That was nationalism not atheism…
Communist nationalism? Are you drunk? Communism is anti-nationalism. Fascism is nationalistic. Communism teaches that people are united by class and not by nation, which is why their battle cry is "workers of the world unite".Manhattan said:
That was nationalism not atheism…
It's pegged to whatever they want but it's generally based on their life experiences - their family, environment, society they live in, etc. Of course that means some of that is based on the religious views of others - but who cares? We are each a product of the environment we live in. One doesn't have to be religious to realize that or to have right vs wrong beliefs.Silian Rail said:I don't assume that, but to play with the compass analogy, what is their compass pegged to? The only reason a compass works is because of the magnetism of the poles. What is their magnetism?javajaws said:Sorry, I should have said "religion or your own moral compass" in addition to the laws...Silian Rail said:And if you have no religion, you're just beholden to the laws of the government you're under and can do whatever you want to as long as you might not get caught.javajaws said:Congrats, I think you have just realized you are beholden to the beliefs of your religion as well as the laws of the government you live under. Did you really have a point or did you just like making nonsense arguments?Silian Rail said:Yes, that's the 'temporal punishment' I referenced earlier. What is scary is that the scenario changes if you don't have any risk associated with the behavior. For a person who only behaves a certain way out of fear of getting caught, they would see no problem with murdering someone in a situation where they felt comfortable that they wouldn't get caught.javajaws said:See - you try to argue just like a liberal. It's pretty funny actually.Silian Rail said:javajaws said:What then? Absolutely nothing.Silian Rail said:Explain it; what if someone doesn't believe that murder is a horrible act. What then?93MarineHorn said:No. I don't need to believe in God to know that murder is a horrible act. I don't need to believe in God to adhere to a 25 mph speed limit in a school zone.Quote:
They do need to backed up by a belief in a supreme being to be persuasive, otherwise there's no reason to adhere to them if it's just some 18th century politico's opinion other than "i like this" and people like all sorts of different things.
Excellent, now we've got a society where it's okay to murder. Sounds like a great place
I don't believe it's wrong to own an SBR (short barreled rifle) without paying $200 to the government. Yet I don't. Why?
Hint: It's the same reason someone might not murder someone even if they morally think murder is ok.
Because really - YOU assume somebody that isn't religious has NO moral compass whatsoever. And that just isn't true. There are plenty of people (despite whatever government laws may or may not exist) that don't believe in god that believe murder is wrong (and adultery is wrong, etc). Some of those people may even believe gay marriage is fine - even some Christians believe that lol.
Quote:
The religious beliefs of Adolf Hitler, dictator of Germany from 1933 to 1945, have been a matter of debate. His opinions regarding religious matters changed considerably over time. During the beginning of his political life, Hitler publicly expressed favorable opinions towards Christianity. Some historians describe his later posture as being "anti-Christian". He also criticized atheism.
Sounds a lot like not-atheism to me.Quote:
In a speech in the early years of his rule, Hitler declared himself "Not a Catholic, but a German Christian". The German Christians were a Protestant group that supported Nazi Ideology. Hitler and the Nazi party also promoted "nondenominational" positive Christianity, a movement which rejected most traditional Christian doctrines such as the divinity of Jesus, as well as Jewish elements such as the Old Testament. In one widely quoted remark, he described Jesus as an "Aryan fighter" who struggled against "the power and pretensions of the corrupt Pharisees" and Jewish materialism. Hitler demonstrated a preference for Protestantism and Lutheranism, stating, "Through me the Evangelical Protestant Church could become the established church, as in England" and that the "great reformer" Martin Luther "has the merit of rising against the Pope and the Catholic Church".
