How many women and children do you think you could kill in a single 24 period?-Sh1fty- wrote:
Damn I would love to do thatmcjagdflieger wrote:
Serious question here....is it not a felony to enter the country illegally? Not saying I advocate shooting illegals, just need clarification on specifics.
Ed. NVM, I learnededed all by meself. Apparently its a misdemeanor, and if repeated, then punishable as a felony. But at the same time entering without being legally documented, or entering legally, and overstaying your visa, is deportable. But we don't deport them (most i guess, not all). Kudos to this man, wish more disgustingly rich folk with plenty of time, would buy up all property along the border and hunt the most dangerous game. Shame they need to do it in the first place, granted.
/wana-be-badass
As many as I can
Funny thing is, you guys consider me not American, so me trying to turn away non-Americans must be a hilarious (stupid) idea to you.
Funny thing is, you guys consider me not American, so me trying to turn away non-Americans must be a hilarious (stupid) idea to you.
And above your tomb, the stars will belong to us.
No it makes you a normal person who doesn't have much going for him in life so he chooses to kick the people he perceives to be beneath him in order to make himself feel better.-Sh1fty- wrote:
As many as I can
Funny thing is, you guys consider me not American, so me trying to turn away non-Americans must be a hilarious (stupid) idea to you.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
It's fun as hell to point guns at people and say GTFO. He's fineJohnG@lt wrote:
No it makes you a normal person who doesn't have much going for him in life so he chooses to kick the people he perceives to be beneath him in order to make himself feel better.-Sh1fty- wrote:
As many as I can
Funny thing is, you guys consider me not American, so me trying to turn away non-Americans must be a hilarious (stupid) idea to you.
jk
And above your tomb, the stars will belong to us.
I dislike Catholics somewhat more.11 Bravo wrote:
i do-Sh1fty- wrote:
I don't dislike Muslims or Catholics in general.
Come on, it takes a big man to threaten penniless mexicans from his mom's basement.JG wrote:
No it makes you a normal person who doesn't have much going for him in life so he chooses to kick the people he perceives to be beneath him in order to make himself feel better.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2011-01-13 18:10:01)
Fuck Israel
Why ?Dilbert_X wrote:
I dislike Catholics somewhat more..11 Bravo wrote:
i do-Sh1fty- wrote:
I don't dislike Muslims or Catholics in general.
catholics have a lot more to be sorry for in the last 1,000 years of history
especially when it comes to retarding human development
especially when it comes to retarding human development
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
If you said 2,000, I would agree. In the last 1,000.... that's a tough call.Uzique wrote:
catholics have a lot more to be sorry for in the last 1,000 years of history
especially when it comes to retarding human development
It doesn't really matter though, since they're all bullshit anyway.
Last edited by Turquoise (2011-01-14 06:33:04)
Are you familiar with the roman inquisition?Turquoise wrote:
If you said 2,000, I would agree. In the last 1,000.... that's a tough call.Uzique wrote:
catholics have a lot more to be sorry for in the last 1,000 years of history
especially when it comes to retarding human development
It doesn't really matter though, since they're all bullshit anyway.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giordano_Bruno
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Yes, I am. I'm also familiar with Islamic conquests.Kmar wrote:
Are you familiar with the roman inquisition?Turquoise wrote:
If you said 2,000, I would agree. In the last 1,000.... that's a tough call.Uzique wrote:
catholics have a lot more to be sorry for in the last 1,000 years of history
especially when it comes to retarding human development
It doesn't really matter though, since they're all bullshit anyway.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giordano_Bruno
I think it's pretty clear that all religions are capable of inspiring humanity to kill for asinine reasons. Comparing brands of brainwashing is like deciding whether or not you'd prefer someone kill you with a machete or with a sledgehammer.
Tough call?Turquoise wrote:
Yes, I am. I'm also familiar with Islamic conquests.Kmar wrote:
Are you familiar with the roman inquisition?Turquoise wrote:
If you said 2,000, I would agree. In the last 1,000.... that's a tough call.
It doesn't really matter though, since they're all bullshit anyway.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giordano_Bruno
I think it's pretty clear that all religions are capable of inspiring humanity to kill for asinine reasons. Comparing brands of brainwashing is like deciding whether or not you'd prefer someone kill you with a machete or with a sledgehammer.
