EAllusion wrote:I see that BCSpace still hasn't apologized for plagiarizing.
Any chance BCSpace is going to show some sign that he actually follows the religion he purports to believe in and display some contrition yet?
EAllusion wrote:I see that BCSpace still hasn't apologized for plagiarizing.
There's no gentle way to put it: People who give in to racism and prejudice may simply be dumb, according to a new study that is bound to stir public controversy.
Gunnar wrote:What I understand least of all about extreme conservatives is their visceral hatred of the idea of "multiculturalism."
How is it a bad thing to learn about other people's cultures and traditions and languages?
Droopy wrote:Because we - and all intellectually and morally normal adults
ldsfaqs wrote:Yep Droopy....
The fact that he either doesn't know or is intentionally being deceptive of what "Multiculturalism" is, and then creates a STRAWMAN "as if" we are against learning about other cultures, etc. shows clearly the depth of liberal intellectual and moral vacuousness.
Gunnar is apparently not familiar with the difference between the "childs" version of Multiculturalism which is the "feel good" learning of and living with others and their differences in harmony etc., and the Political Philosophy of Multiculturalism which is a liberal political and social ideology which is what conservatives condemn, since we are after all talking about "political" things here.
Have you or your family ever received government aid? I remember you discussing this on Z, so I thought it was all right to ask.
Droopy wrote:Have you or your family ever received government aid? I remember you discussing this on Z, so I thought it was all right to ask.
Don't fall for this, Faqs. Its just another manifestation of the old leftist "chicken hawk" argument used to circumvent critical debate with supporters of the war on terrorism.
In 25 to 30 years, I spent approximately 2-3 years, intermittently, on federal welfare programs. I received a significant education at that time in what they were, the kind of mentality and incentives they created, and the "underclass" culture generated by long term dependency (my first wife and I lived in a HUD apartment complex between 1982 and 1984).
This was well before I even developed, to any significant degree, my present political philosophy. I have an insider and intellectual/philosophical outsider-looking-in perspective. There are far, far, far better ways to construct, manage, and utilize a "safety net" for those who need help than the Great Society, which represents, according to all serous empirical, theoretical, and moral critiques of its history, an abject failure of both economic and moral capital.
The gospel - providing the Lord's way - is that pattern and way, but the secular society will never learn that lesson because the "welfare state" isn't really so much about welfare as it is about power.