my two cents

Talk about whatever you wish.

Re: my two cents

Postby Magyk on Tue Oct 23, 2012 4:20 pm

MajorMajor wrote:Then we have to decide if Romney is actually writing things down in permanent or if it is a dry erase marker when telling us what he is going to do.

My opinion is Romney is giving us the Sunshine and Rainbows speech like all politicians.


It appears to me that you have Obama and Romney confused with each other, good sir.

We are not recovering under Obama, just look at the numbers - and even if we were "recovering" it's not so much a "recovery" as it is a change towards socialism.

Thanks but no thanks on socialism.

Edit: Oh, and the reason I always thing it's amusing that people bring up Bush is because A.) As you stated Obama admin has done nothing but smash the problem into a million new problems, and B.) The economic problems we are facing today can be traced back through the Bush administration, through the Clinton administration, and probably even back to chewie's administration. Assigning blame to one individual has to be the stupidest thing anyone could do, but everyone keeps doing it anyway. And if we want to play the "Yeah, but he was in charge when it happened!" game then don't even get me started on how we had an awesome-sauce economy for the first 6 years of Bush (something everyone likes to forget) and then we got a democratic congress and shit coincidentally hit the fan.
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Re: my two cents

Postby Maximus on Wed Oct 24, 2012 1:46 am

I took a look at your earlier link. After reading points one and two I'm not sure you should be taking advice from a guy who would prefer we play a game of nuclear chicken with China and Russia.


That was written in 1958, so some of the statements there are no longer relevant. There was a reason I picked selected quotes and didn't just paste the whole document. I did some further research and am not going to pursue this particular avenue. The question is more one of general principles than of one specific instance.

The principle to which I refer is that there are a lot of people who hate (I'll abuse the term just like everybody else does) religion for various different reasons. They don't have to sit around a conference table and make a formal plan to oppose it; they all just work against it in their own ways, from different angles, with the result that serious Christianity is marginalized. Sure, you can be a Kennedy Catholic and play the tired old line that Biden used, “I personally believe what my faith teaches, but I don't let that affect how I act or influence the way the world is”, but that's basically selling out and believing in nothing. The US bishops released a statement the day after the debate saying everything Biden said about the HHS contraception/abortion mandate was wrong. When you lie on national television to the detriment of your own church, then the divide between church and state has gone too far, and you have betrayed one to serve the other. The fear and indeed reality that I am concerned about is that this arrangement of loyalty to Ceasar over God is both antithetical to what it means to be Christian, and the fact that it will become not only as it is now, common and voluntary, but actually mandatory, to the point that it excludes Christians from the political process altogether.

you think PETA is a radical anti-Christian group.


Perhaps including all of PETA is an over-generalization. It's a large group which like most has its benign and radical elements.

Statements like "dogs are people too!" look cute on greeting cards, but the problem is some people actually believe that. Peter Singer is one notable example. He believes that personhood, for the purposes of rights under the law, depends on the level of consciousness and higher mental functions. In his ethical system, an adult dolphin and chimpanzee have more rights than a human child or someone with Alzheimer's. In other words, I am concerned about the people who do not believe in human exceptionalism, and those who do not believe in inherent rights based on being a member of the human species, with no qualifications. It follows rather logically from the concept of atheistic evolution; homo sapiens is just another animal with an unusually complex brain, and there's nothing that gives us any more right to exist as a species than the common housefly. From there follows the idea that we have no inherent and inalienable rights, only rights granted by social construct/government, and that to truly act as responsible citizens of nature, sometimes we have to act against the apparent good of our own species to protect nature at large.

This is the main problem I have with the climate change alarmists. It's not so much the science that I question, but the social consequences of jumping on the "sky is falling” bandwagon. Disasters and fear of disasters always facilitate an increase in government power, an increase that is rarely reversed. Already we have government mandates on lightbulbs, toilets, vehicle MPG standards, as well as the draconian carbon limits I mentioned earlier in regards to coal power plants. Despite the amount of money that Obama, as well as private industry, has put into “green” energy, currently something like 0.5% of American energy comes from wind and solar. It doesn't make sense to grind our economy to a halt by regulating its main sources of production out of existence and subsidizing technologies that can never work on a large scale, just so we can point to a chart that says we reduced our carbon output by X%, which may or may not have any meaningful effect on global climate in the long run. It makes somewhat more sense to me to regulate things on smaller scales such as LA, where smog is a real problem due to the geography. Those negative effects on humans can be measured much more easily than trying to guess ocean levels 100 years from now.

