Darktooth said:
Hardly any in California. If it's a "simple" marijuana amount, then you get fined.
KAYNE said:FONZ..........WHY DO I GET THE DISTINCT IMPRESSION THAT YOU THINK YOU ARE BETTER THAN EVERYONE? IT MAY BE JUST ME, BUT I GET THAT FROM YOU.
KAYNE
KAYNE said:FONZ..........WHY DO I GET THE DISTINCT IMPRESSION THAT YOU THINK YOU ARE BETTER THAN EVERYONE? IT MAY BE JUST ME, BUT I GET THAT FROM YOU.
It would be an interesting discussion to have...the "What makes on person better than another" ....but it would most likely be reduced to flame wars in our chat board.
I put education and experience as a VERY big factor when i deal with people. Those are 2 things I will always respect.
After that....well too many things to list.
But generally, if a person is older than you, more educated than you, and more experienced than you...they are more likely BETTER than you......don't you think?
I do.
Regardless, I simply put the number of convicts up because frankly it surprised me. I thought the number was far lower than that.
Fonz
Too many laws.
Drug laws # 1 reason.
Wow, you are proving Kayne's point. If you are educated, you should have a better ability to reason and present your ideas. There is hardly any reason to imply that you are more worthy of living because you have a few bachelor degrees and are working on a masters. Is that what your are implying? If you are, just SAY it. How do you act around a PhD?Fonz said:It would be an interesting discussion to have...the "What makes on person better than another" ....but it would most likely be reduced to flame wars in our chat board.
I put education and experience as a VERY big factor when i deal with people. Those are 2 things I will always respect.
After that....well too many things to list.
But generally, if a person is older than you, more educated than you, and more experienced than you...they are more likely BETTER than you......don't you think?
Fonz said:
It would be an interesting discussion to have...the "What makes on person better than another" ....but it would most likely be reduced to flame wars in our chat board.
I put education and experience as a VERY big factor when i deal with people. Those are 2 things I will always respect.
After that....well too many things to list.
But generally, if a person is older than you, more educated than you, and more experienced than you...they are more likely BETTER than you......don't you think?
I do.
Regardless, I simply put the number of convicts up because frankly it surprised me. I thought the number was far lower than that.
Fonz
Fonz said:
It would be an interesting discussion to have...the "What makes on person better than another" ....but it would most likely be reduced to flame wars in our chat board.
I put education and experience as a VERY big factor when i deal with people. Those are 2 things I will always respect.
After that....well too many things to list.
But generally, if a person is older than you, more educated than you, and more experienced than you...they are more likely BETTER than you......don't you think?
I do.
Regardless, I simply put the number of convicts up because frankly it surprised me. I thought the number was far lower than that.
Fonz
You bet we are! But they are beating us in executions by far.WODIN said:Is this more than China?
We're no. 1! We're no. 1! We're no. 1! We're no. 1! We're no. 1!
Baby Gorilla said:Watching this happen over the years, here's my guess of why it's exploding.
It's American culture.
The average American seems to want something for nothing. We glamourize violence. We say it's illegal to talk about God in the classroom but it's okay to talk about "alternative lifestyles" and sexuality. If religion is something reserved for the home and church, when did the birds and the bees suddenly become the perview of public education?
The only morality imposed in American society is the lowest common denominator. While I don't begrudge Tupac from his success, that a criminal can become such a public icon (God only knows how far that influence worked on young minds) doesn't bode well for our society. Remember when our childhood heros were people of virtue? Role models to live up to? Now we get Tupac, Bill Clinton, and the like.
Going back to prison population.
The common thread is that without morality, there is no respect for the law. I don't like what the laws say on many occasions, but I obey them because that's the moral thing to do. If a law is that bad, I fight to have it changed or recinded.
The average American thinks nothing of lying to get something they are not entitled to. The average American sees nothing wrong with breaking the law so long as nobody really gets hurt and they get away with it.
Sadly, a lot of people get caught, and if we don't punish them, it's going to become Hell on earth. So....lawlessness abounds, and prison populations explode. The solution isn't more prisons. The solution is a return to morality.
Beating up a guy over a dispute is not the way to solve the dispute.
