December 17, 2003, 01:53
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#91
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Deity
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It's still quite versatile. Nothing enables pseudo-intellectual ****-fighting like quotes without context.
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I'm consitently stupid- Japher
I think that opinion in the United States is decidedly different from the rest of the world because we have a free press -- by free, I mean a virgorously presented right wing point of view on the air and available to all.- Ned
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December 17, 2003, 02:02
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#92
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ACS Staff Member
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I'm not saying states are champions of liberty. But in this fantasy world where the federal government respected its constitution, then perhaps the states would respect their state constitutions.
But if not, then we'd have more variety in the states, and those who want to live in a statist area can move to New York or Maryland (damn this place sucks). Or if they are looking for more room to breath, they can try New Hampshire or Idaho. Sure they can do that now, but the degree of difference would be more possible.
Plus some things would be more difficult for states to do, like big welfare and social security stuff. I'm sure they would, but smaller states might wise up and realize it wasn't feasible. But who knows.
Thats the beauty of our country as originally formed. We could have a quasi-fascist Maryland, a quasi-libertarian New Hampshire, and a quasi-socialist Massachusetts all in the same country.
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When I was younger I thought curfews were silly, but now as the daughter of a young woman, I appreciate them. - Rah
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December 17, 2003, 02:31
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#93
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Emperor
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Quote:
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A libertarian dictatorship? I'm not quite sure how to classify that. Would it be anarcho-fascism? Wasn't that a Giancarlo fantasy at one time? Or was it coined by EVC? You've been hanging around with the wrong crowd DF. You're really really close to the edge now.
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The problem with majority rule is obviously that it is too easy to restrict the rights of the minority. The solution, then, is to set up a system where even a super-majority cannot impose, say, slavery on others. Or are you telling me that your support for democracy extends to supporting the ability of the majority to impose slavery on others?
If not, then you don't really support democracy, either. I'm just honest about it.
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December 17, 2003, 02:34
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#94
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Quote:
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The problem with majority rule is obviously that it is too easy to restrict the rights of the minority. The solution, then, is to set up a system where even a super-majority cannot impose, say, slavery on others. Or are you telling me that your support for democracy extends to supporting the ability of the majority to impose slavery on others?
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But your minority rights are by far greater in number than Doc's. You have so many minority rights that it would be fair to say you don't believe in democracy. However, Doc only has a few minority rights to be protected, so he still supports democracy.
It's like saying you don't support the free market if you are for copyright law. That's a silly argument, but technically copyrights do restrict the free market, it is just a restriction that is actually better for that market. Just because you believe it doesn't mean you are against the free market.
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“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
- John 13:34-35 (NRSV)
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December 17, 2003, 02:37
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#95
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Emperor
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Quote:
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But your minority rights are by far greater in number than Doc's. You have so many minority rights that it would be fair to say you don't believe in democracy. However, Doc only has a few minority rights to be protected, so he still supports democracy.
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He supports democracy, with qualifications. I suppose I WOULD support democracy, with qualifications, but quite frankly, as long as individual liberty is being protected, and cannot be violated, I'm not really picky what you call the system of government.
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It's like saying you don't support the free market if you are for copyright law. That's a silly argument, but technically copyrights do restrict the free market, it is just a restriction that is actually better for that market. Just because you believe it doesn't mean you are against the free market.
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Sorry, that isn't true. You believe in a mostly free market, unless you are unaware of what the word "free" means.
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December 17, 2003, 02:42
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#96
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I suppose I WOULD support democracy, with qualifications, but quite frankly, as long as individual liberty is being protected, and cannot be violated, I'm not really picky what you call the system of government.
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Exactly! You don't care for the system of government. You wouldn't mind if people couldn't vote for all as long as individual liberty is being protected and cannot be violated. Contrast to Doc, who would protect certain things, but would care deeply for the fact that people should vote.
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You believe in a mostly free market, unless you are unaware of what the word "free" means.
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So you go around saying 'I believe in the mostly free market'? Come on! Who talks that way?
__________________
“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
- John 13:34-35 (NRSV)
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December 17, 2003, 02:54
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#97
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Deity
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Quote:
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Originally posted by Dr Strangelove
One more question: Who gets West Virginia?
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Whichever side loses.
__________________
I'm consitently stupid- Japher
I think that opinion in the United States is decidedly different from the rest of the world because we have a free press -- by free, I mean a virgorously presented right wing point of view on the air and available to all.- Ned
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December 17, 2003, 03:02
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#98
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Quote:
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Whichever side loses.
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Hey, the North took it last time, so they are stuck with it .
