
_______


Okay, how is it not applicable to you then?
I'm not sure that looking at it in terms of ownership makes sense. How can anyone or any group own tradition, culture, heritage ... ?Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sat Apr 08, 2023 1:10 pmIt’s a good question to ask and, when pursued, it would open up into all sorts of interesting areas. Of great advantage to those of socio-political / philosophical orientation, but less advantage to political activists and those carrying political flags and torches. What I mean is something like the sense in the French expression "Tout comprendre, c'est tout pardonner" ("To understand will lead one to forgive" would be how I'd translate it in this case).
Put in the most simple terms (and keep in mind that I am ad libbing here even though I have spent a lot of time investigating the roots of conservatism, the American Right, and also the Extreme Right factions), the MAGA movement is one that deal in the notion and sentiment of ownership. That is, that the huge constituency of people (about half the country, right?) have the sense that what is their rightful possession -- their country, their heritage, even themselves at an ethnic and biological (somatic) level -- is being/or has been taken from them. I think that one must begin from defining first a sentiment and then move to the arena of defining ideas about this loss.
The reason being that, and perhaps this is true for the larger majority? they are far less involved in ideas, discussion and conversation that could result in clear self-consciousness and clear articulation, and substantially in a sort of intellectual darkness or what I might call a shadow-realm where little is clear. But this does not mean that there are not now nor have there not been clear and direct thinkers.
So to illustrate an idea-set that supports my contention here I will quote Wilmot Robertson in The Dispossessed Majority (1972):
This book, though it had a limited circulation, was very influential among those groups of people in America working *against the grain of the times*, as it were, to cobble together an intellectually-based reactive position.Is it not incredible that the largest American population group, the group with the deepest roots, the most orderly and most technically proficient group, the nuclear population group of American culture and of the American gene pool, should have lost its preeminence to weaker, less established, less numerous, culturally heterogeneous, and often mutually hostile minorities?
With all due allowance for minority dynamism ... this miraculous shift of power could never have taken place without a Majority "split in the ranks" - without the active assistance and participation of Majority members themselves. It has already been pointed out that race consciousness is one of mankind's greatest binding forces. From this it follows that when the racial gravitational pull slackens people tend to spin off from the group nucleus. Some drift aimlessly through life as human isolates. Others look for a substitute nucleus in an intensified religious or political life, or in an expanded class consciousness. Still others, out of idealism, romanticism, inertia, or perversity, attach themselves to another race in an attempt to find the solidarity they miss in their own.
However, if I were to include a more up-to-date list of titles that are influential among those of the reactive/political Right and also the more militant and extreme Right, I would start with this list:
It must be said: The thinking, the structure of ideas, that Robertson and all those titles that I have just listed, are ideas that are now forbidden. They are so contentious that they are simply not allowed into the public sphere as bona fide topics of thought and conversation. So I will suggest here that the question Why is this so? can be and should be asked. The answer to it is in no way simple.The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life [1994],
The Vision of the Anointed: Self-Congratulation as a Basis for Social Policy [1995],
The Culture of Critique: An Evolutionary Analysis of Jewish Involvement in Twentieth-Century Intellectual and Political Movements [1998],
Our Culture, What's Left Of It: The Mandarins And The Masses [2005],
Not with a Bang But a Whimper: The Politics and Culture of Decline [2008],
The Secret Knowledge: On the Dismantling of American Culture [2011],
Merchants of Despair: Radical Environmentalists, Criminal Pseudo-Scientists, and the Fatal Cult of Antihumanism [2011],
Ship of Fools: How a Selfish Ruling Class Is Bringing America to the Brink of Revolution [2018], and
Human Diversity: The Biology of Gender, Race, and Class [2020].
This is why I say that to understand our present we must begin from the basic assertion that we are in the midst of an Idea War. If this assertion is true then one is in a better position to examine the mechanisms of ideological control. And if one recognizes that ideological control is a paramount activity, then one can understand why it is imperative to exclude entire ranges of ideas that are made to seem, and indeed to be labeled as, unthinkable thought. An irony here is that I got the term unthinkable thought from Noam Chomsky! (Manufacturing Consent, etc.)
It could well and fairly be said that hovering around the MAGA movement are certain conservative opinionators and even scholars -- for example Victor Davis Hanson. However, I think that to understand American Conservatism and indeed the movement that brought about a *return* to the Evangelical and the Catholic fold among demographic groups that, in the post-Sixties had fallen away, one must refer to Richard Weaver.
Weaver was a dyed-in-the-wool Platonist and did not deal on Christian themes. But he did put forth the concept of 'metaphysical dream of the world'. That is, a vision, a sense, something foundational and perhaps intuited, that our lives are moulded and ruled by our metaphysical conceptions. (Even an anti-metaphysics is, I think, a metaphysics -- if you think about it). This is why, in my own case, I can propose transcending any specific religious persuasion or conviction. And 'picture'. One must understand that what one is really dealing in iare metaphysical concepts that *stand behind* any concretized religious form and mythology.
And by considering the ideas of Richard Weaver one will, as I was, be led to reexamine the American Civil War (the War Between the States is the *politically correct* way to put it) and the intensely politicized and ideological framing of this seminal conflict by the northern political power-structure. That framing, which is part-and-parcel of America's civil religion, is in my view where the so-called Culture Wars are truly to be located. Again I'd say: that it revolves around the issue, the question & the problem, of ownership, control and power.
And without going into details here I will simply float the notion that presently, in the country, the core battles have to do with control and definition of *what America is*, who owns it, who has a right to own it and direct it, and to what ends. These are huge questions and conflictuous ones.
I have often posted the link to this illustrative and I think illuminating bit of discourse (edited from a longer talk and given a soundtrack!) by Jonathan Bowden. My sense of it, and again I focus as a starting point on 'sentiment' that is also part-and-parcel of idea structure, is that it expresses something that, in vague ways, is shared by the MAGA constituencies. But then I would double-back to my assertion that it is, ultimately, bound up with the sentiment of dispossession.