Sorry, that's the "wrong" religion. Morals only belong to the one true religion.Manhattan said:Silian Rail said:Uh yes, I'll introduce you to the communist party who disavowed God, killed millions of people and destroyed churches. You also might have noticed the recent attacks against Catholic Churches and day care centers by Antifa who in light of the Roe V Wade rule, are blaming Catholics for women not being able to kill their kids in some states.aggievaulter07 said:When is the last time someone committed a crime, any crime, publicly in the name of Atheism? Or even at least where their atheism was an obvious driving factor in the commission of the crime? Any atheistic mass shooters? Any atheistic terrorists? Any atheistic bombers? Any atheistic insurrectionists? Any of them that any of you guys might be able to dig deep and come up with will be the exception, not the rule.javajaws said:Sorry, I should have said "religion or your own moral compass" in addition to the laws...Silian Rail said:And if you have no religion, you're just beholden to the laws of the government you're under and can do whatever you want to as long as you might not get caught.javajaws said:Congrats, I think you have just realized you are beholden to the beliefs of your religion as well as the laws of the government you live under. Did you really have a point or did you just like making nonsense arguments?Silian Rail said:Yes, that's the 'temporal punishment' I referenced earlier. What is scary is that the scenario changes if you don't have any risk associated with the behavior. For a person who only behaves a certain way out of fear of getting caught, they would see no problem with murdering someone in a situation where they felt comfortable that they wouldn't get caught.javajaws said:See - you try to argue just like a liberal. It's pretty funny actually.Silian Rail said:javajaws said:What then? Absolutely nothing.Silian Rail said:Explain it; what if someone doesn't believe that murder is a horrible act. What then?93MarineHorn said:No. I don't need to believe in God to know that murder is a horrible act. I don't need to believe in God to adhere to a 25 mph speed limit in a school zone.Quote:
They do need to backed up by a belief in a supreme being to be persuasive, otherwise there's no reason to adhere to them if it's just some 18th century politico's opinion other than "i like this" and people like all sorts of different things.
Excellent, now we've got a society where it's okay to murder. Sounds like a great place
I don't believe it's wrong to own an SBR (short barreled rifle) without paying $200 to the government. Yet I don't. Why?
Hint: It's the same reason someone might not murder someone even if they morally think murder is ok.
Because really - YOU assume somebody that isn't religious has NO moral compass whatsoever. And that just isn't true. There are plenty of people (despite whatever government laws may or may not exist) that don't believe in god that believe murder is wrong (and adultery is wrong, etc). Some of those people may even believe gay marriage is fine - even some Christians believe that lol.
I'll hang up and listen.
That wasn't in the name of atheism… Putin is essentially doing the same thing now with the blessing of the Russian Orthodox Church.
https://www.kktv.com/2022/06/27/fire-colorado-pregnancy-center-being-investigated-arson-wake-roe-v-wade-reversal/aggievaulter07 said:
So, regarding the Communists...
Religious Views of Adolf Hitler
Here are some excerpts:Quote:
The religious beliefs of Adolf Hitler, dictator of Germany from 1933 to 1945, have been a matter of debate. His opinions regarding religious matters changed considerably over time. During the beginning of his political life, Hitler publicly expressed favorable opinions towards Christianity. Some historians describe his later posture as being "anti-Christian". He also criticized atheism.Sounds a lot like not-atheism to me.Quote:
In a speech in the early years of his rule, Hitler declared himself "Not a Catholic, but a German Christian". The German Christians were a Protestant group that supported Nazi Ideology. Hitler and the Nazi party also promoted "nondenominational" positive Christianity, a movement which rejected most traditional Christian doctrines such as the divinity of Jesus, as well as Jewish elements such as the Old Testament. In one widely quoted remark, he described Jesus as an "Aryan fighter" who struggled against "the power and pretensions of the corrupt Pharisees" and Jewish materialism. Hitler demonstrated a preference for Protestantism and Lutheranism, stating, "Through me the Evangelical Protestant Church could become the established church, as in England" and that the "great reformer" Martin Luther "has the merit of rising against the Pope and the Catholic Church".
Got any links to the "Antifa attacks on churches and day care centers"? This is the first I've heard of it...
Let's be real... most atrocities around the world, and throughout history are committed in the name of, or at least motivated by some form of religious belief.
Sure, but let's say they didn't do that. Let's say that community decided person x was subhuman and it was okay to that. What would you say to that? That person X had a certain genetic defect that they didn't want passed around society and they needed to kill that to quarantine the defect. Okay?javajaws said:It's pegged to whatever they want but it's generally based on their life experiences - their family, environment, society they live in, etc. Of course that means some of that is based on the religious views of others - but who cares? We are each a product of the environment we live in. One doesn't have to be religious to realize that or to have right vs wrong beliefs.Silian Rail said:I don't assume that, but to play with the compass analogy, what is their compass pegged to? The only reason a compass works is because of the magnetism of the poles. What is their magnetism?javajaws said:Sorry, I should have said "religion or your own moral compass" in addition to the laws...Silian Rail said:And if you have no religion, you're just beholden to the laws of the government you're under and can do whatever you want to as long as you might not get caught.javajaws said:Congrats, I think you have just realized you are beholden to the beliefs of your religion as well as the laws of the government you live under. Did you really have a point or did you just like making nonsense arguments?Silian Rail said:Yes, that's the 'temporal punishment' I referenced earlier. What is scary is that the scenario changes if you don't have any risk associated with the behavior. For a person who only behaves a certain way out of fear of getting caught, they would see no problem with murdering someone in a situation where they felt comfortable that they wouldn't get caught.javajaws said:See - you try to argue just like a liberal. It's pretty funny actually.Silian Rail said:javajaws said:What then? Absolutely nothing.Silian Rail said:Explain it; what if someone doesn't believe that murder is a horrible act. What then?93MarineHorn said:No. I don't need to believe in God to know that murder is a horrible act. I don't need to believe in God to adhere to a 25 mph speed limit in a school zone.Quote:
They do need to backed up by a belief in a supreme being to be persuasive, otherwise there's no reason to adhere to them if it's just some 18th century politico's opinion other than "i like this" and people like all sorts of different things.
