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Democrat Drops MN State House Run After Tweeting 'ISIS Isn't Necessarily Evil' (startribune.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Dan Kimmel, who works for U.S. Bank in its technology and operations section, dropped out of the race for a Minnesota House seat after unleashing a firestorm of criticism. The controversy erupted after Kimmel tweeted, "ISIS isn't necessarily evil. It is made up of people doing what they think is best for their community. Violence is not the answer, though." The tweet rapidly led to harsh criticism on twitter and spread from there. The DFL Party Chair issued a statement saying that Kimmel's "views have no place in our party. On behalf of the Minnesota DFL, I strongly condemn his comments. ..." The House Minority Leader for the DFL called for Kimmel to end his campaign. Kimmel issued a written apology and withdrew from the race.

519 comments

  1. Religion by rfengr · · Score: 1, Troll

    Well it is made up of the religious righteous.

    1. Re: Religion by rfengr · · Score: 0, Troll

      So I got down modded for pointing out religious righteousness. Fuck you, whoever you are; probably a evangelical Christian.

    2. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Maybe you were modded down for false equivalency.

    3. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Extremists of any religion who use violence are wrong.

    4. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Except for the religion which says Death to the Infidels... then those who don't use violence are wrong. Those evil moderates.

      There is a reason why there seems to be a common theme amoungst the daily occurrence of violence. Psychedelic drugs and Islam.

    5. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That's vacuously correct; only one extant religion uses violence to advance its beliefs.

    6. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So I got down modded for pointing out religious righteousness. Fuck you, whoever you are; probably a evangelical Christian.

      Yep, the evangelical Christians are deadly.

      Look at how they went on multiple murderous rampages over Piss Christ. They're STILL tossing gay men off rooftops, stoning rape victims for besmirching their family honor, cutting the hands off thieves, hijacking airliners and killing thousands, taking an entire school of children hostage then massacring them, recruiting 12-year-olds to conduct suicide bombings, beheading entire groups of non-believers.

      And then there are the morons who use the events of a thousand years ago to excuse the barbaric actions of today's Christians.

      I tell you, Christians are evil.

    7. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Extremists of any dogma who use violence are wrong.

      Fixed it for you, religion like any other dogma is what leads to the extremists views. When any authority lays down a set of principals that are believed to be true by a group of people. Then all others are wrong and if they dont accept it they must be punished in some way. It does not matter if the dogma is religious, (IE: Christian, Muslim, etc) or national pride (IE: Natzies, communism, socialism, or even Americanism)

    8. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Religion that imposes death over arbitrary guidelines? Use of psychedelic drugs? You MUST be talking about Christianity.

    9. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Fuck you, whoever you are; probably a evangelical Christian."
      You see, there's your problem, right there for ya. I'd rather hear you unpack some of your ideas about what you mean and think, rather than get modded to oblivion, but now you just lose any cred with the f.u. bomb. Bummer.

    10. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you know what sucks more than being fubombed by an atheist?
      Being blown into pieces by a damn religious zealot very much like you.

    11. Re: Religion by dywolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Factually incorrect.
      Reality calling. It would like to remind you of:

      the Lord's Resistance Army? Christian
      abortion clinic bombings? Evangelical Christian
      Muslim villages massacred in northern India? Nationalist Hindus
      and others.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    12. Re: Religion by LichtSpektren · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm glad you know all 1-2 some billion Christians on earth and countless billions throughout history are all assholes because your ex-wife was an asshole.

      I guess all the Christian missionaries and religious throughout the world that are feeding and clothing the poorest of the poor should pick up their bags, go home, and be much better people as secular atheists, so they can contribute something meaningful to the world like your shitpost Slashdot comments.

    13. Re: Religion by LichtSpektren · · Score: 1

      Fun fact, the number 1 suicide bombing organization on earth is a Marxist (atheistic) group based in Malaysia.

      Fun fact, you probably cannot name a single Christian suicide bomber.

    14. Re: Religion by rickb928 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      " religion like any other dogma is what leads to the extremists views"

      And Christian extremist views are, what, advocating for different things, the verb being 'advocate', not 'engage', as in 'engage in violence'?

      Christian - inspired violence is so rare as be not merely exceptional, but aberrant. Christians are, sadly, humans, and do engage in violence, but such violence is rarely in the name of their faith. Most other organized religions are also largely non violent, and like Christianity are so because that is a core tenet of their theologies.

      "Then all others are wrong and if they don't accept it they must be punished in some way."

      Christians believe and teach that such punishment is for their God to exact. Most other religions seem to believe similarly, where they preach punishment at all - some do not.

      There is, however, one religion that teaches violence against all non believers, and even against their own who are insufficiently devout. This religion is, sadly, alone against the world. Sadly, because it will cause great suffering to defeat them.

      And you know the name of this religion. Play games, engage in logic puzzles, minimize and excuse it all you want, it is so. To not call them by their name and for what they are is to permit them to continue to kill and oppress.

       

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    15. Re: Religion by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 2, Funny

      Factually incorrect. Reality calling.

      You bubble burster you!

      AC is going to have to go back to watching a weeks worth of Bill O'Reilly and Fox News to undo the damage you did to his truthiness bubble.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    16. Re: Religion by Wootery · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But virtually every Christian condemns abortion clinic bombings, where a terrifying number of global Muslims support terror, Sharia theocracy, death for apostates, punishment for homosexual activity, the abolition of freedom of expression in the name of suppressing images they find offensive, etc.

      See: http://www.pewresearch.org/fac... , http://www.pewforum.org/2013/0... , and virtually any other similar survey.

    17. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Different AC

      Why would you be able to name a Christian suicide bomber? Christianity says suicide is a sin. Murder in the name of the lord on the other hand is totally cool. Also citation needed about the group in Malaysia. Every indication I can find says that the top suicide bombers are all Islamic based and the grand Wikipedia lists ISIS as the leader in attacks between 1985 and 2012. I'm suspecting you're completely making up facts. I'm not even saying these are religious attack, they are mostly political using whatever they can to obtain power.

    18. Re: Religion by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Christian - inspired violence is so rare as be not merely exceptional, but aberrant.

      At this point. Kinda. Not necessarily so in the past. We both know the burinings of heretics, gays and presumptive witches, and the crusades. And while there is some nasty ass stuff in the bible about killing all of your enemy except for the little girls, which might be though a tad odd these days.

      But yeah, there is no doubt that the Muslim religion uses violence as a core competency.

      But there's the nexus of religion, and it is that if your god just so happens to hate everything you do, it's pretty likely that you are making god in your own image.

      IOW, denying Christianity's sometimes violent tendencies is not at all required to condemn the immorality of radical Islam.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    19. Re: Religion by fey000 · · Score: 1

      If you want a citation from GP, you probably shouldn't use Wikipedia as a source. Might as well use BuzzFeed, Gawker or some bloke at the pub.

    20. Re: Religion by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      Extremists of any violence who use religion are wrong.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    21. Re: Religion by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      I guess all the Christian missionaries and religious throughout the world that are feeding and clothing the poorest of the poor should pick up their bags, go home, and be much better people as secular atheists, so they can contribute something meaningful to the world like your shitpost Slashdot comments.

      First off, congratulations on the false dichotomy. It isn't an either/or choice.

      A lot of Christians are good people and do good things.

      Wanna know why? Sit down, this might be hard to take.....

      Because they are good people.

      I suspect that despite your tendency to dive into logic mistakes, you are a good person.

      So if it wasn't for your religion, you'd be a rapist, murderer and thief? I really doubt that. I sure as hell hope not.

      As well, religion certainly does not cancel out the desires of some to do immoral things. Well known pedo rapist Jerry Sandusky was a very religious man, a teetotaler who enjoys boinking little boys.

      Point is, know thyself, and know thy religion, even the warty parts. And religion is constantly used to do things that aren't necessarily all that moral.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    22. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The mother of all whooshes may be required for that comment...is there a nuclear whoosh?

      Captcha: winced

    23. Re: Religion by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Some Christians certainly are evil

      KAMPALA, Uganda — Last March, three American evangelical Christians, whose teachings about “curing” homosexuals have been widely discredited in the United States, arrived here in Uganda’s capital to give a series of talks.

      The theme of the event, according to Stephen Langa, its Ugandan organizer, was “the gay agenda — that whole hidden and dark agenda” — and the threat homosexuals posed to Bible-based values and the traditional African family.

      For three days, according to participants and audio recordings, thousands of Ugandans, including police officers, teachers and national politicians, listened raptly to the Americans, who were presented as experts on homosexuality. The visitors discussed how to make gay people straight, how gay men often sodomized teenage boys and how “the gay movement is an evil institution” whose goal is “to defeat the marriage-based society and replace it with a culture of sexual promiscuity.”

      Now the three Americans are finding themselves on the defensive, saying they had no intention of helping stoke the kind of anger that could lead to what came next: a bill to impose a death sentence for homosexual behavior.

      This was just business as usual, nothing new.

      Uganda is set to pass new anti-gay legislation with provisions calling for the execution of gay people under some circumstances. The rumor of the death penalty clause being removed seems grossly exaggerated. Dr. Warren Throckmorton, who has followed the legislation closely, indicates that some Western media are erroneously reporting that the death penalty clause has been removed. He writes that "the bill is the same bill it has always been. It cannot be amended until the committee report is presented to the floor of the Parliament." Even with the amendment the legislation remains a gross travesty of justice.

      The "intellectual" fuel for this grotesque law came from Christian fundamentalists in the United States. According to The New York Times:

      Much of Africa's anti-homosexuality movement is supported by American evangelicals, the Rev. Kapya Kaoma of Zambia wrote in 2009, who are keen to export the American "culture war" to new ground. Indeed, American evangelical Christians played a role in stirring the anti-homosexual sentiment that culminated in the initial legislation in Uganda.

      Of course, it's also right at home in the US as well. Earlier this yesr:

      California proposal to legalize killing gays hard to stop

      A California initiative proposal is testing the limits of free speech. Lawyer Matt McLaughlin wants to authorize the killing of gays and lesbians. Yet legal experts say the state’s attorney general can’t block it.

      McLaughlin’s plan refers to “buggery” or “sodomy” as “a monstrous evil that Almighty God, giver of freedom and liberty, commands us to suppress on pain of our utter destruction even as he overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah.” Under the proposal, “... any person who willingly touches another person of the same gender for purposes of sexual gratification (would) be put to death by bullets to the head or by any other convenient method.

      Anyone transmitting “sodomistic propaganda” to a minor would be fined $1 million per offense, and/or imprisoned up to 10 years, and/or expelled from California for up to life. It would ban lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, or those who espouse sodomistic propaganda, or who belong to any group that does, from serving in publ

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    24. Re: Religion by Capt.Albatross · · Score: 1

      Not so, unfortunately - truthiness bubbles are inherently fact-resistant.

    25. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The bloke at the pub is likely to have an agenda, but at least it's unlikely to be the same agenda, trotted out over an over again...

    26. Re: Religion by LichtSpektren · · Score: 1

      Murder of anyone in Christianity is a sin. There are no exceptions. There is a Just War doctrine as espoused by Augustine of Hippo and Thomas Aquinas et al., but if you actually read the criteria given for a Just War, most of the wars of our modern age would be considered unjust.

      Sorry, Malaysia was wrong; it was actually Indonesia. The group in question is the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, who until ISIS took control, had the highest kill count of any suicide bomber group in the world.

    27. Re: Religion by O('_')O_Bush · · Score: 1

      Chill with the sarcasm, dude. If Slashdot isn't for venting frustration by devolving any unrelated topic into bashing management, the U.S.A., Christians, Apple/Microsoft/AMD, or those know - nothing NASA scientists from our computer chairs, then what is it here for?

      --
      while(1) attack(People.Sandy);
    28. Re: Religion by dinfinity · · Score: 1

      Yep, we can also add Buddhists to this list:
      http://www.cbsnews.com/news/un...

    29. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religion that imposes death over arbitrary guidelines? Use of psychedelic drugs? You MUST be talking about Christianity.

      If he had written

      "Religion that imposes death over arbitrary guidelines? Absence of psychedelic drugs?" Then he MUST be talking about Islam.

    30. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then you go to a meeting and learn about the Seven Mountains.

      Or about 8-8. Or the Chosen Race.

    31. Re: Religion by Solandri · · Score: 5, Insightful

      abortion clinic bombings? Evangelical Christian

      Of the hundreds of abortion clinic bombings, I've only been able to find one which resulted in a fatality. It's almost as if the bombers were carefully trying to avoid human fatalities. Which makes sense since their whole rationale for doing it was to stop what they perceive as widespread murder of unborn children. i.e. They did it because they value life; their definition of life just happens to be a superset of yours. They only resorted to bombings and arson to in their view stop a greater violence (buildings and equipment being less valuable than lives), the opposite of your implication.

      The lone exception was the bombing carried out by Eric Rudolph. You may know him better as the Centennial Olympic Park bomber, so clearly he had no qualms about using indiscriminate violence in support of his beliefs. (There have been several shootings of abortion clinic workers. But shootings are targeted, not indiscriminate like bombings.)

    32. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, Christianity has some black marks in their past. This is undeniable. But the people who committed those acts are long dead, and the fact remains that the Christian church, among all major sects, are overwhelmingly non-violent. And yes, there are violent things in the Bible. However, all of the mass killings in the Old Testament which people like to point to are not a pass from God for people to determine who to kill, but were examples of God Himself judging a nation and using Israel as an agent to punish them. Aside from the Law of Moses, which allows for punishments for crimes within the nation of Israel (so, only applicable to other Israelites), no where in the Bible does God give man the right to murder anyone.

    33. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And so are some atheists, like Mao & Stalin who killed more than all the religious people in all of history. What's your point other than hating on a mostly-innocent group because of a few?

      If you blame all Christians for that, why not blame all atheists? Or maybe we could realize that the whole blame game is silly and just stop with the bigotry?

    34. Re: Religion by mjr167 · · Score: 1

      I don't think anyone denies that there are violent sects of Christianity or that horrific things have been done in the name of God.

      The point is that the modern, mainstream Christian sects condemn violence. When was the last time Christians led a crusade to wipe out the infidels? One of the mainstream sects with actual world power and influence?

      The whole "remember the Crusades!" bit whenever someone points out that Christianity teaches peace is a bit childish. If you have to go back 400 years to get your example of Christian rampage, isn't that a pretty good record?

    35. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christian - inspired violence is so rare as be not merely exceptional, but aberrant.

      At this point. Kinda. Not necessarily so in the past. We both know the burinings of heretics, gays and presumptive witches, and the crusades.

      Burning of heretics and witches was 1600s and earlier. I have to do some research as to when presumed gays were burned by mainstream Christianity. The Crusades lasted from about 1000 to 1300.

    36. Re: Religion by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 0

      And so are some atheists, like Mao & Stalin who killed more than all the religious people in all of history. What's your point other than hating on a mostly-innocent group because of a few?

      I would make the same point for anyone hating on mostly-innocent muslims because of a few.So what's your point? But more to the point. There are some really rotten apples in both the christian and muslim cultures. Denying that many christians have been just as bad in the past, and there are those who are quite capable today of wanting to kill people who don't follow their rules, would be stupid.

      If you blame all Christians for that, why not blame all atheists? Or maybe we could realize that the whole blame game is silly and just stop with the bigotry?

      For starters, because I never said that all christians are to blame. So why not learn to read, clean up your act, and stop insinuating such things? Your tactics are those of scoundrels and cowards.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    37. Re: Religion by 0xG · · Score: 0

      Christian - inspired violence is so rare as be not merely exceptional, but aberrant. Christians are, sadly, humans, and do engage in violence, but such violence is rarely in the name of their faith.

      I thought you knew what you were talking about until I read that.
      Crusades, anyone?

      --
      A pox on web designers who feel that window.innerWidth == screen.availWidth
    38. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of the hundreds of abortion clinic bombings, I've only been able to find one which resulted in a fatality.

      That's small comfort to the multiple people shot by anti-abortion terrorists, three or four in the city of Pensacola alone, and I'd say the lack of other deaths was chance, not intent.

    39. Re: Religion by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      "But the people who committed those acts are long dead"

      I'm old enough to have seen The Troubles in Northern Ireland on the TV news. Plenty of people in the Republican or Unionist paramilitaries then are elected politicians now. For example, Martin McGuiness, who was 2nd in command in Derry on Bloody Sunday, is currently deputy First Minister for Northern Ireland.

    40. Re: Religion by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      "there is no doubt that the Muslim religion uses violence as a core competency"

      None of the Muslims in my office have ever tried to kill me. Are they just slackers?

    41. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And so are some atheists, like Mao & Stalin who killed more than all the religious people in all of history. What's your point other than hating on a mostly-innocent group because of a few?

      If you blame all Christians for that, why not blame all atheists? Or maybe we could realize that the whole blame game is silly and just stop with the bigotry?

      Mao and Stalin did not kill because of their atheism.

      Muslems do.

      Big difference.

    42. Re: Religion by narcc · · Score: 1

      Maybe the DHKP-C?

    43. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > you probably cannot name a single Christian suicide bomber.

      Anders Breivik is Christian. The fact that he only killed others and not himself shouldn't really matter, as that doesn't make him any better.

      Now, I see No True Scotsman incoming in 3... 2... 1...

    44. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But shootings are targeted, not indiscriminate like bombings.

      This makes absolutely no sense.

      So some guy was just walking along and just randomly exploded an abortion clinic?

      Bombings are rarely indiscriminate.

    45. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Yet legal experts say the state’s attorney general can’t block it.

      He doesn't need to. The 14th amendment has been incorporated by the SCOTUS. The FBI heavy cavalry will ride in, mounted on federal civil rights violation statues and stop it just like they stopped negro-hanging parties in the 1950s.
      The lawyer Matt McLaughlin probably wants to end up on a rope in Nuremberg, sent there by a court composed on american, british, french and russian judges? That would be his 15mins of fame.

    46. Re: Religion by slashmydots · · Score: 2

      You are horribly incorrect. The Bible does not say bomb abortion clincs. The Koran does say go kill non-muslims approximately 20 times.

    47. Re: Religion by larryjoe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      California proposal to legalize killing gays hard to stop

      Actually, this is a good example of the strength of a true democracy and even a civil society. The title of the article is quite misleading. The California attorney general cannot prevent the proposal writer from proceeding to the signature gathering stage. That's good, i.e., that ideas, even the crazy ones, can be stomped out by a single person. At that point, no one (including those that are anti-gay) will sign his petition, and it will die. This is exactly how the system should work.

      We can only dream that such a scenario would be possible in ISIS or even most moderate Muslim countries.

    48. Re: Religion by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 1

      "there is no doubt that the Muslim religion uses violence as a core competency"

      None of the Muslims in my office have ever tried to kill me. Are they just slackers?

      Well, if they are like you, then they are posting to slashdot instead of waging jihad. So, yeah, they are jihad slackers.

    49. Re: Religion by ememisya · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily, no. I'm a moderate Muslim and like any religion Islam has some pretty out dated text that nobody observes. Your observation is superficial and frankly a little offensive.

    50. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you missed the grand parent's post which stated that Christians are evil - not that some Christians are evil. The false dichotomy is not in the post you replied to. You can do better than that Ol' Olsec. Objectivity is your strong suit until you get to a subject that you're passionate about. You're too old for me to "take you to task." You're also too old to not know better. If you can live with it then congratulations?

    51. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about we use a more objective measurement (instead of a narrowly defined subset) and include "all terrorist attacks in the past 50 years?"

      No? Don't like that metric, do you? Why not? What's the point of limiting to just suicide attacks (which removes plane hijacking, firearms, IEDs, artillery attacks, etc)?

      Oh, you have an AGENDA! That's it. Why? What's the point of your being disingenuous? What is the point of your agenda? What are you trying to "prove?" What are you trying to hide?

      Some of us DO study history and some of us keep up with current affairs. That kind of sucks for you when you try to use statistics and we can actually look them up, doesn't it? Limiting it to just one subset is purely an attempt to distort reality. We could say that Al Queda has the most attacks on buildings with airplanes but that's a silly subset, now isn't it? It's even sillier when we can also look and see that Al Queda really wasn't all that successful compared to some other groups.

      So, what's your point?

    52. Re: Religion by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      The Crusades were a response to the invasion of Europe and the Holy Land by...

      Wait for it...

      Wait...

      Muslims.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    53. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This post should not have been modded down. Someone here wants to censor.

    54. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be fair, the progressive/SJW line of thought is: all white people are responsible for racism/violence, but not all Muslims are responsible for terrorism. They're denying that certain Islamic countries/regions have a serious radical problem. I can show mostly non-crazy Muslims (Albanians and not-in-Turkey Kurds). But try to explain to them that not all white people are racist and they go fucking berserk.

    55. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By far the most brutal tortures were done by the inquisitors from catholic church. Witch hunts were not pretty either.

    56. Re: Religion by publiclurker · · Score: 1

      so basically people like you are OK because they are incompetent. funny, normally your brand of idiots think that they are superior, now you are trying to claim that it is good that you are idiots.

    57. Re: Religion by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily, no. I'm a moderate Muslim and like any religion Islam has some pretty out dated text that nobody observes.

      I'm not trying to be hostile here, I'm generally curious, coming from the standpoint of an unbeliever. This is hardly a Muslim-only problem, in fact this is an argument I hear all the time from Christians, but its the first time I've heard it acknowledged by a Muslim. I suppose my question would be how do you draw the line? If the Koran is a holy book, and each part is just as holy and true as every other part (I'm assuming that's the case) just as the Bible is for Christians, then how do you know what parts are God/Allah's inerrant word, and which parts are "out dated text that nobody observes?" Who makes that distinction? ISIS/ISIL certainly draw a different line from mainstream Muslims, emphasizing barbarism over any enlightenment.

    58. Re: Religion by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      He claims christian 'cultural identity', but isn't a god botherer. If he's Christian, so am I.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    59. Re: Religion by Anguirel · · Score: 1

      Except for Amalekites. Murder all of them, including their suckling babes and farm animals. (1 Samuel 15)

      --
      ~Anguirel (lit. Living Star-Iron)
      QA: The art of telling someone that their baby is ugly without getting punched.
    60. Re: Religion by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Actually, this is a good example of the strength of a true democracy and even a civil society

      I think it's an illustration about how California's initiative system is broken. It should be easy to stop an initiative that is clearly unconstitutional, but instead much time and money is wasted by letting them linger. Californians will even vote in unconstitutional initiatives and then act surprised when courts strike them down. Bad initiatives should get caught sooner.

    61. Re: Religion by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      > Yet legal experts say the state’s attorney general can’t block it.

      He doesn't need to. The 14th amendment has been incorporated by the SCOTUS. The FBI heavy cavalry will ride in, mounted on federal civil rights violation statues and stop it just like they stopped negro-hanging parties in the 1950s.

      Proposing to amend a law via peaceful means is not a violation of anyone's civil rights, unlike hanging them.

      The lawyer Matt McLaughlin probably wants to end up on a rope in Nuremberg, sent there by a court composed on american, british, french and russian judges? That would be his 15mins of fame.

      No, he just sought to capitalize on people's stupidity and ignorant beliefs. It's important that haters be able to do that so we can spot them, and engage in debate with other people who, absent debate, might be swayed to his side.

      If this were to pass, it would be contested, and surely shot down. That's the way it's supposed to work. So let him talk, same as all those stores that put up "gay-free-zone" signs after the court ruled against the baker who refused to bake a cake for a same-sex couple. People have a right to know that their money is being spent supporting a merchant who is homophobic, and take their custom elsewhere.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    62. Re: Religion by larryjoe · · Score: 2

      Actually, this is a good example of the strength of a true democracy and even a civil society

      I think it's an illustration about how California's initiative system is broken. It should be easy to stop an initiative that is clearly unconstitutional, but instead much time and money is wasted by letting them linger. Californians will even vote in unconstitutional initiatives and then act surprised when courts strike them down. Bad initiatives should get caught sooner.

      I'm definitely not arguing that California's system is great, but in this case, it's pretty good. If you're arguing that it should be easy to stop really, really bad proposals without wasting too much time and money, then this is the poster child case for that. The only real money spent on this was the $200 paid by the guy who thought of the idea. The guy also has to foot the bill to gather 365,880 signatures. The article opines that 365,880 is a low threshold, but I would argue that this guy not only wouldn't find more than a handful of people willing to sign such a crazy proposal, he probably won't even bother trying. Thus, the process with minimal cost to the state has struck down a really bad idea while preserving freedom of political thought by not allowing any single individual to decide what should or should not be proposed. This is the way it should be.

    63. Re: Religion by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 2

      It should be easy to stop an initiative that is clearly unconstitutional,

      How many times was the constitution amended by proposals that seemed to many to be controversial, even unconstitutional, at the time? Or we don't have to go that far - look at the whole gay marriage thing. Before the Supremes ruled, DOMA was the law of the land It was similarly clearly unconstitutional, as was Proposition 8. However, at the time (and even today) there are plenty of people who don't agree with same-sex marriage, and see it as the state acting unconstitutionally by violating the Constitution's "establishment clause".

      Let him gather the signatures. It is his right, no matter how stupid most of us think the proposal is. If we do otherwise, WE become the ones practicing discrimination as well as suppressing his constitutional right to freedom of speech. Not so cool. Do you really want an administrative bureaucrat (instead of the courts) to decide what proposed laws should be put to the vote, and what laws shouldn't? This would be no different from that stupid clerk who refused to sign marriage licenses for same-sex couples.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    64. Re: Religion by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Aside from the Law of Moses, which allows for punishments for crimes within the nation of Israel (so, only applicable to other Israelites), no where in the Bible does God give man the right to murder anyone.

      Way to not get it. People kill each other in the name of religion all th time. Just because you can tapdance and wordsmith it so that you ccan state that God never ever told anyone to mirder anyone - sorry, I say it does. You think that there was any sort of moral value of a woman being stoned todeath because there wasn't any hymenal blood on teh bedsheets which ar eto be hung out the morning after marriage?

      And those young female virgins that were to be taken fmor the enemies village after you killed all the men the adult women, and the young boys?