"Somehow" matter came into existence. "Somehow" lifeless matter became biological matter on planet Earth. "Somehow" brainless biological matter evolved in to us.
iambiguous wrote: ↑Mon Apr 10, 2023 6:01 am
Okay, how is it not applicable to you then? Like all the rest of us, you don't know how these things happened. You just shrug and say "God". [/b]
Again, in my view, that's ridiculous. You have no capacity to grasp how and why particles of matter came into existence at all. You just -- presto! -- take a leap of faith to the matter that becomes the human brain and -- presto! -- just assert that human consciousness encompasses autonomous understanding and meaning. Why? Because you believe that it does!!henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am Becuz I know the answer to my question.
>If all the particles in the universe, including those that make up the brain and body, possess no consciousness, no understanding, no comprehension of meaning, no freedom, then how can those particles give birth to understanding and freedom?
>They don't. They can't.
you have no way in which to actually demonstrate it.
Smoke and fire are composed of the sort of matter that comprises everything else. Only with smoke and fire, there's the possibility that the fire was started by John burning down his business for the insurance money. And as a result, the fire burned down other buildings and that resulted in the deaths of 10 human beings including 4 children. So, how is the matter in the fire necessarily and inherently different from the matter in John's brain? How did matter evolve into human consciousness? And how, when it happened, did we acquire autonomy? And how, in the absence of that autonomy, can John be held morally responsible for those deaths?henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 amIf I smell smoke, I can surmise there's a fire. I can't say what's burning or how it started, but I can confidently say there's a fire.
And what intrigues me most about beliefs of this sort is not what you believe but pinning down the experience or relationship you had that, in the absence of, you would not believe in Deism at all. Instead, you might be a Christian or a Muslim or an atheist.
Ironically, from my frame of mind, it is the objectivists who manage to turn themselves into meat machines. Rather then acknowledging all of the complex variables in their lives that predispose them to Deism or Christianity or Hinduism or atheism or liberal or conservative dogmas, -- many of which are beyond their full understanding of and control over -- they assume that, God or No God, they were able to "think up" the most rational manner in which to grasp moral and political conflagrations. Thus allowing themselves to believe in turn that they are among the righteous and the rational few rather than among the irrational and immoral many.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am Oh, if I were a meat machine I imagine I'd be a vessel for just about anyone to pour anything into. If I were just a computation I could be edited, revised, or erased.
But, unfortunately for the commoditizers: I'm not just meat.
what is your own take on how the Benjamin Button Syndrome
Note to others:henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am If Daisy had paid attention, looked both ways before crossing, all those causal chains culminating in her gettin' car-smacked wouldn't have meant diddly.
According to IC, the Christian God is the explanation.
Only along with free will and designating homosexuality as a sin, many of IC's Christians are quick to point out that you are on the road to eternal damnation in Hell. Or, as IC himself might put it if asked about it: "Yep".
Okay, at least keep us updated regarding which of you is able to convince the other regarding who the "real deal" God is. You know, unless of course it turns out to be one of theirs...
Again, though, what all of us share in common is the fact that none of us are able to actually demonstrate any of what we believe about either God or drag queens much beyond our own subjective assumptions/prejudices rooted existentially in the lives we've lived.
Again, however, what can you possibly know regarding what they themselves are thinking, feeling and experiencing as drag queens, transvestites, transgender individuals? You just "think yourself" into believing it's just a dis-eased/diseased mental illness. And that makes it true.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am In context: it's quite obvious a man cannot turn into a woman. He can pretend he's a she, may actually believe he's a she, but: he's not. One doesn't even have to abandon promissory materialism to see this.
Supposedly? How about definitely: https://www.google.com/search?q=neurosc ... s-wiz-serp
That's my point! Only most of them are not able to fall back on "because the Deist God created us the way we are, that's why!!". As for Popper's "promissory materialism", sure, there will always be future discoveries that may well turn present scientific "facts" into fiction. But what's that got to do with pinning down your own conclusions here as in fact the optimal frame of mind. Again, other than that "in your head" you believe they are.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am Not at all actually. Neuroscientists are no closer to explaining how mind is created by brain today than they were 50 years ago. They cling to that promissory materialism and ignore anything that even hints the material just might not be all there is. They deny the possibility of fire despite an ever thickening cloud of smoke.
Only nothing in the way of a definitive consensus yet. Though, unlike most of us here, they are not just sitting around at home "thinking up" ways to understand it.
Okay, sure, but using the scientific method, right? And not skipping all that empirical stuff and just attributing us to a God, the God, your God. And, besides, there's still the fact that, in using the scientific method there is no definitive consensus one way or the other: free will/no free will.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am Oh, there's a consensus, that being: matter is all there, mind is the product of brain, and never mind that we can't tell you how mind is the product of brain...we'll explain it all one day...we promise.
Do you or do you not believe that your views regarding drag queens reflects the most rational manner in which to think about them given your capacity [re God] to "follow the dictates of Reason and Nature"?
Okay, that's important. Your belief in the Deist God then is just a subjective, rooted existentially in dasein "leap of faith". And you recognize that given new experiences, new relationships and access to new information and knowledge, you may well be in here concluding just the opposite of what you believe now. Same as me. Same as others.
Have you ever engaged in an exchange with someone regarding these things in which you acknowledged that their own frame of mind was more reasonable? Most objectivist will say no. Why? Because once they admit that they were wrong about something pertaining to the morality of human sexuality in the past they are acknowledging that they may well be wrong about something now.
How about it then? Are you acknowledging that your frame of mind here and now regarding these things may well not be the most rational assessment of them? And are you willing to agree that given a new experience and relationship or given access to new information and knowledge you may well change your mind?