Excellent, now we've got a society where it's okay to murder. Sounds like a great place
I don't believe it's wrong to own an SBR (short barreled rifle) without paying $200 to the government. Yet I don't. Why?
Hint: It's the same reason someone might not murder someone even if they morally think murder is ok.
Because really - YOU assume somebody that isn't religious has NO moral compass whatsoever. And that just isn't true. There are plenty of people (despite whatever government laws may or may not exist) that don't believe in god that believe murder is wrong (and adultery is wrong, etc). Some of those people may even believe gay marriage is fine - even some Christians believe that lol.
Let's say (for sake of argument) mankind had no religious beliefs whatsoever. And let's take a little community in this fictional world where murder was rampant. Do you think some of the people in this community would think to themselves "hey, this is wrong - nobody should have to live in fear for their lives like this". And just like that they have formed part of their moral compass without the help of god, the bible, or anything else other than their life experiences.
BAP Enthusiast said:MGS said:You know what's worse? Having a husband cheat on his wife and then not being able to support the family because he's spending a year in prison.BAP Enthusiast said:
In a marriage this is effectively as bad emotionally as milking someone and people grieve in the same way as an actual death.
Perhaps if there was prison time for this behavior he would never had done it in the first place. People act like this because there is no punishment for any of it. If there was then maybe they would actually work on their marriage instead of looking elsewhere.
First, what I want you to do is acknowledge what I posted about Hitler running the communist party in Germany, and his religious beliefs.Quote:
These are just in the last 7 weeks, and there are many more. Do you want me to do churches now?
Hitler was a Nazi, not a Communist?aggievaulter07 said:First, what I want you to do is acknowledge what I posted about Hitler running the communist party in Germany, and his religious beliefs.Quote:
These are just in the last 7 weeks, and there are many more. Do you want me to do churches now?
aggievaulter07 said:First, what I want you to do is acknowledge what I posted about Hitler running the communist party in Germany, and his religious beliefs.Quote:
These are just in the last 7 weeks, and there are many more. Do you want me to do churches now?
Are you high right now? Do you have any ideas how laws work? They act as a deterrent, not as a failsafe. It absolutely changes behavior. The entire study of economics teaches how people respond to risk and reward, you're arguing that if the penalty for speeding was death, the same number of people would speed. That is idiotic.Zombie Jon Snow said:BAP Enthusiast said:MGS said:You know what's worse? Having a husband cheat on his wife and then not being able to support the family because he's spending a year in prison.BAP Enthusiast said:
In a marriage this is effectively as bad emotionally as milking someone and people grieve in the same way as an actual death.
Perhaps if there was prison time for this behavior he would never had done it in the first place. People act like this because there is no punishment for any of it. If there was then maybe they would actually work on their marriage instead of looking elsewhere.
Please tell me which laws in history have STOPPED a crime from occurring. I'll wait.
Ok I don't want to wait. The answer is none. Name any crime and there are people committing it.
Laws are nothing more than a definition of crimes and their punishment. It's a construct of a supposedly civil society. It does not change behavior. Most people don't murder because they are ethically moral and upstanding on their own, not because there is a law against murder. But murderers still murder despite there being a law against it. It simply defines the punishment for the crime. Same for speeding. People still do it.
But punishing human behavior that is common, private, and even accepted in some case, is lunacy.
I'm happily married and monogamous for 33 years - but this is BSC.
This is Puritanical 101. Found your own commune and good luck with that.
Silian Rail said:Are you high right now? Do you have any ideas how laws work? They act as a deterrent, not as a failsafe. It absolutely changes behavior. The entire study of economics teaches how people respond to risk and reward, you're arguing that if the penalty for speeding was death, the same number of people would speed. That is idiotic.Zombie Jon Snow said:BAP Enthusiast said:MGS said:You know what's worse? Having a husband cheat on his wife and then not being able to support the family because he's spending a year in prison.BAP Enthusiast said:
In a marriage this is effectively as bad emotionally as milking someone and people grieve in the same way as an actual death.