      Sorry man, that is simply fucking sick. Soldiers? combatants? Yeah that's what humans do. But women and male children? Or a virgin with a flexible hymen? Something to see that you support such stuff. You'll tapdance around it, I call it murder.

      Because those people were indeed making their God in their own image. They liked getting that young stuff after pillaging another village. They had no qualms about burying a woman in the dir up to her head, and throwing rocks at her until she passed away. Maybe "buyer's remorse or something. Burning gays and witches at the stake was jolly good entertainment on a Saturday evening.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    65. Re: Religion by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      "But the people who committed those acts are long dead"

      I'm old enough to have seen The Troubles in Northern Ireland on the TV news. Plenty of people in the Republican or Unionist paramilitaries then are elected politicians now. For example, Martin McGuiness, who was 2nd in command in Derry on Bloody Sunday, is currently deputy First Minister for Northern Ireland.

      The fundy tapdancers will try to say it really wasn't about religion.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    66. Re: Religion by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      The whole "remember the Crusades!" bit whenever someone points out that Christianity teaches peace is a bit childish. If you have to go back 400 years to get your example of Christian rampage, isn't that a pretty good record?

      The point isn't that Christians are oh so good now. Really it isn't. These things tend to come up whenever people condemn nutcase groups like ISIS, and some evill atheist points out that religions often foster violence. And many do.

      Even so, although we domn't see many Christian Terrorists outside of Northern Ireland, it isn't like they are blameless, because the evil takes place on a more personal level, as parents under the word of god as granted in his unerring bible, with the admonition "He that spareth his rod hateth his son: but he that loveth him chasteneth him betimes." Proverbs 13:24 King James version

      Beat their fucking kids to death to show them thay do not hate them!

      http://www.goddiscussion.com/7...

      The tl:dr version, Mike and Debbie Pearl devout Christians belonging to the Greater Joy ministries. They claim it is the will of God. How dare you believe otherwise, It's right there.

      More for your reading pleasure.

      http://lasvegassun.com/news/20...

      http://www.examiner.com/articl...

      Especially the second one. Cute kid. Look in her eyes. Her parents thought that God wanted them to torture and kill her. It was their religion, the words that instructed them were in their religion's holy book

      There is a book put out by a Christian Minister ( that Michael Pearl who beat his child to death in the name of God), called "To Train up a Child" Its been found in a number of homes where people have also killed their children

      but as I said earlier, the point isn't that Christianity is better than Islam, or the various other religions.

      It is that religion will allow you to justify whatever evil you wish, and absolve yourself from guilt or responsibility, because the God you made conform to what you want to do ordered you to do it. Which by the way, is why religions are inherently evil.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    67. Re: Religion by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Burning of heretics and witches was 1600s and earlier. I have to do some research as to when presumed gays were burned by mainstream Christianity. The Crusades lasted from about 1000 to 1300.

      Oh - I guess its okay then.

      Dude, the whole middle east shitstorm is about things that took place thousands of years ago.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    68. Re: Religion by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      "there is no doubt that the Muslim religion uses violence as a core competency"

      None of the Muslims in my office have ever tried to kill me. Are they just slackers?

      The question is though, if an ISIS member is getting ready to lop of your head, will any of them come to your rescue?

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    69. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      didn't bush say we were killing the terrorists for god.

    70. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religion is the root of evil.

    71. Re: Religion by mjr167 · · Score: 1

      Religion also tells us to help the poor and love our neighbors.

      Like a gun or a kitchen knife, it can be used for good or evil. Blaming the religion is a convenient and easy way to explain evil people. Nationalism and the 'greater good' is also a convenient scape goat for evil. So is poverty, money, love, drugs, and alcohol. When people beat their spouse to death, we do not blame domestic life.

      Some people are just evil. Does it really matter how they justify themselves? Does it matter if you beat your kid to death because God told you to or because that's how you were raised or because you were pissed off or because you were drunk?

    72. Re: Religion by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Does it matter if you beat your kid to death because God told you to or because that's how you were raised or because you were pissed off or because you were drunk?

      Yes. The drunk person will probably regret it the next day. Probably accept whatever penalty is meted out because they are remorseful. The religious excuse means that the person who beat their kid to death was merely doing god's work, so there's nothing to be sorry about. Sending them to prison might be violating their religious freedom in their minds.

      It's the difference between crimes of passion and calculated crimes. Especially calculated crimes that have a get out of jail free card.

      I'm not talking about people like Andrea Yates, who was mentally unhinged when she drowned her kids in the bathtub in god's name. I'm talking about functioning people like Michael Pearl, who runs a ministry, writes books, and spreads the word about making certain you beat your children.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    73. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Joseph Stalin - atheism - 20,000,000 - 30,000,000 people
      French Cult of Reason - atheism - 300,000
      Mao Zedong - atheism - 45,000,000

      A documented observation by Nobel Prize winner, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn,

      "Apparently it was just an amazing coincidence that every Communist of historical note publicly declared his atheism .there have been twenty-eight countries in world history that can be confirmed to have been ruled by regimes with avowed atheists at the helm These twenty-eight historical regimes have been ruled by eighty-nine atheists, of whom more than half have engaged in democidal acts of the sort committed by Stalin and Mao "

      148,000,000 dead at the hands of atheists in the 20th century.

      I'm not following your logic. I can't disagree with you and I do not agree with you, but I think your conclusion about religion is influenced by opinion rather than fact.

    74. Re: Religion by mjr167 · · Score: 1

      And in the US, parents who kill their children go to jail.

      People who beat their children in God's name are no different than people who beat their children because they are drunk and the kid isn't listening or wet their bed or talked back. The drunk isn't going to regret it. Not really. They might regret the consequences, but they still blame the victim, not themselves.

      Wasn't there a football player who took a switch to his naked toddler and said he did nothing wrong? That's how his dad disciplined him and he didn't see anything wrong with it? Meanwhile we have a kid covered with welts and cuts. And that woman in Florida who drugged her daughter, stuffed her in the trunk of the car, and then didn't report her missing from months so she could go clubbing or something? Or the people who let their babies starve to death while they play video games? I guarantee if you watch your local news you will hear about people getting arrested for beating/killing their kids for all kids of depraved reasons. God told me to is actually pretty far down the list with 'the bitch wouldn't stop crying' being at the top.

      People who think it's ok to hurt other people don't need religion. It's just convenient and easy. The world is full of sick fucks who will latch onto any excuse to be evil. It doesn't make the rest of bad people.

    75. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you really splitting these fucking hairs that finely? Bombing medical facilities isn't terrorism, because they (mostly) do it when people aren't there? I'm sure that wonderfully reassuring to the people wanting to go there. "Most of the times they don't bomb when people are present!"
      Targeted assassination of abortion clinic workers isn't terrorism, because it's targeted, and not indiscriminate like bombings? So if we decided to go shoot all of the WASPs in a town, that's not terrorism, because we're targeting them individually with guns instead of carpet-bombing the place.
      Great.

    76. Re: Religion by LinuxLuver · · Score: 2

      For me, that "outdated text" proved the central document wasn't the word of God, and that insulated the entire religion because it is built on nothing other than the central text. There is no other thing that can be claimed as "proof".

      --
      Only boring people are ever bored.
    77. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mao? Stalin?

      The mass atrocity committed by these turds had nothing to do with any religion. Atheist or not. It was because they were psychotic. The Gregorian nature of your argument is as much about semantics and lacking of facts as a religious text.

    78. Re: Religion by LinuxLuver · · Score: 1

      For me, that "outdated text" proved the central document wasn't the word of God, and that invalidated the entire religion because it is built on nothing other than the central text. There is no other thing that can be claimed as "proof".

      --
      Only boring people are ever bored.
    79. Re: Religion by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      And in the US, parents who kill their children go to jail.

      People who beat their children in God's name are no different than people who beat their children because they are drunk and the kid isn't listening or wet their bed or talked back. The drunk isn't going to regret it. Not really. They might regret the consequences, but they still blame the victim, not themselves.

      In crimes of passion, the perp is often very remorseful. I went to school with a guy who killed his son in a car accident that was his fault. The guy went home and killed himself that day because he couldn't bear the guilt.

      Wasn't there a football player who took a switch to his naked toddler and said he did nothing wrong? That's how his dad disciplined him and he didn't see anything wrong with it?

      Adrian Peterson. I won't stand up for what the piece of shit did to his kid. http://dailysnark.com/pictures... Peterson would have to disable me if I ever caught him doing that to a child, That wasn't killing the kid though. But if you can bring forth the notion to do that to a child, yeah, accidentally killing the kid is a possibility. It was an example of people thinking that they were justified in beating their child. And it isn't a slippery slope legal definition of assault as putting your hands on the victim - its doing actual physical harm. Worry not though, he is back on the team.

      And Peterson has expressed some remorse kinda sorta.

      And that woman in Florida who drugged her daughter, stuffed her in the trunk of the car, and then didn't report her missing from months so she could go clubbing or something? Or the people who let their babies starve to death while they play video games?

      You bring these situations up, and they are awful assholes who should get a lot of their own back.

      I don't know if you understand or not. Your posts seem to be saying I'm accusing Christians of being the only childbeaters. They aren't.

      But Adrian Peterson and Casey Anthony aren't using Jesus as the reason they beat their kids, or killed them in Anthony's case.

      It's just convenient and easy. The world is full of sick fucks who will latch onto any excuse to be evil. It doesn't make the rest of bad people.

      And with that statement you prove it. The problem is, that's a no true Scotsman argument, or in this case, a no true Christian childbeater argument. You just dismiss anyone who doesn't believe in your particular version of what is right. The problem I see is those lines in the bible, which fundamentalist and literalists must take to heart - that if you do not take the rod to your child, you hate the child. I didn't put those lines there - Fundamentalists believe that those words are the word of god as revealed to man. And in a country where there is religious freedom, who are we to tell them they cannot beat the shit out of their kids? It's a real conundrum, and when we are not in 3000 year old desert cult, it doesn't have much place in civlized society. THey are all sick fucks, and some of them are rligious sick fucks who as part of their sickness, give credit to the Abrahamic god for their actions. No free passes. Know thyself, and know thy religion's warts and all, and don't dismiss people who do exactly as the book says.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    80. Re: Religion by mjr167 · · Score: 1

      Child beaters are sick fucks and should go to jail. We all agree on that.

      People who use religion to justify child beating, murder, etc are sick fucks and should go to jail. We all agree on that.

      People use religion to justify being sick fucks ergo religion is evil. That is where we disagree.

      There was a time that I used to think organized religions were evil because there is a lot of evil that is done in God's name. But one day I realized that they are actually made up of a lot of good people who use the tenets of their religion for good and that making generalizations about 'religion is evil' does them a disservice. When people go out an feed the homeless, help them with jobs, give diapers, clothes, and support to pregnant women, or take in people running from abusive spouses in the name of their God, should we disparage them and their efforts to make the world a better place? Do we lump those people in with the murderers because some asshole has decided to use their God's name to justify horrific things? Or do we place the blame on the asshole?

    81. Re: Religion by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      "This is hardly a Muslim-only problem, in fact this is an argument I hear all the time from Christians, but its the first time I've heard it acknowledged by a Muslim."

      Pretty much all religious people will say the same thing (including jews), EXCEPT the hardline fundamentalists or whatever faith it happens to be.

      The core message of almost every major religion has been "Be nice, don't be an asshole"
      This has been twisted around at some point by someone to be "Kill anyone who isn't like 'us'"

      Politicians have always been around and a lot of them dress up as religious leaders because that way their motives don't get questioned.

    82. Re: Religion by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Do we lump those people in with the murderers because some asshole has decided to use their God's name to justify horrific things? Or do we place the blame on the asshole?

      The big difference between you and me is that I belive that good religion is people making god in their own image, and they are good people. Bad religion is people making god in their own image, and are bad.

      the trump card is that people always pick and choose according to their personal beliefs, and use whatever they find in their books that justifys that belief.

      So why on earth not just be good because you are a good person, rather than be good because some book written by hunmans with a slew of contradictory statements tells you to be good? I'm a pretty moral person.

      Mostly because I'm me, and the Abrahamic god has not thing one to do with that. And in someone's religion, I'm going to hell.

      As are you. Funny how that works - we're all doomed.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    83. Re: Religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fun fact, the number 1 suicide bombing organization on earth is a Marxist (atheistic) group based in Malaysia.

      Fun fact, you probably cannot name a single Christian suicide bomber.

      Oklahoma City says hello. It wants to remind you of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building that was "bombed"
      So he was Catholic... but who cares, that's close enough.
      Point is there are terrorist groups here that are NOT Muslim(In fact most are white) and do use bombs. Whether they are suicide bombers or not does not matter.

    84. Re: Religion by mjr167 · · Score: 1

      So why on earth not just be good because you are a good person, rather than be good because some book written by hunmans with a slew of contradictory statements tells you to be good?

      And that's what happens. Evil people are evil. Good people are good. Religion has nothing to do with it. It is simply a tool that provides support and hope to millions of people around the world and gives them moral guideposts. However, a good person is not going to go out and murder babies because someone said their god commands it. They will reject that god. Most people do not accept 'just following orders' as an excuse for hurting people.

      The evolution of our moral codes over time shows that as a whole, society examines itself critically and tries to be better. We reject the tenets that we find repulsive and keep the ones we like. Since most people are not actually evil, this tends to work out for the betterment of society as a whole.

    85. Re: Religion by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      Moreover, how many times a day is an American abortion clinic blown up?

    86. Re: Religion by ememisya · · Score: 1

      This guy gets it. Say you got a bridge you need to build and you're a politician. A major crisis happens where chickens start exploding all around the world. First thing the politician in going to say is, "We're sorry for all the children, an our brave sons and daughters who have lost their lives to these evil chickens... *moment of silence* ... now if we only had a bridge built, we could transport more chickens!"

    87. Re: Religion by ememisya · · Score: 1

      Sure, I doubt anybody takes religion as the objective/scientific truth. It's meant as a public protocol of good will, and is abstract therefore subjective in nature.

  2. Re: Sigh by rfengr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well the 1A protects you from the law, not public opinion. He voluntarily resigned.

  3. Re:Sigh by BCGlorfindel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Another circumstance where the court of public opinion rules political correctness to be a greater virtue than the first amendment.

    Because the first amendment is supposed to prevent people from judging political candidates based in part on what they say?

  4. Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Dunbal · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Chopping people's heads off to make a point and to recruit more crazies is not necessarily evil... uh huh. And Aristotle taught us that violence IS the answer. "We make war so that we may live in peace". This "violence is never the answer" is just a meaningless feel good politically correct statement to appease the liberal left. There is violence for the right reasons, and violence for the wrong reasons. We need more violence for the right reasons because war, after all, is a contest of violence. These crazy people must be rooted out and dealt with.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    1. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Chopping people's heads off to make a point and to recruit more crazies is not necessarily evil... uh huh.

      And Aristotle taught us that violence IS the answer. "We make war so that we may live in peace". This "violence is never the answer" is just a meaningless feel good politically correct statement to appease the liberal left. There is violence for the right reasons, and violence for the wrong reasons. We need more violence for the right reasons because war, after all, is a contest of violence. These crazy people must be rooted out and dealt with.

      ISIS is just pissed off because the US is going to rain electric death on them from the skies without putting any boots on the ground. I would be pissed too if I was a stupid rag head that didn't know his ass from a hole in the ground. As far as the future of humanity is concerned though ISIS is about as useful as a knitted condom. They need to shuffle off this mortal coil so the rest of us can get on with living well in the 21st century.

    2. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by pr0nbot · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I agree with you about violence. But on evil, he's right of course, but as a politician he's a fool to have imagined a cerebral point about moral relativism wouldn't be misinterpreted by the people at large, or misrepresented by his enemies as support for ISIS.

      ISIS are evil by my definition of evil, and I'd gladly see them all hang. By their definition of evil, I'm evil, and they'd gladly see me hang. So, I bomb them, and they abduct and decapitate me.

      I still think I'm right - I'm not saying that I think there's any moral equivalence between me and them. But I'm able to see that they have exactly the reverse position, and thus that in their minds, they're not just not evil, but even rigtheously good.

      Saying "ISIS aren't evil" as a shorthand for all that is not likely to get people's votes. Hell, even saying all that is likely to piss off people who see the world in simplistic black and white (as I believe the majority do).

    3. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2

      And Aristotle taught us that violence IS the answer. "We make war so that we may live in peace".

      Aristotle made many dubious claims (and many good ones). An improvement over Plato, to be sure, but not always.

      Augustine echoed the same sentiments later, setting the stage for the "Just War Theory" that the Jesuits still push forward today - even Bush the Second used Augustinian rationalization to go to war in Iraq.

      Modern ethics understands that the means are what's important - not the ends. Just ends can be arrived at through just or unjust means. 'Evil' exists at that decision point.

      Violence has only one place - in response to unprovoked aggression. When everything is wound up in a tight positive feedback loop of response to response to response, the only way out is to broker an end to responding. 'An eye for an eye' will leave the whole world blind.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    4. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Dunbal · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh yes I'm sure ISIS believe themselves to be fighting for god and all sorts of good things especially when they're hooked on Captagon. But what they are fighting for is an islamic caliphate where they see themselves as the warriors who brought this caliphate into being entrenched firmly at the top, and everyone else their slaves paying tribute in goods and women. While this is not necessarily evil if you happen to be in charge of this caliphate, it certainly is evil to today's current social order. While the western system is far from perfect it attempts to reward individual effort and permit individual expression. I for one am not prepared to see this situation change and if I have to be called "extremist" for this view by ignorant fools then so be it. It's easy to say there's no absolutes and no black and white, but in war you only get to pick one side or the other.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    5. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Viol8 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Modern ethics understands that the means are what's important - not the ends."

      Then modern ethics - read "liberal" values - are full of shit. The means might be important but the end is far more so unless its trivia like a kids egg and spoon race. The whole "he played fair but lost, what a good chap" ethos fails miserably in war if by playing fair you and your whole family end up dead.

      "Violence has only one place - in response to unprovoked aggression"

      So you think terrorists should be allowed to commit an act before they're captured or killed then?

      "An eye for an eye' will leave the whole world blind."

      Spare us the hackneyed Ghandi quotes. He sure as hell was no Plato, never mind Aristotle.

    6. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Violence has only one place - in response to unprovoked aggression.

      And I say there's no such thing as unprovoked aggression because I am sure the side doing the aggression will list any number of excuses to justify their action. The ideal solution to all these problems is education. Only education has shown its ability to reduce religious fanaticism. But we don't live in an ideal world. Education takes time and political stability, neither of which we have. So we are left with one option - to defend our values and way of life, by force if necessary.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    7. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      These crazy people must be rooted out and dealt with.

      They aren't crazy. You're failing to understand their motivations, which means you're failing to combat those motivations. Escalating the "kill a few, create a thousand" strategy of fighting terrorists will have predictable results, and maybe the next dead civilian will be someone you care about. We've tried stupid reactionary wars. It was called the Bush administration, and it got us where we are today. Lets try being smarter about it instead of doubling-down on stupid.

    8. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But on evil, he's right of course, but as a politician he's a fool to have imagined a cerebral point about moral relativism wouldn't be misinterpreted by the people at large, or misrepresented by his enemies as support for ISIS.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lgcd6jvsCFs

    9. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moral relativists have no place in elected public office. Our nation was founded as a nation of laws not a nation of feelings. Laws draw from and codify an absolute moral standard.

    10. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Orgasmatron · · Score: 1

      Wait, doesn't the leader of ISIS have a PhD? Didn't like 8 of the 9/11 attackers have engineering degrees?

      I think we can toss "education" on the does-not-work pile.

      --
      See that "Preview" button?
    11. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Switch from a "kill a few strategy" to a "kill them all" strategy. Problem solved.

    12. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      So you think terrorists should be allowed to commit an act before they're captured or killed then?

      Personally I think it's hard to try someone for a crime they haven't done yet. The criminal always has the initiative. But there is common sense and warning signs that can let you catch them at the "conspiracy" stage. And you don't let mullahs go around in the mosques you let build in your country preach "death to the West".

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    13. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Moral relativists have no place in elected public office. Our nation was founded as a nation of laws not a nation of feelings. Laws draw from and codify an absolute moral standard.

      Laws are not morals. Conflating those two is a common mistake, and leads to many of the problems we have about what should and shouldn't be legal.

    14. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Dunbal · · Score: 2

      Wait, doesn't the leader of ISIS have a PhD? Didn't like 8 of the 9/11 attackers have engineering degrees? I think we can toss "education" on the does-not-work pile.

      I'm pretty sure the leader of ISIS is not doing any shooting or suicide bombing. He's the one who is good at manipulating the others into doing stuff for him. Hell he probably doesn't even believe in Allah or Mohammed - but he sure as hell gives the impression he does. I'm talking about the poor fool who agrees to be sent on a suicide mission in the hope of a better life. He's the one who needs education.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    15. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by phishybongwaters · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Careful injection reason into these type of conversations. See, the fact is, these people are sub human and evil and there is no reason behind it. /end sarcasm While we continue to ignore the reasons that people join with these monsters, we will only ever add more monsters. It's as simple as that. We can't fight terrorism by fighting the symptoms alone, we must also fight the cause. As long as people feel they have no other resource but to join with these people, these terrorists will always have numbers. What makes someone willing to sacrifice their life for a cause? Desperation? Determination? What exactly is it? It's a fight for survival. Our troops enlist and give up their lives to help our way of life survive. Yet we want to pretend some of the enemy doesn't do this for the exact same reason? I guess I'm naive to think that a lot of these people are doing this for more reasons that to just straight up murder people. It's like saying all elisted troops are well adjusted people who just want to do the right thing. That's patently false.

    16. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by c · · Score: 2

      Chopping people's heads off to make a point and to recruit more crazies is not necessarily evil... uh huh.

      Well, ISIS doesn't consider it evil. The rest of us think it's batshit crazy evil.

      Getting back on topic, it's one thing for a western politician to argue that ISIS doesn't see their actions as evil; knowing your enemy should always be an input into your engagement strategy, and showing awareness of your enemies twisted viewpoint demonstrates you're not a complete moron.

      But to phrase it they way he did on Twitter of all places, leaving any suggestion that he might sympathize with their viewpoint, shows a abject lack of understanding of public relations and political debate tactics. Social media is not the medium on which to make academic arguments about moral relativism.

      --
      Log in or piss off.
    17. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      We've tried stupid reactionary wars.

      Bush toppled a government and occupied a country. He created the instability that led to ISIS. But he did not engage ISIS. So spare us your flawed arguments especially since you are not offering any sort of solution. The motivation of those who wish to see you dead are quite simple. They wish to see you dead.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    18. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Junta · · Score: 1

      Note that 'violence is not the answer' was directed toward ISIS folks, not to our response to ISIS. Note that ISIS is much much larger than the folks that speak and control the rhetoric. The crazy people are empowered in part by our inability and/or unwillingness to make a compelling counter perspective to the folks that get caught up in ISIS nonsense. If there was news that snipers took out a group of people widely believed to be accomplices of ISIS, there would be cheers. That's how ISIS recruits view the executions that ISIS does.

      Again, not to say that the way of countering the actions must be non-violent, but we must move forward with an awareness and a strategy that addresses the nuance of the situation and do whatever may help for mitigating their recruitment and even inspiring defection when possible. We cannot afford to avoid a violent response, but we must go further than that in addressing the threat.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    19. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by mrclevesque · · Score: 1

      This

    20. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Modern ethics are a scam to justify smug hedonism. "Modern Ethics" invited this plague into Europe.

    21. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The motivation of those who wish to see you dead are quite simple. They wish to see you dead.

      As long as you are unwilling to see them as anything but one dimensional evil murderers, and instead see them as rational people with motivations, goals, and a cause they feel it's right to dedicate their lives to, you will misread, underestimate, and fail to counter your enemy and end up making things worse. The Bush administration misunderstood the terrorists, and toppled Saddam Hussein to fight terrorism. They were stupid, and wrong, and made everything worse at the expense of far too many good soldiers lives, and here I see the chorus of idiots taking to the interwebs demanding more ill-conceived reactionary action, and the result is bound to be stupid, and wrong, and make everything worse.

    22. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by allcoolnameswheretak · · Score: 1

      I think he phrased that wrong. What he probably meant to say is, that ISIS does not regard itself as being evil. For them, we are evil, with our pornography, homosexuality, atheism, idolism, liberalism and other lack of "morals". They consider themselves the righteous defenders of the one true faith, doing the right thing by punishing the unbelievers.

      I think a large part of what is happening these days with islamic extremism can be attributed to "culture shock". Many people underestimate the importance of culture to societies, and with all the global news and social network of modern times, everyone on the globe is being confronted head on with liberal western culture. To many people who grow up in ultra-conservative, quasi medieval third world contries, a lot of that western stuff is perceived like pulling down your pants and shoving your dick in their face.

    23. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes you idiot. They aren't terrorists UNTIL they commit an act. Rounding up all the people who you don't agree with sounds really hitler-ish.

    24. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, so we just have to kill every last living human. NBD

    25. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by ZeroWaiteState · · Score: 1

      Saudi Arabia beheads people almost every month. They do it for various reasons from protest against the government to witchcraft. When asked about it, the State Department calls it unfortunate, not batshit crazy evil. Saudi Arabia is on the UN Human Rights Council, IIRC, their position being sponsored by the British government.

    26. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      You have to remember that individual expression is bad to them. Conformity in worshipping Allah and serving those ranked higher than yourself is the only moral way to live. That's how it was in Mohammed's time, that's how he lived, so to them it's the ideal.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    27. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Viol8 · · Score: 1

      Sorry idiot - if you're plotting to kill people that make you a terrorist , whether or not you get to carry the act out.

    28. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe he wasn't making the trite and nonsensical (sorry, "cerebral") point about moral relativism you think he was.

      There are no evil people, there are only evil acts (although you may wish, as a shorthand, to assign the adjective "evil" to a person who commits many evil acts, don't forget that this is a shorthand).