__________________
“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
- John 13:34-35 (NRSV)
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December 17, 2003, 03:03
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#99
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Prince
Local Time: 06:41
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Quote:
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Originally posted by Dr Strangelove
It's pretty clear to me. When the United States decided to send troops to Utah to quash the practice of polygamy no southerner took a stand in defense of the right of the people of Utah to determine whether or not polygamy shopuld be legal in Utah. Why? Good heavens man, everyone knew that polygamy was immoral, and the people of the US had the right to crush this offense against God! Yet the issue of the possibility that slaves might have rights on the other hand was the moral equivalent of sales taxes, not to be subject to the intercession of the same federal troops sent to Utah? Do you see the hypocrisy there?
Yet, incredibley, the existence of slavery in the South was not under attack. The issue that really cheesed off the secessionist was the fact that new states being admitted to the Union were rejecting slavery. Did southerners rise to defend the rights of these new states to decide on whether or not slavery would be permitted in their own states? You better believe that they did not! Time and time again they demanded they bargained against the rights of the new states. Frankly I don't think that what really bothered them was that they were being shut out of new opportunities in the developing states. After all, if the south had been so crowded that slave owners had streamed westward in search of new farm land then surely they would have achieved a majority in some of the new states. No, I think that the real problem was that they knew they were loosing the race for moral approval. They knew that public opinion everywhere else was gradually turning against them. In reaction they created entire branches of phony science and distorted religion to justify their way of life. The real motive for secession wasn't states rights, or the preservation of slavery. The real motive was the need of the southern slave owner to fence himself off from the disapproving eyes of the rest of the world.
Id that what's happening today?
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Was the polygamy of Abraham and Jacob an offense against God? Is it worse to be married to more than one person than to behave as if you are when you are not? Please answer with tolerance.
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December 17, 2003, 03:05
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#100
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What does that have to do with anything?
__________________
“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
- John 13:34-35 (NRSV)
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December 17, 2003, 03:07
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#101
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Deity
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Quote:
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Whichever side loses.
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A Solomon-esque decision.
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December 17, 2003, 03:07
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#102
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King
Local Time: 09:41
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When did that matter?
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Lime roots and treachery!
"Eventually you're left with a bunch of unmemorable posters like Cyclotron, pretending that they actually know anything about who they're debating pointless crap with." - Drake Tungsten
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December 17, 2003, 03:09
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#103
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ACS Staff Member
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Well its less a matter of crafting the perfect system, but more a matter of finding a system people will respect and stick with.
On paper I think the US Constitution is as great and perfect a system as one can get. Seperation of powers, checks and balances, federalism, and a difficult (though not impossible) system of amendments. Plus a bill of rights to protect everything from free speech to gun rights to state rights.
Now, as we have seen it doesn't work out so perfectly in practice. Because everything is open to interpretation, even things seemingly explicitly worded.
I support democracy. I support minority rights. I think there needs to be a balance between the two. I think the United States, on paper, has that balance. How to get back to that balance in practice is not something that a few laws can do. It takes a shift in how people think and what they expect from life and government.
That shift takes a lot of work.
__________________
I was thinking to use a male-male jack and record it. - Albert Speer
When I was younger I thought curfews were silly, but now as the daughter of a young woman, I appreciate them. - Rah
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December 17, 2003, 03:15
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#104
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ACS Staff Member
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To ensure a paper system stays a practical system, it depends on the views of the people within the state. This creates a conflict. At some point it becomes perversely necessary for a liberty-minded state to indoctrinate its citizens in liberty. Thus to perserve liberty a state must take decidedly anti-liberty steps.
In this way free speech is the greatest threat to free speech.
Without a true focus on promoting and instilling the benefits of liberty on the public, they are too easily swayed, over time, to anti-liberty positions. Like today. With neo-cons and socialists pulling in either direction, both towards their seperate statist visions.
*sigh* I'm tired. I'm going to bed. I hope what I just said makes sense in the morning.
__________________
I was thinking to use a male-male jack and record it. - Albert Speer
When I was younger I thought curfews were silly, but now as the daughter of a young woman, I appreciate them. - Rah
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December 17, 2003, 03:19
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#105
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Emperor
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Quote:
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Exactly! You don't care for the system of government. You wouldn't mind if people couldn't vote for all as long as individual liberty is being protected and cannot be violated. Contrast to Doc, who would protect certain things, but would care deeply for the fact that people should vote.
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In a system where the central government has extremely limited and precisely defined powers - and those powers don't include the ability to create wealth transfer programs - I wonder how important voting really is?
The only way I can imagine voting to be important is in the realm of foreign policy, especially with regards to the war making power. Free trade vs. tariffs wouldn't be an issue, for obvious reasons, so really people would be voting on how aggressive or passive the foreign policy should be. But even THAT wouldn't be a major issue, because the government would have no way to coercively fund or force people to fight in major wars to begin with.
