Random Politics & Religion #00 |
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Random Politics & Religion #00
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I have the basic writing of Nietzsche which is a lot of books (The Birth of Tragedy, Beyond Good and Evil, On the Genealogy of Morals, The Case of Wagner, and Ecce Homo) combined. It weighs in at 896 pages. The odds of me reading all that is slim but I'll give it the old college try !
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However this book is far easier to read it is just a bunch of aphorisms:
#FreeSpiritLivesMatter
Valefor.Sehachan said: » Hah! As if the current system wasn't faulty enough in determining borrower trustworthiness. Do you even know the guidelines set by Dodd-Frank, or what the guidelines were beforehand? (hint: nothing's changed since Dodd-Frank in terms of lending guidelines) Do you even know anything about the banking system at all, or is your blind hatred clouding your judgement again?
Asura.Kingnobody said: » Do you even know the guidelines set by Dodd-Frank, or what the guidelines were beforehand? (hint: nothing's changed since Dodd-Frank in terms of lending guidelines) Do you even know anything about the banking system at all, or is your blind hatred clouding your judgement again? Do you know anything about private loans period, Mister Trust Fund? Have you had to finance anything in your life? Have you ever had to worry about your inability to finance something because even though you have a great job and pay all of your bills quite timely, larger than the minimum payments, you still might not get a loan because you dared to be poor and get an education and it took time to network and get somewhere in your life? I accept that the current standard of determining loan eligibility works, albeit not perfectly. What I'm saying is that adding Facebook as a determining factor is going to exacerbate the existing problems in an imperfect system, and not helping anything. KN, I have generally liked you in the past despite our general differences, as beyond politics we share a sense of humor and a lot of common interests, but I don't know if it's the stress of your "new job," or the recent history of headbutting you've got with the mods, but you're being awfully insulting recently and it's a lot more personal than Nausi or Sav's random, wild accusations of mental disorders and general disdain. I think you need a drink and a little more vacation time. "That dude is growing pot in his basement, we need an armored car with a turret to get him!"
Ok look, I can see them going after meth (not with the military weaponry), but in general, as meth is some hardcore ***. But pot, come on? Then again, a lot of the same reasons pot should be legal, the other controlled substances should too. Just it's hard (even for me) to get behind meth, coke, heroin. Jetackuu said: » Then again, a lot of the same reasons pot should be legal, the other controlled substances should too. Just it's hard (even for me) to get behind meth, coke, heroin. Decriminalize and regulate. Just like you did with Capone. Don't beat them by fighting them. Beat them by hitting them in the pocket. Ramyrez said: » Jetackuu said: » Then again, a lot of the same reasons pot should be legal, the other controlled substances should too. Just it's hard (even for me) to get behind meth, coke, heroin. Decriminalize and regulate. Just like you did with Capone. Don't beat them by fighting them. Beat them by hitting them in the pocket. Again: fine with pot, especially since then (hopefully) people would digest it's products more instead of smoking it, cuz holy hell. The rest: just can't get behind. Given the utter failure domestically and internationally of the war on drugs, I'm willing to risk it to change up the tactic and see how it goes.
Ramyrez said: » Given the utter failure domestically and internationally of the war on drugs, I'm willing to risk it to change up the tactic and see how it goes. I'd say it couldn't be worse than the situation they've created, but I'm open to the idea of the high probability of them screwing it up more. Jetackuu said: » Ramyrez said: » Given the utter failure domestically and internationally of the war on drugs, I'm willing to risk it to change up the tactic and see how it goes. I'd say it couldn't be worse than the situation they've created, but I'm open to the idea of the high probability of them screwing it up more. Fair enough. Garuda.Chanti said: » The whole toilet seat up/down thing has always puzzled me since I was a child. I mean, I "get" it. But really. Do other guys ***standing up and I'm doing it wrong? Obama's assistant tries to shoot boyfriend
Posting it for curiousity. I wanna see how this is spinned to blame Obama somehow. Ramyrez said: » .... The whole toilet seat up/down thing has always puzzled me since I was a child. I mean, I "get" it. But really. Do other guys ***standing up and I'm doing it wrong? Personally I don't care where you leave the seat. But you WILL put the lid down in my house or my dog will kiss you. Right after taking a drink. Garuda.Chanti said: » But you WILL put the lid down in my house or my dog will kiss you. Right after taking a drink. Gotta be honest, maybe it's just 33 years of "feminist oppression," but I've always put seat and lid down afterward. I mean, who is to say I won't have to sit next time I'm in there? And hey, I'd rather look at a hardwood surface than the bowel of a toilet any day. Haha.
