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Posted by: anybody ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 12:16AM

I see men seduced by greed, filled with pride and hubris, who seek power at all costs.

I see men addicted to hate and fear and driven by madness, who use religion as a vector of evil.

I see people who have been led to think they are good when they are in fact bad -- and do unspeakable things.

I see broken lives. I see children torn from their parents and forced into the darkness. I see hope and dreams destroyed. I see despair. I see terror. I see loss.

I see fury. I see demons. I see blood. I see fire and feel the heat of the flames. I hear screams and cries of pain that make no sound. I see order that is not order.

I see the past attempting to destroy the future.

I see the flight of reason and the triumph of death.

I see bloody, savage, internecine civil war, and it will be a miracle if we avoid it.

But I don't believe in miracles.



Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 04/14/2022 02:47AM by anybody.

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Posted by: Dave the Atheist ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 01:51AM

?

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Posted by: anybody ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 02:54AM
?

Open your eyes and look around you

Open your ears and hear what is happening

Open your heart and let go of fear and hatred

Stop trying to destroy the lives of others because you fear a wrathful god of your own creation

It will only lead to your self-destruction

What is cannot and will never be what was



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/14/2022 02:56AM by anybody.

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Posted by: Elder Berry ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 02:11PM

I think he is an atheist.

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Posted by: anybody ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 03:10PM


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Posted by: Brother Of Jerry ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 02:02AM

“I see a horsie and a duckie”
- Charlie Brown, looking at the sky.

https://www.philipchircop.com/post/11245668821/what-do-you-see-arent-the-clouds-beautiful



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/14/2022 10:29AM by Brother Of Jerry.

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Posted by: thedesertrat1 ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 06:41AM

I also see these thing but but but
When I had a housing crisis a member of my ward put up $5000 and bought me a motorhome to live in. I still have it and from time to time let homeless people crash in it!

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Posted by: Elder Berry ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 03:28PM

That warmed my cockles.

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Posted by: Lot's Wife ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 03:35PM

TMI!

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Posted by: Humberto ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 09:52AM

The sense of inevitability projected at the end, notwithstanding the rejection of miracles, leaves me with the icky feeling of just having been screamed at by a doomsday preacher.

I leave the notions of a predicted future to the god-believers, psychics, and other such irrationals. I think opportunity is easier to see without an apocalyptic mind.

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Posted by: anybody ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 11:07AM

It's up to us to stop fascism and hate, not a make-believe deity.

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Posted by: Humberto ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 11:41AM

To state that something would take a miracle, and follow by negating the possibility of miracles, communicates a not very ambiguous sense of inevitability...

But I'll take your contradictory clarification and accept that I've misunderstood.

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Posted by: anybody ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 12:42PM

"Defiance" (2008) -- The Bielski Brothers, not Moses, lead Jews across a marsh to escape pursuing German troops during WW2

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntGBzcfpKYg



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/14/2022 12:43PM by anybody.

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Posted by: Soft Machine ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 03:42AM


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Posted by: caffiend ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 10:09AM

In a non-Biblical teaching (the Talmud?), the Jews hold that within each of us, even the most vile, there is, somewhere, the spark of the Divine. Yes, we are "fallen," and there is evil and sin ("All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God," holds Paul) but we are still the image and likeness of the Creator--with the Creator's spark, somewhere within.

As much as we pillory LDS and the members, I appreciate that DesertRat acknowledges that it was a generous Mormon who came forward, and Rat expands on that goodness.

Spark into flame.

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Posted by: Brother Of Jerry ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 11:00AM

I didn't mean to sound like I was making light of your despair. I wanted to make the point that there is still childlike beauty and innocence in the world. OP is from near Ukraine, so the situation there obviously hits close to home. I have two grandparents from immediately neighboring countries. I still remember Orthodox Easter dinners at grandma's house when the relatives would show up and greet each other at the door with a kiss and the phrase, said with obvious joy, "Kristos Voskres" - Christ is risen. The reply from the guest was slightly different, I think it translated as "yes, he is risen"

That in particular is why I was always puzzled by Easter on the Mormon side of the family. On the Orthodox side, Easter outfits were a big deal, and Easter family dinner was a huge deal, topping even Thanksgiving.