The Inquisitions only led to several thousand deaths. The Crusades led to several million.
But you have to take into account the really abhorrent sort of ways people were killed by Catholics. Just look at things like the book of martyrs, a nasty example being a heavily pregnant woman being hung above a fire so she was slowly cooked, then dropped into the fire where she gave birth and the crowd chucked the baby back into the fire.
If you're looking at numbers, the Catholics come out looking worse. If you're looking at how horrible the things they did were, the Catholics come out looking worse.
I was speaking to "retarding human development" .. that is why I posted an example of directly attacking the sciences.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
I can't think of a single positive thing about catholicism, unless you count helping africans die of AIDS.
Fuck Israel
As far as how horrible the things were catholics did. They used to believe that they could save a soul with torture.. because they thought that nothing they could do on earth would be as bad as the hell the would encounter in the afterlife.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
a/ You're making all the Catholics guilty for the work of an Inquisition lunatics. This is pretty stupid.Uzique wrote:
catholics have a lot more to be sorry for in the last 1,000 years of history
especially when it comes to retarding human development
b/ Since you said in the last 1000 years I'm going to assume you're talking about Inquisition, which started in the late 12th century.
While it holds some responsibility for "retarding human development" in that era, the main reason for that lies in decline of Roman empire and so called Dark ages which were a direct consequence of that.
Example: contrary to popular belief, most of academics in middle ages recognized Earth to be a sphere and not flat. And guess what, most (if not all) of those academics were Catholics.
I'm not trying to defend actions which were done by Catholics in Inquisition, I'm negating the fact that human development was majorly retarded because of these actions.
I'm not reading 6 pages of flaming, but how is it one man is more effective at patrolling 22,000 acres on his own than the border patrol agents are?
Also, does this guy not have a job? How does he spend so much time out hunting illegal immigrants? At 12,000 in the past 10 years or so he must never get anything done.
Also, does this guy not have a job? How does he spend so much time out hunting illegal immigrants? At 12,000 in the past 10 years or so he must never get anything done.
There is simply no way of knowing how many people were killed, imprisoned, tortured, or just refused to talk about things, like the copernican theory, for fear of being branded a heretic. The catholics placed many scientific writings and books on their forbidden list. It's hard to think that doing that didn't seriously impede human understanding of the world.BlAiR_AgaiN wrote:
a/ You're making all the Catholics guilty for the work of an Inquisition lunatics. This is pretty stupid.Uzique wrote:
catholics have a lot more to be sorry for in the last 1,000 years of history
especially when it comes to retarding human development
b/ Since you said in the last 1000 years I'm going to assume you're talking about Inquisition, which started in the late 12th century.
While it holds some responsibility for "retarding human development" in that era, the main reason for that lies in decline of Roman empire and so called Dark ages which were a direct consequence of that.
Example: contrary to popular belief, most of academics in middle ages recognized Earth to be a sphere and not flat. And guess what, most (if not all) of those academics were Catholics.
I'm not trying to defend actions which were done by Catholics in Inquisition, I'm negating the fact that human development was majorly retarded because of these actions.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Not all Catholics supported the Inquisition, and while there is no doubt it was responsible for outlawing and impeding many scientific works and scientists, you just can't deny the fact that various Catholic orders (like Jesuits) preserved an enormous quantity of knowledge through the the whole middle ages and contributed a lot to spreading this knowledge among people via numerous universities.
So saying that Catholics are to blame for human development retardation is far from accurate (to put it mildly).
So saying that Catholics are to blame for human development retardation is far from accurate (to put it mildly).
Their leaders supported it. They did stand in the way of science, in the most sadistic of all ways. That is without question. Galileo's teachings were condemed before he even had a chance to speak in front of the the catholic leadership. That isn't to say they haven't also contributed. We have the big bang theory (Georges Lemaître) for example. The fact that there has also been contributions does not erase the past.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
LoL
The vast majority did. That's why they stood around cheering when then tortured and burnt people.BlAiR_AgaiN wrote:
Not all Catholics supported the Inquisition, and while there is no doubt it was responsible for outlawing and impeding many scientific works and scientists, you just can't deny the fact that various Catholic orders (like Jesuits) preserved an enormous quantity of knowledge through the the whole middle ages and contributed a lot to spreading this knowledge among people via numerous universities.