Killing a person for anything but self-defense is not right.
Raping someone for sexual gratification isn't justified.
Selling drugs to make a living isn't right especially when you're pushing the really bad stuff. For the lesser things, push to change the laws, don't whine about getting caught.
Don't have the things you want? Get a job and earn them. Don't jack someone else's stuff to get it for free. Otherwise, learn to be happy with what little you have.
Warik said:
Still pretty sad that almost 1% of a nation is in prison. Seems crime is getting worse, not better. now we treat them like royalty. sigh
musclebrains said:
Actually, you could as well argue that it's the imposition of morality, through the criminal justice system, that fills up the prisons.
There's a reason John Ashcroft equates, literally, terrorism and drug use. It's the same logic that partially underlies the invasion Iraq: Get the immoral infidels.
musclebrains said:
Actually, you could as well argue that it's the imposition of morality, through the criminal justice system, that fills up the prisons. The demonization of pleasure through laws that regulate drugs and consensual sex is definitely moralistic -- as is turning sex into something that can only be talked about at home.
An example of the way sex is especially demonized: We attempted to impeach Clinton for lying about a blow job. Now we have Dubya and his cronies lying repeatedly about Saddam Hussein and Iraq. Which is the more serious lie? A curious logic has developed among the right: As the lies legitmating the invasion of Iraq are exposed, the right simply creates new rationales. We went from being under nuclear threat to being the liberating salvation of the Iraqi people. Dubya, according to his friends, sees himself as called by God. Iraq is in part a war on infidels.
The right makes quite a fuss about its support of individual rights but, now that it has ascended to power in this country, it is rapidly going about the business of attempting to impose its morality everywhere, diminishing the freedom of individuals -- whether its women's right to have abortions, the right to end one's own life under medical supervision, even the right of due process. There's a reason John Ashcroft equates, literally, terrorism and drug use. It's the same logic that partially underlies the invasion Iraq: Get the immoral infidels.
KAYNE said:
BY YOUR LOGIC, YOU ARE SAYING YOU ARE BETTER SIMPLY B/C OF A PEICE OF PAPER WITH YOUR NAME ON IT.
Bullit said:
Broly.... you, and many others on this board, think that you are superior to others simply b/c of the diameter of your arms so don't be sounding all righteous on Fonz.
If one had to choose a yardstick - brains or brawn - then brains is a better one to go with.
Baoh said:
Picking the lesser of two evils is still picking evil, though. Neither brain nor brawn determines who is a better person. It just translates into a selfish sense of worth or external value, which has nothing to do with how good or bad a person is.
Bullit said:
True.
I was limiting my comparison to Kayne (brawn) and Fonz (brain).
musclebrains said:
Actually, you could as well argue that it's the imposition of morality, through the criminal justice system, that fills up the prisons. The demonization of pleasure through laws that regulate drugs and consensual sex is definitely moralistic -- as is turning sex into something that can only be talked about at home.
An example of the way sex is especially demonized: We attempted to impeach Clinton for lying about a blow job. Now we have Dubya and his cronies lying repeatedly about Saddam Hussein and Iraq. Which is the more serious lie? A curious logic has developed among the right: As the lies legitmating the invasion of Iraq are exposed, the right simply creates new rationales. We went from being under nuclear threat to being the liberating salvation of the Iraqi people. Dubya, according to his friends, sees himself as called by God. Iraq is in part a war on infidels.
The right makes quite a fuss about its support of individual rights but, now that it has ascended to power in this country, it is rapidly going about the business of attempting to impose its morality everywhere, diminishing the freedom of individuals -- whether its women's right to have abortions, the right to end one's own life under medical supervision, even the right of due process. There's a reason John Ashcroft equates, literally, terrorism and drug use. It's the same logic that partially underlies the invasion Iraq: Get the immoral infidels.
MattTheSkywalker said:A lot of the laws is this land are based on
1. Our Puritan founders
gambling laws
alcohol purchsing and bar closing laws AKA blue laws
anti-prostitution laws
MattTheSkywalker said:Spoken like a boy who has never seen the inside of a jail.
Warik said:
Because, as I said, society treats them like royalty.
Want proof? Fine: How much time are you going to do for your DUI?
