Im sure you guys know more about medicine than Doctor Paul
Tu Stultus Es
I know that vaccination programs work when you vaccinate as many people as possible.eleven bravo wrote:
Im sure you guys know more about medicine than Doctor Paul
He's not anti-vaccination, he's anti forced vaccination. Would you vaccinate your children? I would. So it doesn't have any effect on either of us then now does it?AussieReaper wrote:
I know that vaccination programs work when you vaccinate as many people as possible.eleven bravo wrote:
Im sure you guys know more about medicine than Doctor Paul
Damn big evil government trying to force us to be immunized, is such a stupid position to take.
If you choose not to, then your child develops measles it can spread to my child.Jay wrote:
He's not anti-vaccination, he's anti forced vaccination. Would you vaccinate your children? I would. So it doesn't have any effect on either of us then now does it?AussieReaper wrote:
I know that vaccination programs work when you vaccinate as many people as possible.eleven bravo wrote:
Im sure you guys know more about medicine than Doctor Paul
Damn big evil government trying to force us to be immunized, is such a stupid position to take.
How does it spread to your child if your child is vaccinated? Stop being stupid.AussieReaper wrote:
If you choose not to, then your child develops measles it can spread to my child.Jay wrote:
He's not anti-vaccination, he's anti forced vaccination. Would you vaccinate your children? I would. So it doesn't have any effect on either of us then now does it?AussieReaper wrote:
I know that vaccination programs work when you vaccinate as many people as possible.
Damn big evil government trying to force us to be immunized, is such a stupid position to take.
I thought that concept was obvious.
Vaccinations are not always 100% effective. And if my child is under 18 months, they would not yet be vaccinated. Would you like to see an outbreak of measles in a maternity ward?Jay wrote:
How does it spread to your child if your child is vaccinated? Stop being stupid.AussieReaper wrote:
If you choose not to, then your child develops measles it can spread to my child.Jay wrote:
He's not anti-vaccination, he's anti forced vaccination. Would you vaccinate your children? I would. So it doesn't have any effect on either of us then now does it?
I thought that concept was obvious.
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?pi … 7#p3729717RAIMIUS wrote:
Paul being a social conservative? In which reality?
The guy is pretty darn libertarian (heck, he ran as a Libertarian once).
Meh... All the Paul voters just need to vote for Gary Johnson instead. He's got all the good stuff of Paul without the baggage and nutty stuff.Macbeth wrote:
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?pi … 7#p3729717RAIMIUS wrote:
Paul being a social conservative? In which reality?
The guy is pretty darn libertarian (heck, he ran as a Libertarian once).
read from there onward. I pointed out a few instances of him letting his social views bleed into legislation.
Why do people assume libertarian means social liberal?
Because in theory it does.Macbeth wrote:
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?pi … 7#p3729717RAIMIUS wrote:
Paul being a social conservative? In which reality?
The guy is pretty darn libertarian (heck, he ran as a Libertarian once).
read from there onward. I pointed out a few instances of him letting his social views bleed into legislation.
Why do people assume libertarian means social liberal?
He doesn't understand the definition outside of Democrat-Republican terms.Spark wrote:
Because in theory it does.Macbeth wrote:
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?pi … 7#p3729717RAIMIUS wrote:
Paul being a social conservative? In which reality?
The guy is pretty darn libertarian (heck, he ran as a Libertarian once).
read from there onward. I pointed out a few instances of him letting his social views bleed into legislation.
Why do people assume libertarian means social liberal?
Last edited by Jay (2012-01-11 05:03:55)
So now you agree that Stalin and company knew exactly what would happen when they did what they did? And that the ultimate economic end game (an unsustainable system that collapsed) was known by them and their successors, yet they pressed with it anyway?Shahter wrote:
yeah, heard that before. that "argument" doesn't take into account a simple fact that just about everybody, including "savior capitalists" with their "free market", had a go in russia before bolsheviks and failed miserably. only stalin with "actions that had nothing to do with bringing SU into the 20th century" was successful, and not simply successful - the results that soviets had were nothing short of spectacular. "unforseen economical consequences" my arse.
I'm not judging it. I'm simply laying out what happened. History and everyone else (except, apparently you and a small minority like you) has judged it based on outcome vs actions...and found the cost/benefit equation to be sorely lacking.yeah. it seems so when taken out of context. extreme situations call for extreme measures to resolve them. the situation in 1917th wasn't simply extreme - it was a fucking catastrophe. the methods of the soviets were horrible - there, i said it - but who are you again to judge them? they succeeded where everybody else failed, and history doesn't deal in "what if"s.FEOS wrote:
If the US (and other countries) hadn't resorted to slavery, there would've been a different labor base upon which to build their respective economies--like the industrial North (which had its own evils). Yes, good and bad in all things. Millions of your own countrymen purposely killed? Seems overwhelmingly bad.