      If I'm sitting on my ass and home and you are running around shooting people there's no moral relativism in the world that will convince me that I'm doing an evil act and you're not. See how easy this is? Evil isn't thinking something. Evil isn't having an opinion on something different to me. Evil is causing harm and suffering.

      But you have to subscribe to a minority religion like Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism or Sikhism to understand all this, so let's just pretend that morality is like, say, magnetism.

    29. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      That's why islam is in desperate need of the equivalent of the christian "enlightenment". Otherwise it won't be suffered to exist for much longer simply because itself it does not suffer those of different faith. There are plenty of "abominations" in Jewish and Christian teachings that call for death and dismemberment, but we don't act on those anymore. The radicals have to understand that they must evolve also.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    30. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      I don't underestimate. It's people like Angela Merkel who underestimate.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    31. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Dan+East · · Score: 1

      Yeah yeah yeah. Everything is relative. Just can't pin anything down at all can we? Keeping religion out of the discussion, as "evil" is actually a religiously defined term, we can more generically discuss "evil" in terms of human decency. Is the killing of large numbers of people because they do not share the same beliefs (and they simply want to be left alone to go about their lives) evil? I think in terms of humanity, globally, universally, yes it is. Being "cerebral" and saying that evil cannot be defined and we need to dance around issues and consider ever demented viewpoint is bullshit. That attitude is part of what is going wrong with modern advanced society. This mindset that "morality' is something that doesn't really exist. Nor is "evil". Or any of these foundational concepts that our societies sought in order to take us from from being mere hordes of savage brutes to where we are today.

      So, in the context of this politician, we have someone who was merely trying to spout of the standard PC garbage (there is no right and no wrong and blah blah blah) that he thought liberals would like, and he failed.

      --
      Better known as 318230.
    32. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      As long as you are unwilling to see them as anything but one dimensional evil murderers, and instead see them as rational people with motivations, goals, and a cause they feel it's right to dedicate their lives to

      The problem is that they feel it's a cause they should devote YOUR life to, by killing you. Why should you or I die to further THEIR cause?

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    33. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My parents made the same argument (seems to be a popular way of thinking for baby boomers). They quit making it when I compared American soldiers to ISIS in the same way:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_mutilation_of_Japanese_war_dead

      They didn't believe me at first, but they do now. I guess these things weren't taught in school in the 50s/60s (Perhaps if it were the Vietnam war would have been avoided?)

      Soldiers on both sides do gruesome things. The reasoning behind it can be for a purpose (treats, ie: ISIS) or completely purposeless (trophies for Americans). The important thing is to end violence and promote peace. The first step is not involving yourself in violence until the violence comes to you.

    34. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you think terrorists should be allowed to commit an act before they're captured or killed then?

      They wouldn't seem to be terrorists before they've committed a terrorist act, now, would they? Unless thoughtcrime is enough to brand you as a terrorist...

    35. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Your understanding of Islam is as popular as it is wrong. Islam is quite tolerant of other religions. Note, that site I just linked is maintained by Muslims who seek to share their views with the world and dialogue about them with each other...unlike this site which sounds intelligent but is made by anti-islamics who seek to make the religion look evil by offering their own reading of some of its texts (with no regard to what its teachers actually teach and practice).

      Have you ever heard of the Ottoman empire? People of all faiths lived openly side-by-side, and even served in the military, in a Muslim empire.

      Get your facts straight. ISIS are religious extremists who have been publicly condemned by Muslims around the world.

    36. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by scamper_22 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I just had this conversation last night. I'm Muslim, at least culturally. I don't really believe anymore.

      I don't know too many people who think people who join ISIS just like to kill people.
      Yes, they want their way of life, and they get their people to join their fight.
      We have our way of life, and we get our people to join our fight.
      Yes, people have reasons.
      Yes, the leaders rally people around causes, sometimes even with bad/alterior motives.
      Yes, the average person normally just wants to live their life.

      But in the end, what does this all matter?
      They're killing, raping, enslaving people.
      Does it matter what made someone a monster? I don't think so.
      Even if someone is born purely genertically a sociopathic murderer, that is what they are.
      You can do what you can to prevent that kind of person from being born/created, but once there, that is what they are.
      People in ISIS are killing people on mass, enslaving people, raping young girls and women, all the while thinking they have a right as per their religion.

      What is evil? What is moral? You don't need to get all philosophical. It's been had 1000 times before. In WW2, the Germans bombed London. But the allies did the same to Germany. Who is really evil?
      I'm going to opt out of that discussion for this post.

      When my relatives sit there and blame everything on the US. The US created ISIS they say. The US created Al-Queda and Sadaam Hussein. It's all done for oil and Israel...

      Unless you're a real libertarian/anarchist, you should come to accept one simple rule in life. You will be living under someone's rule. And being in charge is freakin hard. When Syrians were rising against Assad, the demand on our world leaders was to support the rebels. Well turns out that gave the opportunity for ISIS to rise as rebels. What a mind-fuck of a choice. I personally tend to be a little isolationist in these respects for that reason, but it has to be acknowledged that it means I'd let a Rawandan Genocide happen. Unless you're preapred to be the boss and take over and rule a region for a century or massively invest in it, don't jump in. In these global conflicts, all you can do pick the best/least bad ruler.

      Just like in WW2, you have to kind of put the tactics used on the backburner. Not totally of course ,but you enter a blackhole of immorality. War is sick and depraved and it reduces all of us. You can't be Ghandi about things. Non-violence only works against nice enemies like colonialists, and even then, backrupt colonialists who were pulling out anyways :P
      All you can ask yourself is would you rather have had the Nazi ideology win or the Allies?

      Would you rather be ruled by Putin?
      Would you rather be ruled by ISIS?
      Would you rather be ruled by Saudi Arabia?
      Would you rather be ruled by USA.

      I'm not even American, but the choice is pretty plain to see in my eyes. At this point in history, give me American Rule any day of the week.
      Although, I'll say the Chinese are winning me over to some extent.

    37. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Conformity in worshipping Allah and serving those ranked higher than yourself is the only moral way to live.

      Replace Allah with Jesus and you have the American Fundamentalist Christian.

    38. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      The cause is that people are fucked up. A large number of western young people have flocked to the ISIS banners. These people are largely from middle class backgrounds and good families. Many are from Muslim families that fled the same area because of the bat shit crazy fuckers currently causing all the hell there. I know most Muslim people want to live in piece but there is a sizable percentage that think Sharia law is peace. There is no reasoning with those. That so many people from so many backgrounds flock to it shows that it's not any one thing feeding this insanity. I doubt there will ever be peace on this Earth as long as humans remain on it.

    39. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Oligonicella · · Score: 0

      I still think I'm right - I'm not saying that I think there's any moral equivalence between me and them.

      Followed immediately by:

      But I'm able to see that they have exactly the reverse position, and thus that in their minds, they're not just not evil, but even rigtheously good.

      Moral equivalence.

      You are conflating the rational response to a murderous group of people to their psychopathic rationale for murdering. That sir, is moral equivocating. Morals is about what you do, not what you think.

    40. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by c · · Score: 1

      Saudi Arabia beheads people almost every month.

      And?

      If you're trying to say that Saudi Arabia should be considered "batshit crazy evil" and that the US State Department and the UN are complicit shitbags, most rational westerners won't argue too hard against that position.

      If you're trying to say something else... well, sorry, I missed your point.

      --
      Log in or piss off.
    41. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by pr0nbot · · Score: 2

      Moral relativism and moral equivalence are separate things to me. Moral relativism is to say that different people have different morals, which seems obvious to me. Equivalence is to say that therefore you cannot say anyone is wrong. I'm not saying that. I'm saying that ISIS are wrong.

    42. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think we can quantify evil with math.

      According to foreignpolicy.com, the ratio of Muslims killed to US citizens killed is 30 to 1.

      So ISIL is doing bad things because we've done bad things to them 30 times over.

      Until we justify our egg first status we should shut the fuck up about the chicken.

    43. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you don't let mullahs go around in the mosques you let build in your country preach "death to the West".

      You saw it here, folks! Voltaire has finally been refuted, in France of all places!

      I can't even

      Just a moment....

      Just a moment...

      COMMUNICATIONS INTERRUPTED

    44. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by BradMajors · · Score: 1

      Chopping people's heads off is evil while killing people by dropping bombs on them is peace loving. If only ISIS had enough money to buy planes they could join the peace loving countries of the world.

    45. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, idiot: Define "plotting"

    46. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by WheezyJoe · · Score: 1

      Well, at least he had the dignity to quit. Real politicians double-down on their crazy until a fanbase emerges because he's being a "maverick".

      --
      Take it easy, Charlie, I've got an Angle...
    47. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You MUST be retarded.

    48. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "An eye for an eye' will leave the whole world blind."

      I love that one. It's so full of assumptions that it's ridiculous. It doesn't discern the difference between accidental injury and malicious intent. You probably shouldn't blind a guy for accidentally or negligently wounding a person (though, suing them may make sense). Then, there's the malicious case. There was a guy throwing acid in people's faces in Saudi Arabia, so the courts had him blinded. I can't disagree with that.

    49. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by edtice1559 · · Score: 1

      The issue here is that, since there are always going to be people on this planet, there is no "end." Everything is a means. I can go out and try to suppress an entire group of disenfranchised people in the name of preventing violence. If I define the "end" to be at the height of the repression I can declare success. But this may make a bigger problem later on. That's why we have to pay attention to the means.

    50. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      When the 'dippers' have been at war with the 'dunkers' for 1000 years, you will have a working analogy.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    51. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These people are true believers. Just because it doesn't match your ideology is no reason to believe otherwise.

      Thinking otherwise is a fundamental mistake.

      Bad assumptions lead to bad decisions, such as thinking that removing the leaders will solve the problem.

    52. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by quax · · Score: 1


      Would you rather be ruled by Putin?
      Would you rather be ruled by ISIS?
      Would you rather be ruled by Saudi Arabia?
      Would you rather be ruled by USA.

      As a German living in Canada I'd say you should broaden your scope.

    53. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by operagost · · Score: 1

      You've personally bombed someone?

      Because we're talking about people who have. And no, I'm not going to pretend that there is moral equivalence between people who have might have ironically Nobel Peace prize-winning leaders, yet are peacefully going about their lives, and people who directly attack the innocent and defenseless.

      Because there isn't moral equivalence. And while, as a Christian, I'm painfully aware that 100% of us have done evil and deserve death, I'm not going to excuse violent actions in some idiotic attempt to build political cachet.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    54. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Compared to other less tolerant Christian and Islamic areas, that is true. The Ottomans were a fairly tolerant sort, and Islam is a religion based in its roots on conquest, which had the side effect of ensuring it had very specific rules that deal with the treatment of the conquered peoples.

      However, it is important to point out that these communities were considered apart from Muslims and there was a tax and other restrictions on them. This is pretty much the same scenario that Jews would have lived under in the West when the anti-semitic feeling was in a low intensity period.

      Further, the scenario was very much one where you were heavily encouraged to become a Muslim. And you can forget about proselytizing or any conversion to your religion from the dominant state religion. That would get you killed.

      And finally, this treatment is generally only extended to People of the Book (Christians and Jews). Actual pagans are usually required to convert or die, although this did not always happen in places like India for rather practical reasons. Your religion was meant to wither on the vine and die, some were just accorded a little more respect than others.

      Now, compared to being burned at the stake or being the subject of a progrom, those inequities seem like a mere inconvenience. And there were groups like the Greeks who actually did quite well due to their high level of education and could become rather rich in the merchant business and even as princes of client states in the Balkans. The Ottoman vilayet system was remarkably tolerant for an intolerant age, especially for Jews.

      Nevertheless, you were most definitely a second class citizen in a manner in which would be intolerable in a Western society today unless you were a Muslim. And that tolerance was extended as a means of pacifying a large, multi-ethnic empire in a manner that many Muslims today might not subscribe to. Bear in mind, the Ottoman empire really wasn't conquered, it rotted from the inside out. Many Muslim thinkers would view the Ottoman empire as a failure. This is why your ISIS types are looking at the early Arab caliphate for inspiration.

    55. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Daetrin · · Score: 1

      "I'm talking about the poor fool who agrees to be sent on a suicide mission in the hope of a better life. He's the one who needs education."

      An education would be nice, but what they really need is a decent economy.

      Having a large middle class is a societal stabilizer. So is having an economy in which even most of the lower class can afford at least some luxuries. There are people in America and Europe who are just as religous and/or political as the members of ISIS, but they _generally_ don't engage in terrorist activities. There are a few loons who decide to bomb abortion clinics or government buildings or black churches or what have you, but not entire armies of them.

      As much as conservatives like to complain about poor people having iPhones and such, given the choice between dying for your beliefs and spending the afternoon playing flappy bird the vast majority of people will go with flappy bird. And as banal as that makes it sound it still seems like the right choice to me. It's the people who don't have flappy bird, or jobs, or food, (or who have families or fellow countrymen in that position) who decide they have nothing to lose and are willing to go out and kill people in hopes of an afterlife that's better than their current life.

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    56. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the point. They think your indulgence is indecent and the only right thing to do is send you to god for judgement. That is what they think is decency.

      Who is right? Who has authority above all others? No one. That is the point. There is nothing PC about it. In fact, the opposite is true. Essentially whatever you want is good and whatever opposes you is evil and thus goes the justification for killing anyone that is not "like you".

    57. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the US bombs incessantly, including civilian targets on many occasions, sometimes for rather abstract or obscure reasons (e.g. the Medicines Sans Frontiers hospital). Sometimes for false reasons like the claims of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Israel occasionally states some of its assassinations are intended to "send a clear signal to the leadership of Hamas that XYZ", with the target not even in the military wing. Anwar Al-Awlaki was offed from the air, with his son, because he had strong anti-US opinions.

      So, is this more civilized than chopping a guy's head off? A missile kills a lot more people than the target. If it's done by the push of a button, then is it morally superior than forcing your blade through your opponent/victim's veins? And, you know - what about the atom bomb? Hundred(s) of thounsands of the most horrid deaths imaginable, and ruined lives of radiation victims for decades. Is that not monstrous? Oh, wait, it was intended to make the war end sooner by... terrorizing the Japanese into early submission.

      I'm no fan of the Islamic State. I'm just an anonymous coward (from Israel/Palestine which is why I mentioned the state I'm from and it's patron state.) -but I have to say I don't believe in Evil. People are not evil, organizations are not evil, nobody acts with the goal being the causing of pain and suffering - it's practically always ruthlessness, or disregard for the other/heretic/inferior race etc. (Unless you have a neurological condition, and that's treatable.) The politics can suck and be horrible, and still - not evil.

    58. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Chopping people's heads off to make a point and to recruit more crazies is not necessarily evil... uh huh.

      We execute people to "make a point" when they feel they warrant it. Lots of people are calling for indiscriminate carpet bombing of Syria to "Make a point" which will undoubtedly murder far more than 150 civilians.

      I'm not 100% convinced that amputation is better or worse than life imprisonment. I would take amputation to being a three-strike burglar thrown in jail for the next 40 years.

      'The Road to Hell is paved with good intentions' I think is the most apt true-ism in this instance. ISIS has a viewpoint on what the perfect society looks like. They'll kill or jail or enslave anyone who threatens that ideal society. So do we. We just have a more 'enlightened' perspective on what that ideal society looks like.

    59. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would you rather be ruled by USA.

      As Abraham Lincoln noted in his Gettysburg address, the ideal government is a government of, by and for the people. Of course, until our robotic overlords take power, governments are always people. In this context, though, "people" means ordinary people.

      So, Iraq would ideally be governed by a government of, by, and for ordinary Iraqis. And Syria would ideally be governed by a government of, by, and for ordinary Syrians. Etc.

      The complaint against Americans is not that they are not living well. It's that they are living well at the expense of others. More precisely, the complaint is that there is a small, mostly hereditary, ruling class in the USA (e.g. the Bushes and Clintons) who are living very well on money and other favors obtained from dictators (e.g. the Saudi ruling family) in the Middle East and that, in exchange, this ruling class in the USA is using the US military to keep these dictators in power by helping them subjugate their own people.

      More broadly, the fact that someone is living a life of superior material comfort doesn't mean that they are a good person. Kim Jong Il, the dictator of North Korea who lived from 1942 to 2011, would be a blatant example of that. In a world where 20,000 children a day die of poverty, very few people who are richer deserve to be richer and very few people who are poorer deserve to be poorer.

      And, speaking of material comfort, things are pretty good in the USA. But much of that is unrelated to the government. For example, if Denmark had the climate of San Diego and English as their national language then I'd much prefer to live in Denmark than the USA.

    60. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Honestly the most free 1st world country I can think of right now is Japan [the restrictions are societal, not legal]. Canada and Australia would have had my vote until they stared getting super crazy about monitoring the internet. Europe is already lost.

    61. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there are physical diseases, mental diseases and... social diseases
      Isis is a social disease, is dysfunctional and spread by by contagion through memes
      It foster a corrupt social tissue and feed of its hosts
      while some other systems can forge long lived metastable social entities able to coexist with other groups, Isis need to corrupt the surrounding that feeds on, leaving only decay
      Isis kind of grows are as viable to society as cancers are to the body, this apply also to social diseases as far right Nazism or far left pol pot

      Bad for their people and bad for the rest

    62. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      corruption is a social cancer, in America, China or Saudi Arabia..it doesn't matter where, we tolerate a cancer when is under control, doesn't spread and if getting rid of it can cause more damage that leave it be, despite the murders and organised crime I consider US society mostly functional provided the damage doesn't spread too much
      with an Isis kind of thing you don't ask yourself will it grow of control?, will it metastasise? will it spread?
      Of course it will, it is the whole purpose of it, the same way than Nazi ideology cannot tolerate nothing else, the sooner you get rid of it the lower the damage to the healthier tissue and the bigger the chances of survival

    63. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by scamper_22 · · Score: 2

      There's a lot of ideal things.

      But when there are multiple powerful entities vying for power, you have to deal with that.

      I'm under no illusions as to the actions of America. They do some pretty messed up things. They also live all at the expense of others.

      But you need to go one step further and ask. If they're not 'in charge' what would the other empire in charge look like?

      I'll still put my money with the Americans right now. It could change in the future of course.

      There are a lot of countries that just don't do very much actively in the world and are great places to live. I live happily in one of them (Canada). There are plenty of places to live much better than the USA.

      It's just a reality that the world has countries vying for power.
      That is the thrust of what I'm saying.

      Just like in WW2, what would you have done against Hitler? No, as flawed as Britain/America/Allies were at the time, most of us would choose to have the allies win than the Nazis.

      Or now. America is screwed up. But would people want ISIS to rise up. A state whose ideology includes slavery, rape, religious tyranny, ethnic cleansing, destruction of anything non-Islamic...

      Yeah, it's not a good choice. I'd much rather the world be full of Canada's and Denmarks. But that's not the world we live in. And Canada/Denmark at this point in our history aren't really capable of standing up to any bad country/empire vying for power.

      Not having power means you can have a certain morality, but never lose sight of the reality that when it comes to the powers vying for control, you should have an idea of which one is preferable.

    64. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wouldn't that make america the biggest terrorist in the world?

    65. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course there is a perspective (that I expect is impossible to argue against from any ration basis) to suggest that America is BY FAR the world's worst terrorists and have quite-probably THE WORST record on human rights in modern times. The gulf war alone (which was incontrovertibly a heinous war crime and, by most definitions, an act of terrorism) killed well over 100,000 civilians. Plus, all the combatants were actually just people trying to defend their country from a hostile and baseless INVASION. ISIL could only dream of affecting the sort of terror campaigns that America undertakes every day. Then we look at how ISIL are portrayed as hating "everything western" and we say "oh my gosh!" but few seem to notice the baseless hatred that grows for "everything Islam". If you look back through history (1 day, 1 year, 1 century, 1000 years) then over any epoch Islam looks relatively peaceful in the "killing in the name of" numbers. If we are looking for a religion with the highest proportion of "radical" members then nothing competes with the Zionists of Judaism in the modern area. Historically nothing can compete with Catholicism.

    66. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better impeach your president then. And the French one too.

    67. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason the USA is powerful is because it's big (3rd largest in the world by population) and industrialized - not because the, mostly hereditary, ruling class in the USA has been using the US military to prop up dictators in the middle east banana republic style. In fact, there is a compelling argument that ISIS exists precisely because of such actions. The current conflicts in the Middle East are much less of a proxy war between empires and much more of a conflict between ordinary people in the Middle East and an international ruling class that is collaborating to exploit them. Fundamentally, the teams aren't empire versus empire, the teams are ordinary people versus ruling class. But, ironically, the ruling class seems to have you convinced that the solution to the problems in the Middle East is to double down on even more banana republic style violence and oppression.

    68. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Xest · · Score: 2

      Are you telling us that you really think both Germany and Canada are completely free of overarching American influence?

      I think you'll be bitterly disappointed when reality hits you in the face as if that were true then people like Snowden would be sat quite comfortably in a German or Canadian neighbourhood right now.

      Instead he's stuck in Russia, because the only way to escape American influence is to live in one of the countries opposed to it.

      He isn't saying some countries are better than others, he's making the point that there's always a stronger power that ultimately dictates at least some elements of your life, and if you live in the West or Western friendly countries that power is the US. The alternative is to go to the US' opponents like China, or Russia, or lawless areas governed by militias like ISIS, the Taliban, or al Shabab.

    69. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      Or now. America is screwed up. But would people want ISIS to rise up. A state whose ideology includes slavery, rape, religious tyranny, ethnic cleansing, destruction of anything non-Islamic...

      False dichotomy. In real life, both "sides" can be bad. Stalin most likely killed more people than Hitler ever did, yet Stalin was on the opposite side of Hitler in the War.

      Here, both ISIS and the US can "win" in spite of being enemies. Both can be bad. Some more bad than others some times in some ways.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    70. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, what created ISIS is that Bush defeated the previous puppet of the International Socialist, so the International Socialist had to find a replacement to get back Iraq under their control. The problem is that the "replacement" did not want to be a puppet of the International Socialist. The true evil in this story is the IS.

      Remember how after Bush got rid of Hussein, all the "left" press was in a fierce campaign pushing for leaving Iraq unarmed and unattended, so that it would be easier for them to reconquer with terrorism, which it always has been the 'socialist' way to overthrow government. Note how the socialist leaders such as Hollande are just now admitting that they maybe helped a bit in creating ISIS. Look which countries had secret pacts with Saddam, and look at the list of members of IS.

      The Middle East will always be on war, because the faction that controls it unimpeded wins the game of Risk, due to the configuration of Earth's map. It's no coincidence that was the place with the first and most powerful civilizations, because almost all trade lines have to pass through it, so it was the first place in which permanent settling was an option.

      In fact, Iraq would be a much better place today if it were not for the socialists that turned it into an artificial desert with a population that cannot provide for themselves, because as Detroit can attest, socialist policies are worse than Attila riding on an Atomic bomb.

    71. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by neoritter · · Score: 1

      You apparently do not have a clear view of what it was actually like living as dhimmi. It was not like how it appears on paper.

    72. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by neoritter · · Score: 1

      A lot of the Westerners flocking to ISIS are educated people.

    73. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      I certainly do not have a day to day view of it, having never lived as one, and having no desire to do so. I know that many people lived like that successfully and it was certainly much better than the alternative for those who had no other choice.

      However, unless the reality of the situation is actually substantially different than my understanding of what the facts are, then I don't know that there is anything above that is not actually true. Subjugated people can be quite content, but still be aware of their subjugation and status.

    74. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I suggest that ISIS practice the chopping off of heads solely on people who agree with their message...

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    75. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We make war so that we may live in peace".

      Fighting for peace is the same as fucking for chastity.

      There is violence for the right reasons, and violence for the wrong reasons.

      Who gets to decide what is the "right" reason?
      Normally in war the right reason depends on which side you are on. No matter if you agree or not they do have a reason to chop off heads and they feel it is for the right reason. Nazi's killed Jews for what they felt was the right reasons. The US killed Native Americans and also chopped off heads, and the breasts of Native women for what they felt was the right reason.

      Right reason?
      Humm we invaded a people who have lived on the same land for thousands of years. Killed their women and children, and destroyed their homes. They is turn kill our people and chop off heads. Did you ever stop and think that if we hadn't invaded their country they wouldn't be chopping off heads? Seems to me that invading someone's home is a wrong act and killing in self defence of ones home is a right reasons to kill. If I come into your home and kill your wife and kids are you just going to sit there and do nothing or are you going to try to chop off my head if you can? Personally if you come into my home to bring harm yes I will attempt to kill you before you have a chance to bring harm maybe even chop off your head in the process. If you don't want to be attacked then don't invade my home. Knock on the door and ask to come in and most likely you'll be invited in and offered a cup of coffee and find at all in all I am a very peaceful person, well until you try to hurt my kids.

      We need more violence for the right reasons because war, after all, is a contest of violence.

      From that statement I can tell you have never served in a war zone. May I suggest going down to your local recruiter and join up and grab a M-16 and find out what war is REALLY about. You have no right to talk of war until you have been covered with the body parts of your friend after a mortar went off next to him or seen the cooked and crispy bodies of women and children in a village that you just called a napalm attack down on.

      These crazy people must be rooted out and dealt with

      Did you ever think to look at the fact that maybe the politicians, warmongers, and corporations starting these wars for profit are the crazy people???

      If you do go down and pick up that M-16 and go to war you will find that the bastards that start and continue the wars NEVER actually fight and die in their war. It will be you that does the dying and for what? To fill their pockets with oil and money.

      After you have picked up that M-16 and been in a war zone then let's talk about the right and wrong of war. It ain't no video game.

      A Vietnam Vet

    76. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by quax · · Score: 1

      Canada has to accommodate many US demands for sure. The country is entirely dependent on easy access to the US market.

      For Germany it's more of a choice. Granting Snowden asylum risks to be cut off from American intelligence, not a good deal at the current time.

    77. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We've tried stupid reactionary wars.

      Actually, we tried war stupidly - we did not ever intend to completely break the will or capacity of our enemies. Anything short of total war is doomed to fail, but we simply do not have the cruelty necessary to annihilate Islam like Rome annihilated Carthage or the Allies annihilated the Axis.