So saying that Catholics are to blame for human development retardation is far from accurate (to put it mildly).
The point is, it was not the only one which stood in the way of science. Feudalism reigned over Europe at that time, wars were fought constantly, Muslims were pretty much present on Iberian peninsula the whole time, etc. etc.Kmar wrote:
Their leaders supported it. They did stand in the way of science, in the most sadistic of all ways. That is without question. Galileo's teachings were condemed before he even had a chance to speak in front of the the catholic leadership. That isn't to say they haven't also contributed. We have the big bang theory (Georges Lemaître) for example. The fact that there has also been contributions does not erase the past.
The Church (not the Catholic scholars) didn't really give a crap about most of the scientific progress that went on. It was interested only in progress which could imply some heretic notion. You mentioned Galileo, he was very religious, the problem was he was also very fond of Reformation (Martin Luther). The whole argument between him and church isn't as simple as "omfg you heretic earth is the center of the universe now go and live in your house for the rest of your life".
There were so many factors involved in the development of science at the time that pointing the finger at Church at saying "It's your fault we aren't in star trek era yet" makes little sense.
The vast majority of people feared Inquisition like hell. Public executions always attracted lots of people but I wouldn't go as far to say that everyone there was a bloodthirsty maniac who enjoyed that kind of stuff.Bertster7 wrote:
The vast majority did. That's why they stood around cheering when then tortured and burnt people.
Last edited by BlAiR_AgaiN (2011-01-15 09:47:46)
Very well then. I guess they were worse. I would have more interest in debating this if I didn't already despise all religions anyway. Surely, we can agree that most religions have led to massive amounts of death and destruction.Bertster7 wrote:
Tough call?Turquoise wrote:
Yes, I am. I'm also familiar with Islamic conquests.
I think it's pretty clear that all religions are capable of inspiring humanity to kill for asinine reasons. Comparing brands of brainwashing is like deciding whether or not you'd prefer someone kill you with a machete or with a sledgehammer.
The Inquisitions only led to several thousand deaths. The Crusades led to several million.
But you have to take into account the really abhorrent sort of ways people were killed by Catholics. Just look at things like the book of martyrs, a nasty example being a heavily pregnant woman being hung above a fire so she was slowly cooked, then dropped into the fire where she gave birth and the crowd chucked the baby back into the fire.
If you're looking at numbers, the Catholics come out looking worse. If you're looking at how horrible the things they did were, the Catholics come out looking worse.
I know the events around galileo. He was religous, his daughter was even a nun. She ended up helping him with his penance. Galileo was trying to save the church from embarrassment. Poor chap. I doubt he would have made the effort if he knew his reward. Galileo was sentenced to house arrest because the pope thought he was mocking him by putting his words into a character he called simplicio in his book. The pope, which was his personal friend, gave him permission to write the book so long as it was presented as a discussion, and not a matter of scientific fact.. It is doubtful the the pope even read the book.BlAiR_AgaiN wrote:
The point is, it was not the only one which stood in the way of science. Feudalism reigned over Europe at that time, wars were fought constantly, Muslims were pretty much present on Iberian peninsula the whole time, etc. etc.Kmar wrote:
Their leaders supported it. They did stand in the way of science, in the most sadistic of all ways. That is without question. Galileo's teachings were condemed before he even had a chance to speak in front of the the catholic leadership. That isn't to say they haven't also contributed. We have the big bang theory (Georges Lemaître) for example. The fact that there has also been contributions does not erase the past.
The Church (not the Catholic scholars) didn't really give a crap about most of the scientific progress that went on. It was interested only in progress which could imply some heretic notion. You mentioned Galileo, he was very religious, the problem was he was also very fond of Reformation (Martin Luther). The whole argument between him and church isn't as simple as "omfg you heretic earth is the center of the universe now go and live in your house for the rest of your life".
There were so many factors involved in the development of science at the time that pointing the finger at Church at saying "It's your fault we aren't in star trek era yet" makes little sense.The vast majority of people feared Inquisition like hell. Public executions always attracted lots of people but I wouldn't go as far to say that everyone there was a bloodthirsty maniac who enjoyed that kind of stuff.Bertster7 wrote:
The vast majority did. That's why they stood around cheering when then tortured and burnt people.
Xbone Stormsurgezz