Anyway, terrible things happen all over the world - Syria, Lebanon after the explosion a few years ago, Myanmar, Afghanistan, millions dead from covid, and the list goes on. But a great many good things are also happening, and I'd still like to think that MLK Jr was right when he declared that the arc of history bends toward justice. It is a slow, uneven process.

The Ukraine atrocity is in all of our cultural back yard, and literally in "anybody"'s childhood "backyard", so it lands very close to home.

Easter/springtime is the season of hope and looking forward. Even atheist that I am, I remember the sentiment behind a joyful Kristos Voskres with deep fondness. Hang in there, anybody.

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Posted by: Tyson Dunn ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 07:29PM

For those who might want to respond.

Tyson

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Posted by: Brother Of Jerry ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 01:05AM

OMG, you mean I got the first part right? That was a 65 year old memory from a kid wondering what grandma was saying.

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Posted by: caffiend ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 11:43AM

Anybody: It's understandable to focus, even obsess, on the negative. But after delving into the ugly side of reality, do consider the beautiful side. May I suggest several minutes a day (maybe a few times a day!) of focusing on the lovely.

An idea--seriously--go to "weheartit.com," a site where people collect and post all sorts of images of things they love, and enter "landscapes" into the search bar. Or "oceans." Or "mountains," "meadows," "woods" or...even "pretty girls." Take some time and just scroll through what people have found lovely and worthwhile.

Open a tab...do it.

https://weheartit.com/search/entries?utf8=%E2%9C%93&ac=0&query=landscapes

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Posted by: bradley ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 12:49PM

I've seen fire and I've seen rain
I've seen sunny days that I thought would never end
I've seen lonely times when I could not find a friend
But I always thought that I'd see you again

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Posted by: blindguy ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 02:09PM

"Some things take so long
But how do I explain.
Not too many people
Can see we're all the same.
And because of all your tears,
Your eyes can't hope to see
The Beauty that surrounds us.
Isn't it a pity."
--George Harrison, "Isn't It a Pity," 1970, from the All Things Must Pass album (in fact, that album contains two different versions of the song).

It isn't that what you see isn't there, for it most certainly is. But it's been there for a very long time, although its full ugliness is just now coming into focus for the current generation. And what is doing that, you ask. I posit that it is the fear generated by the growing realization that white people will no longer be the majority population in the U.S. within the next two decades that is driving what we see now. Will it end up as a civil war? I don't know, but it very well could. With the background you mentioned in another thread that you have, I would council that one take steps to defend oneself in case that next U.S. civil war should come to pass.

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Posted by: anybody ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 03:12PM

but if I can't, I'll fight if I have to.

I hope it doesn't come to that, but it's no longer a far-fetched prospect any longer.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/magazine/2022/03/08/they-are-preparing-war-an-expert-civil-wars-discusses-where-political-extremists-are-taking-this-country/

Barbara F. Walter, 57, is a political science professor at the University of California at San Diego and the author of “How Civil Wars Start: And How to Stop Them,” which was released in January. She lives in San Diego with her husband.

Having studied civil wars all over the world, and the conditions that give rise to them, you argue in your book, somewhat chillingly, that the United States is coming dangerously close to those conditions. Can you explain that?

So we actually know a lot about civil wars — how they start, how long they last, why they’re so hard to resolve, how you end them. And we know a lot because since 1946, there have been over 200 major armed conflicts. And for the last 30 years, people have been collecting a lot of data, analyzing the data, looking at patterns. I’ve been one of those people.

We went from thinking, even as late as the 1980s, that every one of these was unique. And the way people studied it is they would be a Somalia expert, a Yugoslavia expert, a Tajikistan expert. And everybody thought their case was unique and that you could draw no parallels. Then methods and computers got better, and people like me came and could collect data and analyze it. And what we saw is that there are lots of patterns at the macro level.

In 1994, the U.S. government put together this Political Instability Task Force. They were interested in trying to predict what countries around the world were going to become unstable, potentially fall apart, experience political violence and civil war.

Was that out of the State Department?

