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Random Politics & Religion #00
Administrator
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By Drama Torama 2015-08-15 14:35:47
Hi, friendly neighborhood modmin here.
I've changed the OP's rule listing, to add:
"Along those lines, heat is fine, but sustained, clearly personal hostility is not okay. The personal attack rules still apply. Attack positions, not posters. Failure to adhere to this will result in your removal from the thread."
I know this place gets heated and there are clear factions and people have histories with each other, but the rules do still apply. There's been a real rash of vitriol lately that's been on the border of attacks without really crossing it, which means people are ignoring the spirit of the rule while adhering to the letter of it.
So, I changed the letter of the rule! Carry on.
Administrator
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By Drama Torama 2015-08-15 14:47:58
Probably won't do you any good, moderation is too forgiving towards the liberal front here where they are willing to topicban one insult made by a conservative but a liberal can make all the insults they want....
This is more a function of who does the reporting. I get a lot more reports on the conservative posts.
My response to a lot of it has been "eh, walk it off", but the law of numbers says that when some get acted on, if there's a majority on one side of report type, it'll be the type that appears to be favored from a policy angle.
I don't moderate according to any political position, and I would be pretty surprised if any of you could actually guess my real politics at all.
VIP
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By Odin.Jassik 2015-08-15 14:49:46
It's not a law, it wasn't this year, it had nothing to do with the tea party, and I keep waiting for you to come up with someone, anyone else who has A.) reached the same conclusion as you did about this bill and then B.) connected in some way with the tea party and then C.) clung to it like the edge of one of the lifeboats of the titanic for four years as proof of some point about authoritarianism.
You're just being obtuse. Aman constantly conflates left with authoritarian and right with libertarian, they are not parallel gradients, they are different vectors. I said the right, including the so called "freedom loving" Tea Party are authoritarian as well because they have tried to enact laws that limit people's freedom. I was asked to provide an example, HR3 was it. A lot, introduced and sponsored by Tea Party members that would have essentially banned abortion, conflicting with Roe v Wade. The fact that I've had to explain that to 3 different people across 4 pages is ridiculous. If you disagree with my interpretation of that law, fine, let's move on, but don't try and make me out as a fruitcake, because that was the justice department's conclusion of the law as well.
I don't moderate according to any political position, and I would be pretty surprised if any of you could actually guess my real politics at all.
We all know you're a filthy pinko.
Leviathan.Chaosx
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By Leviathan.Chaosx 2015-08-15 14:52:32
I would be pretty surprised if any of you could actually guess my real politics at all. Constitutional monarchy.
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By Shiva.Nikolce 2015-08-15 15:08:44
don't try and make me out as a fruitcake.
Fruitcake and last word junkie
Leviathan.Chaosx
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By Leviathan.Chaosx 2015-08-15 17:08:18
An interesting read on just how effective anti-bullying laws are.
Quote: A settlement is in the works for the parents of a school district pupil who claim their son was wrongly accused by the district of bullying and that his civil rights were violated, according to the family attorney.
In addition to a $21,000 payment towards legal fees, the agreement calls for documents related to the litigation to be removed from the child’s record and rendered ineligible for use as a platform for progressive discipline, said F. Michael Daily, the attorney representing the parents..
The settlement was not yet formalized Monday by the court, according to both Daily and the school district. In a letter to the court, Daily noted it was the result of mediation previously orderd by a judge.
Both schools Superintendent Lyn Trager and the district business administrator said they could not confirm that a settlement is in the works, but that more information would have to be obtained with Stephen Fogarty, the attorney for the school district. Fogarty did not return numerous calls.
The complaint was brought in the U.S. District Court of New Jersey in 2012 by Woi Cheng Lim and Linwen Mao, the parents of an elementary school student, against school guidance counselor Sandra Massaro, Trager and Christopher Cerf, the former state commissioner of education.
Lim and Mao assert in their complaint that their son suffered emotional distress after the school labeled him a bully.