Of course the next step, indeed already underway in many parts of the world, is population control. Those who value the environment above individuals or cultures believe they are right to apply whatever means necessary to reduce the human population which is supposedly driving the meltdown of the planet and extinction of species. China's infamous one child policy is the most obvious example of this, in which women are forcibly aborted and sterilized if they have more than one child. You don't hear the “pro-choice” advocates making a big deal about those women's lack of choice. In other places, we yews economic pressure and withhold humanitarian aid, making it conditional on legalization of abortion and similar policies.

The more recent Star Wars trilogy (Ep 1-3) provide an clear, although exaggerated, example of one of the ways the radical environmental movement can effect us. Certain ideologies flourish in a time of crisis that would not in a more stable setting. Unscrupulous people, consumed with the hubris of their own plans, put pieces into place and wait for an opportunity to put them into motion. Even better is when the crisis can be manufactured on a convenient timetable.

To yews a more realistic example, this is the same principle that facilitated Hitler's rise to power in the 1930's. The German people were humiliated after WWI, and their economy was in shambles. A charismatic leader came along who was able to take advantage of the situation by providing hope and national pride, create order out of chaos, and put the country in a position of strength. Somewhere during the process such minor concerns as human rights were cast aside, as is typical during the rise of most police states.

As a general rule, I would tend to argue for less state control. The entire point of my previous post was to say that people should be in charge of themselves, with the government having only the minimum necessary power. Once power is gained by the government, it is never given up; the balance of power is a one-way trip (re: Palpatine, Hitler). Obama has said in as many words that he'll just pass everything he wants by executive mandate, since Congress won't do his bidding. The Supreme Court has justices that no longer believe in the primacy of our own Constitution, of which they are supposed to be the most rigorous defenders.

The vast majority of federal bureaucracies operate without much oversight or accountability to the people at large. They only ever make new regulations, imposed on the people, with little to no recourse. Example: Mark Levin filed an FOIA request with the EPA on upcoming regulations. It was denied. He filed the appeal, according to procedure, with... the EPA. Also denied. He is currently suing the EPA in federal court for failing to respond to this completely legal request to preview the mountain of regulations they are preparing to release after the election. The recent GSA scandal is another example of government going “open loop” and getting out of control.

I'm having trouble determining whether in your argument you would prefer more state control or less state control. I say this because you make the case that laws are an extension of morality. If so then you appear to want laws imposed that are Christian. You appear against the freedom of people to make choices. But what strikes me as counter to this is you also appear to be afraid of state control.


An example of Christian laws would be: no business transactions on Sunday; everyone must attend church on Sunday, though which church is up to you; you must give 10% of your income to the church; depending on your denomination, you must refrain from alcohol indefinitely, or meat on Fridays; etc.

The moral law is separate. It depends not on one's religion, but on human nature. It should be put into law and enforced when it is in the public interest. Polygamy is outlawed since it is harmful to the rights and equality of women. Prostitution is outlawed because it poses a public health risk, and encourages infidelity and the breakup of marriage. Abortion ought to be outlawed since science in the last 30 years has validated that life begins at conception and is a continuum thereafter, with no obvious hard breaks before which human rights can obviously be denied. And if you think all “conservative” principles come as a bundle... http://www.plagal.org/
(I was rather shocked to come across this group, to say the least. It's like finding an elephant with talons and gills.)

Like it or not, our society is founded against the backdrop of Judeo-Christian principles, with law based to a large extent on British common law, derived from Roman law, which of course were both heavily influenced by Christianity. To make an entirely secular law you would have to throw out everything including the Constitution and start from scratch (which certain people actually favor). I daresay it's pretty much impossible to write a law that doesn't favor one existing system of morality over another. Again, the question becomes which view of human nature and morality is going to form your understanding of law. Least common denominator doesn't work since you can always find someone with a lower standard than yours.

Throughout many years people have said that certain changes will destroy America or its various institutions. Whether it is letting women vote, wear higher skirts, letting blacks vote, or marry white people, or letting gays serve in the military, or get married, none of these things have destroyed America. The shoe has not dropped. I have faith that it will not drop. There is no reason to be terrified of the future because of social change. Nations aren't destroyed by that. People aren't killed by that. They may be killed for it. Nations may be destroyed for it. But that is other people hurting people. Other nations destroying nations. Not divine wrath or some judgement on society in general.