Perhaps if there was prison time for this behavior he would never had done it in the first place. People act like this because there is no punishment for any of it. If there was then maybe they would actually work on their marriage instead of looking elsewhere.
Please tell me which laws in history have STOPPED a crime from occurring. I'll wait.
Ok I don't want to wait. The answer is none. Name any crime and there are people committing it.
Laws are nothing more than a definition of crimes and their punishment. It's a construct of a supposedly civil society. It does not change behavior. Most people don't murder because they are ethically moral and upstanding on their own, not because there is a law against murder. But murderers still murder despite there being a law against it. It simply defines the punishment for the crime. Same for speeding. People still do it.
But punishing human behavior that is common, private, and even accepted in some case, is lunacy.
I'm happily married and monogamous for 33 years - but this is BSC.
This is Puritanical 101. Found your own commune and good luck with that.
People base all decisions off of utility, which is a risk/reward calculation. I would not be willing to swim across an alligator infested stream for a $10 payoff. I might for a $100,000,000 payoff.
Man, I like most of your posts, but this is one of the dumbest things I've ever heard. That's like saying safe's don't work because they've been broken into before. They don't completely eradicate something, they just decrease it.Zombie Jon Snow said:Silian Rail said:Are you high right now? Do you have any ideas how laws work? They act as a deterrent, not as a failsafe. It absolutely changes behavior. The entire study of economics teaches how people respond to risk and reward, you're arguing that if the penalty for speeding was death, the same number of people would speed. That is idiotic.Zombie Jon Snow said:BAP Enthusiast said:MGS said:You know what's worse? Having a husband cheat on his wife and then not being able to support the family because he's spending a year in prison.BAP Enthusiast said:
In a marriage this is effectively as bad emotionally as milking someone and people grieve in the same way as an actual death.
Perhaps if there was prison time for this behavior he would never had done it in the first place. People act like this because there is no punishment for any of it. If there was then maybe they would actually work on their marriage instead of looking elsewhere.
Please tell me which laws in history have STOPPED a crime from occurring. I'll wait.
Ok I don't want to wait. The answer is none. Name any crime and there are people committing it.
Laws are nothing more than a definition of crimes and their punishment. It's a construct of a supposedly civil society. It does not change behavior. Most people don't murder because they are ethically moral and upstanding on their own, not because there is a law against murder. But murderers still murder despite there being a law against it. It simply defines the punishment for the crime. Same for speeding. People still do it.
But punishing human behavior that is common, private, and even accepted in some case, is lunacy.
I'm happily married and monogamous for 33 years - but this is BSC.
This is Puritanical 101. Found your own commune and good luck with that.
People base all decisions off of utility, which is a risk/reward calculation. I would not be willing to swim across an alligator infested stream for a $10 payoff. I might for a $100,000,000 payoff.
Laws don't deter anything otherwise there would be no crime.
88+% of Brazilians are Christian. Stealing is wrong based on Christian morals. Yet pick pockets are a HUGE issue for people traveling to Brazil.Silian Rail said:We're not talking about the reasons why they don't break the law; we're talking about the idea of whether or not breaking the law is bad, and where that comes from. They're likely not breaking the law because they fear temporal punishment, but even if there is no stick, where is the carrot?ABATTBQ11 said:Silian Rail said:They do need to backed up by a belief in a supreme being to be persuasive, otherwise there's no reason to adhere to them if it's just some 18th century politico's opinion other than "i like this" and people like all sorts of different things.93MarineHorn said:No doubt there is heavy Christian influence in the law, the Constitution and so forth. But those laws and norms don't need to be backed up by a belief in a supreme being for them to be persuasive. I'm getting a chuckle at you piggy-backing on the Catholic church like you and the church are a successful football franchiseQuote:
All of Western Civilization was founded on the back of my church. Like it or not, the values that you hold dear are heavily influenced by Roman and Greek legal and moral philosophy perfected by the Catholic Church.
They need to be backed by belief in a supreme being to be persuasive to you, but there's a whole helluva lot of people who don't need that.
The reason to adhere to them is that such laws and norms are an aggregate of societal opinions on acceptable and expected behavior, and violation of them comes with the threat of societal consequences. No one needs God to tell them killing someone is wrong and you shouldn't do it when no one wants to be killed so everyone agrees that anyone who kills someone else will be punished by everyone else.
Plenty of atheists don't break the law, and, newsflash, it's not because they believe they'll be punished by God.