That's a few months old. I remember seeing it a while back. But it's pretty great either way. Picture for those who don't want to follow the link: Offline
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Leviathan.Chaosx said: » Canada has a bank ? When you run out of places to store maple syrup or hockey sticks. I guess you put stuff in the bank ! Ramyrez said: » Garuda.Chanti said: » The whole toilet seat up/down thing has always puzzled me since I was a child. I mean, I "get" it. But really. Do other guys ***standing up and I'm doing it wrong? But seriously, put the lid and the cover down, is what I usually do at home. When there isn't a cover, I just leave it however I'm done with it, ***'em. Rick Perry: Zombie
The Washington Post Quote: Rick Perry, who as Texas governor oversaw hundreds of executions, is no doubt used to the term "dead man walking." With news that his campaign has stopped paying staff due to cash flow problems, our Chris Cillizza suggests that the term might also apply to Perry -- or at least his candidacy. But that's not quite right. The better analogy is probably that he'll be undead -- shuffling around surviving on someone else's brains (or, more accurately, money). Perry was near the bottom of the pile in fundraising in the second quarter, and he spent 50 cents for every dollar he raised. That was through the end of June -- before he last-minute press for poll number spikes to get into that first debate. He had $800,000 on-hand July 1 -- not a whole lot to pay 400 staff, plus polls and travel and so on. But that said, Rick Perry will not vanish from the campaign trail. "We’ve got plenty of money," Austin Barbour, the head of a super PAC backing Perry told our Robert Costa. "The super PAC is not going to let Rick Perry down." The PACs "saw this was coming," Barbour said, so it "started working on our own plan. We knew we would have to go build a ground game." So they'll pick up the slack in early primary states. Super PACs, which aren't constrained in fundraising the way candidates are, can spend money on anything they see fit, as long as that doesn't get spent in coordination with the candidate. Which is why candidates all have super PACs backing them: it's a fail-safe mechanism for the candidacy at worst and, at best, a potential primary driver of it. Denizens of Iowa and New Hampshire and South Carolina will still see Perry advocates out and about, advocating -- but those advocates won't be paid by the Perry campaign. (Including, it seems, the ones that are actually on staff.) Earlier this year, we noted that the campaigns of Jon Huntsman and Newt Gingrich in 2012 were kept alive thanks to an infusion of support from external PACs. In Huntsman's case, it was one run by his father; in Gingrich's, by billionaire Sheldon Adelson. Each managed to struggle forward for a few more weeks thanks to ads run by PACs; each faltered when that lifeblood was cut off. Jon Huntsman/Newt Gingrich/Rick Perry mounted to the front of some billionaire's dusty car as they try to run the rebellious Hillary Clinton off the road. [Editor's note: Philip assures me this is a reference to a popular movie.] The nonchalance of Barbour's "we saw this coming" is pretty amazing. Granted, the campaign and its backers are in full-fledged this-is-no-big-deal spin mode right now. But even so, shrugging at "we figured the campaign would be unable to even pay its staff and we are prepared for that eventuality" may be honest but it's also revealing. The campaign itself was never essential to the effort. The PAC is. So Zombie Rick Perry will shuffle around the primary states for a while, eventually joined by more and more zombies that in another time would have gracefully bowed out but now can keep going. Zombie Rick Santorum, Zombie Chris Christie: the Campaigning Dead. If enough stay in long enough, peeling away enough votes, the race shifts. There's no consolidation, and a guy polling at, say, 20-odd percent could start winning states. Talk about television dramas. Offline
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That is a lot of words but I do appreciate the effort !
Rick Perry is about as likeable as Jeb Bush which is to say not at all ! No, that's definitely a Cthulu Chocobo. It's an easy mistake to make.
Proof his noodliness exists.
Checkmate, Atheists. Lakshmi.Sparthosx said: » Proof his noodliness exists. Checkmate, Atheists. I think we've arrived at a paradox. The Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster was founded by atheists as a trope on deistic religions. If FSM is real, it's like disproving a negative, because it validates the religion that was founded to invalidate the others.... I need to lay down. |
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