hook it tough to remove…all for just our human enjoyment.

Posted

Its hard to articulate the difference in words but choking a dog with jumper cables is not socially acceptable.  Catching and releasing a fish is.   If i saw a person choking a fish with jumper cables I would question his sanity.  

 

I love lamp

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Posted

I like dogs. But this one time, my friend's daughter was riding her horse and the neighborhood nuisance pitbull mix or whatever tried to attack her (and him) through the woven wire fence. He went to his garage. He never saw the fat-headed dog or his vice grips again. Just remembered that and it made me feel good.

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Posted
7 hours ago, Biff_T said:

Its hard to articulate the difference in words but choking a dog with jumper cables is not socially acceptable.  Catching and releasing a fish is.   If i saw a person choking a fish with jumper cables I would question his sanity.  

 

I love lamp

Oh I’m well aware of what is acceptable and what is not.  As I have said many times, I don’t approve of what the guy did at all and find it very immoral.  But if someone thins that this is unacceptable but aborting a 7 month unborn baby is…well, there’s the rub.  

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Posted
8 hours ago, Biff_T said:

Its hard to articulate the difference in words but choking a dog with jumper cables is not socially acceptable.  Catching and releasing a fish is.   If i saw a person choking a fish with jumper cables I would question his sanity.  

 

I love lamp

I do believe I’d just grab a beer and see how that last one played out though!

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Posted
16 hours ago, HeloDude said:

..  But if someone thins that this is unacceptable but aborting a 7 month unborn baby is…well, there’s the rub.  

Those people are dumb.  They will argue just to be different from their parents.  No logical reason applied by those types.   

Posted

There's something else to do in Thailand lol.   

Also, can make my couch do that?  

 

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