Okay, again, note a few examples of how this was in fact the cases in the past. Your own rendition of my own rendition of this here:
But one by one, just like you, God or No God, they will all insist that their own assessment of drag queens and homosexuals is, in fact, objectively, the "real deal". The One True Path.And there have been any number of situations in my past where my thinking and my emotions were shifting dramatically and thus up to a point out of sync. When I first became a devout Christian. When I became a Marxist and an atheist. When I flirted with the Unitarian Church and with Objectivism. When I shifted from Lenin to Trotsky. When I abandoned Marxism and became a Democratic Socialist and then a Social Democrat. When I discovered existentialism and deconstruction and semiotics and abandoned objectivism altogether. When I became moral nihilist. When I began to crumble into an increasingly more fragmented "I" in the is/ought world.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am Citation, please. I've never said dddly about The One True Path.[/b]
How are your current views regarding drag queens not deemed by you to be the equivalent of One True Path to common sense and rationality?
Again, given my own personal opinion here, that is ridiculous. Who here does not believe that fire is hot? How is fire being hot not deemed by mere mortals to be the One Truth Path in grasping this inherent component of fire? Other than for those of us who are, say, paralyzed?henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am That's like askin': how are your current views regarding fire being hot not deemed by you to be the blah, blah, blah?
Come on, henry, drag queens and transgenders and homosexuals are often all lumped together in the minds of those able to convince themselves that they are all "perverts".
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am If such conflaters wanna join the conversation, they can defend themselves. I'm not their spokesman. I won't defend them.
Okay, okay. As far as our exchange goes, it is your contention that drag queens are dis-eased and mentally ill. But that homosexuals and transgender folks may well not be at all?
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am As I say: I'm talkin' about that continuum of dis-eased folks startin' with a guy who secretly wears sports bras under his three-piece clear on to, and endn' with, the fella who surgically mutilates himself, having bits lopped off leavin' an open wound (he calls his vagina). Which, to me, is entirely in keeping with the thread, a defense of drag show/drag queens
That's for another thread?
Okay, fair enough. We'll need to start a new thread in order to explore your thinking about homosexuals and disease/mental illness. Would you like me to?
Come on, henry, get real. In community after community after community in regard to sexuality and guns and abortions there is nothing but strife regarding how to translate "life, liberty and property" into actual rules of behavior. The drag queen's right to live his life freely vs. the right of others to live in a community where dis-eased, mentally ill people are either "cured" or locked up in mental institutions..
That's simply not true, in my view. In any number of God and No God communities the objectivists will insist that certain human behaviors are in fact natural and that others are not. And that rights -- rules of behavior -- ought to revolve around behaviors that are natural. Then those who argue that in regard to human sexuality itself, so-called "deviant behavior" is not deviant at all. It's just that some of us come into the world hard-wired genetically to think about gender in different ways.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am Even a casual review of the conversations, debates, and arguments in the public sphere shows no one is talkin' about natural rights, as theory or applied.
Of course, no state and no government and there is always the possibility that, in regard to "life, liberty and property", "might makes right" prevails. Or the state and the government itself embodies "right makes might".
Come on henry, even you know damn well that that if those with all the power decide to confiscate all guns from all citizens, you yourself would want a government around to check that. And as long as the local, state, and federal government are squarely behind bazookas, and guns galore, you won't be bitching much. Or if the government is squarely behind your own right makes might rendition of gun policy, that's good government.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am The State (any iteration) does nuthin' to safeguard or preserve natural rights. The absence of it can literally be no worse for the individual than things are right now with it (in any iteration). But, the absence of the State would make things markedly worse for all those who rely on it...
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am As for kids: they have natural rights too. They're persons.
Indeed, and nature itself has seen fit to turn them on sexually as young as age 8 for girls and 9 for boys. So let them?
Right, right. And that's exactly the same thing. As though there is a raging controversy regarding parents letting kids jump off a roof. Or drive a car. Or become a mercenary.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am When my kid was six, he thought it would be fine idea to jump off the roof. I didn't let him.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am No need. I'm aware of his views. It's been awhile, but I'm sure he has some dim recollection of mine. There's been no rancor between us, even where we part company. That good will probably extends out from the idea of not pissin' on your host's rug when in his home. Civility. Like what I'm offerin' in this conversation.
Besides, you readily admit that he might be right and you wrong here. Given that a new experience in your life might bring you around to his way of thinking. Right? Whereas one suspects that this could never be the case with him. Or with the Nazis among us. Not with the fulminating fanatic objectivists. Drag queens are never, ever to be tolerated in their own best of all possible communities. Let alone homosexuals.
What, now you are saying that you can't encounter a new experience, a new relationships or have access to new information that brings you over to his point of view? Which is it, henry? You either might or you can't.
Piss on his rug [civilly or not[ and you are gone.
Yeah, but there you are "disappeared" from the discussions. Not here. Here one can do what you once did to me: "foe me". "Disappear" me from inside your head. But then change your mind.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am Insofar as I know: no nazi (or democrat, or republican, or conservative, or progressive, or Libertarian, or etc.) gives a rat's dirty rear end about natural rights 'cept as lip service.
See, there you go. You talk about "natural rights" as though only you get to say what they are in regard to sex and guns and abortions. And, as far as I know, lots and lots and lots of those folks you mention firmly believe in their own rendition of them
But my point is that they don't argue that. Instead, they argue that those who are not "one of them" [the good guys, the smart guys] are wrong about what is natural -- rational, moral -- behavior. They don't just pay "lip-service" to their own convictions. They can even be fiercely fanatic about them.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am Name some. Seriously, toss out a few names of democrats or republicans or conservatives or progressives or Libertarians or etc. who recognize the other guy has the same natural, inalienable right to his life as he, the democrat or republican, or conservative or progressive or Libertarian, or etc., has to his.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am It's just common sense. A man, to feel less alien in his own skin, lops off body parts and then pretends he's a she. A woman, to feel less alien in her own skin, lops off body parts then pretends she's a he. It's lunacy.
Not to them it's not.