That was done through the CIA. And the task force was a mix of academics, experts on conflict, and data analysts. And basically what they wanted was: In all of your research, tell us what you think seems to be important. What should we be considering when we’re thinking about the lead-up to civil wars?

Originally the model included over 30 different factors, like poverty, income inequality, how diverse religiously or ethnically a country was. But only two factors came out again and again as highly predictive. And it wasn’t what people were expecting, even on the task force. We were surprised. The first was this variable called anocracy. There’s this nonprofit based in Virginia called the Center for Systemic Peace. And every year it measures all sorts of things related to the quality of the governments around the world. How autocratic or how democratic a country is. And it has this scale that goes from negative 10 to positive 10. Negative 10 is the most authoritarian, so think about North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain. Positive 10 are the most democratic. This, of course, is where you want to be. This would be Denmark, Switzerland, Canada. The U.S. was a positive 10 for many, many years. It’s no longer a positive 10. And then it has this middle zone between positive 5 and negative 5, which was you had features of both. If you’re a positive 5, you have more democratic features, but definitely have a few authoritarian elements. And, of course, if you’re negative 5, you have more authoritarian features and a few democratic elements. The U.S. was briefly downgraded to a 5 and is now an 8.

And what scholars found was that this anocracy variable was really predictive of a risk for civil war. That full democracies almost never have civil wars. Full autocracies rarely have civil wars. All of the instability and violence is happening in this middle zone. And there’s all sorts of theories why this middle zone is unstable, but one of the big ones is that these governments tend to be weaker. They’re transitioning to either actually becoming more democratic, and so some of the authoritarian features are loosening up. The military is giving up control. And so it’s easier to organize a challenge. Or, these are democracies that are backsliding, and there’s a sense that these governments are not that legitimate, people are unhappy with these governments. There’s infighting. There’s jockeying for power. And so they’re weak in their own ways. Anyway, that turned out to be highly predictive.

And then the second factor was whether populations in these partial democracies began to organize politically, not around ideology — so, not based on whether you’re a communist or not a communist, or you’re a liberal or a conservative — but where the parties themselves were based almost exclusively around identity: ethnic, religious or racial identity. The quintessential example of this is what happened in the former Yugoslavia.

So for you, personally, what was the moment the ideas began to connect, and you thought: Wait a minute, I see these patterns in my country right now?

My dad is from Germany. He was born in 1932 and lived through the war there, and he emigrated here in 1958. He had been a Republican his whole life, you know; we had the Reagan calendar in the kitchen every year.

And starting in early 2016, I would go home to visit, and my dad — he doesn’t agitate easily, but he was so agitated. All he wanted to do was talk about Trump and what he was seeing happening. He was really nervous. It was almost visceral — like, he was reliving the past. Every time I’d go home, he was just, like, “Please tell me Trump’s not going to win.” And I would tell him, “Dad, Trump is not going to win.” And he’s just, like, “I don’t believe you; I saw this once before. And I’m seeing it again, and the Republicans, they’re just falling in lockstep behind him.” He was so nervous.

I remember saying: “Dad, what’s really different about America today from Germany in the 1930s is that our democracy is really strong. Our institutions are strong. So, even if you had a Trump come into power, the institutions would hold strong.” Of course, then Trump won. We would have these conversations where my dad would draw all these parallels. The brownshirts and the attacks on the media and the attacks on education and on books. And he’s just, like, I’m seeing it. I’m seeing it all again here. And that’s really what shook me out of my complacency, that here was this man who is very well educated and astute, and he was shaking with fear. And I was like, Am I being naive to think that we’re different?

That’s when I started to follow the data. And then, watching what happened to the Republican Party really was the bigger surprise — that, wow, they’re doubling down on this almost white supremacist strategy. That’s a losing strategy in a democracy. So why would they do that? Okay, it’s worked for them since the ’60s and ’70s, but you can’t turn back demographics. And then I was like, Oh my gosh. The only way this is a winning strategy is if you begin to weaken the institutions; this is the pattern we see in other countries. And, as an American citizen I’m like, These two factors are emerging here, and people don’t know.