-Warik
Warik said:
I don't see why the fact that I've never seen the inside of a jail (as if that's not something to be proud of, given the society we live in today) somehow makes my point any less valid. It's a well-known fact that many of the people who will commit a crime over the next week are repeat offenders whose past offenses were not as minor as we'd like them to be. Why are these people still out on the street?
Because, as I said, society treats them like royalty.
Want proof? Fine: How much time are you going to do for your DUI?
-Warik
Testosterone boy said:He was saying that anyone who believes that prisoners get treated like royalty has never been to prison.
MattTheSkywalker said:I'm probably going to be acquitted. No crime no time.
MattTheSkywalker said:However, If I were convicted of DUI I could be sentenced to up to 6 months, and there was zero property damage and no injuries.
MattTheSkywalker said:You're right about the repeat offenders, wrong about the royalty comment. Except for the occasional celebrated criminal "2Pac, etc.", we treat them like absolute shit. I know you're exaggerating but it kills your point.
MattTheSkywalker said:The modern jail culture contributes mightily to the development of repeat offenders. Do you know what a huge loss to society it is to have over a million adults in jail, and a bunch of others who have to watch them?
MattTheSkywalker said:Incarceraton is big business. As long as we can keep jailing the poor to give the lower middle class jobs, we're going to.
Warik said:
But you did commit a crime. See my point?
Wow. Sounds real fair, doesn't it? You could have killed somebody, but the impact on your life would be minimal in comparison to what it would have been to a victim.
OK, but saying "we treat them like shit" doesn't reinforce my point either. My point is that, in comparison to how they SHOULD be treated, they are treated like royalty. Shit gets thrown in jail with punishment equitable to that which the victim and his family received, suffers in there, and doesn't get out for a while... or never if he raped or murdered somebody. Royalty gets back on the street in a few months/years and does it again. That's my point - a fact - which is a problem.
Oh no... you were making sense up until now. Do you honestly think that the poor would be making a meaningful contribution to society if they weren't sitting in a jail cell?
Do you forget how they got into the jail cell in the first place? We don't go door to door in poor neighborhoods arresting people when no crime has been committed.
Do they get treated differently from lower middle class when they DO commit crimes? Possibly... but they're only being treated how everyone should be treated. The problem (if it is true) is not that the poor are treated worse - it's that the lower middle is treated better.
[/quoet]
I like how you just brush aside an inequity that you discounted above as non-existent. Inequity is inequity. Justice should be blind, right?
The fact is that when close to 1% of the population is in jail and you can walk around in a mall for 10 minutes and almost certainly see somebody who has been to jail at least one time in his life, you know we're living in a shitty world.
Come to my house and you can be in the same room as someone who has been arrested 3 times.![]()
KAYNE said:
SO ARE YOU READY TO ADMIT THAT BABYDOC IS A BETTER PERSON THAN YOU??? GOING BY YOUR CRITERIA OF COURSE.
GENERALLY, IF A PERSON IS OLDER THAN YOU, MORE EDUCATED THAN YOU, AND MORE EXPERIENCED THAN YOU.......THEY ARE OLDER, MORE EDUCATED, AND MORE EXPERIENCED. NOT A BETTER PERSON.
NONE OF THAT CRITERIA HAS SHIT TO DO WITH BEING A GOOD PERSON.
KAYNE
MattTheSkywalker said:Not according to the law in the United States (or Florida) I didn't. The US justice system stipulates that you are innocent of crime until proven guilty in a court of law. As I have not been convicted, you're speculating. Are you suggesting we change the system to a speculative one??
MattTheSkywalker said:The same is true every time you, I, or anyone else gets behind the wheel. We could kill someone.
MattTheSkywalker said:Typically, though, we only charge people based on what actually DID occur, not what "could have". Additionally, we punish people based on what they were convicted of, not what they "could have been" convicted of. I don't really see your point.
MattTheSkywalker said:Your characterization of the incarceration process is quite narrow. If we used the sentencing guideline of "equal to the victim's suffering", there would be far fewer incarcerations. Many crimes do not even have victim, and theft type crimes could be resolved with financial judgments.