There you go speaking for them yourself. That many see being a drag queen or having an operation as the solution to what nags at them doesn't count because it's not what you think they should be thinking. And, besides, even if some don't think like you do, they are, after all, mentally ill.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am As I say: a great many readily acknowledge sumthin' is wrong with them. They are told the problem can be corrected by altering their bodies. They may balk at the placeholder lunacy, but very few are celebratory about it, before or after (cuz they realize after that these radical mutilations of their bodies haven't corrected the problem [which, of course, isn't about the body bein' misaligned with the mind, but is about the mind bein' misaligned with the body]).
In fact to go that far it must be very, very important to them. Regarding how they think and feel about themselves. Only they are lunatics because you say so. Their own bodies may be their property to do with as they please, but that doesn't make them any less mentally ill. And they must be because you believe that they are.
Even if that's all it is, they still feel like doing it. It doesn't make them mentally ill...unless of course you have demonstrable evidence that can convince the psychological professionals that they are.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am Dis-eased: not at ease. Diseased: sick. The fella who secretly wears sports bras under his three-piece (to support an anatomical feature he doesn't have) is dis-eased. The guy who willingly has himself surgically mutilated to (for the most) unsuccessfully affect the appearance, demeanor, persona of a woman is diseased.
your emphasisWhat actual hard evidence do you have to demonstrate it such that all rational men and women -- scientists, philosophers, psychologists, sociologists, anthropologists etc., -- are obligated to believe the same?
Okay, in that case maybe I am right. Your current attitudes about them merely reflect the fact that existentially, your own life unfolded such that you came to be predisposed subjectively to embrace one set of conservative political prejudices rather than liberal political prejudices. But that given new experiences, etc., you might change your mind.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am Cancer is natural: no one suggests accepting it.
Disease, and disease processes, physical and non-physical, are utterly natural, but they aren't biologically or psychologically normal.
Few choose to have cancer. But nature [given free will] allows men and women to choose the gender that they feel most in sync with. And since millions and millions have chosen to become drag queens or transvestites or have sex change operations how "unnatural" can it be.
Again, in my view, that's simply preposterous. Millions and millions of men and women already have chosen to take their own at birth biological gender in another direction, You might claim they are mentally ill lunatics for doing so, but [given free will] they still did it. While thinking it was the most mentally sane decision they have ever made.
Then back to the part where we still don't know the extent to which this might all be derived genetically by way of biological imperatives. The normal biologically and psychologically does not entail that behaviors chosen that are not normal are unnatural. Let alone a sign of mental illness. That's just your own "common sense" political prejudices which you refuse to acknowledge may well be rooted in dasein.
Yes, and lots of other mental afflictions. The brain biologically goes in all sorts of directions. But schizophrenia and other such brain dysfunctions really do involve chemical and neurological conditions "beyond the control" of particular individuals. For drag queens, the behaviors are freely opted for given human autonomy.
On the other hand, what of those Deists out there who are themselves drag queens?
Well, as with Kantians and their deontological agenda, doesn't it strike some as odd that all Kantians are not on the same page regarding moral issues. They predicate good and bad on rationality, don't they? So how come they can't all agree on the optimal moral agenda. Same with Deists. Their God installed in them a Divine capacity to "follow the dictates of Reason and Nature". And, as it turns out, common sense. So how can they be all up and down the political spectrum as well? Even within your own ranks things like common sense seem considerably more subjective than one might anticipate. Derived more perhaps existentially from dasein than essentially from God.
Or, "not all of us are mentally ill"? And perfection given the manner in which I construe value judgments existentially as rooted in dasein or perfection as embraced by the "my way or the highway"/"one of us" objectivists?
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am Sure. We all have our prejudices, our idiosyncrasies. Ir's not a given, though, such things determine behavior.
Not in the manner in which cause and effect works in the either/or world. I prefer to use the world "predisposed". That given the historical and cultural and experiential contexts in which you are indoctrinated as a child and given in turn your own uniquely personal experiences as adults you are more likely to choose one set of behaviors over another.
Right. As though my point is not aimed precisely at rebutting the objectivists contention that unless others are inclined to be meat-minds and think exactly as they do, they must be mentally ill.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 11, 2023 1:22 am A person is not just meat. There is sumthin' about him that predates experience. He isn't an empty vessel. Experience influences, it does not determine.
You just...assert that human consciousness encompasses autonomous understanding and meaning. Why? Because you believe that it does!!
did you do so because it was the only rational thing to do?you readily admit that he might be right and you wrong here
Nope.
You have no capacity to grasp how and why particles of matter came into existence at all. You just -- presto! -- take a leap of faith to the matter that becomes the human brain and -- presto! -- just assert that human consciousness encompasses autonomous understanding and meaning. Why? Because you believe that it does!!
Right, I forgot. All that is necessary to make something true is that you just know that it is.
Smoke and fire are composed of the sort of matter that comprises everything else. Only with smoke and fire, there's the possibility that the fire was started by John burning down his business for the insurance money. And as a result, the fire burned down other buildings and that resulted in the deaths of 10 human beings including 4 children. So, how is the matter in the fire necessarily and inherently different from the matter in John's brain?
Let me guess: you just know that it's fundamentally not?
How did matter evolve into human consciousness? And how, when it happened, did we acquire autonomy?
Sorry, I keep forgetting that your Deist God created matter. And that when He created human brain matter He gave it free will. And this is true as well because you know it is.
can John be held morally responsible for those deaths?
Then [of course] back to this:
]God started it all
And then all the "yeps" from these folks: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_r ... traditions
He really is able to convince himself of this!!! He has to. Otherwise he couldn't convince himself that everything that was ever involved in his own interactions with the events in his life were entirely grasped and understood by him such that they could never have unfolded other than in how his own brilliant mind intended them to.He really is able to convince himself of this!!!