With this in mind, I have no problem with the democratic institution of voting, I just question how important it is.
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So you go around saying 'I believe in the mostly free market'? Come on! Who talks that way?
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I guess people who are precise in their speech.
Really, though, I'm arguing a nitpick to prove a point. The point was that fundamentally, DS does not favor true democracy any more than I do. On the other hand, with your philosophy of "might makes right", and your belief that if society wills it, it can't be wrong, I can easily see you supporting a system of a majority dictatorship
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December 17, 2003, 03:40
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#106
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Emperor
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Voting is an insurance against the govenrment turning out not the way it was intended. It's also nice you can change your government without (too many) bloodshed.
And today it seems like we're gonna be the first country to ever impeach (and I mean do the whole dance, not just the threat of it) our head of state, President Paksas. Woohooo!!!
__________________
Originally posted by Serb:Please, remind me, how exactly and when exactly, Russia bullied its neighbors?
Originally posted by Ted Striker:Go Serb ! :doitnow!:
Originally posted by Pekka:If it was possible to capture the essentials of Sepultura in a dildo, I'd attach it to a bicycle and ride it up your azzes.
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December 17, 2003, 04:53
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#107
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Emperor
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Quote:
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Voting is an insurance against the govenrment turning out not the way it was intended. It's also nice you can change your government without (too many) bloodshed.
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Yes, but this is much less true if the government doesn't have very much power to begin with, and if a system of checks and balances are in place to keep it that way (independent judiciary, for starters).
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December 17, 2003, 05:24
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#108
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King
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Hmpfh. I like the geographic makeup of the United States as it is, thank you very much.
That said, the Dakotas would be a *nuclear* power ... Anyone wanna join us at the party? Minnesota? Nebraska? Montana? Wyoming? Iowa? Manitoba? Ontario? Saskatchewan? C'mon. You know you want to party with the Dakotas ...
We could be a mighty inland empire with access to the world's oceans via the Great Lakes and (better) Hudson Bay (er, yes, it does get icy ... oh, well).
Gatekeeper
Gatekeeper
__________________
"I may not agree with what you have to say, but I'll die defending your right to say it." — Voltaire
"Wheresoever you go, go with all your heart." — Confucius
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December 17, 2003, 05:31
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#109
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Emperor
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Quote:
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Originally posted by David Floyd
Yes, but this is much less true if the government doesn't have very much power to begin with, and if a system of checks and balances are in place to keep it that way (independent judiciary, for starters).
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So you don't want the ability to change it? Don;t you think there's a nonzero probability of even the ideal DFloydian minarchist government turning into something not intended?
__________________
Originally posted by Serb:Please, remind me, how exactly and when exactly, Russia bullied its neighbors?
Originally posted by Ted Striker:Go Serb ! :doitnow!:
Originally posted by Pekka:If it was possible to capture the essentials of Sepultura in a dildo, I'd attach it to a bicycle and ride it up your azzes.
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December 17, 2003, 08:33
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#110
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Deity
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Quote:
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That said, the Dakotas would be a *nuclear* power ... Anyone wanna join us at the party? Minnesota? Nebraska? Montana? Wyoming? Iowa? Manitoba? Ontario? Saskatchewan? C'mon. You know you want to party with the Dakotas ...
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We'll party with the Dakotas. Nebraska and the Dakotas will be the lynchpins in the defense of the mighty Taiheigen Empire; the Dakotas have the nukes and Nebraska controls them. All shall quake before our might.
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KH FOR OWNER!
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December 17, 2003, 09:12
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#111
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Emperor
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Quote:
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Originally posted by David Floyd
In a system where the central government has extremely limited and precisely defined powers - and those powers don't include the ability to create wealth transfer programs - I wonder how important voting really is?
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So this is really about social security is it? Do you honestly think that a revived Confederacy is going to do away with SSI? What are you going to do, expel the old people? HA! In your wildest dreams!
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"I say shoot'em all and let God sort it out in the end!
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December 17, 2003, 11:05
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#112
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Emperor
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Quote:
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Originally posted by monkspider
So says the man that is opposed to teddy bears.
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For the last freaking time, I was arguing in FAVOR of those roadside memorials!
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STFU and then GTFO!
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December 17, 2003, 11:26
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#113
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Deity
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Liar. You're a closet bear-hater.
I knew it! Out of one closet, and into another.
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Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.
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December 17, 2003, 11:28
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#114
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Emperor
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If I'm closeted about anything, then just say that I'm a closeted neo-Confederate.