    78. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This above is complete moral relativistic BS.

      I'm sorry, but beliefs matter. And morals are all about how your apply your beliefs to either encourage or hamper human well-being.

      Case in point:

      It is patently obvious to any sane person that men and women should be treated equally, but don't tell that to a sharia court justice, therefore sharia is not fair, and does not promote human well-being when that human is a woman, and is therefore a less good option that other court systems. PERIOD.

      It is patently obvious that pushing someone off a building because they are gay does NOT promote human well-being for that person, and is therefore not the best moral option.

      It is patently obvious that not allowing free speach, freedom of (and from) religion, free movement, freedom of association, and the freedom to pursue your dreams also does NOT promote human well-being and therefore is not the best moral option.

      I would rather be ruled by a government that promotes human well-being to the best of it's abilities. It's clear to me that Putin, Saudi Arabia, and ISIS (graded best to worst) are not good options. Is the USA a good option? Compared to those other 3, it's clearly the best. Can we find better? Yes, absolutely. Should we strive to do better? Absolutely.

      But don't give me this moral relativistic shit. Muslims know that killing apostates, stoning adulterous wives (even when it's lies or there's no proof), and keeping women under the bootstrap of their male 'superiors' is totally morally unacceptable. If they don't, then they are simply ignorant savages. It's no wonder that they lost the cultural battles. The Islamic culture used to be the center of the enlightened world, but they lost it when they decided to become intolerant and bigotted.

      And now, if they don't fucking start seriously reconsidering their values and beliefs, they are going to lose again.

      The house of Islam is burning, and its the Muslim Liberals who need to step up and start a bucket brigade.

    79. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      "Does it matter what made someone a monster? I don't think so."

      It matters if a bomb kills 10 of them, yet the act of killing them ends up being enough motivation to recruit 100 more in their place.

      You can't really destroy an ideology with war. You can kill enough of them that they are not able to attack other people for some period of time, but it will keep coming back unless you start curing (or at least mitigating) some of the root causes.

    80. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by goose-incarnated · · Score: 1

      'An eye for an eye' will leave the whole world blind.

      Ironically, in support of a non-violent response you use the quote of one of the best known peace-brokers in history, but this man you quote, Ghandi himself, was not able to broker a peace with islamists. He eventually caved, broke of a bit of India, called it Pakistan and gave it to islam in the hope that their violence would then be contained.

      --
      I'm a minority race. Save your vitriol for white people.
    81. Re: Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry idiot - if you're plotting to kill people that make you a terrorist , whether or not you get to carry the act out.

      So basically, what you are saying is those who plotted to kill OBL in another country were terrorists. Interesting set of two faced values you have there. If they do it it's wrong if we do it it's right. You're happy to yell "kill 'em all" and then in the same breath ask "why do they hate us".

      I'll tell you why, because you are a selfish cunt with no balls who will beat up anyone who can't fight back. You'll never get of you fat lazy, beer swillin, pizza eating, mouth breather ass to do anything that wasn't for your own selfish cunt face.

      Right wing idiots like you are the end of our way of life. Go back to walmart and do something useful, like sweeping floors, cunt.

    82. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Going to respectfully disagree with you on the point that they believe they are righteously good. Nobody has any good reason for drowning people slowly in a cage, or cutting their heads off with fighting knives. Quick executions, yes. Slow torture, no.

      Neither would someone, believing himself to be righteous, capture women as sex slaves, or sell them on the black market.

      They are brigands, nothing less. They just spew the religious rhetoric, because it plays well with those they wish to recruit.

      Kill them to the last man.

    83. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by Xest · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's simply intelligence, the fact is whilst the EU is the single largest combined economy in the world, the US is the largest individual economy in the world. You're going to see a lot of economic benefit from trading with that, and if it's also acting as your nuclear shield, then that's kind of a big deal.

      Consider this, if the US wasn't influencing any of these countries by offering them protection in return for that influence, and they were left to fend for themselves, do you genuinely think the Russian border wouldn't extend beyond the areas of Ukraine they've now stolen? Putin would've captured much of Eastern Europe back years ago if they were merely fending for themselves with no outside influence - it's a do as we want and we'll make sure no one else forces you to do as they want situation.

    84. Re:Real smart fella (sarcasm) by quax · · Score: 1

      You seem to forget that France as well as the UK are nuclear powers. France already invited Germany several times to join its nuclear shield, but the anti-nuclear sentiments in Germany are too strong.

      In terms of security the ground troops are more relevant.

      Also Russia is mostly about business these days. Attacking your best NG customers is a bad business strategy (Ukraine on the other hand never paid the bills on time or at market price).

      The trade with the US is obviously a big deal, but you don't have to be to closely allied to get free trade, and China nowadays is almost as important a trade partner as are the US.

      So I think a case can be made that intelligence these days is the most important aspect.

  5. r u srs by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well no. He was able to speak his mind. Now he's dealing with the consequences of not pandering to morons

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    1. Re:r u srs by cold+fjord · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So the view of "morons" is that ISIS is dangerous?

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    2. Re: r u srs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shaddap and drink yer poo!

    3. Re:r u srs by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So the view of "morons" is that ISIS is dangerous?

      The view of "morons" is that the world is broken down into the simple black and white camps of the good guys (us, obviously) and the bad guys (anyone with whom we have an armed conflict.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re:r u srs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was about to state that you are a moron, then I read your nick.

      For anyone else who jumps in and doesn't know that cold fjord is a shill I still decided to comment.

      No-one is disputing that a tornado is dangerous. Only a moron would claim that a tornado is evil.
      To claim that ISIS are evil you would have to define evil. Either by biblical absoluteness and that is just superstitious, it's not like the ISIS leaders wake up every morning and says that they are going to do evil today, clearly they think they are working for a good cause, just like cold fjord thinks or anyone else who considers the end to be more important than the means.

    5. Re:r u srs by Junta · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The unfortunate thing is that I think his short, misguided message shows signs of a thoughtful nuanced consideration of the circumstances. ISIS does something and it rapidly degenerates into a broad set of racist generalization and apathy toward the innocent near ISIS.

      In the wake of an ISIS attack that indiscriminately kills innocent civilians a lot of the knee-jerk is to respond in kind, to the point of many loud folks wouldn't mind 'carpet bombing' known places of ISIS gatherings, being completely thoughtless of the collateral damage. Innocents dying on the other side then contributes to escalation, as more people on both sides become more and more desperate to see vengeance carried out.

      Now the military activity seems to be currently controlled by folks with cooler heads with a focus on trying to be precise and minimize collateral damage, but the state of public rhetoric is enough to push haste that could cause mistakes, or mis-characterize a precision strike effort as a 'carpet bombing'. which could dangerously rile up candidates for ISIS recruitment. It's worth taking a moment to be very precise about who the enemy is, and how they came to have enough power to carry out the evil stuff that's happening. The answer must acknowledge that not every person that they manipulate to their cause is evil or even particularly aware of the big picture, acting only on their perception of events shaped by ISIS propaganda.

      Unfortunately, just because not all of them are evil, that makes them no less dangerous. However if you acknowledge that not all are evil, you may be able to get the big picture narrative far enough to win over a few ISIS aligned folks or at least mitigate risk of others joining. That's not to say to do say in lieu of military action, but if you can get that narrative so pervasive that it touches folks you don't even know are connected to ISIS, there's at least some chance for upside, but not much chance for downside. The problem is that such a nuanced approach doesn't sit well. Acknowledging the peaceful method and doing military action against them at the same time means you are humanizing them and killing them at the same time. This is and has been the reality of war from the beginning of man, but to acknowledge that reality is a huge problem for the way we are wired emotionally.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    6. Re:r u srs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yet you find it easy to just write off anyone who disagrees with this guy as a moron. That's pretty black and white. I guess that makes you a moron too and now you'll think I'm a moron for thinking you're a moron and the circle will continue.
       
      You really should think about these things more clearly before you go flapping your gums, moron.

    7. Re:r u srs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It does help when the bad guys in this case are lunatics who indiscriminately attack civilians in bloodthirsty marketing campaigns rather than actually engaging in any armed conflict.

      Maybe not black and white, but definitely a very dark shade of grey and white.

    8. Re:r u srs by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      The view of "morons" is that the world is broken down into the simple black and white camps of the good guys (us, obviously) and the bad guys (anyone with whom we have an armed conflict.)

      While the world and its politics are often indeed nuanced more often than not, in this case there isn't too much gray area when it comes to the whole ISIS/ISIL movement.

      Sure, we can argue all day long as to their genesis, their ultimate goals, their strategies... but in the face of a tsunami of verifiable fact concerning ISIS' actions? Only a sophomore, equivocator, or (let's just put it out there) coward would describe their organization as anything less than the very face of evil.

      Even in the all-too-pandering world of politics, there are still some statements that are not mere pandering, and some statements that are either incredibly stupid or beyond the pale. I suspect our Democrat friend in Minnesota recently discovered that the hard way.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    9. Re:r u srs by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 2

      Evil, not dangerous.

      People like this unrealistic ideal that anyone they don't like is some kind of irredeemable demon whose entire life revolves around punching babies and kicking puppies by pure reflex. The truth is people largely fall into groups, march with the group mentality, and develop fears and prejudices and all kinds of other things revolving around their sense of security--including their sense of entitlement, whereby they feel others are attacking them by not giving them what they rightly deserve.

      You hear a good many vocal Americans talking about how we need to kill all the Muslims, or how anyone brown is a terrorist, or whatnot. If you really look around you, you realize Hitler was just your every-day dude; he happened to gain power over a country and its military.

    10. Re:r u srs by flopsquad · · Score: 1

      +1 Effective Rebuttal.

      Even for the most ambivalent of moral relativists, it should not be too difficult to call out as evil mass beheading, forced sexual slavery, and simultaneous murder-by-explosives/demolition-of-antiquity.

      --
      Nothing posted to /. has ever been legal advice, including this.
    11. Re:r u srs by fustakrakich · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nobody ever said they aren't dangerous. But the word "evil" is strictly used to stir people up. And everybody still ignores that big ol' elephant in the room. You all like to scream about all this religious bullshit, and completely overlook the big pile of money and weapons, courtesy the four friendly empires that are propping these people up for their own "needs". Convince ISIS to point their guns the other way, and will suddenly become "allies", just like Al Qaeda is now. There's lots of horse trading going on in deciding "who's a terrorist". It is extremely easy to see how they define the word. I know you are on a mission here, but you could apply a little "pragmatism" yourself when trying to defend your position, something a bit more substantive than the mere propaganda you're putting forth now.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    12. Re:r u srs by DarkTempes · · Score: 4, Insightful

      My only issue with that is that I don't necessarily really know that ISIS is about irrational bloodthirsty marketing campaigns.

      In Western media we never actually get to hear the other side of the story and I certainly don't speak Arabic or Farsi and so even if I had access to the other side I wouldn't be able to understand their message.

      I could certainly see that from a certain perspective it might look like Western nations are warmongering resource hungry invaders who indiscriminately bomb civilians. So when we get bombed it's terrorism but when we bomb them and kill innocents it's not? I don't think we're quite as 'white' as we claim to be.

      Read The Intercept's drone program report and you'll see that when we bomb someone on very iffy intelligence (because 3rd world countries) we automatically classify any incidentally killed people as enemy combatants until such a time after the fact as they can be verified as innocent civilians and then they're reclassified.
      I might be off a little on specific terminology but not on the gist of it.
      We're assassinating bad guys in other countries because there is no law system to coordinate with but we're also murdering innocent people at the same time.
      We're not exactly paragons of moral excellence there.

      Note that I'm not trying to apologize for ISIS. I think the mostly likely answer is that they are religiously fanatical people who are attempting to take advantage of a power vacuum created by the Syrian civil war, the weakening of governments by the Arab Spring in the North African region, and the effects of removing a dictator from power in Iraq.
      But I don't really know. In my experience, our mainstream entertainment-based media is better at twisting the truth to get viewers than actually informing people in an unbiased fashion.

    13. Re:r u srs by rickb928 · · Score: 2

      The true view of "morons" is that the world is not broken down into the simple black and white camps of the good guys and the bad guys.

      Evil is not good. If you are uncomfortable with that reality, at least do not prevent others from protecting themselves from evil, and you also if they choose to.

      And if you cling to the notion that the world cannot be divided into neat camps of 'good' and 'evil', you are partly correct. There is the third camp, 'neither', which when confronted with evil may cringe and freeze. If the 'neithers' however try to disclaim 'evil', they are part of the problem.

      Evil is real, and to deny it is to risk not merely becoming a victim, but permitting it to expand and continue.

      'Good', 'bad', these sometimes are choices, but often are other names for 'good' and 'evil'.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    14. Re:r u srs by Feyshtey · · Score: 1

      So in your mind, what we label "bad guys" would be those who throw homosexuals off of rooftops, stone rape victims, beat or murder women who show their face in public or drive a car, who sell women and children into sex slavery, who murder anyone who refuses to convert to the religious doctrine that requires these actions of it's followers?

      Is it your position then that these people and these actions are just misunderstood? That "evil" is a false label for these behaviors?

      --
      "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it,..." - Nancy Pelosi
    15. Re:r u srs by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      "you may be able to get the big picture narrative far enough to win over a few ISIS aligned folks or at least mitigate risk of others joining"

      So long as ISIS and other groups have leaders who intend to oppress others, and are able to recruit replacements to fill their ranks, the evil continues.

      First, call them out for what they are. Evil.

      Then, kill or imprison them to at least stop their evil actions.

      Finally, call out their beliefs that they use to justify their evil actions.

      Pretending they should be understood as people who 'think they are working for a good cause' is dangerous. They do their evil consciously. Unless they can be discouraged or convinced otherwise, this continues. So far, successful discouragement has taken the form of killing or imprisoning them. You are aware of an alternative that works?

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    16. Re:r u srs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what justifications do you think there could be for academics being killed for studying an ancient city or homosexuals being thrown off roofs just for being gay?
       
      Seriously, I'm just waiting to hear how you think these things are somehow justified in any form of modern civilization and you're just being led astray by the western media. This should be rich.

    17. Re:r u srs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      clearly they think they are working for a good cause

      Their "good cause" just happens to be bringing about the apocalypse. Whether evil or not, it can definitely be defined as f#$%ed up as well as not something that promotes worldwide stability. As a human race, one thing we have all mostly agree upon is that slavery is wrong, rape is wrong, cruel and unusual punishment is wrong and using violence to expand your territory is wrong to name a few things that the general world has rejected. Sure there are bad actors including the USA who partially violate some of these rules but noone is openly violating so many taboos as ISIS. At least when the USA, etc.. has done an invasion, they present justification to the rest of the world. Not since hitler have we had someone doing such an aggressive land and power grab where the object is to take as much land as possible as quickly as possible using any violent means.

    18. Re:r u srs by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of English-language publications from media sources in the region. There are also reports from various groups that consistently paint the same picture.

      The view of ISIS as "evil" isn't a twisting of the media. When you've managed to turn the entire world against you with such disparate groups as the West, Russia, and al-Qaeda essentially on the same side opposing you, it's usually a good sign you're on the wrong path.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    19. Re:r u srs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His first mistake was thinking average Americans are capable of being smarter than the average ISIL fighter. Hint: they're equally as lacking in intelligence capability.

    20. Re:r u srs by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 2

      My only issue with that is that I don't necessarily really know that ISIS is about irrational bloodthirsty marketing campaigns.

      Just look at all the videos they post showing beheadings. They LOVE their bloodthirsty marketing campaign - it gets them recruits from the wacko population and inspires fear and outrage in their enemies.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    21. Re:r u srs by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Sure, we can argue all day long as to their genesis, their ultimate goals, their strategies...

      Or we can argue about who "they" are, because those who make them possible share their guilt.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    22. Re:r u srs by Junta · · Score: 1

      I'm saying that while you take the regrettable, but necessary violent action to stop the threat and try to unravel things at the top, you also acknowledge that declaring 'evil' and brushing every other consideration under the rug exacerbates how many people are helping the 'evil' cause going forward.

      Being 100% non-violent would be ineffectual. However, doing *only* the violent response fails to adequately mitigate the risk.

      The core of utterly irredeemable evil actors within ISIS could not put fourth the power and authority they do without the efforts of a lot of actors who are not so hard core. Also single minded focus on the violent response without other considerations creates more fresh recruits. A would-be martyr is killed either way with needed violent action, but additional non-violent action is needed to make sure most people have all the data and not consider him a martyr and instead a crazy and/or evil actor putting *everyone* at risk.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    23. Re:r u srs by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      So the view of "morons" is that ISIS is dangerous?

      The view of "morons" is that the world is broken down into the simple black and white camps of the good guys (us, obviously) and the bad guys (anyone deliberately inflicting maximum civilian casualties.)

      FTFY, moron.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    24. Re:r u srs by sociocapitalist · · Score: 3, Interesting

      So when we get bombed it's terrorism but when we bomb them and kill innocents it's not? I don't think we're quite as 'white' as we claim to be.

      There is a big difference between waging war against military targets, making a great effort to target them intelligently to minimize civilian casualties...and deliberately targeting civilians.

      I do not support any government that indiscriminately kills civilians (ie Israel) and I hold my own accountable when accidents happen.

      If we wanted to end this war quickly we could carpet bomb that entire part of the world into non-existence - which is what ISIS would do to us, given half a chance, and yet we do not - and THAT is the difference between our sides.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    25. Re:r u srs by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      As a human race, one thing we have all mostly agree upon is that slavery is wrong, rape is wrong, cruel and unusual punishment is wrong and using violence to expand your territory is wrong to name a few things that the general world has rejected.

      No, this is all incorrect. *You* may think all these things are wrong, but not that long ago plenty of people here in the West thought they were just fine. And there's still lots of people in the world who think some of these things (if not all of them) are just fine and dandy.

      Here in the US, a large portion of the population thought slavery was just fine as recently as 150 years ago. Even today, there's still lots of Americans who think slavery is just fine: you can see them flying Confederate flags on their pickups.

      A large fraction of men think rape is fine, depending on circumstances. Something like 1/4 of all women in the US are raped or sexually assaulted at some point. This isn't being done by the same small group of men. And just look at how many Muslim men think it's OK to rape women if they dress too "provocatively". That mindset isn't limited to Muslims though; they're just more likely to be forthcoming with that opinion; you can find plenty of American men saying the same thing on web forums. I'd be surprised if a large fraction of the Slashdot crowd didn't believe in this; this place is chock full of ultra-conservative misogynists.

      Most humans think using violence to expand territory is fine. Russia just did it within the last year, and Putin has wide popular support. China is doing the same even now. The US was doing it 100+ years ago. Back in the Middle Ages, the Europeans were constantly doing this.

      Most humans think cruel and unusual punishment is fine. The Europeans in the Middle Ages burned people at the stake constantly, along with many other cruel punishments. Even today, here in the US we keep people in prison for years and decades; a few hundred years ago, *that* was considered cruel and unusual, which is why they generally didn't have any prisons (only jails, for people awaiting trial). Keeping someone in prison, esp. in solitary confinement, usually winds up giving them mental problems or turning them insane. Somehow back in the Colonial days when they branded people or tossed fruit at them in the stockades, they recognized this and so didn't have any prisons, only swift punishments.

      At least when the USA, etc.. has done an invasion, they present justification to the rest of the world.

      I'm sure ISIS has their own justification too. It's basically just Sharia Law and "the Quran says so", but that's good enough for the people in that part of the world. That's the kind of mentality people from there have. It's not very different from the mentality that people had in the Middle Ages when people were burned at the stake for believing in the "wrong" kind of Christianity.

    26. Re:r u srs by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      You don't have access to ISIS's view point? Have you not seen the dozens of video of beheading they show? Have you not seen them ranting all over social media? I haven't heard a single rational statement from a single ISIS leader, ever. I remember when the PLO were the big thing (yes I'm that old) and they actually made an attempt to reason with their enemies. They had a goal and that goal didn't include the subjugation of everyone on the planet. ISIS want to subject the world to Sharia law. Their leadership has stated this over and over and if you haven't heard it then you're either deaf or have your head in the sand.

    27. Re:r u srs by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      First, call them out for what they are. Evil.

      They're not evil. They think they're doing the right thing. Their religion says so.

      Then, kill or imprison them to at least stop their evil actions.

      They have their own de-facto country now, and an army, so imprisoning them isn't that easy.

      Finally, call out their beliefs that they use to justify their evil actions.

      You can "call them out" all you want, but the people in that region agree with those beliefs. It's all part-and-parcel of their religion. And all the people saying "Islam doesn't condone violence" are just like Christians saying that "Christianity doesn't include speaking in tongues", when there are significant sects which believe exactly that, or saying "Christians don't believe God loves rich people more" when again there's significant sects that believe exactly that (see Prosperity Doctrine). Just because *your* sect of a religion doesn't believe something doesn't mean your beliefs represent the entire religion.

      Pretending they should be understood as people who 'think they are working for a good cause' is dangerous.

      It's not pretending, it's real. These people DO think they're working for a good cause. Their religion and their scriptures say they are. This is the whole problem with religion, especially with extremely barbaric ones whose holy books openly advocate this stuff. You can't use advanced Western ethics to argue against it, because religion requires blind adherence to doctrine.

    28. Re:r u srs by dinfinity · · Score: 1

      One of the most interesting perspectives I've encountered is this one:
      https://www.washingtonpost.com...

      Relevant quotes: "The de-Baathification law promulgated by L. Paul Bremer, Iraq’s American ruler in 2003, has long been identified as one of the contributors to the original insurgency. At a stroke, 400,000 members of the defeated Iraqi army were barred from government employment, denied pensions — and also allowed to keep their guns.
      [...]
      It was under the watch of the current Islamic State leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, that the recruitment of former Baathist officers became a deliberate strategy, according to analysts and former officers.
      [...]
      Baghdadi’s effort was further aided by a new round of de-Baathification launched after U.S. troops left in 2011 by then Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who set about firing even those officers who had been rehabilitated by the U.S. military.
      [...]
      'The Baathists are using Daesh. They don’t care about Baathism or even Saddam. They just want power. They are used to being in power, and they want it back.'"

      And the kicker, for slight comedic relief: "When U.S. officials demobilized the Baathist army, they didn’t de-Baathify people’s minds, they just took away their jobs"

    29. Re:r u srs by Oligonicella · · Score: 1
      So their own videos of drowning people in cages, roasting people to death in cages, executing people on their knees for differing beliefs, executing people for being homosexual, boasting of their sex slaving, executing groups of children and sawing off the heads of live captives doesn't do it for you.

      I dare say your level of convincing is too extreme.

      Note that I'm not trying to apologize for ISIS.

      You only think you're not.

    30. Re:r u srs by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      The sunni/shea war is over 1000 years old. We didn't start it.

      It will keep them busy, there is no denying that. Of course if it was a deliberate strategy, nobody could admit it.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    31. Re:r u srs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The USA has knowingly bombed civilian targets numerous times in the past decade. Drone strikes have been used more and more indiscriminately (as the technology got better and the stomach for losing soldiers got worse) since about a year before Bush's second term finished, and collateral damage became an acceptable part of their use -- up to and including bombing a funeral.

    32. Re: r u srs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like a total cunt.

    33. Re:r u srs by DarkTempes · · Score: 1

      If half of what you're saying is true then why isn't there a UN security council resolution with multi-nation military forces on the ground right now?
      That sounds as bad as the holocaust in everything but number of victims.

    34. Re:r u srs by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      " And all the people saying "Islam doesn't condone violence" are just like Christians saying that "Christianity doesn't include speaking in tongues", when there are significant sects which believe exactly that, or saying "Christians don't believe God loves rich people more" when again there's significant sects that believe exactly that (see Prosperity Doctrine). Just because *your* sect of a religion doesn't believe something doesn't mean your beliefs represent the entire religion."

      Christians saying that "Christianity doesn't include speaking in tongues" don't murder those who disagree.

      Saying "Christians don't believe God loves rich people more" doesn't inspire those who teach the Prosperity Doctrine to violence.

      "Just because *your* sect of a religion doesn't believe something doesn't mean your beliefs represent the entire religion."

      Then Islam may ave to reconcile the violent sects with the nonviolent ones, or risk being tarred with the brush of tolerance and defense.

      Perhaps you should consider that Islam tolerates this violence either because it is unwilling to define its theology to deny such violence, or because it is unwilling to suffer the fate it will willingly condemn the unbeliever to. I understand fear. It cannot quite excuse inaction.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    35. Re:r u srs by sudon't · · Score: 1

      Look, the guy is right. These people don't think of themselves as evil. They think they're doing God's work, (as does everybody else). It's impossible to express a nuanced thought on Twitter because:no space, but I bet this is what he meant. And yes, the Outrage Brigade behaves like an idiot, (or moron, if you prefer). When a lynch mob forms, whether online or IRL, they're not about to ask anyone for clarification, and they're not in a thoughtful mood. I mean, look at some of the comments here.

      --
      -- sudon't

      Air-ride Equipped

    36. Re:r u srs by tomthepom · · Score: 1

      There is a big difference between waging war against military targets, making a great effort to target them intelligently to minimize civilian casualties...and deliberately targeting civilians.

      A distinction that is unfortunately lost when you're on the receiving end.
      If someone kills your family do you think it'll really matter to you if the killer then shouts "Yay!" or "Oops, my bad!".
      Either way you're likely to support any political party, army or terrorist group that promises revenge.

    37. Re:r u srs by Ionized · · Score: 1

      where exactly do you get the idea that islam tolerates this violence? the vast majority of islam denounce ISIS explicitly, which makes you wrong. not only that, but MOST OF WHO ISIS IS KILLING ARE OTHER MUSLIMS. this makes you wrong AND dumb.

    38. Re:r u srs by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Because in the end it's an internal Muslim world problem. Let them fix their own messes.

      Of course they won't, their idea of 'fixing the problem' is killing the other side.

      Our job is simply to maintain the stalemate. It's not like we want the Iranian backed nuts to win.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    39. Re:r u srs by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      My only issue with that is that I don't necessarily really know that ISIS is about irrational bloodthirsty marketing campaigns.