I would argue that women wearing higher skirts, and by extension the erosion of morality in general, has done a great deal to harm people on an individual basis, in addition to society as a whole. We've only had a radical change in this direction for the past two generations, so the end results haven't percolated through the entire culture yet. To point out a few (from memory, these aren't exact but qualitatively they're pretty close), a divorce rate of 50%; well over 50 million surgical abortions; 1 in 6 teens with an STI; 41% of births out of wedlock; etc.

In response to your earlier question, which I have been asked numerous times before, “what harm will gay marriage do?”, I am assembling a list. This may take a few weeks as I have a lot of other things to work on.

If you have faith that this society will not implode, you are living in denial of human nature and human history. Every great civilization in history got their 15 minutes (or centuries) of power, then they crashed and burned. There is a relationship between the moral strength of a people and their ability to resist external pressure. As many occupying armies have discovered, there is a difference between controlling land, and conquering a people. However if the spirit of the people is already dead, then the conquering army will have much less difficulty assimilating the native population.

This quote is apparently misattributed to de Tocqueville, but I'll just state it as is. America is great because it is good; when it ceases to be good it will cease to be great.

The cycle of democracy:
From Bondage to Spiritual Faith,
From Spiritual Faith to Great Courage,
From Courage to Liberty,
From Liberty to Abundance,
From Abundance to Selfishness,
From Selfishness to Complacency,
From Complacency to Apathy,
From Apathy to Dependency, ← America is here, re: Romney's 47 percent (twisted out of context by the media, but it makes my point here).
From Dependency back into Bondage.

I don't have a fear that the United States will cease to exist as a geographical and political entity. My fear is for the end of America as it was founded to be, with a loss of its original intent. Political correctness, anti-discrimination, and confiscatory tax rates, will supercede freedom. The Constitution, much like the Bible, is only alive and well to the extent that those who interpret it and defend it are faithful to the original intent. Just like the words of the Bible, you can twist the words of the Constitution to mean pretty much anything you want. The idea of a “living document” is basically synonymous with “slippery slope”, or the proverbial house built on sand. The truths contained in the Constitution are universal, and to the degree that we follow it as intended, we remain the land of the free. To the degree that it is ignored or replaced, we lose freedoms.

Also, the whole point of democracy is that decisions are dictated by the numerical majority. Are you against democracy now too?


Yes, against absolute democracy, as any rational person familiar with history should be. Absolute democracy is mob rule. This is why we have a Constitutional republic. The law and the rights it contains is above the ability of the majority and the government to take away from the minority. This system recognizes that there are certain truths, the recognition and practice of which are fundamental to the existence and function of a civilized society, and that the every-changing opinion of the majority of people in the nation may not always recognize those truths. Therefore we put them “out of reach” and give them power over us. This idea is expressed in a different manner in the movie “The Day the Earth Stood Still” (1951). If you haven't seen it, the second hit on my search for it yielded the full version:
http://www.classiccinemaonline.com/cine ... still.html

Reading what you've written I get the sense not just that you are afraid but that you are terrified. I have trouble reconciling this with the idea that you are a person of faith. This is becuase if one has faith that things will work out in the end then there is no need to be terrified.

Don't be afraid. Be kind to others. If your path is the one meant for them then they will see it through your heart, your kind works, your reason, and they will change and it will spread.


Indeed my faith says that things will work out in the end, which really means after we are dead. My faith tells me that this world will remain in a state of at least partial disorder, and that the war against evil, within individuals and between nations, will continue as long as long as there is a human species. I may not live to see the end of this country or this world, but if I have children, I have no interest in seeing them subjected to a New World Order in which Christians and everyone else are subjected to an increasingly totalitarian police state.


A few quotes:
Abraham Lincoln “America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves.”

George Washington “Arbitrary power is most easily established on the ruins of liberty abused to licentiousness.”

Edmund Burke “Society cannot exist unless a controlling power upon will and appetite be placed somewhere; and the less it there is within, the more there must be without. It is ordained in the eternal constitution of things, that men of intemperate minds cannot be free. Their passions forge their fetters.”

Thomas Jefferson “That government is best which governs the least, because its people discipline themselves.”

Ronald Reagan “Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same.”

Mohandas Gandhi “I claim that human mind or human society is not divided into watertight compartments called social, political and religious. All act and react upon one another.”

Dr MLK Jr “He who passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps to perpetrate it. He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really cooperating with it.”

Pope John Paul II “When freedom does not have a purpose, when it does not wish to know anything about the rule of law engraved in the hearts of men and women, when it does not listen to the voice of conscience, it turns against humanity and society.”

