Being the only person in this thread with both reading comprehension AND a pdf reader...Registered Lib: 9,176Turnout Lib: 989 (10.8%)
11/4/2010 3:40:24 AM
philihp:
11/4/2010 3:43:02 AM
11/4/2010 9:44:56 AM
Wow, a lot of obvious bullshit has gone unchallenged in this thread.
11/4/2010 12:59:13 PM
11/4/2010 1:12:30 PM
11/4/2010 1:48:04 PM
11/4/2010 1:59:24 PM
you exile them from society
11/4/2010 2:07:04 PM
11/4/2010 5:25:57 PM
11/4/2010 7:11:45 PM
11/4/2010 7:27:03 PM
[Edited on November 4, 2010 at 7:48 PM. Reason : ]
11/4/2010 7:35:04 PM
forgot to close a tag. sorry
11/4/2010 7:40:03 PM
11/4/2010 7:42:23 PM
so you deny the existence of a logical fallacy that even YOU mentioned existed the other day? starts with an H and ends with omunculus?
11/4/2010 7:43:53 PM
That's not the homonculus fallacy, it's Newton's third law.
11/4/2010 7:48:08 PM
Homosexualomunculus?
11/4/2010 7:49:33 PM
you might want to read up on the homunculus, buddy. If a thing is driven by an occurrence of another instance of the same thing which is then driven by another instance of the same thing, well, you got it.
11/4/2010 7:51:36 PM
Rand Paul has libertarian pedigree but he’s definitely not a libertarian.And the fact the he started his own ophthalmologist accrediting agency makes me think he’s just a little bit crazy.But i don’t think he’s really an idiot, which is refreshing.
11/4/2010 7:52:00 PM
I think he may well be a libertarian. I can't claim to know his "true beliefs," but I know that the areas where he did veer off from libertarian ideals are in areas that were, frankly, important to Kentucky voters. Like I've mentioned, a real libertarian can't get elected, and if they want to get elected, they're going to have to play politics. I do think they he'll vote like a libertarian.
11/4/2010 8:23:07 PM
11/4/2010 9:27:06 PM
11/5/2010 12:57:52 PM
hahahahahaha. Newton's third law has NOTHING to do with issues of choice, you stupid fuck. admit it, you got called out, troll. if anything, the third law would support the notion of choice, as it would state there is a reaction that is nullified by the sum total of all events, stupid fuck
11/5/2010 5:08:02 PM
11/5/2010 5:43:36 PM
11/6/2010 2:07:12 AM
11/6/2010 12:02:03 PM
11/6/2010 4:09:58 PM
Based on an idea shared by some other people and the characteristics of slim mold you have determined the course of human history. That is damned impressive, sir, damned impressive.
11/7/2010 4:19:02 PM
11/7/2010 7:12:26 PM
11/8/2010 1:03:44 AM
11/8/2010 12:08:20 PM
11/8/2010 4:01:23 PM
Environmentalism is all about limiting freedoms of people for the sake of something that isnt even a person. Thats about as far from Libertarianism as it gets.
11/8/2010 5:19:39 PM
11/8/2010 6:20:58 PM
^^I may have misunderstood the context of the quote.I was thinking that it implied that libertarianism was the only way to keep one's own ecosystem clean.
11/8/2010 7:01:27 PM
11/8/2010 8:36:57 PM
11/8/2010 9:19:03 PM
^^^I got the same impression, and I wanted to point out that the opposite is true.
11/8/2010 11:06:56 PM
11/8/2010 11:14:48 PM
It must be real dandy to claim as inevitable a thing that has never existed.It sucks when you have to argue against a self-proclaimed communist who claims that communism never *really* existed.
11/9/2010 12:15:58 AM
^^ are you trying to say that slavery only existed because of government?
11/9/2010 12:59:12 AM
I don't think that's his point. I don't think that's his point. (I'll condense the double-post)Slavery will probably always exist, as it always has. Nowadays, it is relegated to the fringes. It is criminal, and it is prosecuted when found in most countries. But government endorsement of slavery allows it to thrive. The plight of African-Americans would have been lessened if there weren't a governmental decree that runaways be prosecuted/sent home regardless of what state they were in. Harriet Tubman might have racked up a higher count of freed slaves if she hadn't had to take them all the way to fucking Canada.
11/9/2010 1:10:26 AM
Yep.I think it was in the "What is the role of government thread," but one of my problems with contract enforcement is that you could basically sign away your rights. If the role of government is to protect rights, how does enforcing a "slavery contract" fit into that? It doesn't. Also, hardly anyone reads the contracts they sign as carefully as they should.
11/9/2010 2:24:06 AM
11/9/2010 5:58:05 PM
11/9/2010 9:05:15 PM
11/9/2010 11:09:26 PM
I don't think I'd own many slaves if I had to do all that flogging and will-breaking myself. Hard enough to do it horses. Maybe I could get a slave to do the flogging for me.
11/10/2010 1:04:29 AM
11/10/2010 10:33:23 PM
Kidnapping is absurdly rare. But, a sizable percentage of all attempted crimes are thwarted due to potential victims being armed. I'd assume the same pattern holds for kidnapping too.
11/11/2010 12:13:11 AM