      In Western media we never actually get to hear the other side of the story

      You're just not bothering to consume the media that actually informs on this subject. Read the recent Atlantic article about ISIS . You'll get a thorough and well researched view into their history, motivations, and vision. You, by the way, fit into their vision as a dead guy.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    40. Re:r u srs by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      I do not support any government that indiscriminately kills civilians (ie Israel) and I hold my own accountable when accidents happen.

      If we wanted to end this war quickly we could carpet bomb that entire part of the world into non-existence - which is what ISIS would do to us, given half a chance, and yet we do not - and THAT is the difference between our sides.

      If you were right about Israel, they'd do exactly what you say the other side would do. And yet they very demonstrably do NOT do that, even when they are attacked by people indiscriminately attacking them with hundreds of rockets.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    41. Re:r u srs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is literally one bad election cycle away. We have mainstream Republican candidates who would be happy to start a nuclear holocaust for religious (anti-islam) purposes, and approximately half the population would go happily along with that. We are incredibly lucky to have a reasonable president in office, this has not and will not always be the case. The previous administration was no less evil than Daesh in being warmongering psychopaths. Sure, they sanitized the information coming in from the war and didn't brag about the worst of the atrocities they committed, but in terms of people killed and tortured and displaced, Daesh is a bunch of amateurs in comparison.

    42. Re: r u srs by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      And your statement that ISIS mostly killed other Muslims is the point. Other Muslims don't much kill ISIS assailants.

      Many Muslim nations play political games to avoid confronting violent Muslim groups such as ISIS. They should be held to account.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    43. Re:r u srs by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Very few people are evil for the sake of evil. Someone isn't not evil just because he or she believes in what he or she is doing. By that criterion, the German genocides of WWII were not evil. I'm calling ISIS evil.

      Religious fanatics of any denomination frighten me. You can talk with a reasonable person. You can deter a corrupt person. It's harder to stop the fanatics.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    44. Re:r u srs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even Al Jazeera doesn't like IS/ISIS. Yes, even the Muslim press, biased and state controlled (in some regions) has spoken out against and reported on the atrocities committed by them. So, perhaps, you might want to examine the press you seem to be decrying and not wallow in willful ignorance. "I don't know, I have not researched, but I have an opinion!" Yes, you have an opinion. No, it's not a valid opinion. How you got modded up for that trash is beyond me.

    45. Re:r u srs by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Christians saying that "Christianity doesn't include speaking in tongues" don't murder those who disagree.

      They used to, just a few hundred years ago or so. It was only with the Enlightenment, aka the Age of Reason, and its turn towards secularism, where this stuff stopped. But there's plenty of Republicans who would just love to go back to having a theocracy, and they're exactly the kind of people who would love to burn "heretics" at the stake.

    46. Re:r u srs by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      The view of "morons" is that the world is broken down into the simple black and white camps of the good guys (us, obviously) and the bad guys (anyone with whom we have an armed conflict.)

      There is another set of morons that believe that there is no such thing as good and evil.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    47. Re: r u srs by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      "But there's plenty of Republicans who would just love to go back to having a theocracy, and they're exactly the kind of people who would love to burn "heretics" at the stake.â

      This is ludicrous. I'm not at all convinced you are delusional, so you're likely just engaging in hyperbole to further marginalize those you disagree with.

      Ludicrous.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    48. Re:r u srs by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      I do not support any government that indiscriminately kills civilians (ie Israel) and I hold my own accountable when accidents happen.

      Israel doesn't make a practice of indiscriminately killing civilians, and the "investigations" making those sorts of accusations tend to have "issues".

      Goldstone: You Cannot Undo a Slander
      Israel’s Heroic Restraint
      Scandal Rocks the U.N.
      The U.N.’s Grotesque Gaza Inquiry
      Another Effort to Destroy Israel

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    49. Re:r u srs by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      There is a big difference between waging war against military targets, making a great effort to target them intelligently to minimize civilian casualties...and deliberately targeting civilians.

      A distinction that is unfortunately lost when you're on the receiving end.
      If someone kills your family do you think it'll really matter to you if the killer then shouts "Yay!" or "Oops, my bad!".
      Either way you're likely to support any political party, army or terrorist group that promises revenge.

      Oh I agree that it doesn't matter to them - but it matters very much to me. I would not support a war deliberately targeting civilians, but I do support a war against those who do which is the case here.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    50. Re:r u srs by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      If you were right about Israel, they'd do exactly what you say the other side would do. And yet they very demonstrably do NOT do that, even when they are attacked by people indiscriminately attacking them with hundreds of rockets.

      They do, actually - just look at how many children are killed each time Israel re-invades the occupied territories; Rockets kill 15 Israelis and the Israel kills 1500 Palestinians, hundreds of them children.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    51. Re:r u srs by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      I do not support any government that indiscriminately kills civilians (ie Israel) and I hold my own accountable when accidents happen.

      Israel doesn't make a practice of indiscriminately killing civilians, and the "investigations" making those sorts of accusations tend to have "issues".

      Goldstone: You Cannot Undo a Slander
      Israel’s Heroic Restraint
      Scandal Rocks the U.N.
      The U.N.’s Grotesque Gaza Inquiry
      Another Effort to Destroy Israel

      Of course they have issues as Israel has an extremely strong propaganda arm.

      One might as well argue that the Israeli reports saying otherwise 'have issues'.

      http://www.theguardian.com/wor...
      http://www.bbc.com/news/world-...
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    52. Re:r u srs by riondluz · · Score: 1

      "it gets them recruits from the wacko population..."

      Sarcastically observant I hope. Otherwise
      while I usually enjoy and share your viewpoints
      that brush you just used calls the paint and
      painter into question. If by whacko you happen to
      mean the edge cases that seem to be slipping into
      ever-widening cracks in our society. A growing
      sense of enslavement and serfdom via flattening and tipping scarce and poorly managed resources.

      'wacko' will always be drawn to that which
        appears to understand their suffering and/or distress.

      Sorry in advance for parking my .02 here:

      We should caution treating ISIS/ISIL (lets just call em sand-niggers) as the cause more than the effect.

      Make no mistake (for the 'morons') what they are
      doing is evil, should and will be stopped.
      And for the more nuanced among us, the only way to
      accomplish that (stopping them) is to understand
      one's enemy, including why they believe, and maybe
      conceding a point or two.
      But there is no room for discussing anything (there is no point to make) until their battle stops. Because whatever their ends, they are not justifiable means.

      Though I suspect it's about the usual suspects of greed married to politics, gaining the leverage
      bent on the cold betrayals of true-believers
      to what lies in martyrdom, their actions cannot be tolerated.

      Some would call it war; to bury their truths.
      The 'conversation' nobody's willing to have
        because truth hurts.
      Namely, that we (western society) are the cause; all our wars are repercussions of the effect.
      The wacko population is growing, domestically and overseas (#alllivesmatter) as we
      (industrial-techno society) tries to fill/fuel our needs.
      It's all P.R. and snake-oil and short of a blood-bath, we're not going to win. But
      we'll happily send others to die trying. Or go all Xe droney on anyone in our way.

      --
      resist propaganda
    53. Re:r u srs by strikethree · · Score: 1

      In Western media we never actually get to hear the other side of the story and I certainly don't speak Arabic or Farsi and so even if I had access to the other side I wouldn't be able to understand their message.

      I do have access to other media and translations. Their view (that they project but only the lower ranks believe) is that they are doing God's (Allah's) work. They are cleansing the world for the believers to live in a paradise ruled by Sharia law.

      Ultimately, I judge people by their actions. Burning people alive, cutting off heads (especially of truly innocent people), throwing homosexuals off of tall buildings... These are not things that anyone should be doing regardless of the why and wherefore. Sure, cleansing the world of perceived evil seems to be a great and altruistic thing, but those are just words. The actions are clear and unambiguous.

      Da'esh and all "movements" like it must be opposed strongly. The weird thing is that fighting them is likely the worst possible way to oppose them. Fixing the corruption so that the "regular people" can trust and support their government is the best way to fix all of this. Their is less corruption in the administration of Da'esh than there is in the governments of Iraq, Syria, etc. which is why despite their horridly evil actions, they still find continuing support amongst the populations they have invaded.

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
  6. Did he really think by Maritz · · Score: 2

    That was going to go down well? After the other night?

    --
    I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
    1. Re:Did he really think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. When you live in the big libtard bubble and all you read or hear are moral equivalence arguments it's easy to assume that's what everyone thinks and put your foot in it. Successful libtards understand they must suppress their real views when reality strikes to avoid these embarrassing moments. Fortunately this one was caught early in his career and won't be speaking his mind on the floor of the US Senate or anything.

      At least not right after a mass murder incident. Should be safe to resume normal apologetics and rationalization again in a couple weeks.

  7. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Huh? Did he get arrested over this? Or was this just a case of a politician saying something that caused the electorate to decide not to vote for him? I wasn't aware the first amendment was able to protect you from that.

  8. Slashdot would lynch him alive... by CajunArson · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    ... if he had said that, I dunno, Christians/cops/republicans "aren't necessarily evil"

    But interestingly enough, the supposedly rabid atheists around here who "bravely" stand up to those "totalitarian oppressor" church-ladies on here have a huge blind spot / sick fetish for the most hard-core Islamic fascim you can think of.

    Some Christian doesn't want to bake a cake for a gay wedding? Government funded execution squad, no trial.

    ISIS executes gays by throwing them off of buildings? How dare you be intolerant of other people's culture!

    --
    AntiFA: An abbreviation for Anti First Amendment.
    1. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by The+Evil+Atheist · · Score: 1

      the supposedly rabid atheists around here who "bravely" stand up to those "totalitarian oppressor" church-ladies on here have a huge blind spot / sick fetish for the most hard-core Islamic fascim you can think of.

      Then they're not really rabid, are they?

      As for me, no, I'm like quite a lot of atheists who think Islam is the problem and there's no way to "fix" the religion. Nice attempt at trying to manufacture a hypocrisy where none exists, though.

      --
      Those who do not learn from commit history are doomed to regress it.
    2. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is evil in everyone of us.

    3. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually most atheists think you're all just as retarded. The difference is that fundamentalist Christians have more chance of getting in the way of atheists living their lives in the West because they've historically been Christian countries and of those who still cling insecurely onto ancient texts in these countries, Christians are by far the most numerous and vocal.

      No one cares what some Imam in a middle eastern country says about gay marriage, though no one is standing up for them either. They want change, but it's kind of hard to change Raqqa from 5,000 miles away. They care a lot about a Christian in their own country trying to oppress their friends and dictate what they can and can't do. They can more easily achieve change in terms of the latter, but not the former.

      But of course then you get idiots like this (are we sure he's even an atheist?) who are just simply wrong anyway. Quite why you needed to take one idiots words as the gospel for an entire group I've no idea - maybe it's simply because you've just gotten too used to playing the victim and doing exactly that - you assume that because you're part of some Church of Group Non-Thinking that everyone else is too. Yeah, we're not, we don't need others to make up our minds for us, that's precisely why we haven't fallen into the trap of mistaking ancient fiction for reality just because some guy who wants power without doing anything to merit it in the first place tells us so.

    4. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "manufacture a hypocrisy where none exists" Really? Are you deliberately blind?

      How about... a Gay Couple that raises hell when a Christian refused to make a cake supporting gay weddings... lawsuits... riots on the internet...

      And then the Islamic Bakery that did the same thing with no repercussions what so ever?

      Same request: Make me a cake. Same response: It goes against my religion. Completely different response: Christians "flayed alive". Islamic shop completely ignored.

      Now... apply that to treatment of gays and women. Gays thrown off of buildings and women treated as second class citizens. Yet the evil that needs to be stopped is Christians and the religion that needs to be respected is Islam...

      You are deliberately dense and ignorant if you don't see the hypocrisy.

    5. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Well the important thing is you've found someone to hate other than just ISIS.

      I like how you make up a bunch of random stupid shit that's demonstrably not true, get really angry about it and then start hating on a whole bunch of people based on your weird fantasy. Sadly it appears this fantasy is not unique to you as you've been modded insightful.

      Atheists are not exactly known for being in favour of violence and murder in the name of some god, you know.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    6. Re: Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Halp, halp, I'm being oppressed! Somebody said that they wouldn't bake me a cake!

    7. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're the idiot. Comparing social equality issues in America to Islamic extremism? Have fun with that flow chart....

    8. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by tbannist · · Score: 1

      But interestingly enough, the supposedly rabid atheists around here who "bravely" stand up to those "totalitarian oppressor" church-ladies on here have a huge blind spot / sick fetish for the most hard-core Islamic fascim you can think of.

      You are deeply ignorant of atheism and atheists. You might want to shut up before you embarrass yourself.

      Some Christian doesn't want to bake a cake for a gay wedding? Government funded execution squad, no trial.

      Too late.

      Of course, there are two cases that I know of that kind-of-sort-of fit your description. In one, the case is ongoing although the cake maker has twice lost his case that refusing to sell a wedding cake to a gay couple isn't discriminatory, and in the other case the bakers were fined a large amount of money for publishing the home address of the complainants, recklessly publicising it, and inciting a campaign of harassment against the couple. In both cases, the defendants were tried and found guilty of violating the law.

      ISIS executes gays by throwing them off of buildings? How dare you be intolerant of other people's culture!

      So you're going to stand with Infowars and claim that not enough of the people you hate denounced ISIS for executing gays so they must be explicitly supporting ISIS even though the people you hate did denounce ISIS, but not enough for you to believe that they actually meant it? Or can you find a single example of someone saying that we should tolerate ISIS's murderous rampages?

      I see no reasons to be more irate with ISIS when they are killing gays, then when they are killing Christians, or Muslims who don't believe the "correct" interpretation of the Koran, or doctors, or professors or really anyone else. They are a bloody-minded, murderous, bunch of religious fanatics that's not news. The news that religious fanatics who hate gays have killed 0.04% more people in their own territory for their invented reasons, just isn't spectacular enough to get people up in arms any more. Frankly, ISIS's murderous thugs killing anonymous gay people is just sad, depressing news, it's not shocking any more because the body count is already so very high.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    9. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      atheists around here who "bravely" stand up to those "totalitarian oppressor" church-ladies on here have a huge blind spot / sick fetish for the most hard-core Islamic fascim you can think of.

      It's because they see the islamofascists killing people with religious convictions and they get jealous that they can't do it too.

    10. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Straif · · Score: 1

      Atheists are not exactly known for being in favour of violence and murder in the name of some god, you know.

      No, but there has been a long history of atheist leaders using peoples belief in "some god" as an excuse to kill them en masse.

      People have a tendency to see any competing ideology as opposition that must be eliminated, but the degree people are willing to go to eliminate that opposing belief varies greatly. In terms religions (which includes Atheism) it can be any other religion or even other factions of your own religion and they can try to eliminate it through proselytizing or just trying to lead by example or, as is the case of ISIS, just kill off anyone who disagrees with them.

      --
      Of course that's just my opinion...... you could be wrong!
    11. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      No, but there has been a long history of atheist leaders using peoples belief in "some god" as an excuse to kill them en masse.

      If you're thinking of Mao and Stalin, then you're essentially wrong. If you were an atheist who didn't worship the cult of Mao you'd be just as fucked as a during the cultural revolution.

      People have a tendency to see any competing ideology as opposition that must be eliminated

      You're confusing atheism which is not an ideology with leadership cults which are.

      In terms religions (which includes Atheism)

      Atheism is a religion in the same way that not collecting stamps is a hobby.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    12. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      Atheism is a religion in the same way that not collecting stamps is a hobby.

      Not quite. Saying "there is no God" is just as much a religion as saying there is. It is a statement of faith concerning things unseen.

      Now, if the "not stamp collector" were to deny the existence of stamps, you'd have a good analogy. But people who do not collect stamps rarely deny their existence, they only see no purpose in collecting them. Someone who admits there is a God but sees no purpose in "collecting" Him is not an atheist -- by definition.

    13. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Not quite. Saying "there is no God" is just as much a religion as saying there is. It is a statement of faith concerning things unseen.

      No, not really. Saying "there is no God" is as much as a statement of faith as saying "there are no unicorns", "there are no faries" or "Zeus does not rule us from Mount Olympus".

      It is a statement of faith concerning things unseen.

      Same with unicorns. I've never seen them, you've never seen them, but neither of us can prove they don't exist. I'd say however the likelihood is so low that they do exist that going with "they don't exist" is entirely reasonable. Same for god(s).

      Now, if the "not stamp collector" were to deny the existence of stamps, you'd have a good analogy.

      Not really. Not doing something is not the same as actively doing the negative of something.

      Someone who admits there is a God but sees no purpose in "collecting" Him is not an atheist -- by definition.

      You have confused the analogy. God is not being equated to stamps. The act of believing is being equated to the act of collecting, because I'm making a point about the act. Like I said not doing something is not the same as actively doing the opposite.

      I don't sit around actively believing in no god: there's simply never been anything which would make me believe in a god I cannot see, interact with or sense in any other manner. I can conceive of an uncountably infinite number of things which fall into that category (I'm not very imaginative: they're all different species of magical unicorn which almost all have an transcendental number of horns, some horns being incomplete you see---as you can tell I like unicorns and numbers), and there are many other far-fetched things like Russell's Teapot and so on.

      The point is they all have identical properties to god: there is no way of sensing their existence. Given that is makes no sense to me to elevate the concept of god above the concept of any of those other rhetorical devices.

      I doubt I'm going to change your mind, but the point is, faith is just that, faith. It's something you know in your gut is true precisely without evidence (wouldn't be faith otherwise). I lack that gut feeling of truth that (I'm assuming) you have. I don't have the strong gut feeling that god doesn't exist, just the same general feeling that god sits with all those other things don't exist.

      To me, belief in god is irrational. For me to be deeply critical of it would be however hypocritical. Like every other person, it would be absurd to claim I live my life as a rational robot (I try to be rational as much as possible, but I know I cannot always succeed, and fail frequently). Belief in god does not make someone de facto more stupid than me (that would be an astoundingly arrogant claim especially given some scientists I've known who are regular churchgoers).

      However your arguments seem designed to try to justify your act of faith by painting it philosophically as the same as not having faith in some way. If you succeed it's not really much of an act of faith.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    14. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Some Christian doesn't want to bake a cake for a gay wedding?

      You need to use "sudo bake me a cake". No, wait, that would be a lie....

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    15. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      No, not really. Saying "there is no God" is as much as a statement of faith as saying "there are no unicorns",

      Not true. Unicorns are physical creatures, or would be were they to exist. God, however, is not. His existence (were he to exist) is outside the physical universe as we can determine it. I.e., if unicorns exist, you could see them. If God exists, you cannot. It is an order of magnitude different to claim there is no physical object called "unicorn" compared to claiming there is no unobservable object called "God."

      Same with unicorns. I've never seen them, you've never seen them, but neither of us can prove they don't exist. I'd say however the likelihood is so low that they do exist that going with "they don't exist" is entirely reasonable. Same for god(s).

      As I've just explained, not it is not the same with God. Or Gods.

      Now, if the "not stamp collector" were to deny the existence of stamps, you'd have a good analogy.

      Not really. Not doing something is not the same as actively doing the negative of something.

      Yes, that was exactly my point. "Not stamp collecting" is not the same as "believing there is no God". One is inaction, the other an action. One admits the existence of the object referred to, the other denies it.

      The act of believing is being equated to the act of collecting, because I'm making a point about the act.

      Exactly. The act of believing there is no God because he is "irrational" and thus cannot exist would be analogous to not collecting stamps because they are "irrational" and cannot exist. This is why the analogy fails. Nobody claims that stamps don't exist no matter how uninteresting they find the hobby of collecting them to be.

      Given that is makes no sense to me .... To me, belief in god is irrational.

      Your basis for your disbelief, that the existence of God would be "irrational", is akin to claiming that anything you don't understand doesn't exist. This is certainly not true. For centuries man did not understand the simple virus and yet they certainly did suffer from the "common cold" or worse.

      However your arguments seem designed to try to justify your act of faith by painting it philosophically as the same as not having faith in some way.

      Not at all. It is just as much an act of faith to say "there is no God" as to say there is. Both beliefs cannot be proven by any scientific method. Both beliefs are faith-based. Atheism is based on faith in man's intellect and if his intellect cannot find it rational then God cannot exist. It is a faith in the human mind being able to comprehend the universe and saying what it does not contain. Every time an atheist says "if God existed he would ..." he is basing that statement on his own understanding of what he thinks God would do were he to think like humans. Faith in man's superior intellect is still faith.

      I actually made no statement of faith, if you read carefully. I simply pointed out the fact that atheism is a faith just as much as any theistic belief. You say you won't change my mind, and indeed, you have not, because I am not here to argue whether God exists or not -- and therefore your arguments that he does not are relevant only in that they prove my point.

    16. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of the atheists I have known are astoundingly arrogant.

    17. Re: Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like you're crying because you're losing the argument.

      Fact is, the trend is away from ISIS/Tea Party thinking, towards more liberal values.

      Sucks to be you stuck in the stone ages I guess.

    18. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Not true. Unicorns are physical creatures, or would be were they to exist.

      They're frequently portrayed as magical creatures. I don't see why they have to always manifest a physical manifestation in this realm.

      God, however,

      How does he hold his hammer if he's not physical? Also, yoking his rams would extremely difficuly with no hands. Or are you actually referring to Yaweh/Jehova who is not physical yet apparentlly make man in his image.

      I.e., if unicorns exist, you could see them.

      Only if they visit this realm, which they chose to do rarely if ever. If they want to be seen to you, they will come here and show themselves. There is no way for you to enter their realm unless they chose to bring you there. The vast majority of unicorns are neither powerful enough to show themselves to you or to bring you to their realm, however.

      It is an order of magnitude different to claim there is no physical object called "unicorn" compared to claiming there is no unobservable object called "God."

      You don't seem to be very up to speed on the mythology of unicorns. They are creatures of magic from another realm, not merely some horned horse inhabiting an unknown forest.

      Not at all. It is just as much an act of faith to say "there is no God" as to say there is.

      It is as much an act of faith so claim god in all probability doesn't exist based on the evidence as it is to say that in all likelihood unicorns don't exist based on the evidence. Once the likelihood becomes overwhelming one takes a shortcut and says "doesn't exist".

      Both beliefs cannot be proven by any scientific method. Both beliefs are faith-based.

      I can invent many things which cannot be proven/disproven (note the word there) by the scientific method. I can claim for example, that there is a nice, cherry red ceramic teapot orbiting galaxy MACS0647-JD, a lightyear out beyond its most distant star. It's scientifically impossible for us to observe it because it's a small object 13.3 billion lightyears away and we can only just observe the entire galaxy. And there's no possible way to get close enough to observe it.

      Is it an act of faith for you to disbelieve me?

      To me, the absurd teapot is like god. Its existence can be postulated but it can never be observed. However the existence of the teapot is so wildly unlikely, that I'm going to outright claim it doesn't exist. Like god, it has no observable effect on the universe. So, like god, I see no reason to transfer it from "category of unobservable things I don't believe in" to another category.

      Atheism is based on faith in man's intellect and if his intellect cannot find it rational then God cannot exist.

      It's a looser claim. First, I'd like to note that you seem to have a fairly clear idea what god is. You refer to it with a capital G and in the singular. Atheism is simply applying the reasoning by which we live our day to day lives. We don't believe in almost everything that can be conceived of. Nor is it a matter of faith that we don't believe in them (at least not in the sense that "faith" is normally used in English). To claim that "god" is special and that not believing in it is an act of faith (unlike my unicorns) is in itself an act of faith because you are axiomatically treating god as different from almost everything else. Since it's an axiom, it's outside of the logic of whatever follows. An axiom like that however is a matter of faith.

      I actually made no statement of faith, if you read carefully.

      It is, if you follow the reasoning behind the words. You are elevating god to a very special position to which you do not elevate an infinite number of unobservable imaginings. I don't think you're ever going to believe in unicorns (or the teapot) or regard your disbelief as a lack of faith.

      What about the other creatures of mythology and legend? Poltergeists? Ghosts? Faeries? Unicorns ad I imagine them? All supernatural or creatures of magi

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    19. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you call that god "The Cause" or "The People", and you will find plenty of violence and murder. Then you have the NWO that specificly preaches that 95% of the world's population must be removed because of numerology and neo-malthusianist bullshit, and the NWO is what has shaped your mind because it controls all the media you watch.

    20. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      The gay couple went to a bakery, and was turned down. They filed a complaint with the appropriate authorities, which in the normal course of things would have resulted in a small fine, no real problem.

      Then the assholes who ran the bakery got all offended and started an internet campaign against the couple, by people who call themselves Christians and don't act anything like Jesus. The lawsuit was about the harassment the couple suffered. You appear to have a definitions of "flayed alive" I was not previously familiar with, which is apparently "sued for damages for the harm they caused". I seem to have missed the passage in the Gospels where Jesus encouraged the crowd to persecute people who were different and stone the adulterer.

      If an Islamic bakery did the same thing, they probably turned the couple away and did nothing more about them. Had a complaint been filed, they would have owed a small fine. Just like the "Christian" bakery, if they had let the matter lay there would have been no lawsuit and no significant consequences.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    21. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      How does he hold his hammer if he's not physical?

      Thank you for proving my point better than I could ever do. Your faith in your logical reasoning about God is shining through with every word. Faith. God cannot exist because I don't understand how he could hold a hammer, and I have ultimate faith in my ability to understand.

      Let's go back 200 years and ask this: how could we hear a man's voice if he were not in the room speaking to us? Let's go back 20 years: how can we put five hours of music recording into something that is smaller than one of Aunt Martha's compacts? How can a man walk on the moon when there is no air? Clearly such ideas are irrational and impossible.

      It is as much an act of faith so claim god in all probability doesn't exist based on the evidence as it is to say that in all likelihood unicorns don't exist based on the evidence.

      I've covered that error already. Finding no physical evidence of a being that, should he exist, would have no physical presence means nothing. Finding no physical evidence of a physical object has more significance. Your conversion of a horned horse into a magical beast that nobody could see even if it was standing in front of him is interesting, but only serves to prove the distance you have to go to make that analogy.