C S Lewis “The safest road to hell is the gradual one - the gentle slope, soft underfoot, without sudden turnings, without milestones, without signposts.”

John Adams “We have no government, armed with power, capable of contending with human passions, unbridled by morality and religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge and licentiousness would break the strongest cords of our Constitution, as a whale goes through a net. Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”

Lyle Myhur “When they took the 4th Amendment, I was quiet because I didn't deal drugs. When they took the 6th Amendment, I was quiet because I am innocent. When they took the 2nd Amendment, I was quiet because I don't own a gun. Now they have taken the 1st Amendment, and I can only be quiet.”
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Re: my two cents

Postby MajorMajor on Thu Oct 25, 2012 1:40 pm

Magyk wrote:just look at the numbers.


I have. We are in recovery. The numbers are positive. I always love how Romney says things aren't getting better because the numbers show we are. I laugh at the absurdity of his position. He'd be happier if the economy wasn't recovering because then what he is saying would make sense. His position should be we are recovering but not fast enough. Instead he decides to lie and say we aren't recovering at all.

Then he goes on about how he can make us a great nation again and we do this by cutting taxes and eliminating deductions. Also, but we really don't like to say it, massively cut social programs. We'd really prefer to spend that money we don't have on the military. Which we don't need because we aren't going to have any new wars. Oh wait, lets stay in Afghanistan another decade because they really aren't ready to handle things yet even though we've been training them for ages. Maybe their just slow.

Also, that socialism thing is all scare tactics. The far right just substituted socialism for communism because it fits a little better and then played it up as the end of the American way. Or more likely as the end of bankers being able to cook the books because of better regulations( regulations another swear word for the far right) among many other things that require regulations because people will try to get away with anything.

Medicare is socialism. Social security is socialism. Medical care/benefits for our Veterans is socialism. There are a lot of good things that come from socialism. The only reason the Republicans are against socialism is because it requires everyone to donate a little money to the pot to pay for all these great things.

The reason government ends up doing these things is because, contrary to Republican Ideology, the private sector fails at providing them for the public. If companies provided decent pension plans and affordable medical coverage then there would be no need for medicare or social security.

The problem is companies aren't interested in doing whats right for their people. They are interest only in their bottom line. A great example of this is something you can see by just looking at how insurance policies are designed. I mean who, when they are looking for medical care, say I'd like to be covered for broken bones but not the off chance I get cancer or I want this procedure covered but not that one? No, When a person goes shopping for coverage they want to be covered for everything that could go wrong. They don't want to play the odds trying to choose which plan and which diseases they think they will have. The companies want them to do that because then they don't have to pay for certain things and they make more money. Its not what is best for our health though.
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Re: my two cents

Postby Magyk on Fri Oct 26, 2012 6:03 pm

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Re: my two cents

Postby Maximus on Sat Oct 27, 2012 12:10 pm

I was right about a video about ObL being released the weekend before the election, I just had the wrong one.
http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/20 ... 963241037/
If you want to see something about the Seals from before they were a hot political item, see Act of Valor. It was filmed years ago but released this year.

Total welfare spending divided by number of households in poverty = $60,000 per household. (Some spending that qualifies as welfare goes to non-poverty households).
http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/ove ... 57889.html
Solar panel company failures:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-2 ... icies.html
One of Obama's biggest broken promises from 2008 is his lack of transparency.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-09-2 ... g-law.html
Latest CBO estimates of Obamacare paint an even worse picture of its cost (July article)
http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/cbo ... 49066.html
But at least your high school kid can get sterilized for free and they don't even have to tell you!
http://www.catholic.org/health/story.php?id=47274
Don't think US taxes are high enough? Let's have the UN start taxing us!
http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2012/10/ ... americans/
Numerous problems with Obamacare and it's not even implemented yet.
http://www.realclearmarkets.com/article ... 99890.html
Time to roll back the revisionist history and take a look at the facts of which party is the party of racism.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3LqPedoxSk

I work in the industry that may be affected by this one.
Senator Obama wrote:American workers who have committed themselves to their employers expect in return to be treated with a modicum of respect and fairness. Failing to give workers fair warning…ignores their need to prepare for the transition.…Many of these workers support families that are living from paycheck to paycheck, squeezed by the demands of rising health care costs, the declining value of their homes, and wages that have been stagnant for decades. It adds insult to injury to close a plant without warning employees.