Okay, suppose she did look both ways. After all, in the clip she sees the taxi but the driver was "momentarily distracted" and hit her anyway. And we all know how that works. It could be anything that distracts us. Something completely beyond our control. Sure, sometimes these things unfold because of us, but other times they involve a series of interactions that we are powerless to prevent. Like when the next "big one" -- earthquake, volcano, tornado, tsunami -- wipes out tens of thousands. What, it's their fault for choosing to live where these things created by God can happen? Practically anywhere on Earth.henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am It's obvious. If Daisey had looked both ways, all those other causal chains wouldn't have mattered. She, a free will, let her guard down and she got car-smacked becuz of it.
at least keep us updated regarding which of you is able to convince the other regarding who the "real deal" God is
Fine. But what doesn't change of course is this: if it's his God you burn in Hell for all of eternity. If it's your God...?
henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 amIn context: it's quite obvious a man cannot turn into a woman. He can pretend he's a she, may actually believe he's a she, but: he's not. One doesn't even have to abandon promissory materialism to see this.
what can you possibly know regarding what they themselves are thinking, feeling and experiencing as drag queens, transvestites, transgender individuals?
Oh, I see. When you claim to know something about them then that in and of itself makes it true. But when they claim to know something about themselves and it doesn't fit seamlessly into your own "in my head" reality, they are simply "loons".henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 amNuthin' beyond the fact that if any of these men actually believe themselves to be women: they're loons.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am Neuroscientists are no closer to explaining how mind is created by brain today than they were 50 years ago. They cling to that promissory materialism and ignore anything that even hints the material just might not be all there is. They deny the possibility of fire despite an ever thickening cloud of smoke.
That's my point! Only most of them are not able to fall back on "because the Deist God created us the way we are, that's why!!". As for Popper's "promissory materialism", sure, there will always be future discoveries that may well turn present scientific "facts" into fiction. But what's that got to do with pinning down your own conclusions here as in fact the optimal frame of mind. Again, other than that "in your head" you believe they are.
I addressed that above.
Right. Like those who from time to time become drag queens actually do believe that they are women. Instead, as drag queens [for whatever personal reasons] they acquire a feeling about themselves that [for whatever personal reason] fulfils them. Some need to go further of course but what can you possibly grasp about what unfolds inside their heads? Instead, you just insist that they are mentally ill.henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am My frame of mind (optimal or not) has nuthin' to do with the reality men cannot turn into women, women cannot turn into men, and anyone who thinks they can is deluded.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am Oh, there's a consensus, that being: matter is all there, mind is the product of brain, and never mind that we can't tell you how mind is the product of brain...we'll explain it all one day...we promise.
Okay, sure, but using the scientific method, right? And not skipping all that empirical stuff and just attributing us to a God, the God, your God. And, besides, there's still the fact that, in using the scientific method there is no definitive consensus one way or the other: free will/no free will.
So, are they all Deists, as well? After all, since you insisted above that it was a God, the God, your God that brought about the human condition as it is, don't they have to start there as well?henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am Yes, like Wilder Pennfield and John Eccles and Michael Egnor and others.
Do you or do you not believe that your views regarding drag queens reflects the most rational manner in which to think about them given your capacity [re God] to "follow the dictates of Reason and Nature"?
Your belief in...God then is just a subjective, rooted existentially in dasein "leap of faith".
Okay, then how do you explain your belief then? IC also insisted that his belief in the Christian God was not just a "leap of faith". He insisted that he knows that He does exist and resides in Heaven. Yet every time I attempt to yank some actual proof of this out of him, he quotes the Christian Bible and notes 16 youtube videos that prove it.
you recognize that given...new information and knowledge, you may well be in here concluding just the opposite of what you believe now.
Okay, let's get this straight. There's how you think about God. There's how you think about drag queens. There's how you think about life, liberty and property.Yep.
they will all insist that their own assessment of drag queens and homosexuals is, in fact, objectively, the "real deal". The One True Path.
Just go to the websites of all the "ism" folks and note for yourself how in regard to moral and political value judgments they regard themselves [and not you] as being on the One True Path.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am That's like askin': how are your current views regarding fire being hot not deemed by you to be the blah, blah, blah?
Again, given my own personal opinion here, that is ridiculous. Who here does not believe that fire is hot? How is fire being hot not deemed by mere mortals to be the One Truth Path in grasping this inherent component of fire? Other than for those of us who are, say, paralyzed?
But the One True Path, common sense, rational thinking and morality regarding drag queens?
Again, only regarding those who, when they dress up as drag queens, actually do believe this makes them women. Sure, for those who think this, they are clearly a few cans short of a six-pack. But if, while in drag, it brings them closer "in their head" to how they think about their own gender, that's another think altogether.henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am Recognizing fire is hot is not part of a subjective experience or a One Truth Path. Fire is hot. In the same way: recognizing men cannot turn into women and women cannot turn into men is not a subjective experience or a One Truth Path.
Come on, henry, get real. In community after community after community in regard to sexuality and guns and abortions there is nothing but strife regarding how to translate "life, liberty and property" into actual rules of behavior. The drag queen's right to live his life freely vs. the right of others to live in a community where dis-eased, mentally ill people are either "cured" or locked up in mental institutions.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am Even a casual review of the conversations, debates, and arguments in the public sphere shows no one is talkin' about natural rights, as theory or applied.
That's simply not true, in my view. In any number of God and No God communities the objectivists will insist that certain human behaviors are in fact natural and that others are not. And that rights -- rules of behavior -- ought to revolve around behaviors that are natural. Then those who argue that in regard to human sexuality itself, so-called "deviant behavior" is not deviant at all. It's just that some of us come into the world hard-wired genetically to think about gender in different ways.
Same with all other conflicting goods that generate strife revolving around "life, liberty and property". Who gets to say what a person has a right to in regard to them when others insist that they don't. The right own a gun, the right to live in a community where there are no guns. Then all the pro and con arguments. The right of the unborn to live or the right to force a woman to give birth. Then all the pro and con arguments. The right to be a drag queen. The right to keep mentally ill people out of a community. Then all the pro and con arguments.