The case stems from an incident in September 2011 when a note was sent home by the school nurse informing parents that one of the children in the school had lice. Shortly thereafter, the boy in question was seated at a table with several students and he identified one of the girls as the one with head lice, according to the lawsuit, which provides the following account:
The girl complained to a teacher, who instructed the boy to apologize. He apologized but the incident was reported to Massaro, the school’s bullying specialist, and she formally investigated the incident. After interviewing the boy, she prepared a written report. It found that the boy had “committed an act of bullying within the meaning of NJSA 18:37-14, of the New Jersey Anti-Bullying Statute and the HIB policy of the Board of Education of the Borough of Tenafly,” said the lawsuit.
The report found that the boy’s comment was bullying because, although what he said was true, it insulted the girl and made her feel bad, school officials said. The boy was then required to meet Massaro at lunch and discuss a book title “Just Kidding,” a story about situations where jokes can hurt feelings.
His teacher also was required to lecture students about the need to be kind to each other, which ironically embarrassed the boy in front of his classmates as everyone was able to deduce that he was the one who had generated the reprimand, said the lawsuit.
The boy’s bullying was memorialized in a formal resolution by the Board of Education in December 2011.
The lawsuit asserts that as a result of all of the above, the boy was permanently stigmatized as an individual who had engaged in a “harmful” behavior. Consequently, he sustained emotional pain.
As a result of the defendants’ actions, said the parents in the lawsuit, the boy has been permanently stigmatized as a “bully” and chilled from engaging in speech and other modes of protected expression and he therefore continues to suffer injury, both irreparable and otherwise.
In affirming the decision, the defendant Commissioner of Education conceded that the case “stretched the definition of HTB to the outer edge of legislative intent but noted that districts are struggling to find the right balance between common sense and the highly respective provisions of the law,” noted the lawsuit.
Daily said such lawsuits have been on the rise ever since the anti-bullying laws were toughened in response to the tragedy involving Tyler Clemente, an 18-year-old Rutgers student who jumped to his death from the George Washington Bridge in September 2010 after being subjected to video spying by other students. Daily added that he is currently handling two bullying cases. Some attorneys are capitalizing on the trend by advertising that they handle bullying cases. “New Jersey has the most severe anti-bullying statute in the country,” he said. “It’s driving school personnel crazy and costing a lot of money. It’s turning into a cottage industry.”
The wording in the bullying statute is ambiguous, which is why a joke or innocuous comment can land someone in big trouble for bullying, even if they aren’t on school grounds, he said. Tenafly family’s lawyer says settlement with school district over bullying lawsuit is near
By Jetackuu 2015-08-15 17:21:28
I think I just had an aneurysm out of the sheer stupidity of that law, and it's application.
As if I needed another reason to stay out of Jersey.
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By Vectivus 2015-08-15 17:28:20
wow a 21k lawsuit for saying someone has lice ? There goes free speech out the window. Honest question, when is the revolution going to start ? we can't talk the way we want to talk anymore,lol
Leviathan.Chaosx
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By Leviathan.Chaosx 2015-08-15 17:40:19
wow a 21k lawsuit for saying someone has lice ? There goes free speech out the window. Honest question, when is the revolution going to start ? we can't talk the way we want to talk anymore,lol The lawsuit was from the boy's parents over labeling him a bully for pointing out the girl with lice.
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By Asura.Kingnobody 2015-08-15 19:39:30
I would be pretty surprised if any of you could actually guess my real politics at all. Constitutional monarchy. Naw, it's clearly fascism.
He's already taken over FFXIAH, next the world!
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Leviathan.Chaosx
Serveur: Leviathan
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Posts: 20284
By Leviathan.Chaosx 2015-08-15 19:48:43
I would be pretty surprised if any of you could actually guess my real politics at all. Constitutional monarchy. Naw, it's clearly fascism.
He's already taken over FFXIAH, next the world! Original Italian Fascism?
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By Phoenix.Amandarius 2015-08-15 21:56:10
I'm going to start saying more positive things about posters here.
Aman rules!
Valefor.Endoq
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By Valefor.Endoq 2015-08-16 00:16:59
Probably won't do you any good, moderation is too forgiving towards the liberal front here where they are willing to topicban one insult made by a conservative but a liberal can make all the insults they want....
This is more a function of who does the reporting. I get a lot more reports on the conservative posts.
My response to a lot of it has been "eh, walk it off", but the law of numbers says that when some get acted on, if there's a majority on one side of report type, it'll be the type that appears to be favored from a policy angle.