      I actually made no statement of faith, if you read carefully.

      It is, if you follow the reasoning behind the words. You are elevating god to a very special position ...

      Sorry, but no. I pointed out that atheism is a belief system that requires faith just as much as theism is. I am not the one who created the concept of the being you cannot believe in because you cannot understand him.

      Every time an atheist says "if God existed he would ..."

      That's a straw man.

      No, sir, that is the very heart of the matter. "I cannot understand this, therefore it cannot exist." That is a statement of faith in one's own ability to sense the universe and understand it based on incomplete information. When you consider the recorded history of mankind, you'd realize that "cannot understand" is a very poor way to determine what does and does not exist. To make a statement that something that couldn't be observed if it did exist does not exist because it hasn't been observed is a statement of faith.

    22. Re:Slashdot would lynch him alive... by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Thank you for proving my point better than I could ever do. Your faith in your logical reasoning about God is shining through with every word. Faith. God cannot exist because I don't understand how he could hold a hammer, and I have ultimate faith in my ability to understand.

      I pointed out two posts ago that it's matter of faith. Now you smugly bring up as if its a great revelation with which you will strike me down. A clue: when you make a point I already made to you, it's not a great revelation.

      But yes, well done for conceding that it's a matter of FAITH. That was my point.

      Clearly such ideas are irrational and impossible.

      Not really sure what your point is. Those things are all observable. You said yourself that God isn't. So what are you equating to what precisely?

      Your conversion of a horned horse into a magical beast that nobody could see even if it was standing in front of him is interesting, but only serves to prove the distance you have to go to make that analogy.

      Not really, no. To me there's little difference between your God, who is apparently an unobservable being without substance and one of my hypothetical unicorns. Besides, they could allow you to see them if they wanted. I guess they don't generally want to be seen however. But the ones who can visit this realm are creatures of very advanced magic, so they can be invisible if they choose.

      Sorry, but no. I pointed out that atheism is a belief system that requires faith just as much as theism is.

      No, you keep asserting it, not pointing it out. There's a difference in that you're not making a reasoned argument, you're simply stating the same point repeatedly.

      I am not the one who created the concept of the being you cannot believe in because you cannot understand him. ,

      I don't follow. How is not believing in god (who I cannot observe) different in not believing that teapot exists?

      No, sir, that is the very heart of the matter.

      It is because you're putting words into my mouth. I never said anything along the lines of "if god existed he would... blah". You're arguing vociferously against something which I never said. That is the definition of a straw man.

      "I cannot understand this, therefore it cannot exist."

      At this point, I'm beginning to winder if you're intentionally misrepresenting what I'm saying. I'm saying:

      If it's unobservable, then I have no reason to believe in it (just like any other unobservable thing I can dream of such as my unicorns).

      "cannot understand"

      Again you're arguing against something I didn't say. Cannot understand is not the same as cannot observe.

      To make a statement that something that couldn't be observed if it did exist does not exist because it hasn't been observed is a statement of faith.

      If you concede the point you just made (I can only assume you do as you made it) then it is equally a matter of faith that I don't believe in unicorns and that I don't believe in that teapot orbiting a galaxy 13.3 billion lightyears away.

      Neither of those things can be observed and so according to you, making the statement that they don't exist is a matter of faith.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  9. Next stop: the White House! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mark my words, this guy is going to announce his candidacy this week. There's no doubt in my mind that he wants to run for President. None of the three Democrat presidential candidates appear to be capable of forming the words "radical Islamic terrorism". He'll fell right at home.

  10. Sigh by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Another person who doesn't understand the first amendment. The first amendment says that the government can't mess with your free expression. They can't put you in jail because you say something they don't like, they can't shut down a news paper for reporting on things they don't want, and so on. It does NOT say that people have to listen to whatever you say, like it, and not respond in any way.

    This guy didn't have his rights violated at all: He said something extremely stupid, and people then used their first amendment rights to express that he's a jackass. His political party decided that because he'd pissed off lots of voters, they weren't interested in supporting them. They aren't required to support anyone, the choose the candidates they like. He realized he'd fucked up, and had no chance of wining, and so withdrew.

    Nothing improper here. You seem to think that the first amendment should mean speech without consequence. Of course that doesn't work without infringing on the rights of others. If you say something I don't like, I have to be free to say I don't like you for it, or my freedom of speech is being infringed upon. I have to be free to refuse to talk to you, do business with you, etc or my freedom of association is being infringed upon.

  11. SJWs have already confirmed this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The SJWs have already confirmed that ISIS isn't that bad. As they've repeatedly said over the past year, GamerGate is "literally worse than ISIS".

    1. Re:SJWs have already confirmed this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The SJWs have already confirmed that ISIS isn't that bad. As they've repeatedly said over the past year, GamerGate is "literally worse than ISIS".

      Not only that, the #Black(only)LivesMatter twits are bitching about ISIS - because ISIS "stole the spotlight".

      Sometimes I think I should be cheering for ISIS - because if ISIS wins such campus crybabies will be the first one up against the wall.

  12. Re:Sigh by Cederic · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What's politically correct about pointing out that ISIS are a bunch of murderous selfish thugs that qualify as 'evil' by almost any definition of the word, and mocking the fuckwit that claimed otherwise?

  13. Eh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I understand what he was trying to communicate, but brainwashing children to hate from the time they're born is the epitome of evil. However, yes; they are doing what they think is right. But, that doesn't make it right. Right?

  14. True enough by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

    ISIS is completely unnecessarily evil.

    --
    "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    1. Re:True enough by Errol+backfiring · · Score: 2

      And so was bombing Iraq. While I don't agree with the terrorists, I can understand that they return the "favour" that has been done to them (one of the terrorists apparently came from Iraq). I mean, the main difference between "shock and awe" and "terrorism" is "us" and "them". I just don't understand why they do this to France.

      --
      Nae king! Nae laird! Nae yurrupiean pressedent! We willna be fooled again!
    2. Re:True enough by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      "ISIS is completely unnecessarily evil."

      Unless you are the government of the USA and need a powerful Sunni militant group to facilitate your goal of regime change in Syria, counter the Shiite Muslim influence in Iraq and undermine the Hezbollah movement in Lebanon.

    3. Re:True enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I asked myself the same question. France isn't the only country bombing and fighting right now. But then I asked myself another question. How has Israel continually dodged this bullet, but any country that starts to hold up a mirror to the state of Israel instantly gets hit.

    4. Re:True enough by WhatHump · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There are many reasons for targetting Paris. It's a world-class city, it's streets are alive with locals and tourists, giving gunmen lots of easy targets. The French are very proud of their history as standard-bearers of liberty and freedom, ideals detested by fanatics that treat women like dirt and anyone that does agree with them as candidates for death. And France itself does not have clean hands. Its colonialist past, most recently in Algeria, resulted in a lot of carnage back home.

      --
      "Could be worse...could be raining." Igor
    5. Re:True enough by nitehawk214 · · Score: 2

      It might be that ISIS knows that Israel has no qualms about sending the lot of them straight to hell if they get involved.

      Or perpahs it is becuase they don't need Israel as an enemy. Most of the people in ISIS held territory already hates Israel and wants them dead. Spending resources attacking them won't provide any new converts.

      Now, attack France, UK, United States, Russia... the response will be bombs dropped from the sky... which ISIS actually needs. This is how they create new terrorists in those countries.

      Of course, the solution isn't to simply "ignore them". I don't know how to break the hate cycle. Maybe it can't be done.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    6. Re:True enough by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, US policy makers are still fighting the cold war. Everyone is either Red or Blue, there is nothing in between, and our allies would never fight each other and our enemies would never cooperate.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    7. Re:True enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, attack France, UK, United States, Russia... the response will be bombs dropped from the sky... which ISIS actually needs. This is how they create new terrorists in those countries.

      Of course, the solution isn't to simply "ignore them". I don't know how to break the hate cycle. Maybe it can't be done.

      How many suicide bombers do we get out of Japan and Germany these days? We bombed everyone in WWII: military, industry, civilians. The intention was to completely break the people's will to resist. It worked, though in Japan's case it took two nukes before they realized just how hopeless the situation was. Result? No more Nazis, no more World Wars, no more kamikaze bombers. Complete, unconditional surrender works. Sniping at an endless series of "#2 leaders" with drones doesn't.

    8. Re:True enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Turn Syria to glass with an implications "who's next"? If the UN collectively says "we don't know who fired those nukes" it would be the global version of the murder of Ken McElroy.

    9. Re:True enough by nitehawk214 · · Score: 2

      Also, given time, both Japan and Germany's peoples realized that they were wrong. I don't think these Daesh assholes will ever figure it out.

      But I am sure people said that about the Japanese 70 years ago.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    10. Re:True enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Morality and utility aren't the same. Yes, they are evil, but they were apparently useful to the idiots who currently manage US foreign policy.

  15. Re:Sigh by SirDrinksAlot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think perhaps the real issue here is that he's grossly under educated on a subject and he opened his ignorance hole on the subject. Because (so far) murdering 10,000 non-combatant Men, Women and children for not following Islam is totally just trying to protect their community, right?

    Disclaimer: There is an application of sarcasm here. Please read carefully.

  16. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It seems like he was actually trying to be PC. He reflexively put out a PC-type spin on a tense situation to try to look wise.

  17. Re:Cry me a river. by Dunbal · · Score: 2

    And you seem at least as necessarily evil as ISIS is.

    How so? Are you seriously comparing silly quotes from historically insignificant people to von Clausewitz and Aristotle? You think blowing up and shooting random people is equivalent to eliminating those who are sworn to do this? Sorry but you are the one who is misguided. If I tie you to a table, knock you out and stick a knife in you, that could be assault with a deadly weapon or surgery. It depends on the reason. THE MEANS DOES NOT JUSTIFY THE END.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  18. Completely out of line with leftist ideals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Democrats of all people should know that morals and ethics are relative, as relativism is a fundamental tenet of leftism.

    Democrats and liberals have an obligation to stand behind the tweet, because it was absolutely in line with democrat and liberal ideals.

    1. Re:Completely out of line with leftist ideals by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      Democrats of all people should know that morals and ethics are relative, as relativism is a fundamental tenet of leftism.

      Democrats and liberals have an obligation to stand behind the tweet, because it was absolutely in line with democrat and liberal ideals.

      Flawed logic. There is no reason for people anyone to act like we were dropped on our head multiple times as a baby and lack any common sense or perspective, and have to defend a tweet that has to hide behind extreme political correctness.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
  19. He is right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    except what ISIS is doing is bad for everybody else.

  20. But why is this on /. by rossdee · · Score: 1

    How is this news for nerds?

    and its only stuff that matters to the people who would have been voting for him

  21. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It doesn't protect you from the law. Go announce your love for ISIS loudly in an airport, see what happens.

  22. Politicians... The epitome of Stupid. by Lumpy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Honestly all this does is serve to prove that the people running for any office are some of the absolute dumbest people in our society. Because smart people don't want to have anything at all to do with it because you have to deal with the general population and that is the largest collection of dumb there is.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:Politicians... The epitome of Stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, no, one dumb candidate does not prove that they are all dumb, nor does one dumb statement prove that a person is dumb. I highly recommend that you study logic (a formal discipline of philosophy), as that will both clean up your sloppy reasoning, and possibly introduce you to such concepts as moral relativism, which is probably what motivated Dan Kimmel to say what he said.

    2. Re:Politicians... The epitome of Stupid. by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      I studied congress. All of them are stupid except for 2 of them, therefore it is easy to extrapolate out.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    3. Re:Politicians... The epitome of Stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This politician was stupid in that he voiced an opinion without considering his audience.

      But the mob is always stupider.

      I'd probably vote for the guy if he's that philosophical most of the time. If I happened to live there.

  23. violence is the answer by strstr · · Score: 0

    the civil wars and world war's happened for reasons.

    the outcomes of the wars don't always matter because it's often times one evil fighting another evil, and when the whole world is evil - who gives a fuck?

    can't undo the western evil civilization war machine killing torture brutality denying all humans rights thing we have going on world wide.

    obamasweapon.com
    drrobertduncan.com

  24. Once more by easyTree · · Score: 0

    Once more ... reinforcing the truth that free speech in the US is a figment; that everything the US does is right - therefore, it's not OK for the other guy to fight back.

    The freedom to toe the line and pretend to be religious; to repeat the platitudes; to avoid mentioning the elephant in the room. Keep it up.

    1. Re:Once more by bws111 · · Score: 1

      You are an idiot. Nobody's speech was restricted in any way. Was he prevented from making his stupid statement? Nope, and many people heard it. Was he guy arrested? Nope. Did he just 'disppear'? Nope. He used his right of free speech to say something that a majority of people disagree with. Many of those people used their right of free speech to say they disagreed with him (they do have this right, don't they?) Another group of people used their right of association to decide they didn't want to be associated with him, and they also used their right of free speech to state that. Seems like absolutely nobody had their rights infringed.

  25. Utter BS. by Millennium · · Score: 1

    You could almost say this of Daesh even a few years ago, when they kept their antics mostly confined to their own territory. You'd still be wrong, because that argument requires you to ignore both the sheer enormity of the things they do to inside that territory and the blatant expansionism they practiced and continue to practice, but the argument could at least be considered semi-reasonable.

    But that was before they started going after their own refugees: people who were outright running away. Quarrel or no, they posed no threat; indeed, posing no threat was, for many, a driving factor in their decision to leave. And if Daesh are willing to do this to refugees, then the only even half-baked argument left for calling them anything but pure evil is gone now. It is time to accept that we are dealing with the Nazis of our time, and treat them accordingly.

    1. Re:Utter BS. by loonycyborg · · Score: 1

      It is millenia old islamic tradition to purge all heterodox religions or ideologies they can with extreme prejudice, such as polytheists, Christians, Zoroastrians and the most hated of them, muslims of different branches such as Sunni vs Shia. Any sort of disagreement they consider a threat. And they're not alone in that. Even "civilized" nations are full of such mindset. Only threat of mutual nuclear destruction prevents large scale wars. Actually, that gives an idea: someone should give some nuclear weapons to IS. There's just no way they could expand in any way after that. Any future war would result in MAD so they wouldn't able to war anymore.

    2. Re:Utter BS. by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      No,the idea of purging the world of infidels is recent. In the Middle Ages, the Islamic countries were more tolerant of other religions than most countries in Europe.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    3. Re:Utter BS. by loonycyborg · · Score: 1

      Exterminating all non-muslims were part of original rise of caliphate under Muhammad, and Koran is full of his butthurt due to being ridiculed by jews and pagan arabs. Later there were indeed some religiously tolerant caliphs in arab empires, some of them even being defacto atheists. But those were merely temporary exceptions before they decided to abandon reason and build order based on unconditional adherence to religious book built from concentrated butthurt.

  26. Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by Qbertino · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I guess I've heard shit like that before. From my German-side Grandpa.

    I think there is a distinct area in which people and their views can be placed that is undoubtedly evil. Holding abysmally absurd theo-fascist views, chopping peoples heads of whilst chanting praises to your utlitmate-dictator-in-the-heavens god, preaching and trying to practice genocide, believing in truth by revelation rather than insight and forcing that truth to others at gunpoint, etc. pretty much puts people smack center of the 'evil' designation in my book. And in most other peoples book aswell, I would presume.

    Give us an effin' break - please.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
    1. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about the American Civil War, got any relations on that side of thing?

      I can go a hundred places in America, and it wouldn't take me a long walk to find somebody willing to spout long and eloquently on the virtues of the Southern Gentlemen defending their homes from that demon Lincoln.

      Yet I bet half of them, at least, would see no irony in their own behavior. You could hold up a mirror all day, and they'd never spot the log if it were the size of the General Sherman.

    2. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by thegarbz · · Score: 2

      pretty much puts people smack center of the 'evil' designation in my book.

      What about in the book of an ISIS fighter?

      That's the thing about evil. It doesn't have an absolute definition, and it is entirely dependent on the point of view. They are evil in my book too, so was Hitler, but don't forget that Hitler got to power via popular vote.

    3. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not that the SS were a bunch of "nice fellas" by any stretch - they were opportunistic gov trolls (Reichstag and all). But did your German-side Grandpa explain about his people being starved to death during the Blockade of Germany? Had you asked the average-joesef from back in the day "WTF HAPPENED BACK THERE??" they might have explained this lesser-known slight to you and the overall impact it had on the minds and motives of the German people - which may have been something as general as "f-ck if we'll ever let that happen again." - which seems to be a very cyclical statement for as often as it's said or adopted by people.

    4. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      So fucking what? They both instigated mass murder. It's not your POV, it's what you do.

    5. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      And you white man are part of a culture that worships the wrong god, takes over countries for oil resources, topples regimes and then throws bombs at others because they are having a territorial dispute.

      Point Of View.

      If you can't see this then you really need to open your eyes. The most evil people in the world think you're part of the most evil people in the world.

    6. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      That's the thing about evil. It doesn't have an absolute definition, and it is entirely dependent on the point of view.

      If your point of view grants you the right to simply kill someone you don't like because you don't like then, then you are objectively evil. It's as simple as that. Morality can be objectively weighed when it bears on how that moral framework defines your relationships with other people. Death is absolute, not relative to your point of view. A value system that tells you that you can dish out death for no reason other than to please an imaginary magical being is a moral framework that is inherently inferior value systems that consider that to be unacceptable.

      don't forget that Hitler got to power via popular vote

      How does that change any evaluation of his value system, or the values of people who supported him? It doesn't. Millions and millions of Muslims directly and happily say that they support ISIS. 16% of all French citizens approve of ISIS and their agenda. That horrifying little bit of reality doesn't make that world view less objectively evil. It just means there are that many people who embrace it.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    7. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      If your point of view grants you the right to simply kill someone you don't like because you don't like then, then you are objectively evil.

      You're right. And you've just lumped some 100s of millions of westerners in with your definition right there further proving my point.

      That horrifying little bit of reality doesn't make that world view less objectively evil.

      I never said it did. They are decidedly evil, in the GP's view as well as mine. That doesn't change the fact that we are evil in the view of someone else.

    8. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      That doesn't change the fact that we are evil in the view of someone else.

      But the difference is that their judgement is based on a moral framework that is, by definition, objectively inferior. The radical Islamist jihaddi's judgement that we (Westerners) are evil is based on things like our unwillingness to do things like kill women for learning to read, or for having been raped. So explaining to me that they find the west to be evil is completely pointless. I don't care. Consider the source of that judgement, and the value system that drives it. Anybody who engages in worrisome hand-wringing over the fact that an objectively evil person doesn't approve of your values ... that person is the worst sort of moral relativist, and through their inability (or unwillingness) to call things what they are, gives moral support to the murderers in question.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    9. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah they shouldn't chop peoples heads off they should hang them, use electric chair, or give them leathal injections like civilised people do.

    10. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      That's the thing about evil. It doesn't have an absolute definition...

      Yes it does. Evil is that which is contrasurvival, for the individual, for the family unit, for the village, for the nation-state, or for the species. Daesh fails at every level of abstraction. It's evil from beginning to end. No religious book, not even a philosophical book is necessary to arrive by this definition. It's straight up Darwinism. We understand evil as children. It's only the endless sophistry that conceals evil. Let's rip away the veil.

      If your religion mandates the death of 78% of your species, it is evil.

      If your religion mandates the death of 99.5% of all nations, it is evil.

      If your religion mandates the death of 100% of the villages that do not submit to your rule, it is evil.

      If your religion mandates the death of your own sister if she is raped, it is evil.

      If your religion mandates your own death, it is evil.

      The new caliphate called ISIS is evil.

    11. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by BlackDeath3 · · Score: 1

      I think there is a distinct area in which people and their views can be placed that is undoubtedly evil. Holding abysmally absurd theo-fascist views... etc. pretty much puts people smack center of the 'evil' designation in my book.

      In your book. Moral relativism is the whole damn point.

    12. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by BlackDeath3 · · Score: 1

      It's not your POV, it's what you do.

      One's point-of-view determines how said person interprets "what you do". Nobody is suggesting that somebody who might otherwise view ISIS as evil should reconsider that position simply because ISIS doesn't think that ISIS is evil. What is actually being said is that, though you (and many others to be sure) may think that ISIS is evil, this doesn't make them evil in some sort of objective, cosmic sense. All it means is that a bunch of people think that ISIS is evil.

      TL;DR: Moral relativism.

    13. Re:Yeah. And the SS was a bunch of nice fellas ... by micahraleigh · · Score: 1

      You're suggesting this Democrat was being too ... theological?

      Because the Democrats are totally known for pushing theology on everyone.

  27. Damn... by Jay+Maynard · · Score: 0

    For a DFLer to show this much sense (withdrawing, not the original tweet) is...unusual, to say the least - and I say that as someone who lives in Minnesota.

    --
    Disinfect the GNU General Public Virus!
  28. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Since when does the law apply in airports?

  29. Twitter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone who uses Twitter to express political views needs to be locked up. Extremely poor judgement, no matter what your view on ISIS is.

  30. If ISIS isn't evil, who is? by GuB-42 · · Score: 2

    In the real world, "evil" people almost always think they do what they think is best for something.
    If ISIS cannot be considered evil, then true evil only exist in fiction, and even then, it's only when writers don't put much thought into their villains.

    Maybe that's actually the point : there is a bit of good in all of us, even the worst.

    1. Re:If ISIS isn't evil, who is? by Kjella · · Score: 2

      In the real world, "evil" people almost always think they do what they think is best for something.

      Yeah, best for themselves. You think a thief isn't pissed when he's robbed? The bully when he's beaten up? I don't think your average criminal believes he's got any moral high ground, he simply has the power and is using it for personal gain. A few might because they believe it serves the greater good or divine will or whatever ranging from civil disobedience to jihadists, but that's the exception not the norm.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    2. Re:If ISIS isn't evil, who is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "then true evil only exist in fiction"

      Well yeah. Since "evil" is defined relative to whoever's viewpoint you're looking at, there is no "true evil". It's just a word.

    3. Re:If ISIS isn't evil, who is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe that's actually the point : there is a bit of good in all of us, even the worst.

      This

    4. Re:If ISIS isn't evil, who is? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Maybe that's actually the point : there is a bit of good in all of us, even the worst.

      So what? If somebody's "good" (say, a moment of affection for one's own children, perhaps - or in whatever form it comes) isn't enough to stop them from gang raping women and burning people alive, then that little bit of goodness is completely meaningless.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    5. Re:If ISIS isn't evil, who is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does ISIS need to do to count as evil?

      Do they need to chant "Christians to Beruit, Alawites to the grave"?

      Do they need to steal women and sell them as brides in accordance with Islamic law under which men may marry up to four women and divorce them at will?

      Do they need to steal women from one particular tribe, the Yazidis, and sell them "to wipe out the blonde gene pool"?

      Do they need to force small boys to kneel in a line and machine gun them?

      Do they need to stage the 2nd most deadly, and most coordinated, terrorist attack in European history?

      At what point do we stop giving weapons to their allies?

    6. Re:If ISIS isn't evil, who is? by werepants · · Score: 2

      I see more of the corollary - there's a bit of evil in all of us, and as soon as we're willing to commit atrocities in the pursuit of a "higher good", the distinction between us and the evil we fight becomes theoretical.

    7. Re:If ISIS isn't evil, who is? by werepants · · Score: 1

      So what? If somebody's "good" (say, a moment of affection for one's own children, perhaps - or in whatever form it comes) isn't enough to stop them from dropping nuclear weapons on civilian population centers, then that little bit of goodness is completely meaningless.

      Fixed that for you.

      If our response to danger is to abandon our ideals (liberty, integrity, justice) then the distinction between us and our enemies ceases to exist.

  31. Re:Sigh by DarkOx · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This first amendment gives him the right to tweet whatever he wants. It gives the rest of us the right to say we don't approve! The right to vote gives the rest of us the right to make it clear to him he might as well not bother standing for election.

    --
    Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
  32. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another person who doesn't understand the first amendment. The first amendment says that the government can't mess with your free expression. They can't put you in jail because you say something they don't like, they can't shut down a news paper for reporting on things they don't want, and so on. It does NOT say that people have to listen to whatever you say, like it, and not respond in any way.

    Yep, had to explain this to someone who was complaining that "apparently the first amendment doesn't apply" to that Duck Dynasty guy.

  33. Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yesterday Marco Rubio equates all muslims to nazis and he's cheered for it.

    Video: http://youtu.be/RVCip5B8P6c

    Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, arguing that the United States is "at war with radical Islam," sharply criticized Hillary Rodham Clinton for declining to characterize the perpetrators of the Paris attacks in that way, invoking Nazi Germany to make his point.

    "That would be like saying we weren't at war with Nazis, because we were afraid to offend some Germans who may have been members of the Nazi Party but weren't violent themselves," Mr. Rubio said Sunday on ABC's "This Week."

    http://www.nytimes.com/politic...

    1. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by halivar · · Score: 1

      Your own quote does not back you up. Analogies are not equivalencies. Furthermore, this particular analogy is apt.

    2. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Your own quote does not back you up. Analogies are not equivalencies

      Don't play dumb. The best possible spin you can give what he said is that being muslim is like being an unwilling member of the nazi party - that it is something normal people do because if they didn't join they would be persecuted. That islam, as practiced by 1.6 billion people other than extremists, is a bankrupt ideology that normal people would not normally participate in.

      > Furthermore, this particular analogy is apt.

      Yeah? How so?

    3. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      Do you know what "radical" is? That's the extremists who believe it's their duty to kill the infidels. Of course we're at war with them. What the heck do you think we're doing in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, etc?

    4. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wooosh!

      Do you know why non-radicals joined the nazi party? Because they were afraid of state persecution for not doing so. What is it about islam that makes Rubio, and presumably you, think 1.6 billion non-violent people are forced to be muslims?

    5. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      I see what you're trying to do, but it doesn't work. He clearly called out "radical Islam", not Islam as a whole. There may be non-violent people that identify with the IS, that would be the second quote. There is absolutely nothing wrong with saying we're at war with the radicals, he's right. Shame on you for trying to distort his speech.