Then those like you who come into places like this and argue as though anyone one doesn't share their own rendition of what is naturally right is naturally wrong.
Note to others:henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am No one in the public sphere is talkin' about natural rights, as theory or applied. It's simply not happening.
Of course, no state and no government and there is always the possibility that, in regard to "life, liberty and property", "might makes right" prevails. Or the state and the government itself embodies "right makes might".
henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am The State (any iteration) does nuthin' to safeguard or preserve natural rights. The absence of it can literally be no worse for the individual than things are right now with it (in any iteration). But, the absence of the State would make things markedly worse for all those who rely on it...
Come on henry, even you know damn well that that if those with all the power decide to confiscate all guns from all citizens, you yourself would want a government around to check that. And as long as the local, state, and federal government are squarely behind bazookas, and guns galore, you won't be bitching much. Or if the government is squarely behind your own right makes might rendition of gun policy, that's good government.
Ever and always it comes down to agreeing with or not agreeing with how you think about something. Well, at least until a new experience, a new relationship and access to new information and knowledge changes your mind about guns. And "sure" you note that might happen.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am When my kid was six, he thought it would be fine idea to jump off the roof. I didn't let him.
Right, right. And that's exactly the same thing. As though there is a raging controversy regarding parents letting kids jump off a roof. Or drive a car. Or become a mercenary.
Well, I myself believe that here there has to be a chronological cut-off age -- 16? 18? -- when children should be permitted to decide for themselves about these things. Like laws revolving around getting a drivers license or buying booze or purchasing cigarettes. Yeah, if a parent consents to their 11 year old son having a sex change operation then subjectively as an individual here and now I would be opposed to that. I just don't have a God or an ideology or a deontological assessment to fall back on such that I can argue that such things are necessarily irrational or immoral.henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am Yep. A parent has an obligation to safeguard and preserve his child till adulthood. A child jumping off a roof; having his penis removed: no parent worthy of the title would allow such things.
...you readily admit that he might be right and you wrong here. Given that a new experience in your life might bring you around to his way of thinking. Right? Whereas one suspects that this could never be the case with him. Or with the Nazis among us. Not with the fulminating fanatic objectivists. Drag queens are never, ever to be tolerated in their own best of all possible communities. Let alone homosexuals.
What, now you are saying that you can't encounter a new experience, a new relationships or have access to new information that brings you over to his point of view? Which is it, henry? You either might or you can't.
Note to others:henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am As I say: there are no conversations, debates, or arguments about natural rights in the public sphere.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am Name some. Seriously, toss out a few names of democrats or republicans or conservatives or progressives or Libertarians or etc. who recognize the other guy has the same natural, inalienable right to his life as he, the democrat or republican, or conservative or progressive or Libertarian, or etc., has to his.
But my point is that they don't argue that. Instead, they argue that those who are not "one of them" [the good guys, the smart guys] are wrong about what is natural -- rational, moral -- behavior. They don't just pay "lip-service" to their own convictions. They can even be fiercely fanatic about them.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am As I say: a great many readily acknowledge sumthin' is wrong with them. They are told the problem can be corrected by altering their bodies. They may balk at the placeholder lunacy, but very few are celebratory about it, before or after (cuz they realize after that these radical mutilations of their bodies haven't corrected the problem [which, of course, isn't about the body bein' misaligned with the mind, but is about the mind bein' misaligned with the body]).
There you go speaking for them yourself. That many see being a drag queen or having an operation as the solution to what nags at them doesn't count because it's not what you think they should be thinking. And, besides, even if some don't think like you do, they are, after all, mentally ill.
Your current attitudes about them merely reflect the fact that existentially, your own life unfolded such that you came to be predisposed subjectively to embrace one set of conservative political prejudices rather than liberal political prejudices. But that given new experiences, etc., you might change your mind.
Yep. Nope. Maybe.
you recognize that given...new information and knowledge, you may well be in here concluding just the opposite of what you believe now.
Few choose to have cancer. But nature [given free will] allows men and women to choose the gender that they feel most in sync with. And since millions and millions have chosen to become drag queens or transvestites or have sex change operations how "unnatural" can it be.
Again, in my view, that's simply preposterous. Millions and millions of men and women already have chosen to take their own at birth biological gender in another direction, You might claim they are mentally ill lunatics for doing so, but [given free will] they still did it. While thinking it was the most mentally sane decision they have ever made.
Again, as though I haven't already addressed this above.henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am Surgical mutilation and wearing dress does not make a man into a woman.
And perfection given the manner in which I construe value judgments existentially as rooted in dasein or perfection as embraced by the "my way or the highway"/"one of us" objectivists?
This, in my view, is by far the most important point of mine that you have to be adamant regarding. Once you begin to grapple seriously -- existentially -- with your own sense of self you may well begin to "crumble" as well. As "I" did when my own comforting and consoling objectivist fonts began "cracking up" all those years ago.
Right. As though my point is not aimed precisely at rebutting the objectivists contention that unless others are inclined to be meat-minds and think exactly as they do, they must be mentally ill.henry quirk wrote: ↑Thu Apr 13, 2023 2:25 am A person is not just meat. There is sumthin' about him that predates experience. He isn't an empty vessel. Experience influences, it does not determine.
( https://www.conservapedia.com/Atheism_and_cannibalism )If there is no God, no hell, no right and wrong, no moral responsibility, no meaning or significance beyond your pleasure, then existence is meaningless. Nothing you do matters, others do not matter, and what you do with them—and to them—does not matter. Nihilism liberates. For the Sadean egotist, then, everything is permitted. Sade incessantly rationalized the most depraved and libertine sexuality, and every crime including cannibalism and murder.
...is a less weighted or slanted approach.And, seriously, let's explore the very first time you became aware of the Deist God. What was the context? What variables had to fall into place to make it possible? And how did the Benjamin Button Syndrome not factor into it?
All that is necessary to make something true is that you just know that it is.
Right, like this changes anything.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am "...when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth..."