So I gave a talk at UCSD about this — and it was a complete bomb. Not only did it fall flat, but people were hostile. You know, How dare you say this? This is not going to happen. This is fearmongering. I remember leaving just really despondent, thinking: Wow, I was so naive to think that, if it’s true, and if it’s based on hard evidence, people will be receptive to it. You know, how do you get the message across if people don’t want to hear it? If they’re not ready for it.

I didn’t do a great job framing it initially, that when people think about civil war, they think about the first civil war. And in their mind, that’s what a second one would look like. And, of course, that’s not the case at all. So part of it was just helping people conceptualize what a 21st-century civil war against a really powerful government might look like.

After January 6th of last year, people were asking me, “Aren’t you horrified?” “Isn’t this terrible?” “What do you think?” And, first of all, I wasn’t surprised, right? People who study this, we’ve been seeing these groups have been around now for over 10 years. They’ve been growing. I know that they’re training. They’ve been in the shadows, but we know about them. I wasn’t surprised.

The biggest emotion was just relief, actually. It was just, Oh my gosh, this is a gift. Because it’s bringing it out into the public eye in the most obvious way. And the result has to be that we can’t deny or ignore that we have a problem. Because it’s right there before us. And what has been surprising, actually, is how hard the Republican Party has worked to continue to deny it and to create this smokescreen — and in many respects, how effective that’s been, at least among their supporters. Wow: Even the most public act of insurrection, probably a treasonous act that 10, 20 years ago would have just cut to the heart of every American, there are still real attempts to deny it. But it was a gift because it brought this cancer that those of us who have been studying it, have been watching it growing, it brought it out into the open.

Does it make you at all nervous when you think about the percentage of people who were at, say, January 6th who have some military or law enforcement connection?

Yes. The CIA also has a manual on insurgency. You can Google it and find it online. Most of it is not redacted. And it’s absolutely fascinating to read. It’s not a big manual. And it was written, I’m sure, to help the U.S. government identify very, very early stages of insurgency. So if something’s happening in the Philippines, or something’s happening in Indonesia. You know, what are signs that we should be looking out for?

And the manual talks about three stages. And the first stage is pre-insurgency. And that’s when you start to have groups beginning to mobilize around a particular grievance. And it’s oftentimes just a handful of individuals who are just deeply unhappy about something. And they begin to articulate those grievances. And they begin to try to grow their membership.

The second stage is called the incipient conflict stage. And that’s when these groups begin to build a military arm. Usually a militia. And they’d start to obtain weapons, and they’d start to get training. And they’ll start to recruit from the ex-military or military and from law enforcement. Or they’ll actually — if there’s a volunteer army, they’ll have members of theirs join the military in order to get not just the training, but also to gather intelligence.

And, again, when the CIA put together this manual, it’s about what they have observed in their experience in the field in other countries. And as you’re reading this, it’s just shocking the parallels. And the second stage, you start to have a few isolated attacks. And in the manual, it says, really the danger in this stage is that governments and citizens aren’t aware that this is happening. And so when an attack occurs, it’s usually just dismissed as an isolated incident, and people are not connecting the dots yet. And because they’re not connecting the dots, the movement is allowed to grow until you have open insurgency, when you start to have a series of consistent attacks, and it becomes impossible to ignore.

And so, again, this is part of the process you see across the board, where the organizers of insurgencies understand that they need to gain experienced soldiers relatively quickly. And one way to do that is to recruit. Here in the United States, because we had a series of long wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and Syria, and now that we’ve withdrawn from them, we’ve had more than 20 years of returning soldiers with experience. And so this creates a ready-made subset of the population that you can recruit from.

What do you say to people who charge that this is all overblown, that civil war could never happen here in the United States — or that you’re being inflammatory and making things worse by putting corrosive ideas out there?

Oh, there’s so many things to say. One thing is that groups — we’ll call them violence entrepreneurs, the violent extremists who want to tear everything down and want to institute their own radical vision of society — they benefit from the element of surprise, right? They want people to be confused when violence starts happening. They want people to not understand what’s going on, to think that nobody’s in charge. Because then they can send their goons into the streets and convince people that they’re the ones in charge. Which is why when I would talk to people who lived through the start of the violence in Sarajevo or Baghdad or Kyiv, they all say that they were surprised. And they were surprised in part because they didn’t know what the warning signs were.