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STFU and then GTFO!
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December 17, 2003, 12:34
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#115
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With my support for the "two gears Europe", where countries prone to federation would not force countries prone to confederation to follow them, I can only agree with the idea of the south separating from the north
I never understood why your country insisted of having Sava and Sloww living under the same banner
__________________
"I have been reading up on the universe and have come to the conclusion that the universe is a good thing." -- Dissident
"I never had the need to have a boner." -- Dissident
"I have never cut off my penis when I was upset over a girl." -- Dis
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December 17, 2003, 12:38
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#116
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Local Time: 16:41
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Quote:
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Originally posted by Saras
And today it seems like we're gonna be the first country to ever impeach (and I mean do the whole dance, not just the threat of it) our head of state, President Paksas. Woohooo!!!
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BTW, a short question from an ignorant Frenchman: to what language group does Lithuanian belong? (Slavic, Germanic, Finno-Ugric, other?)
Are the 3 Baltic languages very different (like Russian and Spanish), slightly different (Grman and Dutch), or very similar?
__________________
"I have been reading up on the universe and have come to the conclusion that the universe is a good thing." -- Dissident
"I never had the need to have a boner." -- Dissident
"I have never cut off my penis when I was upset over a girl." -- Dis
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December 17, 2003, 13:38
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#117
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Emperor
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Quote:
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Originally posted by Spiffor
BTW, a short question from an ignorant Frenchman: to what language group does Lithuanian belong? (Slavic, Germanic, Finno-Ugric, other?)
Are the 3 Baltic languages very different (like Russian and Spanish), slightly different (Grman and Dutch), or very similar?
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Latvian and Lithuanian languages are Baltic languages, and are really close to the maternal indo-european language, the ancient sanskrit. Estonian is Finno-Ugric, close to Finnish.
Latvian and Lithuanian are like German and Dutch. Lithuanian-Estonian is worse than Russian-Spanish. It's like Navajo-Swahili.
I charge 25 EUR per word of my profound linguistic wisdom. Would you like to wire the money or send a check?
P.S. I demand a :€€€: smiley to be created
__________________
Originally posted by Serb:Please, remind me, how exactly and when exactly, Russia bullied its neighbors?
Originally posted by Ted Striker:Go Serb ! :doitnow!:
Originally posted by Pekka:If it was possible to capture the essentials of Sepultura in a dildo, I'd attach it to a bicycle and ride it up your azzes.
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December 17, 2003, 13:44
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#118
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Emperor
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Saras,
Quote:
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So you don't want the ability to change it? Don;t you think there's a nonzero probability of even the ideal DFloydian minarchist government turning into something not intended
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First of all, changing the person in power doesn't strike me as that important, assuming he has very little power to begin with.
Secondly, sure, there's a chance that something could go wrong. However, I doubt voting in a new President would solve the problem.
But let's be clear. I'm not opposed to voting. I'm actually in favor of it. I just think it is LESS important than having a Constitution that can't be changed that STRICTLY limits the government AND precisely defines the government's limited powers, and reserves all other powers and liberties to the people.
DS,
No, this isn't totally about Social Security, although SS would certainly be done away with in my ideal society. Wealth transfer programs were an example, and they include SS, social welfare, Medicare/Medicaid, corporate welfare, etc. All that would be gone.
Old people would not be expelled, but forced to rely on family, friends, charity, and the church, assuming they had no savings of their own. If old people made the stupid decision not to save money, or if they squandered their savings, everyone else wouldn't be responsible for it - if it came down to it, the fool with no money could starve before I'd force someone else to feed him.
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December 17, 2003, 13:45
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#119
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Emperor
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Saras,
Quote:
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Latvian and Lithuanian languages are Baltic languages, and are really close to the maternal indo-european language, the ancient sanskrit. Estonian is Finno-Ugric, close to Finnish.
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I was under the impression that Finnish (along with Hungarian) was an Altaic language.
It's been a while since I've looked at linguistics, so I could easily be wrong.
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December 17, 2003, 13:53
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#120
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Emperor
Local Time: 17:41
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Join Date: Apr 1999
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Quote:
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Originally posted by David Floyd
Saras,
I was under the impression that Finnish (along with Hungarian) was an Altaic language.
It's been a while since I've looked at linguistics, so I could easily be wrong.
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You can split the bill with Spiff.
__________________
Originally posted by Serb:Please, remind me, how exactly and when exactly, Russia bullied its neighbors?
Originally posted by Ted Striker:Go Serb ! :doitnow!:
Originally posted by Pekka:If it was possible to capture the essentials of Sepultura in a dildo, I'd attach it to a bicycle and ride it up your azzes.
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