But this is no joke. This is the ultimate abuse of the President’s executive authority: inducing federal contractors to violate a federal law and promising to yews taxpayer funds to reimburse them for any resulting liability that they incur for violating that law.


http://blog.heritage.org/2012/10/26/mor ... e-the-law/

So, Senator Obama voted for a bill that he is now as President asking companies to break, because the timing is inconvenient to his reelection, and have the taxpayers cover the cost of the lawbreaking. :roll:
He did the same thing in the video talking about the Stafford Act in relation to Katrina, saying that the black community of New Orleans were treated unfairly since the Stafford Act requirements of 10% funds matching were not waived. This is as misleading as he usually is because 1) he had voted AGAINST funding the Stafford Act (probably because it funds a bunch of other things, like veterans' benefits), and 2) the federal government gave billions of dollars to the areas affected by Katrina, no strings attached.

I am exercising some self-restraint in regards to Libya since not all the facts are in as to why it went down the way it did. I hate to agree with SECDEF Panetta but we only have pieces of the puzzle; there may be other factors we don't know about. What is absolutely clear at this point was THE STORY ABOUT VIDEOS AND RIOTS WAS A FABRICATED COVER STORY FROM THE BEGINNING; the Libyan president said so from day one. Radical Islamists have hated the largely Christian West since ~700AD and have been attacking us ever since. I don't think all Muslims are evil; most of them probably just want to live their lives and don't care about us. The ones who do hate us don't need any excuses to attack us. The anniversary of 9/11 should be a time of heightened security for all US forces, no matter if there's any indicators or not. The evidence piling up is pretty damning.

Short summary of what we do know: The consulate was previously attacked in April and June, with explosives. One of these attacks made a hole in the wall "large enough to drive a truck through". Earlier in the year there was a failed assassination attempt of the UK ambassador; at that point the Brits decided the region was "too hot" and pulled out. There was a known Al Qaeda cell in the area, and their flags had been spotted flying from buildings in the city. Repeated requests for additional security had been denied. A number of the people guarding the ambassador were local hired guards (we made very clear on the application that being in a same sex relationship was completely OK(?)). I've heard at least one statement that it was these local guards that gave out his hiding place to their terrorist friends (do not attempt to combine these two sentences to mean more than I intend). Once the attack started, there were multiple sources of real-time intel on the ground sending information to Washington. Obama had a closed-door meeting with Panetta at 4pm EDT which was not long after the first attack started. There were multiple assets in range that were fully capable and qualified of dealing with the situation. But as I said, there may be other mitigating factors we don't know yet.

Early guess which is subject to change: Just like usually happens when Obama gets put in a tight situation in which there's no way to please everybody and make himself look good, he spouts (stutters, actually) platitudes, and votes Present rather than going on record to stand for something. That doesn't work as Commander in Chief. He probably hoped the people on the ground would take care of themselves and hide out until the whole thing blew over. "Some protestors burned down our building" is a lot less bad on the PR side than "We gave the Libyans a bunch of weapons, now Al Qaeda has taken over and we had to send in the Marines to prevent a massacre of Americans who were there to give the illusion of peace and stability".

My God if this man is reelected this country is completely and permanently done.
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Re: my two cents

Postby Turky on Tue Oct 30, 2012 1:15 am

Candidates aside, these are the issues that matter the most to me:

Quit arguing about abortion and gay marriage. Those things should be a choice. It makes me laugh there's actually been politicians who claim that when a woman is raped, something magically happens to them to keep the baby from forming. (I shit you not.) Really? Did they fail high school biology?

We need to stop relying so much on oil for transportation. If you'd like to see what I mean, go watch Who Killed the Electric Car. I'll leave it at that.

We need to do something constructive about the illegal immigrants that are currently here, and keep them from coming. Seriously. Nothing makes them so special that they don't have to go through the process that everyone else has to. I would never randomly slither into another country and expect all of the signs and telephone prompts to be in English. Why? Because they're keen enough not to cater to illegal immigrants. You learn their language or you GTFO. If only we did the same in our country...

And while this isn't one of the prominent political themes at hand, I fully support the 100 Year Spaceship project. Bill Clinton put it best: the pursuit of such an effort would inevitably lead to the development of energy solutions that we ought to have here on Earth to begin with.
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Re: my two cents

Postby Laser on Tue Oct 30, 2012 6:44 am

When people say they are against gay marriage, all I can picture is a redneck touching his daughter in a pick up truck yeee-hawww
Less QQ more Pew Pew
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Re: my two cents

Postby Magyk on Tue Oct 30, 2012 8:52 am

I don't care if gay marriage is legalized or not. I think abortion should be illegal except in cases of rape, incest, life of the mother, etc.
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Re: my two cents

Postby Maximus on Wed Oct 31, 2012 12:42 am

Turky wrote:Quit arguing about abortion and gay marriage. Those things should be a choice. It makes me laugh there's actually been politicians who claim that when a woman is raped, something magically happens to them to keep the baby from forming. (I shit you not.) Really? Did they fail high school biology?