    6. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > There may be non-violent people that identify with the IS

      He didn't say "non-violent people that idenitfy with nazis" he said "non-violent members of the nazi party."

      > There is absolutely nothing wrong with saying we're at war with the radicals,

      Except that is NOT what he is saying. He is saying we are at war with islamic radicals. What part does the islamic matter? YOU just left it off yourself. You've just proved him wrong with your own word choice.

      Furthermore, just a couple of sentences later in that interview (all in the 1st minute of the video) he goes on about "a clash civilizations." Now either you believe IS represents the civilization of all 1.6 billion muslims or you recognize that this is not a clash of civilizations, it is a clash with a tiny radical sect that barely has any civilization at all.

    7. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      You're trying to nitpick over something that's not there in his speech or my comments. Fine, drop the "identify with Nazis".. people of a party identify themselves as such, do they not?

      Yes, I left off "Islam". There's only one group of radicals in this discussion. Yes, radical Islam. I dropped Islam because I thought it was pretty clear who we were discussing. My bad assuming you could follow a few lines of text without forgetting the context.

      The clash of civilizations is between the supposed "Islamic State" versus the rest of the civilized world. That civilized world includes the billion and a half muslims who don't agree with the Islamic State's interpretation of their religion. To suggest that Rubio is saying anything else is absurd.

      This is why politics suck so badly. I don't believe for one second that you really believe that Rubio was calling out an entire religion. You're looking for ways to pervert what he said in order to fit your agenda. I'm going to guess that's why you're posting as an anonymous coward as well. You don't want anyone to be able to connect these comments to you.

    8. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Yes, I left off "Islam". There's only one group of radicals in this discussion. Yes, radical Islam. I dropped Islam because I thought it was pretty clear who we were discussing.

      Obviously it is not clear because it is the islamic part that is the key to the whole thing. The ENTIRE context of what he said is that none of the democratic presidential candidates will say "islamic radicals" they don't have a problem saying "radicals."

      > The clash of civilizations is between the supposed "Islamic State" versus the rest of the civilized world.

      No it isn't. That phrase has been in use with respect to muslims long before IS even existed. If you think otherwise you have not been paying attention to any of the debate.

      > This is why politics suck so badly. I don't believe for one second that you really believe that Rubio was calling out an entire religion

      If course I fucking do. That's the whole point of what he said was to spell out the islamic part. If it weren't for the reference to islam nobody would have asked him that question. If you have not watched the damn video, watch it.

      > . I'm going to guess that's why you're posting as an anonymous coward as well

      Fuck off. You are just as anonymous as I am. If I had an account I would use it because this is exactly the same kind of guilt by association shit that the nazis did to the jews to turn the german public against them.

      The best possible explanation for your position is utter ignorance of world history.

    9. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      It takes two seconds to create an account. That's why I say I'm pretty sure that you're trying to make something out of nothing. Words mean nothing. You won't even create an account on a free site where people would be able to tie your inane comments together. Your inaction there speaks volumes to me. Are you posting from a country that would behead you for quibbling on a tech discussion site, or are you carpet bombing trying to stir up a debate where there is none?

    10. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lol. Unable to rebut a single fact, you've tried to make this about me.

      That's how a coward, even a logged in coward, admits they were 100% wrong.

    11. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      The only discussion point in what you posted is your attempt to read something into Rubio's speech that wasn't there. That is about you, and I'm not the one whose comments are preceded by "anonymous coward". So congrats on your second attempt at spin. I'm sure MSNBC has a staff position for you.

    12. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >The only discussion point in what you posted is your attempt to read something into Rubio's speech that wasn't there.

      You mean where he did this:

      Islamic Radicals::Muslims
          as
      Nazis::Non-Violent Nazi Party Members

      The only reason you don't think its there is because you are too callow to see it.

      > That is about you, and I'm not the one whose comments are preceded by "anonymous coward"

      Tell you what, if I did create and account then respond to you, what difference would that make? Yeah, that's what thought. Not one single bit.

    13. Re:Meanwhile Rubio Calls All Muslims Nazis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is about you, and I'm not the one whose comments are preceded by "anonymous coward".

      That might be the problem. You need to not make discussions about a person who you are merely speculating and conjecturing about, as that tends to spoil a discussion.

      Especially when your own identity is very minimal.

      You'd have done better to focus on Marco Rubio's words, rather than descend into this particular phase of the discussion which instead of discrediting anyone else, discredits you.

  34. Re:Sigh by gstoddart · · Score: 1

    The first amendment means government can't pass a law prohibiting free speech. They didn't in this case.

    That does not imply that if you say stupid things which cause outrage that you have no consequences from that.

    So, you are free to say any stupid shit you want to. You are not free from the public telling you that what you said was stupid.

    Free speech is not freedom from consequences and the reaction of other people, and never has been. You are legally free to say any stupid crap which you choose. And others are free to decide you're a fucking idiot.

    People might even defend your right to say it, but the results of you saying it are all your own.

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  35. Another Twitter case study by timholman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You know, sooner or later people might get it through their heads that using Twitter is a strategy for fools.

    You have two choices with Twitter: either you tweet some meaningless groupthink post, guaranteed not to offend anyone, OR you post something that offends someone, somewhere. And if you offend enough people, suddenly your life and career are in tatters when the Internet mob turns on you.

    You'd think that enough peoples' lives have been ruined by thoughtless tweets that the lesson would have been learned. But it seems there's always another fool just waiting to make an example of him/herself.

    1. Re:Another Twitter case study by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      s/Twitter/speech/g;s/tweet/say/g

      Twitter is just one platform among many, and before it we've always given people public platforms to say dumb, career-ending things. You know, you can still (and always could!) say offensive things. The trick is to say it in such a way as to get your point across before others stop listening.

      Dumb statement: Hitler wasn't all bad!

      Better statement: Although Hitler committed great atrocities, it is important we remember he was a human and capable of good, too, so that we don't forget that danger always walks among us.

      Same sentiment; more tactful delivery. This is what politicians are supposed to be able to do. That Kimmel was unable is a good sign that he should not be an elected representative. Lots of people have successfully used Twitter (and other social media platforms) to say lots of non-mainstream things without making legions of enemies.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    2. Re:Another Twitter case study by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Twitter is just one platform among many, and before it we've always given people public platforms to say dumb, career-ending things.

      No, Twitter actually is a new problem. Why? Because of that stupid 140 character limit. Your better statement has 172 characters and your tactful delivery has almost 300 characters. Only the dumb statement is allowed it Twitter. That's the problem. And it makes politicians write like teenage girls.

  36. Who Would Jesus Bomb? by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Thank you for defending us against that straw man. Delightful of you to drag your personal conflicts into this discussion. No one is claiming that ISIS are not bad people, the point is that we should not become bad people ourselves in response. Our brains are wired to be irrational towards people we perceive as enemies (as your post demonstrates ably). We dehumanize them, we exaggerate their bad qualities, ignore the good, and so justify any malicious act against them.

    In terms of human suffering, Paris was a drop in the ocean, and probably outweighed by deaths in Syria both in recent history and as a result of these retaliatory airstrikes. Interventionist policies are increasingly difficult to justify, and bombing hasn't seemed to do anything except provide welfare for munitions manufacturers.

    To a rational person, this is a complicated situation. For the hawkish politician it's a great time for a power grab -- for some reason there's a tendency to want to fight fascism with fascism. By surrendering your reason to violent instinct you aid those who wish to control you, and work to spread suffering -- no matter who the villains-of-the-day happen to be. It's also not particularly Christ-like.

    --
    Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
    1. Re:Who Would Jesus Bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one is claiming that ISIS are not bad people
       
      Except maybe the guy running in MN? You know, the one the story is really about. But hey, let's not make a strawman of it, right?
       
        It's also not particularly Christ-like.
       
      I just love when that reach is made... Suddenly if you're not a goosestepping liberal you must be a xtian and in such be judged based on the half-baked version of christianity that the goosesteppers tell you that you must adhear to. That's rich.
       
      What's your response to those of us who don't really have a religion (nor are we atheists, we're just honest enough to admit that we really don't know and mostly don't care)?

    2. Re:Who Would Jesus Bomb? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Maybe we could send someone to negotiate with them. They can go over and give them whatever they ask for in return for an end to the conflict. When they come back they can declare "Peace in our time!" They'll be a hero....for a little while.

    3. Re:Who Would Jesus Bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one is claiming that ISIS are not bad people

      Except maybe the guy running in MN? You know, the one the story is really about. But hey, let's not make a strawman of it, right?

      Bad != evil. Which in case you missed it was the general point. Also the strawman was this fictitious atheist, do follow along.

      What's your response to those of us who don't really have a religion

      I'd say that you should attend to the rest of the post, which does not rely upon religious arguments. The religious argument was not addressed to you specifically, and in no sense proscribed any religious affiliation. Get over yourself.

    4. Re:Who Would Jesus Bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      by 'not becoming bad people ourselves' we are resigning ourselves to be ruled by the most viscous group that can attain power

    5. Re:Who Would Jesus Bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      by 'not becoming bad people ourselves' we are resigning ourselves to be ruled by the most viscous group that can attain power

      I, for one, welcome our tarbaby overlords!

    6. Re:Who Would Jesus Bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ISIS are anti-Christian. So are Jews.

      http://biblehub.com/hebrews/10-30.htm

      A Call to Persevere
      29How much severer punishment do you think he will deserve who has trampled under foot the Son of God, and has regarded as unclean the blood of the covenant by which he was sanctified, and has insulted the Spirit of grace? 30For we know Him who said, "VENGEANCE IS MINE, I WILL REPAY." And again, "THE LORD WILL JUDGE HIS PEOPLE." 31It is a terrifying thing to fall into the hands of the living God.

      ...

      To a rational person, this is a complicated situation. For the hawkish politician it's a great time for a power grab -- for some reason there's a tendency to want to fight fascism with fascism. By surrendering your reason to violent instinct you aid those who wish to control you, and work to spread suffering -- no matter who the villains-of-the-day happen to be. It's also not particularly Christ-like.

      Suffice it to say, you do not understand Scripture or Jesus Christ yet.

    7. Re: Who Would Jesus Bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck that Jew book. Christianity is about what Jesus said. Not the Pentateuch, not Paul, not St. Augustine. Go ahead and interpret Matthew 5:44 for me. If you can read "love thy enemies", " turn the other cheek", and the Beatitudes and come away with the idea that Jesus would be in favor of bombing ISIS then you are delusional. It's not my religion, but I know what it fucking says.

    8. Re: Who Would Jesus Bomb? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There isn't a shortcut I should give you to understand God on Slashdot. Scripture is written how it is for many reasons.

      http://biblehub.com/matthew/13-13.htm

      The Purpose of Jesus' Parables
      12"For whoever has, to him more shall be given, and he will have an abundance; but whoever does not have, even what he has shall be taken away from him. 13"Therefore I speak to them in parables; because while seeing they do not see, and while hearing they do not hear, nor do they understand. 14"In their case the prophecy of Isaiah is being fulfilled, which says, 'YOU WILL KEEP ON HEARING, BUT WILL NOT UNDERSTAND; YOU WILL KEEP ON SEEING, BUT WILL NOT PERCEIVE;

      I wholeheartedly suggest that you continue to read and pray. What I said is correct.

      http://biblehub.com/matthew/27-23.htm

      The Crowd Chooses Barabbas
      22Pilate said to them, "Then what shall I do with Jesus who is called Christ?" They all said, "Crucify Him!" 23And he said, "Why, what evil has He done?" But they kept shouting all the more, saying, "Crucify Him!"

      http://biblehub.com/1_john/2-23.htm

      Beware of Antichrists
      22Who is the liar but the one who denies that Jesus is the Christ? This is the antichrist, the one who denies the Father and the Son. 23Whoever denies the Son does not have the Father; the one who confesses the Son has the Father also. 24As for you, let that abide in you which you heard from the beginning. If what you heard from the beginning abides in you, you also will abide in the Son and in the Father.

  37. How the first amendment works by sjbe · · Score: 2

    Another circumstance where the court of public opinion rules political correctness to be a greater virtue than the first amendment.

    I think you don't understand how the first amendment works. Allow me to clarify:
    1) The first amendment protects you from the government, not from private citizens or companies in most cases so long as they don't violate the law in response to your speech.
    2) The first amendment does not protect you against all possible consequences of saying something stupid or offensive.
    3) People have as much right to say they don't like what you say as you have to say it. You have the right to be offensive but it might cost you your job if you exercise that right. You have a right to remain silent too but that seems to be exercised less often.
    4) This was a private citizen exercising his right to free speech (however stupid it might be) and others exercising theirs. All peacefully. That's how it's supposed to work.

  38. Re:Sigh by tbannist · · Score: 2

    Actually, it may be even more than that. According to the Atlantic article What ISIS Really Wants, the goal of ISIS is to bring about the apocalypse and thus end the world. So maybe, they want to be evil, with a capital E. Because, I don't think you can get much more evil than wanting to kill everybody everywhere.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  39. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're probably responding to a teenager. Slashdot is probably half teenagers by now -- you can tell by the style of writing.

  40. Re:Cry me a river. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First of all: this one quote ain't from Aristotle. It's from some Roman guy[1] who is as famous with you as my uncle Bob.

    Second: I'm not comparing quotes. The core of my message is: raging & foaming at the mouth is bad, be it ISIS, be it American religious nutjobs. What we need now is a cool head. What we are getting now is tons of knee-jerk and reactive security. Go read Bruce Schneier to see why this doesn't work. Comprende?

    Third: I cringe watching how those stupid terrorists are killing our open society "by proxy" -- the dirty job being taken up by all you right-wing nutjobs. Go get a life. Go to Syria or Irak and enjoy your phantasies.
    [1] Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus

  41. Perfectly in line with Democrats' thinking by mi · · Score: 1

    "ISIS isn't necessarily evil. It is made up of people doing what they think is best for their community. Violence is not the answer, though."

    Kimmel's views have no place in our party.

    Oh, the pompous Democratic assholes — the above-quoted view was perfectly in line with the party's (including government officials) thinking until last Friday.

    Maybe, not all of the party, but hardly a far fringe — the man was endorsed by the same Star Tribune, which is now reporting on his dropping out. The whole idea, that evil is relative (unless it is Hitler or Bush) and that we don't really have enemies in the world — only friends, whose grievances we haven't accommodated just yet — is firmly planted in the Democratic party today. Mr. Kimmel's attempts to stop "othering" ISIS were perfectly in accordance with the opinions prevailing on the Left. The Left, which temporarily retreated into their "Healing Zone", but who will emerge from there with counter-arguments on how ISIS are different from Islam, and how murdering infidels is really "unislamic" — pretending to believe, they know the opinions and customs of ISIS' target-audience better than ISIS knows them themselves.

    No, Mr. Kimmel's views do have a nice and comfortable place in the Democratic party — complete with a "Safe Zone" too — it was just silly of him to underline that point at such inopportune time. Should've waited a month or two...

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    1. Re:Perfectly in line with Democrats' thinking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...is firmly planted in the Democratic party today

      Not really, no. If it were, they'd have the courage of their convictions. But it's hard. Very hard to stand up and embrace the most despicable and wretched among us, it's difficult enough with the poor and homeless, those who chose the path of violence, and anger? Even tougher. Because you know they're wrong, and it is easy to proclaim them to be unjust.

      It is hard to love in the face of such evil.

      It is even harder to persuade others, who seeing such things, want to lash out, to strike back, to fight. That is a very tempting and appealing option. It feels good. It feels right.

      That takes a strength and grace that goes beyond the mortal.

      Unfortunately, the roots of that are rather shallow in the political consciousness, there are few among the religious who know that love, let alone among the body politic. Neither Republican nor Democrat can truly say it is within their souls.

  42. morons shouldn't be elected or run by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    well this guy's just a total idiot for saying something like that, the institution of the House of Representatives, the Democratic Party, and the people of Minnesota are better served by him dropping out - hopefully someone with more of a brain can take his place in the race for the democrats in that district

  43. You gottta realize by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's from MinnieSoda, you betcha. They think harsh winters aren't necessarily evil, don't cha know.

  44. if thy right eye offend thee by Pseudonymous+Powers · · Score: 0

    It was already moronic for a US politican to express any even-slightly nuanced view on ISIS, much less since Paris happened, and even stupider to phrase it like he did. But likely what the guy meant to say was that "these guys don't see themselves as evil".

    Hardly anybody ever does, of course. In the case of ISIS, they believe that God wants them to conquer the world for Islam. And even though that requires killing a bunch of what we would call "innocent" people, well, that's okay, because all those people they're killing are evil, because they oppose the spread of Islam. It's not evil to destroy evil, right? It takes all the moral horror out of violence, and "righteous" violence is like crack to the 18-year-olds that ISIS is marketing itself to.

    Yeah, it's pretty obviously evil to the rest of us. But then again, if you go far enough back, we're all of us living on land that our ancestors stole from somebody else's ancestors. It wasn't a smooth and amicable transfer of ownership, either. Unless you believe that there's such a thing as absolute morality, which is actually kind of the problem here, you can't really "prove" that ISIS isn't "right" to put zero or even negative value on the lives of the rest of us. It's just our word against theirs, so to speak.

    That said, I think that, at this point, the rest of the world we can all agree that ISIS is a pack of rabid dogs that are wandering our streets intent on spreading the infection. Whether they're evil or not is irrelevant. Evil or not, they gotta go.

    1. Re:if thy right eye offend thee by transfire · · Score: 1

      Well said.

  45. Evil begats evil by transfire · · Score: 1

    It is so easy to just lump people into a group called Evil. Then we need not think of the consequences. Do people stop to think what might drive other people to do "evil" acts? Consider, what might you do if a foreign country dropped a bomb on your land and killed your relatives? I bet you'd be inclined toward doing some "evil" things too. I think it is very hard for Americans to understand that the Iraq war and Syria civil war has resulted in hundreds of thousands dead and what that can do to people. While many people hold on to a shred of humanity, usually b/c they still have children to protect, others look for someone to blame and they look for groups to join to do something about it. Until we actually start discussing these nuances instead of just lumping everything into "Evil", these conflicts will never end, but simply continue in a cycle of endless escalation.

  46. File it with "Good Old Uncle Joe" Stalin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    File it with "Good Old Uncle Joe" Stalin - sometimes people in politics say stupid shit even when most are becoming aware that they are saying something nice about a monster.

  47. Re:Sigh by quintessencesluglord · · Score: 1

    Not exactly that clear cut.

    The government also makes laws that states you could be fired from your job for expressing an opinion, which just a proxy, much like the US government not being legal in snooping into your affairs without a warrant, but is perfectly cromulent to authorize a foreign government to do the snooping. Doubt you would be as sympathetic if you were fired for expressing your love of kittens. After all, it was just consequences of your speech. The government wasn't involved at all, except making it a legal argument for dismissal.

    And all this ignores the spirit of the 1st Amendment, which is to foster debate, free from intrusion. Your line logic lead to free speech zones, which yes; you are free to say what ever you want (just like you could in prison), but far away from it being meaningful.

  48. He should drop his head off for this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He should drop his head off for this.
    He is a dangerous imbecile that must be removed from public space.

  49. Democrats soft on terror/pander to muslims by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The true irony is Islam has no tolerance for most liberal ideals.

  50. Re:Sigh by fey000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well duh, you're only supposed to judge them by how much money they can scrounge together.

    If we judged politicians by their words or actions, both Trump and Hillary would be in jail (and poor Bernie would be sedated in a looneybin somewhere).

  51. Evil is a childish world by damn_registrars · · Score: 2

    We really live in a more complicated world than that; terms like "evil" have led us into really awful and short-sighted situations before. Perhaps this guy could have phrased his tweet a little more elegantly, but he does have a point that civilized discourse should not reduce itself to calling people - or organizations of people - "evil" (although twitter doesn't help that).

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:Evil is a childish world by ScentCone · · Score: 1
      What's wrong with that word? It's succinct, and accurate. People who embrace a value system that makes it acceptable to kill teachers because they seek to educate young girls, or who think their vision of the world is best served by attempting to provoke an apocalyptic war by strolling down a street in Paris and shooting up restaurants full of people on a Friday night specially because those people are enjoying themselves ... that's evil. Evil is a handy word, because it saves us the trouble of explaining, each and every time we mention them, "you know, those guys who burn people alive, cut heads off because of religion, line up villagers and gun them down in order to make recruitment videos, and gang-rape women from other religions in order to please Allah" ... that's such a lot of fuss to type every time, don't you think?

      civilized discourse should not reduce itself to calling people - or organizations of people - "evil"

      Oops! I'm sorry, I didn't realize you were trolling for the lulz there. My mistake. Civilized discourse should definitely refer to ISIS as "The Gentlemen from Raqqa" - that's appropriate.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    2. Re:Evil is a childish world by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      Evil is a word that describes cartoon villains. Evil is a word that young children use. Evil is a word that makes the argument against the labelled person (or group) itself look childish. Refusal to use the word evil does not in any way suggest an endorsement of the thing that would otherwise be labelled as evil, it just shows that there are better ways to describe the actions and philosophy.

      We can adequately describe the difference between them and ourselves without reducing our own discourse to such absurdly childish terminology.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    3. Re:Evil is a childish world by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      We can adequately describe the difference between them and ourselves without reducing our own discourse to such absurdly childish terminology.

      So I suppose you prefer "naughty" for gang raping mass murders who burn people alive for religious reasons? Or perhaps "miscreants?" Or "rascals?" I detect a big dose of poisonous moral relativsim that's preventing you from "childishly" describing something in honest terms, lest you commit the unforgivable sin of using your OWN moral framework to make judgement.

      Evil

      adjective
      1. morally wrong or bad; immoral; wicked:
      evil deeds; an evil life.

      2. harmful; injurious:
      evil laws.

      3. characterized or accompanied by misfortune or suffering; unfortunate; disastrous:
      to be fallen on evil days.

      4. due to actual or imputed bad conduct or character:
      an evil reputation.

      5. marked by anger, irritability, irascibility, etc.:
      He is known for his evil disposition.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:Evil is a childish world by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Gee, you're awfully selective with that word. I mean you got your Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Pakistan, Kuwait, Al Qaeda (They are "allies" now). Eh, no biggie, as long as you support the lesser evil, right? I mean it's only evil when they don't obey us. Sure is funny whenever you people bring up that 'relativism' thing.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    5. Re:Evil is a childish world by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      You seem to be trying to mindlessly slap a silly label on me just as quickly as you would like to do it to ISIS. Similarly you are also overlooking the fact that calling them "evil" only helps their cause, as it helps them to portray themselves as victims of hate and oppression (they are, after all, trying to "reclaim the holy lands", amongst other things). During the crusades, the Christians called the Muslims "evil" - and didn't really get what they were after. Just as you make yourself look silly and childish when you call someone else "evil", you end up building up their own local PR.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    6. Re:Evil is a childish world by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Really? So we can - as everyone does - call them murderers, terrorists, rapists, and thieves ... and that's all fine, because that doesn't hurt their feelings and make them go online and tell prospective recruits that the world is being mean to them. But saying that doing those things is evil ... well, that's just too much! Mass rapes, decapitating children, keeping slaves ... pointing that out is OK, but making a value judgement about them, well that is just MEAN, huh? Are you even listening to yourself?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    7. Re:Evil is a childish world by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Gee, you're awfully selective with that word. I mean you got your Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Pakistan, Kuwait, Al Qaeda (They are "allies" now). Eh, no biggie, as long as you support the lesser evil, right? I mean it's only evil when they don't obey us. Sure is funny whenever you people bring up that 'relativism' thing.

      If you really think your point is best made by pretending I've said something I haven't, that's fine. So long as it's clear that you're just making stuff up. Personally, I don't think my points are made more persuasively by lying. But whatever scores you some points with your chosen audience, right?

      Now that you bring it up, by the way, yes. Sometimes you DO have to hold your nose and work with the jerks who aren't slaughtering people, even if they are jerks, when you're dealing with the people who are slaughtering people. That's why the French were able to fly out of the UAE and Jordan.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    8. Re:Evil is a childish world by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Well, thank you for confirming your own relativism then.. I have to admit, your talent for rationalization is right up there with all those you condemn for the same thing. Like so many others, you follow the same script so perfectly. Hold on tight! It's a long fall off that high horse of yours.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    9. Re:Evil is a childish world by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Still making things up? OK. Which part of what I said indicates moral relativism on my part? Since you didn't cite it or explain what you mean, I'll just take it as more of your lazy ad hominem, and further indication that you are so paralyzed by political correctness and rubber values that the ONLY type person you'll make a judgement about is the one you think is committing the ultimate sin: calling things what they actually are. The horror!

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    10. Re:Evil is a childish world by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      *sigh* You're just another textbook case...

      You just said you are perfectly okay dealing with one set of killers to combat another. And of course you will deny that we profit by selling weapons to both sides, just like the old Iran/Iraq days... I like you more than the other guy. You're more aggressive in your baseless typical right wing assertions. Got some more?

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    11. Re:Evil is a childish world by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Is it fun lying? Do you like it? Do you think you score some sort of rhetorical points with low-information friends when you do that? Are you really interested in cultivating social capital with people so intellectually challenged that they can't click "parent" to see that you're deliberately making up words to put in people's mouths? I'm genuinely curious about how your brain works in that regard. Please, do tell.

      But let's pretend that it's not you being cravenly disingenuous, and that maybe your reading comprehension actually IS so bad, or your short term memory and critical thinking skills really are so hobbled that you need to have things spoon fed to you. OK.

      Here in the real world, there are very bad people (I know, try not to cry little snowflake tears as you near someone make a value judgement about other people). There are also slightly less bad people. Sometimes you have to interact with the less bad people while looking to have the worse people do a bit less of things like showing up at your Precious Snowflake Concert Venue, and shoot you in the head because you are a Precious Snowflake. Dealing with reality doesn't mean that leveraging the opportunity to use the not-as-bad-but-still-bad people to that end makes those people less bad (oh noes! TWO value judgements in the same post! do you need a nap to recover? do you need to go to your safe space so that you won't be triggered by any more confrontations with icky feelings like knowing that reality doesn't provide you with international relations resembling Sesame Street?).

