made cuts for character limit, responded to complete posts tho
I don't deny that morality plays a large role in politics...
Sure, but what are you arguing? Who are you attacking? On what issue? Your criticism has little relevance if not placed into a context. Most people on either side will have a set of statistics to validate their claim and well-reasoned arguments. This is why your claim about "Libs like to call everything racist" was weird--yet here your post is about sweeping generalizations.
Science that comments on social matters is fundamentally not neutral, and will always take on a political character. Consider that there are issues that ostensibly should be cut and dried if we take looks with the scientific method but when placed into certain contexts take on more meaning, and in fact sometimes reflect certain interests (the gun control debate lasting as long as it has in America.)
Mostly because, as a moral code, it can serve to censor science and reality ... Politically correct moral codes censor studies pertaining to IQ or differences between sex, often.
...
... censorship via morality. ...
Parts of your post border on scientism, anyway--
I don't associate myself with the Moral Majority. Anyway the thing about "root biological explanation for homosexuality" is irrelevant in political contexts beyond an academic curiosity in the sense that it already exists in nature and in other species besides humans; there's no reason to treat gay people as some sort of aberrant undercaste. Also, the branch of science known as Evolutionary Psychology has historically been linked to socially conservative views and marred by poor research. You almost seem like you're stopping short of taking a gender essentialist stance.
That aside, science can't be truly censored--it's only historically been stymied. Do you think feminists or LGBT scholars have been obstructing legitimate science? This is the only relevant conflict I can think of to cite in a discussion about "political correctness" ruining the progress of science, because I don't see another issue where that's been the case on the side of the left wing in particular. Even science has to be critiqued internally and externally--I'm sure you've heard of the bogusness of The Bell Curve and its racism. Past that, I don't think it's important to, for example protect the ability of businesses to discriminate, for example, or to protect people's ability to be discriminatory.
If you're inclined, link me to your post on NeoGAF. I think there's more to the story than you're letting on--Mumei, though feminist, is not a ban-happy mod, and there are plenty of anti-feminists on NeoGAF (though you may not be one.) The choice of rhetoric here is getting too defensive/victimized for my tastes--I would never defend myself by citing a philosopher/writer. You have a sort of skewed understanding of censorship, by the way.
He was beating for a conflict with Syria quite hard, let's not beat around the bush (no pun intended), ...
I agree on Syria; but let's bring some context--you brought that up in a discussion about Obama being worse than Bush, the Patriot Act president. Obama didn't fabricate a reason to go to Syria--he chose an inconsistent angle (human rights violations, in consideration of the fact that Assad has already used weapons against his people, though he later talked about chemical weapons changing war in general which is a little more believable). Bush's purpose was punitive, predicated on overly feverish rhetoric and Republican FUD, and he chose a scapegoat. Obama, ostensibly, wanted to go through with a modest operation which would very likely achieve little. And yeah totally, the idea that Obama is a centrist or a conservative has regularly been circulated outside of mainstream discussion. I've seen someone say he is a conservative in the Edmund Burke tradition, a philosopher that I'm not familiar with other than the fact that he's routinely cited as a kind of conservative. As I've mentioned to max, when comparing our political parties to some in Europe they might be inclined to say our political continuum is further right than theirs on the whole. You also noted/hinted at him making conservative/moderate appointments, which is true. Healthcare reform was weak because there was too little support for it congressionally, and the government is too close to the world of finance.
Except that's not a complete picture and the Administration is avoiding discussions of cost the 2nd year of these plans.
As I said to max (I believe), this system is supposed to perform better the more people who enroll in it, specifically those who are already otherwise healthy and young. It's because of this that premiums and effectiveness in general down the line are increasingly harder to guess.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/09/29/health-care-exchanges-impact/2879371/Anyway, your first source talks about something that I was already talking about--the variability in coverage due to factors including the differences in the state-run exchanges and how they turn out. The previous discussion was class-based as you brought it up, but yeah younger men will pay comparatively more. let's take a look at your source--it names one particular demographic--young men not insured through employers--as those who pay higher premiums. It talks exactly about the federal poverty line statistic I mentioned earlier. In any case, it mentions that young men will pay more when not getting insured through the employer.
Let me make a diversion--you brought this up in a discussion about the flaws of Obamacare. Since you cited the article, let's just say for sake of argument that it is indeed empirically true (which I'm not debating, on a side note) that young men will pay more. You can't take a neutral stance on this, contrary to your view on sticking to science in the above posts--in fact, you may not realize it, but you have already taken a moral position. You think that this is inconsistent with Obama providing Affordable health care to all, and that all should have lower premiums. I might agree with this, but in the absence of that, I think it makes the most sense that the demographic that has the lowest incidence of hospital visits pays more to cover for the needs of the others and less capable. Though I fit the demographic as a young man, I am not all that outraged that my premiums would go up where I to participate in the exchange (accounting for the fact that these are apparently averages!) But as I have repeatedly stated, I support single payer.