(with apologues to Mr. Doyle for the truncation).
you just know that it's fundamentally not?
Yeah, that's my point. Matter is matter is matter. Only you believe God, in creating the matter in John's brain, provided him with the capacity to "follow the dictates of Reason and Nature". In other words, to think exactly as you do about abortion and guns and drag queens. Surely there can't be conflicting dictates, right? Not from God Himself!!henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 amThe matter in the fire is fundamentally the same as the matter in John's brain: electrons, protons, and neutrons.
Huh? Why go through all of this? Just say, "because God created things the way they are down here and in following the dictates of reason and nature I happen to know exactly what that means".henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am "Let me see if I can summarize this, because it’s really rather startling. The universe is nothing but particles. All those particles follow laws of motion. They aren’t free. The brain is made up entirely of those same particles. Therefore, there is nothing in the brain that would give us freedom. These particles also don’t understand anything, they don’t make sense of anything, they don’t grasp the meaning of anything. Since the brain, again, is made up of those particles, it has no power to allow us to grasp meaning or understand anything. But we do understand. We do grasp meaning. Therefore, we are talking about qualities we possess which are not made out of energy. These qualities are entirely non-material." (a fictional version of the dead Mr. Einstein summing it up for a fictional version of the living Mr. Rappoport)
How did matter evolve into human consciousness? And how, when it happened, did we acquire autonomy?
Sorry, I keep forgetting that your Deist God created matter. And that when He created human brain matter He gave it free will. And this is true as well because you know it is.
Note to others:henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am "In solving a problem of this sort, the grand thing is to be able to reason backwards. That is a very useful accomplishment, and a very easy one, but people do not practise it much. In the every-day affairs of life it is more useful to reason forwards, and so the other comes to be neglected. There are fifty who can reason synthetically for one who can reason analytically…Let me see if I can make it clearer. Most people, if you describe a train of events to them, will tell you what the result would be. They can put those events together in their minds, and argue from them that something will come to pass. There are few people, however, who, if you told them a result, would be able to evolve from their own inner consciousness what the steps were which led up to that result. This power is what I mean when I talk of reasoning backwards, or analytically." (Mr. Holmes, of course)
Okay, suppose she did look both ways. After all, in the clip she sees the taxi but the driver was "momentarily distracted" and hit her anyway. And we all know how that works. It could be anything that distracts us. Something completely beyond our control. Sure, sometimes these things unfold because of us, but other times they involve a series of interactions that we are powerless to prevent.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am Only becuz she put herself out in the road. She didn't stop & look but, instead, spun herself carelessly into his path.
Like when the next "big one" -- earthquake, volcano, tornado, tsunami -- wipes out tens of thousands. What, it's their fault for choosing to live where these things created by God can happen? Practically anywhere on Earth.
Look, with IC's Christian God, His "mysterious ways" allow the faithful to rationalize all the terrible pain and suffering. Your God however is, what, off the hook because even though He created a planet that pummels us over and over again with His devastating "acts", it's all now up to us to figure out where to live on Earth...a place where there's the least likelihood of being wiped out by nature?henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am Of course not. Those events are the kind of we often call acts of God, but, really, it's just luck of the draw.
If it's your God...?
What actual evidence that God exists? Actual empirical evidence, and not merely defining or deducing Him into existence. And your evidence for free will is basically that God installed it in our brain matter. I mean, it's not like you are a neuroscientist able to pin down precisely in the brain where autonomy is created.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am Unlike for God and free will, I see no evidence of an afterlife.
And if it's No God? Then all of our lives are essentially meaningless and purposeless; and we all tumble over into the abyss that is oblivion.
At least here I am willing to acknowledge that I have no way in which to demonstrate myself that there is no afterlife. Hell, in a universe this mysterious anything is possible. All I can do is to ask those who claim to believe what they do about God and an afterlife to note how they go about demonstrating to themselves that it is in fact true.
The Intercollegiate Studies Institute's website First Principles 1st Web Journal declares:
Yep.If there is no God, no hell, no right and wrong, no moral responsibility, no meaning or significance beyond your pleasure, then existence is meaningless. Nothing you do matters, others do not matter, and what you do with them—and to them—does not matter. Nihilism liberates. For the Sadean egotist, then, everything is permitted. Sade incessantly rationalized the most depraved and libertine sexuality, and every crime including cannibalism and murder.
...what can you possibly know regarding what they themselves are thinking, feeling and experiencing as drag queens, transvestites, transgender individuals?
henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am Nuthin' beyond the fact that if any of these men actually believe themselves to be women: they're loons.
Oh, I see. When you claim to know something about them then that in and of itself makes it true.
But for many of them they know that in fact they are not becoming women. But while in drag it allows them to feel more comfortable, more fulfilled with how they feel about themselves "in their head". Then what you and your ilk do is simply claim that in fact this makes them mentally ill. Facts here are merely what you claim that they are.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am No. I claim nuthin'. I state fact. Men cannot turn into women; women cannot turn into men.
But when they claim to know something about themselves and it doesn't fit seamlessly into your own "in my head" reality, they are simply "loons".
Yeah, I suppose if a man in drag claimed that being in drag makes him a woman, he would be off his rocker. And if in drag he walks into the ladies locker room and there are a bunch of naked women around, they'd be justified in having him arrested.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am No. A man who sez he is a she is wrong. If he truly believes it, he's crazy. Men cannot turn into or be women.
Until...The perfect philosophy. Like Maia's "spiritual Self" and MagsJ's "intrinsic Self" and gib's "emotional Self" over at ILP, all one need do is to think something and that makes it true. Deep down inside you "just know" it is what you believe it is. And since no one else is you, what can they possibly know about it?
Only what happens when your own deep down inside you Self comes into conflict with another's deep down inside them Self in regard to abortion and guns and drag queens?