MattTheSkywalker said:Additionally, are you familiar with any aspects of prison life? Any guards in your family or among your friends? It is not easy or pleasant, except maybe for minimum security inmates. I am not sure what kind of treatment you are advocating...
MattTheSkywalker said:So should we just execute them? Achievement is equal to your opportunity, not just ability.
MattTheSkywalker said:If you think that police presence is equal in poor neighborhoods as it is in rich neighborhhoods, you're just wrong.
Cops are crawling the streets in poor neighborhhoods, looking for dealers and street people. Crime, particularly drug use, is equally prevalent in rich neighborhoods, but if the cops started hanging out there, homeowners would bitch. It lowers property value.
MattTheSkywalker said:When rich people complain, politicians listen, so cops don't hang out in those neighborhoods.
MattTheSkywalker said:When poor people complain, no one cares. Pick up a rich kid for drugs, his dad may know people. Pick up a poor kid, you got yourself a conviction.
MattTheSkywalker said:I live in a very exclusive area. You NEVER (and I mean NEVER) see a police car.
Warik said:
Oh please... don't give me this legal technicality bullshit. You committed a crime and there's plenty of evidence to convict you. Were you behind the wheel? Yes. Did a breath test show you to be above the legal limit? Yes. That's it - case closed. We're not "speculating" here. The fact that you're getting off despite the evidence suggests that there's a problem in the legal system. If you deny that, then show me why.
It's not illegal to get behind the wheel sober. It is, however, illegal to get behind the wheel with your blood-alcohol level above the legal limit. That's even though "we" could kill someone, "I" did not commit any crime.
So I suppose if I take a golf club to someone's head and he recovers fully somehow, battery+aggravated assault and not attempted murder, right?
My point is the following:
1) Was a crime committed? Yes.
2) Should the person committing the crime be punished? Yes.
3) Was/will the person be punished? No.
That presents an indisputable fault in our legal system.
Of course, I don't want to see you behind bars, but for the sake of this argument, you're the perfect target. =)
And that'd be a bad thing? Don't tell me you've never seen me rambling on about victimless crimes. An act without a victim other than oneself cannot logically be classified as a crime.
A financial judgment would be equitable to a victim's suffering. The victim had something taken from him by someone it didn't belong to. Vice-versa for the criminal. Sounds fair to me.
I am not familiar with prison life whatsoever, which is why my discussion has nothing to do with prison life. I'm talking about criminals on the street, not criminals in prison. If someone commits a crime, he shouldn't be on the street. Keep your red herrings to yourself.
Only the murderers and, possibly, the brutal rapists. No reason to execute drunk drivers, burglars, muggers, etc.
OK - and how often do you hear about a brutal murder or a burglarly in your exclusive area on the news? rofl dude... your counterargument has strengthened my point beyond bulletproof.
If there are so many cops preying on poor people in poor neighborhoods, and there are so few cops preying on rich people in rich neighborhoods, why is there still so much violent crime in poor neighborhoods compared to police-free rich neighborhoods?
MattTheSkywalker said:Referring to the right to a trial by jury as a "legal technicality" is bizarre. It's straight out of the Constitution.
MattTheSkywalker said:Anyway: The charge is "driving under the Influence", not "driving with a BAC above .08". Free law note for you: There are states where being above .08 is itself a crime. Florida is not one of them.
MattTheSkywalker said:You said I could have killed someone. So can you when you drive to the store. Your response above is a non-sequitur.
MattTheSkywalker said:For the DA to decide. Intent would play a big role. What does that have to do with anything?
MattTheSkywalker said:Tell it to a legislator.
Tell it to a legislator.
MattTheSkywalker said:You can't incarcerate everyopne convicted of a crime forever. Convicted criminals pay their debt to society and then what?
MattTheSkywalker said:I'll agree to the death penalty for murder convictions with a standard of absolute certainty: videotape, DNA etc.
MattTheSkywalker said:Why can't the cops stop the crime, if they know where it is going to happen?
MattTheSkywalker said:Seems to me like the police aren't making a difference in either neighborhood. If they don't stop crime in poor areas, and there is so little in rich areas, why have cops at all, except to jail the poor people away?
MattTheSkywalker said:KEEP THE RICH WEALTHY.