I don't moderate according to any political position, and I would be pretty surprised if any of you could actually guess my real politics at all. You strike me as someone that would be a member of the McGillicuddy Serious Party
policies included:
*Free dung
*Sending out intelligence agents around the world to wipe New Zealand off published maps, thus ensuring that no-one could invade the country
*Standing a dog for parliament in the Hobson seat in Northland. Her policies included the abolition of cars, and turning a meat-works into an organic flea-powder factory.
*The abolition of money, replacing it with chocolate fish or with sand.
*The demolition of The Beehive, parliament buildings, and all other buildings on a last-up, first-down basis.
*The diversion of aluminium production away from building US military aircraft and missiles to build giant space-mirrors to melt the polar icecaps and destroy all of the foolish greed-worshipping cities of man in one stroke, thereby returning man to the sea, which he should never have left in the first place (this the inspiration of the Admiral of the Highland Navy Aaron Franklin).
*Raising the school leaving-age to 65 (after Parliament raised the school leaving-age by one unambitious year)
*Full unemployment, or full employment through slavery
*Using beer as a National Defence strategy: leaving bottles of beer on all beaches, so that any invading army would abandon its attack and get drunk while the broken bottles would prevent the army advancing any further.
*Restricting the vote to minors: i.e., ONLY those under 18 years of age could vote (announced when Parliament lowered the voting age to 18 years). The party ran its 1993 electoral advertisements during children's programming.
*Student loans for Plunket (or Kindergarten) attendance: prior to the 1984 election, David Lange's Labour Party promised to maintain free tertiary education, but the Education Minister, Phil Goff, introduced student fees when elected. National Party education spokesman Lockwood Smith promised a return to free education if elected, but did not carry out this promise. Most party supporters, many of them students, felt displeased that both major political parties had deemed free tertiary education unsustainable, but had deliberately lied about their intentions to attract votes.
*Abandoning male suffrage: New Zealand, the first nation to achieve women's suffrage (in 1893), made a big deal of the centenary of this at the time of the 1993 election.
*Votes for trees: New Zealanders have a reputation as environmentalists, and the University of Auckland's ex-Marxist law lecturer Klaus Bosselmann seriously advocated giving trees (and other bits of the environment) some legal standing. The party could not decide on whether native trees should have the option to vote in Māori electorates, whether male trees as well as female trees should vote, and on the status of shrubs.
*The demolition of the Auckland CBD to create a giant sundial, using the Sky Tower as the gnomon; or to protect the Sky Tower by placing a condom over it.
*Replacing the Royal New Zealand Armoured Corps with Mounted Knights, claimed as more modern. The New Zealand Army's outdated equipment became a constant source of quips and embarrassment in the 1990s — at the time Queen Alexandra's Mounted Rifles operated FV101 Scorpions and M-113s.
*Building dreadnoughts in the Tamaki Estuary: a reference to the Royal New Zealand Navy's controversial purchase of Anzac class frigates.
*An All Whites victory in the Football World Cup: both the Labour Party and the National Party used the All Blacks' victory in the 1987 Rugby World Cup in their 1990 campaigning — the All Whites stood about as much chance of winning the Football World Cup as Brazil have of winning the Rugby version.
*An indecent society: Jim Bolger's National Party used the slogan "A Decent Society".
*A potato famine: Jim Bolger's somewhat pock-marked countenance bore an unfortunate resemblance to a potato. Much to his displeasure, he became widely known as "Spud"; the Royal New Zealand Air Force, with a typically Kiwi lack of reverence, christened his Boeing 727 "Spud One".
*Limiting the speed of light to 100 km/h: 50 km/h in Mt Roskill, (Auckland's Bible Belt), because folks there preferred to stay less enlightened.
*Linking the North Island and South Island by bulldozing the Southern Alps into Cook Strait.
*Post-natal abortion: making abortion illegal, but any mother could kill her child up to the age of 18, provided she did it with her own hands. The party designed this policy to offend all sides in the abortion debate. The fundamentalist Christian Heritage Party used abortion as a major policy.
*Mandatory homosexuality for 33% of the population — also devised to annoy the fundamentalists.
