


Moderator: Ghost Hip
D.o.S. wrote:You're like a walking Mad Men episode.
BitchPudding wrote:DO WHAT MUST BE DONE, LORD JFREY.
My music rec Twitter: https://twitter.com/MostlyEssentialfriendship wrote:one cool thing about living is that things get worse and worse and worse until you die
Deals:friendship wrote:You motherfuckers think I won't fuck up a couple octoroks and assemble the Triforce?
Behndy wrote:i don't like people with "talent" and "skills" that don't feel the need to cover their inadequacies under good time happy sounds.
snipelfritz wrote:I'll leave you with a metaphor to lighten things up: the way you don't understand how people can believe in God is much like the way I don't understand how people can like mayonnaise. I'd rather it be made illegal and exterminated, but wouldn't it be better if we just learned to live with each other?
Tom Dalton wrote:You're a dumbass for making this thread to begin with.
magiclawnchair wrote:fuck that bitter old man
smile_man wrote:fuck you.ifeellikeatourist wrote: Pedals aren't everything, yada, yada, yeah I know.
McSpunckle wrote:I ctrl+f'd mountain goats and decided we aren't friends anymore.
jfrey wrote:The bit about blinders. If someone believes the Sun goes around the Earth, it isn't imprisoning them to tell them they can't be teaching that to children. It would be mental child abuse. And, it isn't imprisoning to tell them that they shouldn't believe that either. It's like talking to someone that has lived in a cage their whole life, and them telling you that they like it there, why should you force them to come out, and why should you want to stop them from raising their children in the cage with them?
jfrey wrote:To believe something requires a person to think in a way that is not scientific, is not based on reality. I find it really troubling that a person like that is making decisions that affect the world. I'd find it troubling for them to make decisions that could affect a pet hamster, let alone a planet.
jfrey wrote:Belief in god requires proof that that belief is valid. It holds the burden of proof. On the other side, almost no atheists say that it is impossible for there to be a god. There simply isn't any evidence that there is one, no reason to suspect there might be.
jfrey wrote:My main problem is with the concept of belief. The more immediate problem though is that beliefs do have real consequences. Saying live and let live or whatever is a cop out. It grants license for stupidity. It's why we have declining vaccination rates, people opposing gmo research when starvation and malnutrition are still serious problems in large portions of the world, opposition to stem cell research which could in our lifetime wipe out hundreds of debilitating conditions if allowed to.
rfurtkamp wrote:Bastard stepchild of modern delay times/looping and a Lexicon Vortex would have me whipping out the credit card faster than a hooker at a coke convention.
Lobstrosity wrote:Dad-a-chum? Dod-a-chock?
Twangasaurus wrote:I won't answer for Jfrey but in regards to GMOs, not all GMOs are the applied within the bullshit Monsanto style model. When you are looking at third world countries and people growing crops (both large and small scale) within a hostile environment at first glance (I haven't seen the video yet, I will watch it though) it doesn't look like it's going to help an awful lot. What is permacultures answer to crop destroying insects or diseases, what about extreme weather or soil conditions? I don't know about permaculte but that is something GMOs can help with and when it's something that is literally a life or death situation for some people you can't be stuffing around.
Chances are that permaculture and GMOs could probably be combined pretty effectively with a properly thought out approach to the ecological impact in the way we are modifying crops and we don't have to use a one fits all approach in regards to the economic and environmental disparity between countries. First thing we have to do is blow up Monsanto (only half joking).
rfurtkamp wrote:Bastard stepchild of modern delay times/looping and a Lexicon Vortex would have me whipping out the credit card faster than a hooker at a coke convention.
Lobstrosity wrote:Dad-a-chum? Dod-a-chock?
futuresailors wrote:snipelfritz wrote:I'll leave you with a metaphor to lighten things up: the way you don't understand how people can believe in God is much like the way I don't understand how people can like mayonnaise. I'd rather it be made illegal and exterminated, but wouldn't it be better if we just learned to live with each other?
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alexa. wrote:Ok, opposition to stem cell research is bs; but if you're gonna advocate GMO's in a starving world, you have no idea about permaculture, how it works, and what it's capable of, ok? If anything is a cop-out, GMOs are one. I encourage you to inform yourself more about permaculture, and why agriculture is bs we've been doing wrong from the start.
morange wrote:Jfrey, you're not the only one here with an education, so could you lay off the condescension?
D.o.S. wrote:You're like a walking Mad Men episode.
BitchPudding wrote:DO WHAT MUST BE DONE, LORD JFREY.
My music rec Twitter: https://twitter.com/MostlyEssentialfriendship wrote:one cool thing about living is that things get worse and worse and worse until you die
morange wrote:Humans have believed in gods as far back as we know; I think that counts for something, unless all of our ancestors were just dumb shits who didn't know any better. It's more likely they had some reason to believe what they did. Yeah I know, scientific revolution and all that. Also, it's a big claim to say everything in the bible is a lie. It's hard now thousands of years later to tell what's true, but it seemed so to the people who lived during those times. I think our inherited human memory carries some credence, and qualifies as a form of evidence, or at least probable cause, to believe in a higher being, and it's out of line to say it's completely nonsensical to believe in God.
The existence of life and the universe still point to a creator, and science has led us into a deeper understanding of what an excellent creation it is. There will always be things we don't fully understand, because we can't perceive everything. When we think about what caused the big bang, it takes as much faith to say it was completely spontaneous as to say it was God.
Jfrey, you're not the only one here with an education, so could you lay off the condescension?