Why is it wrong to steal? What if someone doesn't have empathy? Unless objective truth exists, then it isn't wrong to steal, it's merely distasteful and not something you would do.
Quote:
Uh yes, I'll introduce you to the communist party who disavowed God, killed millions of people and destroyed churches. You also might have noticed the recent attacks against Catholic Churches and day care centers by Antifa who in light of the Roe V Wade rule, are blaming Catholics for women not being able to kill their kids in some states.
Quote:
https://www.kktv.com/2022/06/27/fire-colorado-pregnancy-center-being-investigated-arson-wake-roe-v-wade-reversal/
No mention of antifaQuote:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jun/11/fire-pregnancy-crisis-center-oregon-portland
No mention of antifaQuote:
https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/251477/police-investigation-fire-graffiti-at-upstate-new-york-pro-life-pregnancy-center
No mention of antifaQuote:
https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/251480/vandalism-pro-life-pregnancy-center-north-carolina
No mention of antifaQuote:
https://www.foxnews.com/us/washington-dc-abortion-pregnancy-vandalized
Behind a pay wall.Quote:
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/08/us/madison-anti-abortion-center-vandalized.html
Your bombshell is that Christians do bad things?dmart90 said:88+% of Brazilians are Christian. Stealing is wrong based on Christian morals. Yet pick pockets are a HUGE issue for people traveling to Brazil.Silian Rail said:We're not talking about the reasons why they don't break the law; we're talking about the idea of whether or not breaking the law is bad, and where that comes from. They're likely not breaking the law because they fear temporal punishment, but even if there is no stick, where is the carrot?ABATTBQ11 said:Silian Rail said:They do need to backed up by a belief in a supreme being to be persuasive, otherwise there's no reason to adhere to them if it's just some 18th century politico's opinion other than "i like this" and people like all sorts of different things.93MarineHorn said:No doubt there is heavy Christian influence in the law, the Constitution and so forth. But those laws and norms don't need to be backed up by a belief in a supreme being for them to be persuasive. I'm getting a chuckle at you piggy-backing on the Catholic church like you and the church are a successful football franchiseQuote:
All of Western Civilization was founded on the back of my church. Like it or not, the values that you hold dear are heavily influenced by Roman and Greek legal and moral philosophy perfected by the Catholic Church.
They need to be backed by belief in a supreme being to be persuasive to you, but there's a whole helluva lot of people who don't need that.
The reason to adhere to them is that such laws and norms are an aggregate of societal opinions on acceptable and expected behavior, and violation of them comes with the threat of societal consequences. No one needs God to tell them killing someone is wrong and you shouldn't do it when no one wants to be killed so everyone agrees that anyone who kills someone else will be punished by everyone else.
Plenty of atheists don't break the law, and, newsflash, it's not because they believe they'll be punished by God.
Why is it wrong to steal? What if someone doesn't have empathy? Unless objective truth exists, then it isn't wrong to steal, it's merely distasteful and not something you would do.
Huh.
You can't take me seriously? The dude who thought Nazi Germany was communist? Who do you think is doing this stuff? Maybe the group that showed up at the Supreme Court and said "burn it all down?" and all of a sudden a bunch of churches and pregnancy help centers start catching on fire? What do you think Mr.Wizard?aggievaulter07 said:No mention of antifa.Quote:
https://www.kktv.com/2022/06/27/fire-colorado-pregnancy-center-being-investigated-arson-wake-roe-v-wade-reversal/No mention of antifaQuote:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jun/11/fire-pregnancy-crisis-center-oregon-portlandNo mention of antifaQuote:
https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/251477/police-investigation-fire-graffiti-at-upstate-new-york-pro-life-pregnancy-centerNo mention of antifaQuote:
https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/251480/vandalism-pro-life-pregnancy-center-north-carolinaNo mention of antifaQuote:
https://www.foxnews.com/us/washington-dc-abortion-pregnancy-vandalizedBehind a pay wall.Quote:
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/08/us/madison-anti-abortion-center-vandalized.html
I cannot take you seriously, or assume that you are debating in good faith at this point. Zero of those articles made a single mention of antifa.