*Free castration
*Setting up a Frivolous Fraud Office to investigate any fraud deemed too silly for the Serious Fraud Office
*Air bags for the New Zealand Stock Exchange (following the 1987 stock market crash)
*Replacing the Queen's chain with hemp: the Labour Party had a policy of protecting and extending the Queen's chain (publicly accessible land bordering watercourses), forcing farmers and iwi to allow public access to waterways. Candidate Dominic Worthington proposed replacing the chain with more environmentally sound hemp; with the Queen, of course, replaced by Prince Geoffie the reluctant. Rather than limiting the chain to protecting water in aqueous form, the King's hemp would also serve to hold together water in solid form, as in the ice in glaciers and in the Ross Dependency (in particular, the Ross Ice Shelf, alleviating environmentalists' concerns that the ice shelf might collapse and raise sea-levels). Ultimately, the policy envisaged that technology would regress far enough for it to become feasible to lasso water in gaseous form (i.e. clouds).
*Fixing accountants in concrete and using them as traffic barriers, occasionally accompanied by a pledge to steal some of the Monster Raving Loony Party's other policies as well — possibly a reference to political parties accusing each other of stealing policies, or possibly just silliness.
*Good weather (but only if voters behaved).
*Full employment by carpeting the national highways: this would also save wear and tear on tyres
*Breaking its promises
Bahamut.Ravael
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By Bahamut.Ravael 2015-08-16 00:40:16
Probably won't do you any good, moderation is too forgiving towards the liberal front here where they are willing to topicban one insult made by a conservative but a liberal can make all the insults they want....
This is more a function of who does the reporting. I get a lot more reports on the conservative posts.
My response to a lot of it has been "eh, walk it off", but the law of numbers says that when some get acted on, if there's a majority on one side of report type, it'll be the type that appears to be favored from a policy angle.
I don't moderate according to any political position, and I would be pretty surprised if any of you could actually guess my real politics at all.
I've never reported someone, but if there's a scale that needs balancing....
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Valefor.Endoq
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By Valefor.Endoq 2015-08-16 00:57:36
Cerberus.Josiahfk said: »Phoenix.Amandarius said: »I'm going to start saying more positive things about posters here.
Aman rules! I am confident you can just discuss ideas and topics without resorting to straight up attacking whoever you're conversing with.
No one said anything along the lines of forcing people to compliment others, but instead expecting our being grown adults capable of healthy discussion. We have a thread for that.
http://www.ffxiah.com/forum/topic/22624/the-user-above-me
Valefor.Sehachan
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By Valefor.Sehachan 2015-08-16 03:57:55
Nope, you don't have to say anything good about anyone there. This is the thread you're looking for.
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By Asura.Kingnobody 2015-08-16 10:10:51
Probably won't do you any good, moderation is too forgiving towards the liberal front here where they are willing to topicban one insult made by a conservative but a liberal can make all the insults they want....
This is more a function of who does the reporting. I get a lot more reports on the conservative posts.
My response to a lot of it has been "eh, walk it off", but the law of numbers says that when some get acted on, if there's a majority on one side of report type, it'll be the type that appears to be favored from a policy angle.
I don't moderate according to any political position, and I would be pretty surprised if any of you could actually guess my real politics at all.
I've never reported someone, but if there's a scale that needs balancing.... I only report obvious attacks and harassment. I know that most reports get ignored, so I limit them to what really needs to be addressed. Hell, I reported Nausi a couple of times myself.
Cerberus.Josiahfk said: »I am confident you can just discuss ideas and topics without resorting to straight up attacking whoever you're conversing with.
No one said anything along the lines of forcing people to compliment others, but instead expecting our being grown adults capable of healthy discussion. Most people here do, actually. It's the passionate ones, the ones who think you are personally attacking them by rebutting their viewpoints, and the conspiracy theory followers who attack.
I fall under the passionate category....
By Vectivus 2015-08-16 12:24:52
i find it kind of bad that people think conspiracy is a something to laugh about or disregard as nonsense the definition is
"the action of plotting or conspiring. a secret plan by a group to do something unlawful or harmful."
in my opinion if you think about it without a biased view of the word that's our entire History of human civilization. A conspiracy means more than one person doing something for some purpose. Think about it seriously. Hell our founding fathers conspired to leave a empire, the Federal reserve was conspired about by very wealthy individuals and a senator. the black hand a ( terrorist group) conspired to assassinate archduke Francis Ferdinand which help start world war 1, its goes on and on. i do not find anything at all about the word conspiracy as something to laugh about or disregard as nonsense . When you can look at a lot of significant history and there are more than 1 person organizing and involved in a action or purpose.