Let's compare those cases (slaves and colonies) to purposefully killing millions of your own people by creating bad harvests by moving people from farms to cities and forcing inefficient/improper farming "for the state" because "the state" knows more about farming in that area than the farmers who have been farming it for centuries. Yes, slavery was horrific in that it forcibly placed humans in servitude to other humans. We fought a war over the issue (among others) 50-odd years before your own Bolshevik revolution. The end result was freed slaves, who then--despite massive discrimination (like other ethnic minorities in other nations)--began to make even more wonderful contributions to our society. Same with the colonies (India, for example) when they broke away from their colonial powers. In neither case did the offender just kill millions as a matter of policy in order to "make things better" and then, when things happened to get better, say "See? It was worth it to kill/let all those people die." Nobody in the US is arguing that slavery was "worth it" or "a good thing in the end" despite the huge boon to the Southern economy--there were far too many negatives associated with it.i said it numerous times - stalin didn't purposefully reduce any population and thinking so is absurd. the fucking population was one of the most valuable resources for soviet union, because, unlike many "civilized and progressive", soviets didn't have colonies or slaves. your version of "holodomor" is total fiction. if you look at the history of russia for, like, a hundred years immediately prior to 1917 you'll see that "holodomors" happened every time there was a bad harvest during those times. each and every fucking time. they reason it turned out so particularly bad under bolsheviks was, as i mentioned numerous times, was that the nation was in total turmoil as a whole. it's also worth noting that it was the last of those famines in history of russia. never again anything like that happened under bolsheviks. but that, of course, falls under "unforseen economical consequences" category, right?FEOS wrote:
That many fewer people available to fight for the motherland ten years later... Would the Nazis have made it to Stalingrad if the Ukraine's population hadn't been significantly reduced by Stalin 10 years prior?
So if you understand what the slant is and you have varied sources, you can filter based on the known slant. If you have one source, with one filter, you never know if you're getting any variance in information.of course it's more varied - in the ways that it provides for better understanding of what some of the more dominant "private interests" there currently are. always good to know, especially for the purposes of "democracy and freedom". pffft.FEOS wrote:
It's certainly more varied...which allows for at least a modicum of critical thought on the matter, rather than a single viewpoint. But your sig tells us your thoughts on open-mindedness, right? It's a bad thing.
So I suppose if Russia had bothered to look into it--which would've required funding, btw--then nobody could trust their conclusions, either. Because they would've funded the investigations. You do realize that everything in this world must be paid for, right? And that doesn't make it automatically tainted in some way...why would anybody pay to have what actually happened reported?FEOS wrote:
I don't know. I would assume some would have been paid for by Interpol (or similar organizations), some would have been done internally by other journalistic organizations, trying to figure out what happened.directly. the one who pays for the dinner usually gets to take the girl dancing.FEOS wrote:
So how it's funded changes what it finds?it does. just like everybody else. in time they might even get better at this.FEOS wrote:
I guess that means that Russia doesn't fund anything...
ooookkkk. That answer means nothing. They actually are publicly traded and their inner workings are generally transparent, as they are investigated, audited, etc. Do you just have an issue with them not being government-controlled?not evil. private.FEOS wrote:
So why do you think private interests are somehow evil?
Because there are enough sources for information that people can figure out if they're being fed BS and stop using a given source. That's where the money is (see ratings drops in CNN, MSNBC, etc and increase in ratings/use of alternative media).where's money in that?FEOS wrote:
Perhaps the private interests are "interested" in ensuring the truth is out there for people to make their own decisions?
The fact that you don't get/understand this shows how numbed by your own propaganda machine you've become, apparently...lolFEOS wrote:
They certainly have a better track record of it than government-controlled media outlets do...
No different than any other prison from that perspective. There are always a few who do learn those things while they are in there. But true, most just keep their heads down and try to live day to day and get out. That doesn't mean there aren't exceptions.i have personally spoken to many people, who were in gulags. the last thing your learn in places like that is what they are for and who the people around you truly are.
Again with the "I live here, so that cancels out any other opinion--even of other people who have lived here" argument.you know, i've actually been raised in a family of soviet intelligentsia, only, unlike solzhnitsyn, i got to actually experience the world around me when ussr dissolved. i've a very good idea of what kinda person mr. solzhenitsyn was: "totally out of touch with reality" would describe him best.FEOS wrote:
Seriously. You act as if he heard about the prisons on a street corner and wrote a comic book about them.
Your position has inherent negativity. And for you to state that you are not issuing labels or judging is merely laughable.i never said anything "against the west" - only that your so called "freedom" has nothing to do with actual freedom, and "democracy" has devolved into an information manipulation tool. i never said that stuff was good or bad - just that it's not what you are trying to convince yourselves it is. you here are issuing labels and judging people and nations you have only been given second hand info about, not me.
But the difference is, I honor your perspective as being different. I don't agree with it, and want to better understand why you have that perspective through discussion. You just discount different perspectives and try to shut down discussion with your approach of "I live here, you don't, anything you read is tainted by Russia haters, propaganda, blah blah blah" no sources, emotion-based, argument. That is the frustrating thing for me, at least.i'm using the same sources you are. i'm just making different conclusions because i see it from different perspective - perspective you never had for reasons i already mentioned.FEOS wrote:
Even though you've provided zero sources to back up any of your arguments. And even if you did, I should just ignore them and discount them as propaganda.
http://www.opensecrets.org/pres08/contr … =N00009638 - 2008 obama contributionThe organizations themselves did not donate, rather the money came from the organizations' PACs, their individual members or employees or owners, and those individuals' immediate families. Organization totals include subsidiaries and affiliates.
Because of contribution limits, organizations that bundle together many individual contributions are often among the top donors to presidential candidates. These contributions can come from the organization's members or employees (and their families). The organization may support one candidate, or hedge its bets by supporting multiple candidates. Groups with national networks of donors - like EMILY's List and Club for Growth - make for particularly big bundlers.
... really does not belong here. and, frankly, i'm tired of trying to convince you to use commons sense of your own instead of "scholars" this and "widely known and accepted" that. as i said, you version of stuff have been cooked very well for you, but it doesn't make it any less one sided. the info is out there - you can keep believing in fairy tales or you can do something else.FEOS wrote:
So now you agree that Stalin and company...
Wall Street bought him too.Dilbert_X wrote:
Wall St bought another President - nice.
Obama should be able to run with that.