Silian Rail said:Sure, but let's say they didn't do that. Let's say that community decided person x was subhuman and it was okay to that. What would you say to that? That person X had a certain genetic defect that they didn't want passed around society and they needed to kill that to quarantine the defect. Okay?javajaws said:It's pegged to whatever they want but it's generally based on their life experiences - their family, environment, society they live in, etc. Of course that means some of that is based on the religious views of others - but who cares? We are each a product of the environment we live in. One doesn't have to be religious to realize that or to have right vs wrong beliefs.Silian Rail said:I don't assume that, but to play with the compass analogy, what is their compass pegged to? The only reason a compass works is because of the magnetism of the poles. What is their magnetism?javajaws said:Sorry, I should have said "religion or your own moral compass" in addition to the laws...Silian Rail said:And if you have no religion, you're just beholden to the laws of the government you're under and can do whatever you want to as long as you might not get caught.javajaws said:Congrats, I think you have just realized you are beholden to the beliefs of your religion as well as the laws of the government you live under. Did you really have a point or did you just like making nonsense arguments?Silian Rail said:Yes, that's the 'temporal punishment' I referenced earlier. What is scary is that the scenario changes if you don't have any risk associated with the behavior. For a person who only behaves a certain way out of fear of getting caught, they would see no problem with murdering someone in a situation where they felt comfortable that they wouldn't get caught.javajaws said:See - you try to argue just like a liberal. It's pretty funny actually.Silian Rail said:javajaws said:What then? Absolutely nothing.Silian Rail said:Explain it; what if someone doesn't believe that murder is a horrible act. What then?93MarineHorn said:No. I don't need to believe in God to know that murder is a horrible act. I don't need to believe in God to adhere to a 25 mph speed limit in a school zone.Quote:
They do need to backed up by a belief in a supreme being to be persuasive, otherwise there's no reason to adhere to them if it's just some 18th century politico's opinion other than "i like this" and people like all sorts of different things.
Excellent, now we've got a society where it's okay to murder. Sounds like a great place
I don't believe it's wrong to own an SBR (short barreled rifle) without paying $200 to the government. Yet I don't. Why?
Hint: It's the same reason someone might not murder someone even if they morally think murder is ok.
Because really - YOU assume somebody that isn't religious has NO moral compass whatsoever. And that just isn't true. There are plenty of people (despite whatever government laws may or may not exist) that don't believe in god that believe murder is wrong (and adultery is wrong, etc). Some of those people may even believe gay marriage is fine - even some Christians believe that lol.
Let's say (for sake of argument) mankind had no religious beliefs whatsoever. And let's take a little community in this fictional world where murder was rampant. Do you think some of the people in this community would think to themselves "hey, this is wrong - nobody should have to live in fear for their lives like this". And just like that they have formed part of their moral compass without the help of god, the bible, or anything else other than their life experiences.
Silian Rail said:Man, I like most of your posts, but this is one of the dumbest things I've ever heard. That's like saying safe's don't work because they've been broken into before. They don't completely eradicate something, they just decrease it.Zombie Jon Snow said:Silian Rail said:Are you high right now? Do you have any ideas how laws work? They act as a deterrent, not as a failsafe. It absolutely changes behavior. The entire study of economics teaches how people respond to risk and reward, you're arguing that if the penalty for speeding was death, the same number of people would speed. That is idiotic.Zombie Jon Snow said:BAP Enthusiast said:MGS said:You know what's worse? Having a husband cheat on his wife and then not being able to support the family because he's spending a year in prison.BAP Enthusiast said:
In a marriage this is effectively as bad emotionally as milking someone and people grieve in the same way as an actual death.
Perhaps if there was prison time for this behavior he would never had done it in the first place. People act like this because there is no punishment for any of it. If there was then maybe they would actually work on their marriage instead of looking elsewhere.
Please tell me which laws in history have STOPPED a crime from occurring. I'll wait.
Ok I don't want to wait. The answer is none. Name any crime and there are people committing it.
Laws are nothing more than a definition of crimes and their punishment. It's a construct of a supposedly civil society. It does not change behavior. Most people don't murder because they are ethically moral and upstanding on their own, not because there is a law against murder. But murderers still murder despite there being a law against it. It simply defines the punishment for the crime. Same for speeding. People still do it.
But punishing human behavior that is common, private, and even accepted in some case, is lunacy.
I'm happily married and monogamous for 33 years - but this is BSC.
This is Puritanical 101. Found your own commune and good luck with that.
People base all decisions off of utility, which is a risk/reward calculation. I would not be willing to swim across an alligator infested stream for a $10 payoff. I might for a $100,000,000 payoff.
Laws don't deter anything otherwise there would be no crime.
The whole reason why San Francisco was running amok is because their DA wasn't enforcing crime. Enforcing crime causes crime rates to drop, because the risk increases which makes the reward less attractive.
Do you know why theft is so non prevalent in the middle east? Because they cut your hand off if you steal. Do you know why Singapore is so clean? Because they beat you if you vandalize.