Of course, out in the real world where actual flesh and blood men and women have to come up with one of another set of laws to reward and punish particular behaviors relating to abortion, guns and sex, conflicts are everywhere. And you can say "Nuthin'" right up to the point where the community passes laws that go after your own assessment of life, liberty and property.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am Nuthin'. There's nuthin' I can or wanna do about Mary snuffin' her kid in the womb, never owning a gun, and paradin' herself around as Marvin. Of course, Mary isn't satisfied with my indifference. She wants my approval. She'll never have it.
1] those with most power prevail...might makes right
2] those able to convince everyone else that their own "right makes might" agenda should prevail
3] those willing to embrace moderation, negotiation and compromise in a democracy
henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am My frame of mind (optimal or not) has nuthin' to do with the reality men cannot turn into women, women cannot turn into men, and anyone who thinks they can is deluded.
Right. Like those who from time to time become drag queens actually do believe that they are women. Instead, as drag queens [for whatever personal reasons] they acquire a feeling about themselves that [for whatever personal reason] fulfils them. Some need to go further of course but what can you possibly grasp about what unfolds inside their heads? Instead, you just insist that they are mentally ill.
On the other hand, some might argue that those who come into places like this and argue as though only their own value judgments reflect the optimal or the only possible rational truth are the mentally ill ones. After all, given all the objectivists out there -- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_p ... ideologies -- one would have to be somewhat off their rocker to actually imagine that they and they alone are on the One True Path. Philosophically, morally, politically or otherwise.
Note to others:
henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am Oh, there's a consensus, that being: matter is all there, mind is the product of brain, and never mind that we can't tell you how mind is the product of brain...we'll explain it all one day...we promise.
Okay, sure, but using the scientific method, right? And not skipping all that empirical stuff and just attributing us to a God, the God, your God. And, besides, there's still the fact that, in using the scientific method there is no definitive consensus one way or the other: free will/no free will.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am
Yes, like Wilder Pennfield and John Eccles and Michael Egnor and others.
So, are they all Deists, as well?
Okay, then...only your scientists count.
After all, since you insisted above that it was a God, the God, your God that brought about the human condition as it is, don't they have to start there as well?
Let's try to pin this down. In regard to human biology and to human social, political and economic interactions where does God end and mere mortals begin? If God created human brains equipped to follow the dictates of Reason and Nature, is there or is there not a One True Path here or are mere mortals allowed to come up with their own ofttimes conflicting understanding of "life, liberty and the pursuit of property?"
Your belief in...God then is just a subjective, rooted existentially in dasein "leap of faith".
Okay, then how do you explain your belief then? IC also insisted that his belief in the Christian God was not just a "leap of faith". He insisted that he knows that He does exist and resides in Heaven. Yet every time I attempt to yank some actual proof of this out of him, he quotes the Christian Bible and notes 16 youtube videos that prove it.
How about you? No Bible right? So, if it's not just an existential leap of faith what is your belief predicated on?
Right, right. You "reasoned" your way "naturally" to His existence. An intellectual/philosophical process by and large.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am I didn't become aware of God. I concluded He exists. As for the process: I explained in a previous conversation.
Come on, none of us have a "blank mind" here. Instead, we are born and raised in a particular historical and cultural context, out in a particular world and based on our indoctrination as children and on our own uniquely existential trajectory of personal experiences [along with the Benjamin Button Syndrome] we come to this or that God on this or that religious path.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am "Let me run over the principal steps. (I) approached the case...with an absolutely blank mind, which is always an advantage. (I) had formed no theories. (I was) simply there to observe and to draw inferences from (my) observations." (again, with apologies to Mr. Doyle, for truncation and paraphrasing)
...you recognize that given...new information and knowledge, you may well be in here concluding just the opposite of what you believe now.
Okay, let's get this straight. There's how you think about God. There's how you think about drag queens. There's how you think about life, liberty and property.
But that's just "here and now".
You admit that given a new experience, a new relationship and access to new information and knowledge, you could, in fact, come in here and embrace the opposite of what you think you know now about these things.
But you're not a fractured and fragmented moral nihilist like me because you "just know" that through your God you possess the capacity to "follow the dictates of Reason and Nature" to the objective truth. It may be for or against abortion, guns and drag queens but it must be either one or the other?
Note to others:
go to the websites of all the "ism" folks and note for yourself how in regard to moral and political value judgments they regard themselves [and not you] as being on the One True Path.
Well, they might not actually call it that, of course. But they wouldn't subscribe to an Ism if they didn't believe that some behaviors are clearly more rational than others. The Ayn Randroids even call themselves Objectivists.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am I'm a regular consumer of print and electronic news & opinion. I've never come across anyone claiming their's is the One True Path.
What, now you are saying that you can't encounter a new experience, a new relationships or have access to new information that brings you over to his point of view? Which is it, henry? You either might or you can't.
Note to others:henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am As I say: there are no conversations, debates, or arguments about natural rights in the public sphere.
We'll just have to agree to disagree here then. In my view, you can go to any number of discussion forums that revolve around social, political and economic issues and find plenty of people who will insist that they are directly addressing such things as life, liberty and property.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am Not a one. And none of them address directly: does a man, every man, any man, have a natural, inalienable right to his, and no other's, life, liberty, and property?
even henry admitted above that given new experiences, relationships, information etc. he might well be in here embracing the opposite of what he believes now.
Huh? How on earth do we gain access to new information and knowledge if not through new experiences and new relationships. We go to the library and find a book that changes our mind about things. We begin a new friendship with someone who changes our mind about things. We walk around a corner and encounter a situation that we have never experienced before. It changes us dramatically.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:49 am No, I did not. I agreed given...access to new information and knowledge, (I) could, in fact, come in here and embrace the opposite of what (I) think (I) know now about these things.
Right, like this changes anything.
Why should he be arrested?Yeah, I suppose if a man in drag claimed that being in drag makes him a woman, he would be off his rocker. And if in drag he walks into the ladies locker room and there are a bunch of naked women around, they'd be justified in having him arrested.