PLACATE THE MIDDLE CLASS WITH RHETORIC, PROPAGANDA, THE TWO PARTY "BLAME THE OTEHR GUY" SYSTEM, TV, AND DREAMS OF WEALTH THEY CAN NEVER HAVE. (KEEPS THEM SLAVING AWAY UNTIL RETIREMENT AT 65)
JAIL THE POOR.
THE AMERICAN WAY
supernav said:People get sent to prison for the sorriest of things.
Get a speeding ticket? Don't pay it? Warrant goes out and YOU go to jail buddy.
You're 18 and she's 16? You go to jail buddy.
Your work visa expired? You didn't leave voluntarily? You go to jail buddy.
You make some software cd copies for a friend. Microsoft finds out. You go to jail buddy.
Stop paying child support cuz the bitch took the kids and won't let you see them. You go to jail buddy.
and so on and so on. No it's not all drug users and violent criminals. Maybe 45% max i would bet would comprise of those.
-= nav =-
Bullit said:
Broly.... you, and many others on this board, think that you are superior to others simply b/c of the diameter of your arms so don't be sounding all righteous on Fonz.
If one had to choose a yardstick - brains or brawn - then brains is a better one to go with.
Bullit said:
True.
I was limiting my comparison to Kayne (brawn) and Fonz (brain).
Fonz said:
Babydoc is not in my field. But I do repect his education. He's just very colourful w/ his insults.
"Good" Person? What the hell are you talking about?
We aren't mormons. We are talking about "Better" not "good".
Please tell me you're not this naive.
If there weren't BETTER people than you....then how do you measure your success...in your own socio/economic/academic world?
There is no such things as Equality in life. Its a constant struggle to see who can win. It really is that simple. Civility is the only thying that keeps everything from crumbling down.
Fonz
Let me interject. Defining "goodness", or who is better, doesn't make much sense. People are too complex to quantify them with a scalar (single dimensional) value.KAYNE said:
WHEN YOU SAY YOU ARE A BETTER PERSON THAN SOMEONE ITS THE SAME AS SAYING THAT PERSON ISNT AS GOOD A PERSON AS YOU. APPLES AND ORANGES. YOUR CRITERIA ON WHAT MAKES A PERSON BETTER THAN ANOTHER IS SERIOUSLY FLAWED AND POMPOUS ON YOUR PART. NOONE IS "BETTER" THAN ANYONE (PROVIDING WE ARE TALKING ABOUT NORMAL PEOPLE AND NOT PEOPLE LIKE MURDERERS, ETC. SO DONT EVEN BRING THAT UP).
BY YOUR LOGIC, YOU ARE IMPLYING THAT A PERSON WITHOUT THE SAME CREDENTIALS (SO TO SPEAK) AS YOU ISNT AS GOOD A PERSON AS YOU I.E....YOU ARE BETTER THAN THEM AS PERSON.
YOU EQUATE SUCCESS AND EDUCATION TO WHETHER SOMEONE IS AS GOOD AS YOU OR NOT. THATS STUPID. PLAIN AND SIMPLE.
KAYNE
plornive said:
The fact that Fonz chooses to recognize one definition and the fact that his definition is based largely education reveal a lot about his personality.
KAYNE said:
YOU MEAN IT REVEALS THINGS LIKE VANITY, NARCISSISM, AND SELF-ADMIRATION. STUFF LIKE THAT RIGHT!
KAYNE
Fonz said:
Narcisstic = Thinks he's better than everybody else.
KAYNE said:
YEAH, I'M SO STUPID I MAKE 4.0'S SCHOOL EVEN THOUGH I'M EXTREMELY LAZY WHEN IT COMES TO STUDYING AND SCHOOL WORK.
___________________________________________________
atlantabiolab said:
Good post. I feel kind of weird actually agreeing with you. But you still are not seeing the complete picture, both groups are responsible for this problem. Since society has accepted the concept that morality is independent of reality, and that the mind creates reality, then whoever is in power, with this mindset, will interpret reality and morality to their wishes. The left does this with restrictions of freedom in lifestyles, such as smoking laws, increasing taxes on the working class, environmental regulations, affirmitive action, etc., while the right does it with expansion of government authority in criminal investigations and judicial actions. Both use the concept of "the good of society" to perpetuate their agenda, which is essentially power and control of thought.