But also because people had a vested interest in distracting them or denying it so that when an attack happened, or when you had paramilitary troops sleeping in the hills outside of Sarajevo, they would make up stories. You know, “We’re just doing training missions.” Or “We’re just here to protect you. There’s nothing going on here. Don’t worry about this.”

I wish it were the case that by not talking about it we could prevent anything from happening. But the reality is, if we don’t talk about it, [violent extremists] are going to continue to organize, and they’re going to continue to train. There are definitely lots of groups on the far right who want war. They are preparing for war. And not talking about it does not make us safer.

What we’re heading toward is an insurgency, which is a form of a civil war. That is the 21st-century version of a civil war, especially in countries with powerful governments and powerful militaries, which is what the United States is. And it makes sense. An insurgency tends to be much more decentralized, often fought by multiple groups. Sometimes they’re actually competing with each other. Sometimes they coordinate their behavior. They use unconventional tactics. They target infrastructure. They target civilians. They use domestic terror and guerrilla warfare. Hit-and-run raids and bombs. We’ve already seen this in other countries with powerful militaries, right? The IRA took on the British government. Hamas has taken on the Israeli government. These are two of the most powerful militaries in the world. And they fought for decades. And in the case of Hamas I think we could see a third intifada. And they pursue a similar strategy.

Here it’s called leaderless resistance. And that method of how to defeat a powerful government like the United States is outlined in what people are calling the bible of the far right: “The Turner Diaries,” which is this fictitious account of a civil war against the U.S. government. It lays out how you do this. And one of the things it says is, Do not engage the U.S. military. You know, avoid it at all costs. Go directly to targets around the country that are difficult to defend and disperse yourselves so it’s hard for the government to identify you and infiltrate you and eliminate you entirely.

So, like with the [Charles Dickens’s] ghost of Christmas future, are these the things that will be or just that may be?

I can’t say when it’s going to happen. I think it’s really important for people to understand that countries that have these two factors, who get put on this watch list, have a little bit less than a 4 percent annual risk of civil war. That seems really small, but it’s not. It means that, every year that those two factors continue, the risk increases.

The analogy is smoking. If I started smoking today, my risk of dying of lung cancer or some smoking-related disease is very small. If I continue to smoke for the next 10, 20, 30, 40 years, my risk eventually of dying of something related to smoking is going to be very high if I don’t change my behavior. And so I think that’s one of the actually optimistic things: We know the warning signs. And we know that if we strengthen our democracy, and if the Republican Party decides it’s no longer going to be an ethnic faction that’s trying to exclude everybody else, then our risk of civil war will disappear. We know that. And we have time to do it. But you have to know those warning signs in order to feel an impetus to change them.



Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 04/14/2022 03:19PM by anybody.

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Posted by: Lot's Wife ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 03:51PM

A friend of mine was present for this commencement speech by Ken Burns in 2016.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WtnXbL2wwdM

She says that while most people were decorous, the boos he elicited were far louder when heard from within the audience.

For people who know history well, the patterns are clear.

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Posted by: bradley ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 08:45PM

Why couldn't Putin and Zelenski just thumb wrestle?

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Posted by: dagny ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 08:46PM

I share your sentiments, anybody.

Sure, I see pretty rainbows and kittens, BUT...I think we are now far along enough that the decks are stacked beyond repair by the rich, gullible, and corrupted powerful. The gerrymandering alone prevents any fair representation where I am at least.

I'm tired of seeing that the people accusing are actually confessing their own crimes because it works for them to get away with anything. I'm tired of unfair justice as seen in example after example based on how rich and corrupted the system is.

I tend to vote against whichever of the three power structures (government, corporations or religion) is getting unbalanced. It's not comforting to see the manipulation of the religious or payoffs to government by the rich.

I see no lower limits for human cruelty or stupidity and how they can be manipulated.

I'm sure it has always seemed to the older generations that the world is going to hell in a handbasket. Maybe that's because with age, the repeating patterns are more obvious.