People respond to carrot and sticks. You saying people don't respond to laws is that same thing as saying people don't change their behavior if you offer them money.
1st amendmentQuote:
Well just tell me what gives you the right to make claims on people's behavior if there are no moral absolutes
You got me on the mixing up Commies and Nazis. My bad. Brain fart, 100%. I would circle back to how you pointing that out actually helps me make my broader point, but...Quote:
You can't take me seriously? The dude who thought Nazi Germany was communist?
No, I can't take someone seriously when they present their assumptions as facts.Quote:
Who do you *think* is doing this stuff? Maybe the group that showed up at the Supreme Court and said "burn it all down?" and all of a sudden a bunch of churches and pregnancy help centers start catching on fire? What do you think Mr.Wizard?
Wait, what? Are you saying the Soviets weren't nationalistic? Wow.Silian Rail said:Communist nationalism? Are you drunk? Communism is anti-nationalism. Fascism is nationalistic. Communism teaches that people are united by class and not by nation, which is why their battle cry is "workers of the world unite".Manhattan said:
That was nationalism not atheism…
aggievaulter07 said:You got me on the mixing up Commies and Nazis. My bad. Brain fart, 100%. I would circle back to how you pointing that out actually helps me make my broader point, but...Quote:
You can't take me seriously? The dude who thought Nazi Germany was communist?No, I can't take someone seriously when they present their assumptions as facts.Quote:
Who do you *think* is doing this stuff? Maybe the group that showed up at the Supreme Court and said "burn it all down?" and all of a sudden a bunch of churches and pregnancy help centers start catching on fire? What do you think Mr.Wizard?
My man.Quote:
It really sounds like you have been brainwashed into thinking that you (or anyone else) cannot make moral decisions for yourself and must look to others for guidance. If that's what you want in life go ahead, it doesn't matter to me. I for one like to think for myself. If my morality coincides with yours, great. If not, too bad.
We judge ourselves as well as get judged by the society we live in (either by force or by choice). In some of those societies we get to elect people who hold as similar views to our own as possible so that we might better align the laws of society we live in with our own chosen moral values (which is something ALL of us have in common for the most part...except for those that don't vote or live in a place where they can't vote).
Will you feel better if I grant you a brain fart for proclaiming that antifa did something that none of the sources you quoted attributed to them?Quote:
Brain fart? You mixed up Communist Russia and Nazi Germany and that's a brain fart?
dmart90 said:Wait, what? Are you saying the Soviets weren't nationalistic? Wow.Silian Rail said:Communist nationalism? Are you drunk? Communism is anti-nationalism. Fascism is nationalistic. Communism teaches that people are united by class and not by nation, which is why their battle cry is "workers of the world unite".Manhattan said:
That was nationalism not atheism…
aggievaulter07 said:Will you feel better if I grant you a brain fart for proclaiming that antifa did something that none of the sources you quoted attributed to them?Quote:
Brain fart? You mixed up Communist Russia and Nazi Germany and that's a brain fart?
The rights given to me by the constitution and the state I live to make such changes via elections, constitutional amendments, etc.Silian Rail said:
We're talking about two different things you keep arguing people can have morals without God, I disagree but will say people can act in a moral matter without a codified belief system. Where the rub is, is why are right sacrosanct, the founders said that the rights were inalienable as they were endowed by the creator. They reference divine providence, you reference people choosing for themself, that's fine, but what gives you the right to override their choice if you have a moral disagreement?
aggievaulter07 said:When is the last time someone committed a crime, any crime, publicly in the name of Atheism? Or even at least where their atheism was an obvious driving factor in the commission of the crime? Any atheistic mass shooters? Any atheistic terrorists? Any atheistic bombers? Any atheistic insurrectionists? Any of them that any of you guys might be able to dig deep and come up with will be the exception, not the rule.javajaws said:Sorry, I should have said "religion or your own moral compass" in addition to the laws...Silian Rail said:And if you have no religion, you're just beholden to the laws of the government you're under and can do whatever you want to as long as you might not get caught.javajaws said:Congrats, I think you have just realized you are beholden to the beliefs of your religion as well as the laws of the government you live under. Did you really have a point or did you just like making nonsense arguments?Silian Rail said:Yes, that's the 'temporal punishment' I referenced earlier. What is scary is that the scenario changes if you don't have any risk associated with the behavior. For a person who only behaves a certain way out of fear of getting caught, they would see no problem with murdering someone in a situation where they felt comfortable that they wouldn't get caught.javajaws said:See - you try to argue just like a liberal. It's pretty funny actually.Silian Rail said:javajaws said:What then? Absolutely nothing.Silian Rail said:Explain it; what if someone doesn't believe that murder is a horrible act. What then?93MarineHorn said:No. I don't need to believe in God to know that murder is a horrible act. I don't need to believe in God to adhere to a 25 mph speed limit in a school zone.Quote:
They do need to backed up by a belief in a supreme being to be persuasive, otherwise there's no reason to adhere to them if it's just some 18th century politico's opinion other than "i like this" and people like all sorts of different things.