Typical MSM spin; report only the one quote of the year that doesn't make sense, and ignore the other 500 speeches that were just fine. For the record, a nurse called in to the Glenn Beck program the day after this incident, and said that 30 years ago she was taught this exact thing in medical school. Obviously we have learned more in the intervening years. Some informative posts at various places I read explained the rationale for this line of thinking and the more recent research that has superceded it. At worst you can accuse Todd Akin of being out of date, which I assure you is NOT representative of the modern prolife movement. It's since come to light that he was arrested 4 times back in the 80's during the "bubble zone" days while peacefully protesting outside abortion facilities. I was so impressed that I donated to his campaign even though I'm out of state. Who controls the Senate affects the whole country so it made sense to me. If you think this is stupid, recall that MLK and many others were arrested and subjected to much worse for standing up for their own and others' rights. Sometimes this is the kind of non-violent but bold action it takes to bring attention to these issues.

As far as abortion itself goes:
We have come so far in our knowledge of prenatal development that we can no longer claim the ignorance that the Supreme Court did in 1973. Roe vs Wade was a bad decision for all the same reasons as Dred Scott vs Sandford: declaring a human individual to not be a person, a citizen with full protection of the law, based on an irrelevant detail (in Roe, stage of development and location; in Scott, ethnic heritage). The two decisions share even more similarity in light of the history surrounding Margaret Sanger, who was quite an outspoken racist and eugenicist. Norma McCorvey (Roe of Roe vs Wade), Sandra Cano (Doe of Doe vs Bolton), and Dr Bernard Nathanson, founder of NARAL and a pioneering abortionist after Roe, all became prolife advocates in the following years.
All the typical objections, "women's choice", rape, etc are really just red herrings to distract from the main issue. Most of them are so shot full of holes by now that only people who have no interest in the truth fall for the party lines. At the heart of the abortion issue lies nothing but the following: the so-called right to have sex with whoever you want, whenever you want, without consequences (this is the key part), to the point where you are willing to kill a human being to accomplish this end. As a reminder, in most states, abortion is legal through all 9 months, up until the moment of birth (partial birth abortion was just barely banned), for any reason/excuse whatsoever. Any attempt to pass common-sense limits such as restriction to first trimester (which is a completely arbitrary point in fetal development) or parental permission meets with stiff resistance, exposing the abortion industry's primary focus as nothing but plain-old profit.

Life, it should go without saying, is the first and most fundamental right. There's a reason why "life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness (in other formulations, property)" always appears in that order. Liberty is useless without life, and having property is rather useless if you yourself are not at liberty. What good is a Constitution that protects rights if the time of those rights beginning is not defined? You would think that would be pretty fundamental.
On a somewhat different tangent, I find it somewhat hypocritical of those who argue for "gay rights" based on an analysis of biology and law, and proceed to not bother to give even moderate consideration to biology and law in regards to the abortion issue.

And while this isn't one of the prominent political themes at hand, I fully support the 100 Year Spaceship project. Bill Clinton put it best: the pursuit of such an effort would inevitably lead to the development of energy solutions that we ought to have here on Earth to begin with.


I don't see the real benefits of continuing manned spaceflight. I think a lot of the low hanging fruit was able to be gained over the last 50 years. Let's face it, the nuclear arms race of the Cold War drove a lot of the space research between the 40's and 80's, and the economy domestically and globally doesn't have the resources to put into this right now. If we can get to some sort of stability then maybe this can happen at some point.
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Re: my two cents

Postby Magyk on Wed Oct 31, 2012 10:12 am

MajorMajor wrote:
Magyk wrote:just look at the numbers.


I have. We are in recovery. The numbers are positive. I always love how Romney says things aren't getting better because the numbers show we are. I laugh at the absurdity of his position. He'd be happier if the economy wasn't recovering because then what he is saying would make sense. His position should be we are recovering but not fast enough. Instead he decides to lie and say we aren't recovering at all.


Didn't see this post before, but, uh, yeah. This is pretty much a flat out lie.
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