Cheer up, anybody. It can always get worse. :-)

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Posted by: Lot's Wife ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 09:14PM

dagny Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> I'm sure it has always seemed to the older
> generations that the world is going to hell in a
> handbasket. Maybe that's because with age, the
> repeating patterns are more obvious.

Yes, there is a cynicism, realism, that comes with age. But that does not mean that all ages are equally benighted, corrupt, and susceptible to evil.

To argue the opposite would mean that being a Shanghainese in 1937, a German Jew in 1942, a Palestinian Arab in 1948, a Bosnian Muslim in the early 1990s, or a Ukrainian today is no worse than being a Swede in 2010 or an American for most of the 20th century. It would mean that starving during the Great Depression is no worse than living in today's egalitarian and Australia.

The truth is that some ages are demonstrably worse than others, and the present world with its resurgent authoritarianism, and the contemporary United States with its ethnocentric and anti-republican populism, are objectively worse than at any point since the 1860s.

Which is to say that sometimes cynicism is empirically justified.

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Posted by: anybody ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 11:17PM

but it's worse when you see so many people who claim to be "good" people screaming the same things -- only they say they are just doing it because it's "god's will" as a psychological escape mechanism so they can tell themselves they aren't Nazis when they are doing the same things...

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Posted by: Soft Machine ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 03:47AM

I agree. I t is difficult to understand how the hating fundies can be called Christian, as they fall at the first fence: they have no compassion.

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Posted by: blindguy ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 09:45AM

anybody Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> but it's worse when you see so many people who
> claim to be "good" people screaming the same
> things -- only they say they are just doing it
> because it's "god's will" as a psychological
> escape mechanism so they can tell themselves they
> aren't Nazis when they are doing the same
> things...

I think that it would help to keep in mind that most Americans were horrible at both history and geography when they were in school, even when the schools weren't teaching the full history and geography. Couple that with the fact that most history is forgotten over time and one realizes that the people who are spouting Naziism today have absolutely no idea where the ideas they are spouting originated.

This is one very good reason why the concept of innocence, especially among adults, is a very bad concept.

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Posted by: kentish ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 06:46PM

Personally I much prefer the view from the narrow end of the telescope. My early years were spent sheltering by candlelight in an air raid shelter. The rest has been sunny uplands by comparison so forgive me if I don't participate.

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Posted by: Kathleen ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 06:50PM

“Sunny uplands” . . . I love that, Kentish.

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Posted by: Nightingale ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 06:57PM

Kathleen Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> “Sunny uplands” . . . I love that, Kentish.

Me too.

And no kidding about air raid shelters. When I see that in newsreels or shows I cringe. I'm terribly claustrophobic. Can't imagine having to hunker down in one of those for even a minute, never mind hours, days.

Speaking of childhood memories that never leave you...

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Posted by: kentish ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 07:07PM

Wish I could lay claim to it Kathleen. Stolen from a great Englishman. Hey, I almost wrote another great Englishman but modesty and all that....

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Posted by: Nightingale ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 07:38PM

Winston Churchill: "This was their finest hour".


"Hitler knows that he will have to break us in this island or lose the war. If we can stand up to him, all Europe may be free and the life of the world may move forward into broad, sunlit uplands."



Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 04/14/2022 07:47PM by Nightingale.

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Posted by: Kathleen ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 01:17AM

Kentish, the heck with modesty, go ahead and write "another great Englishman."

:)



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/15/2022 01:19AM by Kathleen.

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Posted by: Kentish ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 09:53AM

Permission indeed.

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Posted by: bradley ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 12:21PM

Mother do you think they'll drop the bomb?

I think 2022 has proven the old adage "Things could always be worse".

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Posted by: Kathleen ( )
Date: April 14, 2022 11:33PM

People screaming from high-rise apartments in Shanghai lockdown. What's going to happen to them ?





https://twitter.com/DrEricDing/status/1512974880463114241

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Posted by: Brother Of Jerry ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 01:40AM

I went to a county council meeting where people were screaming because they were going to have to wear a mask in county facilities and businesses. The legislature agreed that this was such an egregious imposition, that the state legislature stripped the county of the authority to impose a mask mandate.