Your second source--Avik Roy, the Romney adviser, who actually supports a universal mandate---is strange for a couple reasons. One, he has a graph that tries to reconcile household income and the individual effect. Not to mention he argues for the double-whammy while ignoring the distribution of tax burden (lower bracket, lower tax). Not to mention that North Carolina insists on not participating in the exchange--thereby setting up a bad one not worth participating in, and not to mention that Obamacare doesn't eliminate employer-offered plans (how do you get your money in a way that your premium will jump so high but you also don't have access to an employer-offered plan?) The other is his use of inflammatory rhetoric--just look at that article and some of the others ones, especially the ones on unions.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/09/25/how-much-will-obamacare-premiums-cost-depends-on-where-you-live/http://aspe.hhs.gov/health/reports/2013/MarketplacePremiums/ib_marketplace_premiums.cfmI can agree that there's a messaging problem in so far as just calling Obamacare the providing of more healthcare for more people is better. And in some states it is preferable to pay the mandate penalty over enrolling if one is unemployed. But I also prefer to have more people with health care, which few people are going to debate this won't accomplish. And I still support universal coverage. And as I have already said elsewhere--I dislike the market approach. I can't make it clearer that I don't care all that much for Obamacare (=P) but it's superior to others being uninsured right now.
So, your picture is also incomplete--the "picture" of prediction is incomplete in general because of the necessity of higher enrollment numbers and because, since it's a special market, it requires more participation to judge the second year.
He attempted to extend the US deployment in Iraq past the date the Bush admin agreed upon with the Iraqi government, the Iraqis refused Obama's conditions and his push fell apart.
Now I see. Of course it was partially motivated by the usual selfish geopolitical interests (Iran.)
Gun control received a popular boost because it was an emotional time; I know that's when the most logical and fair laws are crafted, when a wave of emotional support pushes the creation of legislation....
Like the Civil Rights Act? Is it lost on you that there's actually no connection between emotional popular support and whether or not something is desirable, or dare I say, possessing a factual basis? Why would you stake your position on the fact that the support was "emotional" and therefore not warranted? False dichotomies ftw. I've broken down a number of reasons why public ownership of guns is not desirable, and a large part of your position is based on freedom. The regulation argument is already more or less clear--see other European, Asian countries, Canada.
Why shouldn't one have the right to kill themselves, can you craft a factual argument
Why shouldn't you have the right to kill other people?
Why shouldn't you have the right to defraud someone in an economic transaction if they willingly consent to it in spite of actually being defrauded?
Why shouldn't you be able to depict rape as a potentially liberating experience for the victim or blame the victim?
Why shouldn't you have the right to practice propaganda of the deed and stage violent anarchist protests against globalization summits or businesses?
Why shouldn't you have the right to be a violent vigilante?
Why shouldn't you have the right to be racist?
What --factual argument-- is there.
Let's not forget that I never argued for disallowing "the right to kill themselves!" Do you know my position on euthanasia? But, I don't like this framing of "the right to..." because
I? Who has no responsibilities to anyone, shouldn't have the right to end my own life? That's my decision if we operate on the basis of free human will. Of course, it's also a moral one but none the less a factual argument could be made against a right to suicide. Hence why I support ...
All aboard the freedom train.
I don't operate on the "basis of free human will." I don't hold it as the most desirable virtue. I don't see it as the most desirable virtue in absence of a God or an infallible moral authority to reconcile the moral differences that people have. Look at the superman/ubermensch talk "I, who has no responsibilities to anyone" I assume you have no kids. Some people without jobs say they have no responsibilities to anyone but I'm sure you do--but anyway, I am critiquing your heavy handed rhetoric. Nevermind how you contradicted yourself - "well it's a moral one but it's also a factual one!" When did freedom become a fact? Can you cite freedom in a peer reviewed science journal?
You talk of "factual basis"--to make an overly simplistic argument but one that is effective in this context--- what's the "factual basis for freedom"? It's just the only "moral position" allowed in the absence of facts acting as authority over morality--the absence of seeing any position as more desirable. Now understand I'm not arguing for lies--I'm arguing against your means of reasoning. I find it strange that you think they must essentially contradict. They don't, and even when you see people who act like this, it's not an argument for deferring to freedom of opinion on social issues
For the record, suicidal tendencies can be cries for help from people who cannot express this desire. Giving them some help might do them good. There are people out there who have been dissuaded from suicide who don't exactly regret not going through with it! Was it wrong for them to be dissuaded or be "intervened against"?
I support an assault weapons ban because there's no reason for the public to own them, other than novelty or "self-defense" which the superbly vast majority are underequipped to do in the relevant situations where it matters most. Besides, carrying around assault weapons for punitive reasons or to be on guard for self-defense is prohibitively tedious, and only becomes an internally consistent position if one carries assault weapons with them all of the time.
My home, Oregon, ....
The quote you cited has little relevance to what you're arguing. And it's not even a refutation of the fact that other countries (who carry on just fine!) with stricter gun control laws do indeed have low gun violence (see: the United Kingdom.) I don't see why one would insist one wanting guns other than a selfish indulgence of a right that doesn't actually exist. Rights don't "exist" technically anyway--rights are moral, they have to be created.