Excellent, now we've got a society where it's okay to murder. Sounds like a great place
I don't believe it's wrong to own an SBR (short barreled rifle) without paying $200 to the government. Yet I don't. Why?
Hint: It's the same reason someone might not murder someone even if they morally think murder is ok.
Because really - YOU assume somebody that isn't religious has NO moral compass whatsoever. And that just isn't true. There are plenty of people (despite whatever government laws may or may not exist) that don't believe in god that believe murder is wrong (and adultery is wrong, etc). Some of those people may even believe gay marriage is fine - even some Christians believe that lol.
I'll hang up and listen.
Manhattan said:Silian Rail said:Uh yes, I'll introduce you to the communist party who disavowed God, killed millions of people and destroyed churches. You also might have noticed the recent attacks against Catholic Churches and day care centers by Antifa who in light of the Roe V Wade rule, are blaming Catholics for women not being able to kill their kids in some states.aggievaulter07 said:When is the last time someone committed a crime, any crime, publicly in the name of Atheism? Or even at least where their atheism was an obvious driving factor in the commission of the crime? Any atheistic mass shooters? Any atheistic terrorists? Any atheistic bombers? Any atheistic insurrectionists? Any of them that any of you guys might be able to dig deep and come up with will be the exception, not the rule.javajaws said:Sorry, I should have said "religion or your own moral compass" in addition to the laws...Silian Rail said:And if you have no religion, you're just beholden to the laws of the government you're under and can do whatever you want to as long as you might not get caught.javajaws said:Congrats, I think you have just realized you are beholden to the beliefs of your religion as well as the laws of the government you live under. Did you really have a point or did you just like making nonsense arguments?Silian Rail said:Yes, that's the 'temporal punishment' I referenced earlier. What is scary is that the scenario changes if you don't have any risk associated with the behavior. For a person who only behaves a certain way out of fear of getting caught, they would see no problem with murdering someone in a situation where they felt comfortable that they wouldn't get caught.javajaws said:See - you try to argue just like a liberal. It's pretty funny actually.Silian Rail said:javajaws said:What then? Absolutely nothing.Silian Rail said:Explain it; what if someone doesn't believe that murder is a horrible act. What then?93MarineHorn said:No. I don't need to believe in God to know that murder is a horrible act. I don't need to believe in God to adhere to a 25 mph speed limit in a school zone.Quote:
They do need to backed up by a belief in a supreme being to be persuasive, otherwise there's no reason to adhere to them if it's just some 18th century politico's opinion other than "i like this" and people like all sorts of different things.
Excellent, now we've got a society where it's okay to murder. Sounds like a great place
I don't believe it's wrong to own an SBR (short barreled rifle) without paying $200 to the government. Yet I don't. Why?
Hint: It's the same reason someone might not murder someone even if they morally think murder is ok.
Because really - YOU assume somebody that isn't religious has NO moral compass whatsoever. And that just isn't true. There are plenty of people (despite whatever government laws may or may not exist) that don't believe in god that believe murder is wrong (and adultery is wrong, etc). Some of those people may even believe gay marriage is fine - even some Christians believe that lol.
I'll hang up and listen.
That wasn't in the name of atheism… Putin is essentially doing the same thing now with the blessing of the Russian Orthodox Church.
So you have the right because of a political process, understood. All you've gotten back it that slavery was fine as it was the law of the land. You might disagree with it, but if you don't like slavery don't be a slave I guess.javajaws said:The rights given to me by the constitution and the state I live to make such changes via elections, constitutional amendments, etc.Silian Rail said:
We're talking about two different things you keep arguing people can have morals without God, I disagree but will say people can act in a moral matter without a codified belief system. Where the rub is, is why are right sacrosanct, the founders said that the rights were inalienable as they were endowed by the creator. They reference divine providence, you reference people choosing for themself, that's fine, but what gives you the right to override their choice if you have a moral disagreement?
Unlike some countries, America is not a religious state and is free to deviate from the morality of its founders should its citizens collectively decide too (which they have and will continue to do so as long as our current government and constitution remain in place).