You did good until you threw in euthanasia and abortion, though. Stick to real rights of individuals, not legalities.
Fonz said:
Narcisstic = Thinks he's better than everybody else.
Actually spelled narcissism .And your definition of the word isn't quite accurate either.Fonz said:
Narcissm?
You have to stop trying to post big words if you don't understand their meaning.
Narcisstic = Thinks he's better than everybody else.
Fonz
posthuman said:
Actually spelled narcissism .And your definition of the word isn't quite accurate either.
KAYNE said:FONZ.......YOU LOVE YOURSELF. YOU LIKE TO HEAR YOURSELF SPEW OFF SHIT (OR IN THIS CASE, READ YOUR OWN SHIT). YOU THINK YOU ARE BETTER THAN EVERYONE WHEN IN FACT, YOURE NOT.
GET OFF OF YOUR HIGH HORSE ASSHOLE. YOURE NO BETTER THAN ANYONE ELSE ON HERE.
KAYNE
40butpumpin said:If you really want to know why that number is so high take a look at the breakdown wrt race. Then take a look at the breakdown of judges, officials and politicians wrt race. Fonz no disrespect intended but education is not even in my top ten for respecting a person. It has to be more than that, bro. The fact of it is that many of the individuals in prison never had a chance outside because they were born into poverty. White collars are very educated people, obviously the most educated of our society, however, they, IMO, are the most corrupt by far.
Fonz said:
We are on a FITNESS site. My knowledge vastly super-seeds yours in fitness....so I'm therefore BETTER than you in regards to fitness knowledge.
End of story.
Until you put in the necessary time researching and reading over data....you will just be another chat board moron to me.
I still find it funny you cannot let this trivial issue go. Talk about insecurity.
Fonz
Fonz said:
Its Ok.
Everybody has different view-points.
I just find it funny that people get blasted for being intelligent.
Like it was a crime to actually show your intelligence. i.e Kayne
I find education important b/c it think its a very important character building block.
Fonz
I know this gets a lot of flack, but there's more truth in this than most would want to acknowledge.MattTheSkywalker said:....This is the bottom line:
COPS ARE THE WAY THAT THE STATE DEALS WITH POOR PEOPLE, SINCE THEY ARE THE MOST LIKELY TOENGAGE IN VIOLENT REVOLUTION AND KICK OUT THOSE IN POWER. IT GOES ABOUT LIKE THIS:
KEEP THE RICH WEALTHY.
PLACATE THE MIDDLE CLASS WITH RHETORIC, PROPAGANDA, THE TWO PARTY "BLAME THE OTEHR GUY" SYSTEM, TV, AND DREAMS OF WEALTH THEY CAN NEVER HAVE. (KEEPS THEM SLAVING AWAY UNTIL RETIREMENT AT 65)
JAIL THE POOR.
THE AMERICAN WAY
Warik said:
Red herring alert. I'm asking YOU.
I'm not asking you if you were convicted of a crime. I'm asking you if you committed a crime. There are only two possible answers: "yes" or "no." Conviction or acquital does not change that. I understand that for legal reasons, you may not be inclined to answer. I will accept "stop being a little kid who's never been to jail" as a "yes I clearly committed a crime."
uh, Florida's legal limit is 0.08. The fact is that you are presenting a mountain of evidence to suggest that you weren't driving under the influence, but none of which pertain to cold hard facts. The machine "could" have been inaccurate, you "could" have driven home just fine.
You know what the problem is? Someone whose test WASN'T inaccurate and who COULD NOT have driven home COULD get off on the same defense on which you're going to get off, and that's a problem.
Trial by jury is to protect the innocent, not the guilty bubba.
Has an innocent man ever be put to death? If so, who? (not a counterpoint... just asking out of curiousity).
Police prey on the poor, right? But in order to prey on the poor, the poor must commit crimes, right? So when a poor person commits a crime, the police show up and haul him away, right?
Snce there is no difference between a poor person and a middle-class or rich person, then rich neighborhoods should be rampant with crime because there are no police there to stop right, right?