By Jetackuu 2015-08-16 13:43:03
i find it kind of bad that people think conspiracy is a something to laugh about or disregard as nonsense the definition is
"the action of plotting or conspiring. a secret plan by a group to do something unlawful or harmful."
in my opinion if you think about it without a biased view of the word that's our entire History of human civilization. A conspiracy means more than one person doing something for some purpose. Think about it seriously. Hell our founding fathers conspired to leave a empire, the Federal reserve was conspired about by very wealthy individuals and a senator. the black hand a ( terrorist group) conspired to assassinate archduke Francis Ferdinand which help start world war 1, its goes on and on. i do not find anything at all about the word conspiracy as something to laugh about or disregard as nonsense . When you can look at a lot of significant history and there are more than 1 person organizing and involved in a action or purpose.
You confuse what people laugh at: conspiracy theory with conspiracy.
Since we're using definitions (sorta):
conspiracy theory
Examples
noun
1.
a theory that explains an event as being the result of a plot by a covert group or organization; a belief that a particular unexplained event was caused by such a group.
2.
the idea that many important political events or economic and social trends are the products of secret plots that are largely unknown to the general public.
Do you not see why conspiracy theories are generally met with ridicule?
By Vectivus 2015-08-16 13:56:17
so what i think your saying with what you posted is that we are supposed to laugh at people who question those who conspire for an action or purpose whatever the end may be. I would rather question and call out stuff like that, why does everything have to be so secretive to the mass populace ? What do the people conspiring have to fear of the general public's opinion ?
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By Asura.Kingnobody 2015-08-16 14:08:19
why does everything have to be so secretive to the mass populace ? What is? Can you tell us what is so secretive to the mass populace?
I wonder if he will get it
Quotes are a man's best friend.
By Vectivus 2015-08-16 14:24:05
legislatively ? a big one i can think of is the trans pacific partnership, hell even our own congress does not know whats in the bill and you get folks like nancy pelosi here,lol
Pelosi: "We Have to Pass the Bill So That You Can Find Out What Is In It"
YouTube Video Placeholder
in my opinion i think thats a really bad idea to play russian roulette with secret legislation.
By Jetackuu 2015-08-16 14:50:06
so what i think your saying with what you posted is that we are supposed to laugh at people who question those who conspire for an action or purpose whatever the end may be. I would rather question and call out stuff like that, why does everything have to be so secretive to the mass populace ? What do the people conspiring have to fear of the general public's opinion ? No, that's not what I'm saying, and if that's what you deduced from that then you need to work on yourself.
By Vectivus 2015-08-16 15:06:40
thanks, i think everyone has room for improvement as well.
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Posts: 34187
By Asura.Kingnobody 2015-08-16 17:02:10
Cerberus.Josiahfk said: »I fall under the passionate category.... Are you saying you're blameless in the personal attack category and you just rebutting viewpoints without insulting individuals? Far from it.
It's the passionate ones, the ones who think you are personally attacking them by rebutting their viewpoints, and the conspiracy theory followers who attack. I'm just as guilty as the next person.
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Posts: 34187
By Asura.Kingnobody 2015-08-16 17:06:56
a big one i can think of is the trans pacific partnership That's not a secret. The TPP (or really, the TTIP which this copies from) is very open in it's dealings.
No, what you don't understand is your whole phrase: "Secrets from the mass population." I asked you what they were, and any answer you would have given me would have been counter to your point, since how can they be a secret if you know about it?
hell even our own congress does not know whats in the bill and you get folks like nancy pelosi here,lol
Pelosi: "We Have to Pass the Bill So That You Can Find Out What Is In It" That's not a secret either, that's incompetence. Shame on those who voted for her in the first place, but you cannot demean a system based on one person.
Random Politics & Religion is for topics that aren't thread worthy on their own and do not have their own existing thread.
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With that out of the way, let the debates begin!
/bow
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