So it takes more than people screaming to convince me a great injustice is being perpetrated. If the people in the high rises have access to water, they can survive a two week lockdown. That’s a major annoyance, but not a catastrophe. Having your apartment building blown up, women and children spirited out of the country, men kept behind to fight, all for an indeterminate amount of time, now that’s a catastrophe.

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Posted by: Kathleen ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 02:14AM


Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 04/15/2022 02:59AM by Kathleen.

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Posted by: Kathleen ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 03:30AM

So, they’re not facing starvation like the media seems to portray ?

The sound of all that screaming was so horrifying.

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Posted by: Lot's Wife ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 04:00AM

Some people have inadequate food and medical care. It's not mass starvation, but it is hardly the strong but balanced governance people want.

China has a dilemma. On the one hand, since abandoning communism in the late 1980s the government's legitimacy has rested solely on economic growth and rising living standards. The system is not as resilient as a solid democracy (of which there aren't that many left, sadly).

On the other, they need to deal with COVID and can't ease up on regulations because the vaccine China developed and distributed isn't very good and does not confer the impressive immunity that the major Western countries engendered. So China faces the possibility of a surging epidemic that would slow the economy and undermine political stability. That's why they are reacting so aggressively to any hint of a COVID outbreak.

But the people's patience is wearing thin and major lockdowns will have an economic impact. So the Shanghai policy and any future such episodes could become a serious political problem, as intimated by the midnight screams.

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Posted by: moehoward ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 09:32AM

China also has a problem with an inverted population pyramid that will eventually effect their economy.

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Posted by: Brother Of Jerry ( )
Date: April 16, 2022 11:55PM

The lockdown was supposed to be for 2 weeks, and when this thread started, we were a week in. It takes a fair amount of time for a normal healthy person to starve to death - a month or two if the person is getting no food at all. Of course, not everyone is a normal healthy person - covid and all that, but I think it is also unlikely that people are left with no food at all for extended periods of time.

I don't know. Maybe the situation is really bad. I am inclined to think that much of it is patience wearing thin, as opposed to real risk of life. I suppose my reaction is colored by having had to listen to people whine about the vicious tyranny of a mask mandate, including forced landing of planes because they refused to wear a mask. I'm left wondering how those people managed the tyranny of having to wear shoes in restaurants all those years.

I do not have similar skepticism about whether or not the events in Ukraine are a real catastrophe. However bad the situation in Shanghai is, I think the situation in parts of Ukraine is infinitely worse.

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Posted by: Elder Berry ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 11:34AM

Didn't want to have this stay on 42.

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Posted by: Dr. No ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 12:10PM

anybody Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> I see men seduced by greed, filled with pride and
> hubris, who seek power at all costs.
===============================

Congratulations, you're awake and have (so far) escaped self-delusion

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Posted by: blueskyutah2 ( )
Date: April 15, 2022 08:02PM

"I see dead people. They don't know that they are dead."

: )

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Posted by: Dr. No ( )
Date: April 16, 2022 12:27PM

anybody Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> I see men seduced by greed, filled with pride and
> hubris, who seek power at all costs . . . . .
> . . . . . . . . . . /-/ . . . . . . . . .
> . . . . I see bloody, savage, internecine civil war
===============================

. . . because you know -- OP is a description of God, who commands:

“Now go and attack the Amalekites and completely destroy everything they have.
Do not spare them. Kill men and women, infants and nursing babies, oxen and sheep, camels and donkeys.”
(1 Sam 15:3)

--------

And chimps display this sort of genocidal behavior (Gombe chimpanzee war)

Isn't
That
Curious.

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Posted by: Birdbrain ( )
Date: April 17, 2022 11:34AM

I see people who know that they are right .

I see the same people cancelling anyone who doesn’t agree with them.


I don’t see how this social construct can be conducive to peaceful coexistence.

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Posted by: dagny ( )
Date: April 17, 2022 12:01PM

Ban books, ban women's autonomy, ban gay people, then complain about cancel culture! Yeah, that's the ticket.

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