Also, you didn't look at the Wikipedia chart, did you? Check this out:
http://www.americanprogress.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/AmericaUnderTheGun-4.pdfhttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/16/states-gun-violence_n_3091993.htmlBy the way, my state apparently has higher gun restrictions than most, and is low on gun violence!
I love this argument from the left...
Your argument is highly misleading. It becomes a question of how pyrrhic you want the victory to be, because the notion of turning against one's citizenship is asinine to begin with since citizenship runs the country (via election, economic activity,etc.) Think of our nuclear arsenal That's enough to take off most any threat..any civilization. Also, the left likes to talk about how our intervention in Vietnam was unjustified like MLK Jr. (who incidentally was a democratic socialist), our attempts at regime change are misguided and motivated by selfish interests/neocolonialism. The US objective wasn't to go scorched earth on Vietnam. This was motivated by more Red Scare bullshit and anti-communism paranoia and thus they saw the Viet Cong's ideological position as counter to their interests in containing communism. My position is, if a country wanted to level its cities, it easily could. Anyone who possesses the level of firepower currently owned by the several countries that own weaponized warheads who could so easily. Doesn't even need to be nuclear--it's clear how many tanks, drones (which is huge), fighter jets, cruise missiles, etc. the military has over the citizenship. We are continually financing the military industrial complex.. They've tested laser weapons (believe they are competent), and have been working on a "lightning gun."
This is in absence of the fact that it would be disastrous socially and make no sense for any govt to attack its citizenship.
For the record, I would actually call Vietnam a loss too. America didn't get what it came for. My argument is that I disagree with people feeling secure or free from the government because they're packing heat. They should've stolen their weapons and not joined a registry/gotten a permit. if they wanted real freedom from govt oversight. That's a more consistent position. Plus, a handgun is paltry against superior firepower. the mass of American citizens are not guerilla warfare specialists. they're just american citizens--not the viet cong!
... we can say with some confidence that a sizable portion of the military would likely break off in a supposed revolution due to a refusal to kill American civilians. As well as potentially fight on the side of said rebels.
This is a weird position for me to be in honestly, as I don't love the idea of any government per se but the fact that people believe in these anti-government holy war scenarios is shocking. I don't stake my views on the assumption that government is fundamentally bad or good. It's a means to an end. That being said.
What the military thinks is irrelevant once the nuclear call is made, and it's not made by democratic decision. You cited the Arab Spring--only one country out of those has nuclear weapons and didn't use them--and suffered no overthrow, anyway. There are countries still unstable in spite of it. Though I do like democratic spirit, anyway...
I find it strange your scenario is predicated on the military seeing the light (making a moral judgment, and not necessarily a factual or rational one since govt is more likely to win and the govt funds the military) and joining forces with American citizens. Let's ignore how contrived the scenario is and assume that the government is super terrible and wants to kill its citizens because its filled with cartoon villains. Let's ignore that the military in Egypt rose to power politically, and hence, acted out of self interest. Let's also ignore how the military in America is historically home to conservative views and generally hierarchical. And assume that they act in lockstep to a significant number. The military certainly didn't choose the right thing with Japanese internment in WW2, and many of them were American citizens. Our military can't even address its sexual assault and misogyny problem appropriately, and it took years before they stopped resisting non-white service.
Military is law and order. Your scenario is unrealistic--"well some of the military who believes in freedom fighting would break off and fight against the government and join the rebels."
And I generally support revolutions! As for your last statement, I never said that.
Unless you're also delusional enough to maintain al qaeda was defeated, which you specifically, are not.
Then why try to go there in the first place =P, this is not clever rhetorically or makes much sense. Sounds passive aggressive
...you view guns as unnecessary and they should be outlawed/banned for the most part because of the number of people they kill?
Personally, I operate on my own moral code and respect that others have theirs so long as they don't try to force them on me. In my personal view? I view my rights as ending where other's rights begin; essentially it's not my business unless you make it my business.
What I said earlier explains my stance. I think guns for the public are unnecessary and ineffective, not just because of the number of people that are killed. I think the Second amendment's allowance of public gun ownership is petty. I would at least support both maxims of Mill's harm principle.
I also operate on my own moral code. Virtually all humans do if they have the brain activity. But, Your second paragraph sounds uninterested in what other people have put up with. Other people's views sometime do infringe on others, as the Southern Strategy, Manifest Destiny, colonialism/neocolonialism, patriarchy, Anglocentrism, the prosperity gospel, the preservation of the filthy rich/insider trading, and numerous other problems can attest to a moral code freedom won't solve the problem for. It ignores that consent can be manufactured, the conflict of interests that can occur to preserve privilege and power, and even worse the passive ways people accept problems in the name of self-preservation or because they don't want to "cause friction". Ron Paul argued against the Civil Rights Act partially on because it's an "infringement on liberty."