Baoh said:"super-seeds"
Hmmm.
Fonz said:
We are on a FITNESS site. My knowledge vastly super-seeds yours in fitness....so I'm therefore BETTER than you in regards to fitness knowledge.
End of story.
Until you put in the necessary time researching and reading over data....you will just be another chat board moron to me.
I still find it funny you cannot let this trivial issue go. Talk about insecurity.
Fonz
musclebrains said:
Oh, okay, dad. I forgot that morality is a set of universal, essentialist principles that, however much they are perverted from culture to culture and epoch to epoch, can always be articulated in their purity by you and are, as Pirandello said of absurdity, true simply because they ARE.
atlantabiolab said:
You never forgot, you just don't want to accept it. It is much easier to believe the relativistic idea that reason is impotent to understand the world, and therefore morality is not real, but simply a personal term. Your insinuation that simply because man has failed to express morality, proves its non-existence, is no different than saying that because man has failed so many times in his endeavors in science, that science must not be real. But being a non-scientist, one who studies a field in which anyone can wish into being "illnesses", with no definable criteria, fits one who believes that the world is what you believe it to be.
atlantabiolab said:
You never forgot, you just don't want to accept it. It is much easier to believe the relativistic idea that reason is impotent to understand the world, and therefore morality is not real, but simply a personal term. Your insinuation that simply because man has failed to express morality, proves its non-existence, is no different than saying that because man has failed so many times in his endeavors in science, that science must not be real. But being a non-scientist, one who studies a field in which anyone can wish into being "illnesses", with no definable criteria, fits one who believes that the world is what you believe it to be.
MattTheSkywalker said:I tried to explain this to you in my plast post but I guess I wasn't clear. Driving with a BAC above .08 is NOT A CRIME in Florida. In some states it is. This is not one of them.
I was charged with "driving under the influence". The Breathalyzer test is one of 5 tests I was given to determine intoxication. Some of them I failed, some I passed. The police report, videotapes and other evidence will be compiled in order for a jury to determine if I was in fact under the influence.
One more time: driving with a .08 BAC is not a CRIME in Florida. Red herring that.![]()
MattTheSkywalker said:A guy named Roger Coleman was executed in Virginia in 1992. The state of Virginia will not relesae DNA evidence for additional testing. This is likely an example of the "wrong guy" being put to death. There are dozens of inconsistencies and Coleman had a solid alibi (he was at work, his presence was verified by many witnesses).
MattTheSkywalker said:Police don't stop crime. If they did, crime would decline acorss the board. But it never drops and stays low. The police presence or absence in any neighborhood IS IRRELEVANT to the amount of crime.
MattTheSkywalker said:I think we are talking past each other. I never contested that poor people commit more crimes.
Fonz said:Kayne, you're becoming more and more like Puc every day.
Another bitter, jealous person.
There are people that are simply smarter than you.
I am one of those people.
Sorry to break it to you.
Now run along....back to finance or whatever degree you are doing.
I'm not wasting my time trying to talk to a person who always types in caps and claims to be secure.
LOL
Fonz
Fonz said:Please add the fact I am a FAR BETTER athlete than you are.
Next.
Fonz
Fonz said:
Yes, i made a spelling mistake.......1 AM.
I don't use spell check.
Fonz
Fonz said:Please add the fact I am a FAR BETTER athlete than you are.
Next.
Fonz
Fonz said:
Yes, i made a spelling mistake.......1 AM.
I don't use spell check.
Fonz
Warik said:side note: fonz is my bitch. he still hasn't answered that statistics question from months ago.
KAYNE said:
THATS NO SUPRISE. HE TENDS TO SIDESTEP AND MANIPULATE THINGS WHEN HE IS LOSING THE BATTLE. JUST LIKE HE DID WITH BABYDOC AND JUST LIKE HE IS DOING WITH ME.
KAYNE said:AND REMEMBER DUM SPELLED BACKWARDS SPELLS MUD.
MAN FONZ, YOU REALLY SOUND LIKE A LITTLE BITCH. A WHINEY LITTLE GIRL. YOU ARE STARTING TO CEMENT MY SUSPICIONS THAT YOU ARE A FAIRY.
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