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    12. Re:Evil is a childish world by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Dude, you're the liar, not me, even if it is only to yourself. Your mind is shut like a trap. The relativism is strong with you. Watching you deny it is pure entertainment. Your lesser evil bullshit doesn't fly. You are merely playing both sides for profit, that's how the game works. There is no "moral" judgement being made. That's just something you wish for, but it ain't happening. Do try to get that nonsense out of your head and realize that this is business and nothing but. Maximal profit is the singular goal, well, that and keeping the competing Russian and Chinese "investors" out of the way. And in that regard, you should be most pleased with the President's (and Hillary's) performance... A nice simple graph shows what it's all about, and yet here you are, playing your little charade, trying to be the *big man*, all huffing and puffing with your little speech there.

      By the way, if people do read back up the thread and they are honest with themselves, they will understand perfectly who is the bullshitter. You're just reciting boilerplate propaganda throughout. I do like your style though, a real fighter... feisty! The most rudimentary studies document perfectly your real nature that you reveal so, um, eloquently right here, You're a combination of Archie Bunker and Jerry Falwell, correction, you are merely a follower.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    13. Re:Evil is a childish world by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      Evil is a childish blanket statement that suggests you see no redeeming, humane, or worthwhile aspect to them. It suggests you don't care about anything they do and you see them just as a caricature of a villain. I don't support them, but when you make a point of painting them with such a broad and uncaring stroke you end up helping their cause more than you hurt it, as they will use that in their own propaganda.

      Think of it this way - is there a politician in your country (sitting or running) who you would describe as "evil"? Hopefully not, as it would show again that you are not paying enough attention to what they are doing to understand that evil is at best a very childish way to describe them, and at worst it would only end up aiding whatever it is that they do which you dislike so much as to be willing to lower yourself to such a silly level of discourse.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    14. Re:Evil is a childish world by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      You just said you are perfectly okay dealing with one set of killers to combat another.

      Do yourself a favor and show where I "just said that." Then correct the rest of your screwed up take on things.

      It is good to see, though, that you're faithfully playing the rest of the cards you've been issued. It's all business! The Eeeeevil Corporate Man is trying to keep us down by making us like killers! Anyone who disagrees with my propaganda is a propagandist!

      I also like how you try to use every big-boy condescending phrase you can muster ("huffing and puffing" - my goodness, are you sure you're old enough to trot that one out just yet?") in an attempt to make it sound like someone else is playing high and mighty. You're as impervious to irony as you are to recognizing your the limitations you're putting on your point by having reduced yourself to ad hominem right out of the gate and ever since. And I especially like your faux discomfort at the making of moral judgments even as you make them yourself, thinking nobody will notice because you've got them wrapped up in phony juvenile patronization. You should be aware that it's very noticeable, and that you're not fooling anybody.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    15. Re:Evil is a childish world by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Sometimes you DO have to hold your nose and work with the jerks who aren't slaughtering people, even if they are jerks, when you're dealing with the people who are slaughtering people.

      This here is your bullshit. The jerks you think are not slaughtering people actually are, they're just people you don't care about. You're still financing and supplying them. We deal with and profit from both sides. Look, you're just a regular right wing nationalist dweeb, that is a given. I've seen all this shit before. I'm not interested. I only like to see it documented for future reference when you feed your bullshit to people who might believe it. So, thankyouverymuch for your participation. Toodles...

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    16. Re:Evil is a childish world by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Ah, the drive-by, slink-away cowardly lie as your parting shot. Classic!

      The actual bullshit is your imposition of a "totally OK with" value judgement that I did not express. You manufactured that fiction in order to maintain your own BS posturing. Nothing new here, you're will to BS about not only your own position but about what you'd like to pretend other people have said. As seen in several of your posts, reading comprehension looks like a problem (but it's not, really - you see and understand, and then make stuff up since it's a bad fit with your narrative). So at least you're consistent, and not the least bit surprising. Especially that bit where you lie and run away - that's the best part.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    17. Re:Evil is a childish world by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Keep on rationalizing, my man... and denying your own words... I'm diggin' it! I don't need to say anything else. You're saying it all for me. Much appreciated. And your own reading comprehension, now there's something to be proud of, but I figure it's intentional, you know, being what you are and all.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    18. Re:Evil is a childish world by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      ...value judgement that I did not express.

      Oh, but you did! That's the beauty. You express it perfectly, just like your comrades in arms, right there in black and white. And your denial further confirms it. No big deal, you're just picking sides. I understand completely. You need something to believe in, and you have a dog in this race. So, as the man said, *Please, continue*

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    19. Re:Evil is a childish world by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      So, just to be clear, you think that words you put in my mouth, which I did not say, is me talking? You said you were going to show me where I said I was "totally OK" dealing with killers. Which you can't, because I never said those words or words that convey that sentiment. You're just making shit up, and thinking that maintaining your phony condescending tone will somehow make it sound more credible. If it makes you more comfortable with your own lies to use a certain sound when you say them, you should take a little time to re-evaluate why you see things that way. What underlying mixed premises or contradictions are you clinging to that make paralyze you so? What is it about your own inability to grapple with reality that makes you so angry that you're comfortable not only lying, but thinking that it's somehow constructive, or that doing so illuminates something other than your own nonsense? It's a bit of a mystery, but you're the one who has to live inside your own head, so best of luck with that. But please, do avoid things that impact other people, like voting.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    20. Re:Evil is a childish world by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      I put no words in your mouth.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    21. Re:Evil is a childish world by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Wow, won't even cop to your own writing, huh?

      I get it. You went into this saying that it's childish to call something what it is. And despite calling other people what you think they are, you're retaining the right to pretend that other people's assessments, and even the actual words they type, are subject to your spin, interpretation, and meaning - but ONLY to yours. That sort of craven arrogance, decorated with the hypocritical patronizing condescension peculiar to the personality type you so fully represent, would actually be sort of breathtaking if it weren't fairly common these days. Hey, didn't you say "toodles?" Or does that word also not mean what it means? Uh huh.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    22. Re:Evil is a childish world by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      God! You are funny as hell! Your screaming, defensive reaction is such perfect confirmation of what I said. You're just jabbering now. Thank you so very much! And please, feel free to continue, this is great stuff.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  52. ISIS Non-combatants? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ISIS is as much a place on the map (sphere of influence) as it is a black flag unfurled by some angry young violent men.
    What about all the women/children/elderly/pacifist swept up by it?
    Perhaps we call them victims, and not "ISIS" but ISIS itself disagrees.
    They are most certainly not the same "Evil."

  53. The Golden Rule by RghtHndSd · · Score: 1

    The Golden Rule has been observed in nature. It is natural. It is the basis of any sensible law and regulation. To not follow it is evil.

    1. Re:The Golden Rule by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      The necessary corollary to the Golden Rule is 'be prepared to assume that the 'other' is also living by the Golden Rule.' In other words, at some point, you need to act as though the other person is fully aware of how they're treating you, and treat them as appropriate.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  54. 2 Repub Govs reject resettlement of Syrianrefugess by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two Republican governors of Michigan, Alabama reject resettlement of Syrian refugees in their states.

    This typical democrat's clueless view of reality is just More evidence that liberalism is a mental disease.

    Which party has a clue and is trying to keep us safe?

  55. Re:Cry me a river. by fizzer06 · · Score: 1

    raging & foaming at the mouth is bad, be it ISIS, be it American religious nutjobs

    Because, in your feeble mind, they are equivalent?

  56. In other news by skovnymfe · · Score: 1

    In other news, a politician has an opinion and is chastised for it. Let's not let these people think too hard lest they hurt themselves in the process. Just sit down and take your spoonfed soundbites like a good doggy. Here comes the plane! Prrrrrwooooooooeeeeeee!

    1. Re:In other news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not that he has an opinion, but that he spilled the beans on the true nature of the democratic party.

  57. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This was the most insightful comment on this thread. Unfortunately I already spent my mod points.

    Other mods: MOD THIS GUY UP PLEASE!

  58. Re: Sigh by rickb928 · · Score: 1

    Then you cling to the 4th, and 5th amendments, among others even.

    Of course none of these protect you from being a fool.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
  59. One too many cultural anthropology classes? by smchris · · Score: 1

    His point could make for interesting academic discussion but in a political context in the U.S. it was moronic.

    Perhaps a showcase example of being so smart you look stupid.

  60. Re:2 Repub Govs reject resettlement of Syrianrefug by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 0

    Considering a Republican (Gorge W Bush) caused the creation of ISIS, the Republican party is certainly not trying to keep us safe.

  61. We invade countries on completely false pretenses by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

    And we are going to argue "what is evil"??! I find that utterly fascinating!

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  62. "evil" vs "different morals" pragmatically differ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think that his point is that if someone is "evil", it carries a connotation that, there is an agreed upon morality, and they are doing something that is not only wrong, but that they agree is wrong, and that the simple wrongness of the act is in large part the motivation behind it.

    This is opposed to differences in the accepted morality arising from cultural norms or otherwise.

    This has a lot of practical considerations with how to deal with the person. If there are mere cultural differences, it may be possible to change a person's views on the matter through education and cultural conquest generally. Views on right and wrong are somewhat malleable and so pushing hard on westernized education, commerce, etc. can at least HELP alleviate a situation. However, if they already agree upon our system of values, and perform acts purely because they are wrong, education seems pointless, because they are already educated in your way of thinking, and wholesale destruction becomes the only obvious answer.

    I'm not really acquainted with any ISIS members, so I'm not sure if they are truly evil or their actions are simply driven by a different world-view, but I like to hope that we can settle the situation through education and open communication (which is what, I think, this congressman was hoping as well); because the other option will be death and destruction, and lots of it.

  63. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I didn't read the quote as love for ISIS, just trying to acknowledge that those involved in the group are taking what they believe to be the best course of action, and then advocating peace. If the mob rule vilifies another group and calling them evil is the only acceptable answer this just foments more conflict since there is now an enemy and demands for confrontation and an escalation of the violence.

    Any one who is advocating peace IMO should not be ridiculed and shamed. We also don't want to drop all our defenses and let them come in and take over because they are armed and we are disarmed. Conflict may be inevitable with an angry armed opponent at this point. Is anyone trying to follow the money? Who is supplying and training these folks? Who is providing them with documentation? The USA has supposedly been engaging them for over a year, and yet there's been little progress to show for it. Russia steps in and over a weekend the organization is reportedly in chaos and falling apart. WTF?!

  64. Re:in.news.yahoo.com/britain-vienna-talks-draw-syr by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

    in.news.yahoo.com/britain-vienna-talks-draw-syria-144131896.html

    How 'bout the institutions that finance them? Nobody wants to talk about that, because we would discover something that nobody wants to know, much less accept. Hasn't anybody noticed that Al Qaeda is now an "ally" (again) in this little spat?

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  65. Re:Cry me a river. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Third: I cringe watching how those stupid terrorists are killing our open society "by proxy" -- the dirty job being taken up by all you right-wing nutjobs. Go get a life. Go to Syria or Irak and enjoy your phantasies.

    The right wingers just want to go kill the stupid terrorists. It's the left wingers who won't "let a good disaster to go to waste" (taking away rights) and actively seek such disasters when no options present themselves (growing ISIS via inaction).

  66. Evil doesn't exist. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The entire premise of evil is false. We ascribe our in-built vestigial cave man monkey instincts as "evil" which denies the fact that we were once a bunch of apes who raped and stole from each other. Maybe after a few thousand years we will have finally shed our monkey dna and start acting like humans.

  67. Re:Am I the only One Who thinks ... by jsepeta · · Score: 1

    He's not wrong. Christianity (and other religions) seek to turn the meaning of Bad to Evil, because their initial survival was predicated on demonizing their enemies. ISIS commits some terrible, immoral actions -- blowing up innocent civilians for political gain -- but their goal is first to create a nation-state, before world domination. Birds of a feather will flock together.

    --
    Remember kids, if you're not paying for the service, YOU ARE THE PRODUCT THAT IS BEING SOLD.
  68. Re:Sigh by towermac · · Score: 1

    "I have to be free to refuse to ... do business with you ..."

    Yeah we lost that one already. It was for a good cause, civil rights in the 60s and all, but we gave that right up long ago.

  69. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not true. He is welcome to say whatever he likes, but so is everybody else, and his statement reflects on his personality and how he may conduct himself in office. He is also a banker, and then banks are not very popular with people.

  70. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The TSA will arrest you, but it will be illegal. All the more reason TSA and HSA should not be tolerated anyplace outside an airport.

  71. Hate to say it but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... The time for full-fledged war is here. The only thing these aholes understand is a bullet in the skull. It's time to give it to them. Let's not beat around the bush - it's time to return them to the stone age. I'm sorry if you don't like this but it's time. Long live freedom.

  72. His real sin? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Using Twitter.

  73. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And all this ignores the spirit of the 1st Amendment, which is to foster debate, free from intrusion..

    You couldn't be more wrong.

  74. Re: Sigh by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    If the mob rule vilifies another group and calling them evil is the only acceptable answer this just foments more conflict

    How is someone *not* evil when they regularly saw off peoples' heads?

    Any one who is advocating peace IMO should not be ridiculed and shamed.

    You want to try to live peacefully with a group that burns people at the stake and beheads them regularly? If you want to advocate strict separatism and quarantining because getting involved in that region is unlikely to work out well, that's a reasonable-sounding position, but saying "let's make peace" with people this barbaric is just dumb.

    Is anyone trying to follow the money? Who is supplying and training these folks? Who is providing them with documentation? The USA has supposedly been engaging them for over a year, and yet there's been little progress to show for it. Russia steps in and over a weekend the organization is reportedly in chaos and falling apart. WTF?!

    Now this does raise a good point, though I have to call for "citation needed" on the bit about ISIS being "in chaos and falling apart"; I haven't read that at all. All Russia's done is dropped some bombs, and even then it looks like they bombed the wrong guys, they bombed some other anti-Assad groups, not ISIS (since their only real concern is propping up Assad). The French probably did more with their small bombing of Raqa in the last day or two. But that again makes me wonder: if we knew where these training camps and recruitment centers were, why weren't they bombed long ago? Honestly this whole thing kinda stinks: this enemy has no aircraft, no real AAA that I've heard of, just a bunch of Toyota trucks and AK47s and probably some other infantry equipment. How hard can it be to weaken them to the point where the Kurds can completely eliminate them on the ground?

  75. Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well to be fair ISIS is controlled by the CIA.

    1. Re: Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Skynet. ISIS is controlled by skynet.

  76. The US human rights record... by sjbe · · Score: 2

    Saudi Arabia beheads people almost every month.

    And many of the state governments in the US routinely execute people (some innocent) plus the federal government kills innocent people all the time with drone and missile strikes while trying to assassinate people they deem terrorists. You really want to compare the human rights and execution record of the US with Saudi Arabia? It won't be pretty on either side of the ledger.

    When asked about it, the State Department calls it unfortunate, not batshit crazy evil.

    Because of practical Realpolitik reasons. Not as if the US government has its hands clean. If it was politically expedient for them to call out Saudi Arabia I'm sure they would even if that made them (more) hypcritical.

    1. Re:The US human rights record... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should actually compare the execution records of the US, Saudi Arabia, and China, so that you get a better insight. I promise you that you will be unpleasantly surprised.

  77. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think perhaps the real issue here is that he's grossly under educated on a subject and he opened his ignorance hole on the subject. Because (so far) murdering 10,000 non-combatant Men, Women and children for not following Islam is totally just trying to protect their community, right?

    Well, if that's the prerequisite for evil, you probably don't want to look into how many innocent's the US killed in Iraq

  78. Actions vs Thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actions can be evil. Thoughts can never be evil. And that is all I am saying on the subject.

  79. Re:Am I the only One Who thinks ... by LichtSpektren · · Score: 1

    Christianity's early survival was predicated on accepting martyrdom as a death of honor and grace rather than shame. Hence why 10 of the original 12 apostles were crucified.

  80. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Actually, he said something decidedly un-PC. To be PC, he would shoot the leader of ISIS in Vikings Stadium, then go to the concession stand and order a beer.

    Bonus points if the other guy is wearing a Packers uniform. Or the Giants.

  81. Re:Sigh by Tailhook · · Score: 1

    Aside from most of your comment being incoherent I'd like to hear your remedy. Is some authority supposed to force the Minnesota Democratic party to support this candidate? Should his oppressors be punished in some way for criminally criticizing him?

    I'd really like to know what you think should happen to correct this injustice.

    --
    Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
  82. Re:Sigh by amiga3D · · Score: 1

    We keep losing rights to good causes. Pretty soon we'll be out of rights.

  83. Re:Sigh by dinfinity · · Score: 1

    poor Bernie would be sedated in a looneybin somewhere

    Why is that?

  84. Evil is who evil says by mistr · · Score: 1

    Just a thought about all this evil nonsense. Imho only misguided people fall into this trap of believing that his opponent is evil. What humanity should have learned through infinite wars and numerous religious superstitions, is that man is capable of doing anything if he believes he is in his right to do so. And how easily a man can be misled into believing he is right. And please spare me this my God holier than thine religious chant, read your history books and be silent.

  85. Re:Sigh by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

    The government also makes laws that states you could be fired from your job for expressing an opinion,...

    True, but as the OP pointed out freedom of speech is not freedom of consequences. The government is not guilty of prior restraint, which would impinge on your free speech rights. Rights don't exist in a vacuum either, and it is necessary to balance one right against the other as well. For example, you may feel that the 1st give you the right to stand in front of someone's house and yell at them with a bullhorn at 2 AM but I would argue that stopping you from doing that after you start is a reasonable action by government and not a violation of your 1st amendment rights.

    --
    I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
  86. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Advocating politics that killed a hundred million last century.

  87. Re:Cry me a river. by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    First of all: this one quote ain't from Aristotle. It's from some Roman guy[1] who is as famous with you as my uncle Bob.

    The quote is from the book Nicomachean Ethics, written by Aristotle in 350 BC, Long before the Roman empire was founded. Therefore, fool, I will not argue with you anymore because doing so is vain.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  88. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > If we judged politicians by their words or actions, both Trump and Hillary would be in jail (and poor Bernie would be sedated in a looneybin somewhere).

    Your ideas intrigue me and I would like to subscribe to your newsletter.

  89. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pretty hard. One mistake in bombing a civilian site, or even a site where they have brought in hostages as shields, and ISILIS will crow endlessly over it and recruit the next batch with the pictures. Heck, even an accident loading the bombs would cause a freak out.

    France is only doing anything now because they have the cover of these attacks. Anybody who protesters, even for the costs, and they'll be shouted down.

    And that isn't even getting into how the Turks don't want the Kurds doing anything. That sets off their alarm bells. And the West needs the Bospurus.

    So it is a mess. Which nobody will fix.

  90. Re: 2 Repub Govs reject resettlement of Syrianrefu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jug-ears has helped along the process of creating ISIS.

    In his press conference this morning he confirmed what a piece-of-shit president he is.

  91. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember, you have the right to be offended by something. You don't, however, have the right to not be offended by anything.

  92. Targeting Civilians by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 1

    There is a big difference between waging war against military targets, making a great effort to target them intelligently to minimize civilian casualties...and deliberately targeting civilians.

    Not if you're a civilian casualty. How are they even supposed to distinguish between a military accident and a deliberate act of violence? Do we issue an apology afterwards? Pay reparations? Try, convict, and sentence the offenders? Or do we call every military-age male a combatant in order to pretend our bombing campaign is just and legal?

    Considering every military-age male to be a combatant gives them two choices: become a refugee, or take up arms in self-defense. Not only are you not holding anyone accountable (to anything more consequential than your bad opinion), you don't even know what's being done. Our hands are clean because we defined "dirty" in such a way that it doesn't apply to us.

    --
    Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
    1. Re:Targeting Civilians by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      There is a big difference between waging war against military targets, making a great effort to target them intelligently to minimize civilian casualties...and deliberately targeting civilians.

      Not if you're a civilian casualty. How are they even supposed to distinguish between a military accident and a deliberate act of violence? Do we issue an apology afterwards? Pay reparations? Try, convict, and sentence the offenders? Or do we call every military-age male a combatant in order to pretend our bombing campaign is just and legal?

      Considering every military-age male to be a combatant gives them two choices: become a refugee, or take up arms in self-defense. Not only are you not holding anyone accountable (to anything more consequential than your bad opinion), you don't even know what's being done. Our hands are clean because we defined "dirty" in such a way that it doesn't apply to us.

      Whether they know that they are not being deliberately targeted or not is irrelevant (I agree not from their perspective but from ours).
      The point that I'm trying to make is that in once case civilians are accidentally killed and in the other they are deliberately targeted.

      As I said in another post, if we didn't care about civilians we could end this war very quickly by bombing the entire area to glass - something that I daresay IS would do to us if they could.

      So yes, there is a very real difference.

      As far as apologies and reparations...are you taking the position that our bombing what we believe to be IS positions is somehow illegal?

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    2. Re:Targeting Civilians by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 1

      Whether they know that they are not being deliberately targeted or not is irrelevant (I agree not from their perspective but from ours).
      The point that I'm trying to make is that in once case civilians are accidentally killed and in the other they are deliberately targeted.

      But as long as civilians are being killed either way, saying that we're being less bad than we could be is mostly nonsense to make our citizens feel better about themselves.

      As I said in another post, if we didn't care about civilians we could end this war very quickly by bombing the entire area to glass - something that I daresay IS would do to us if they could.

      You presume much, and overestimate our ability to conduct mass murder. But there's not a lot of moral advantage in only killing as many civilians as we think we can get away with. If war is a continuation of politics with other means, then we need to consider political objectives before military ones, and those don't seem to be well served by bombing. We're not trying to control a strategic objective or destroy a large army; that we have the ability to bomb arbitrary targets does not mean that playing whack-a-mole in the desert is a good idea.

      As far as apologies and reparations...are you taking the position that our bombing what we believe to be IS positions is somehow illegal?

      I don't think it's unreasonable to try to repair our faults even if they are not technically illegal, but given that there has been no formal declaration of war against these people, I would be inclined to think it illegal, yes.

      --
      Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
    3. Re:Targeting Civilians by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      "But as long as civilians are being killed either way, saying that we're being less bad than we could be is mostly nonsense to make our citizens feel better about themselves."
      If you are working on something and you hit your partner in the face because your hand slipped off the tool you are using, this is different than if you punch them in the face.

      What do you suggest? That we wage war only without the possibility of killing civilians? That we don't wage war at all?
      Neither is possible.

      "You presume much, and overestimate our ability to conduct mass murder."
      Tell it to the Japanese.

      "But there's not a lot of moral advantage in only killing as many civilians as we think we can get away with."
      You say this as if we intentionally kill civilians, which we do not.

      "If war is a continuation of politics with other means, then we need to consider political objectives before military ones, and those don't seem to be well served by bombing."
      Please feel free to go to IS territory and reason with them. Once they agree with you, then I will also agree with you. As they will probably cut your head off just because you are not their brand of muslim this conversation will resolve itself.

      "We're not trying to control a strategic objective or destroy a large army; that we have the ability to bomb arbitrary targets does not mean that playing whack-a-mole in the desert is a good idea."
      Here I actually agree with you. I think that overwhelming force is going to be the only possible solution here - to utterly remove the enemy's ability to wage war of any sort.

      "I don't think it's unreasonable to try to repair our faults even if they are not technically illegal, but given that there has been no formal declaration of war against these people, I would be inclined to think it illegal, yes."
      Agreed that it should be declared.

      That being said this is a war that I support because I believe that we have no choice - that these people will continue to wage war on us whether we wage war on them or not. That if we were to suddenly stop the war against them, they would consolidate their territory and then expand, continuing their religious war and killing and destroying anyone and any culture that they do not approve of.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    4. Re:Targeting Civilians by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 1

      If you are working on something and you hit your partner in the face because your hand slipped off the tool you are using, this is different than if you punch them in the face.

      You're not making a different argument, you're repeating the first one. It does not make a difference to the people we're bombing whether we bomb them intentionally or not, especially the way we're doing it.

      But there's not a lot of moral advantage in only killing as many civilians as we think we can get away with.

      You say this as if we intentionally kill civilians, which we do not.

      We don't kill civilians because we have defined "civilian" such that there aren't any.

      Here I actually agree with you. I think that overwhelming force is going to be the only possible solution here - to utterly remove the enemy's ability to wage war of any sort.

      Haven't Iraq, Afghanistan, and Vietnam demonstrated that this doesn't work either? You can destroy an army's ability to wage war, but asymmetric conflicts where the enemy is any normal person with an AK-47 are immune to everything but massacre.

      That being said this is a war that I support because I believe that we have no choice - that these people will continue to wage war on us whether we wage war on them or not. That if we were to suddenly stop the war against them, they would consolidate their territory and then expand, continuing their religious war and killing and destroying anyone and any culture that they do not approve of.

      I'm okay with that. Their ability to project force outside the region is minimal; killing a few dozen civilians in Paris is a useless gesture that will only serve to make their enemies stronger and more motivated. Overwhelming force is not an option; we don't have the force levels for a ground invasion and using nuclear arms would be political and diplomatic suicide. Right now we make war with a nest of serpents. Let them consolidate power. Let them brutalize their own. Then when the strongest has eliminated all other potential leaders as threats to his own power, assassinate him and install a puppet state per our usual game plan, and people might actually see us as the lesser evil. It's still going to be a tough diplomatic issue trying to clean up the mess afterwards, but it's an easier problem than dealing with 1,000 wannabe-warlords individually. And yes, in the meantime a lot of brown people are going to die, which is unfortunate. It was unfortunate when it happened in Rwanda and Cambodia too. I don't care how many brown people die, and the western world is not threatened. What I want is a region of peace and prosperity, with education and functioning infrastructure, ruled by a puppet state friendly to us. Right now that's not possible, and we don't have a suitable puppet. There aren't any good options, but pursuing a diplomatic route kills fewer Marines and lets them become their own worst enemies.

      --
      Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
    5. Re: Targeting Civilians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I don't care how many brown people die ..."

      Did I read that right?

    6. Re: Targeting Civilians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep. I don't care a whole lot about human life no matter the color. There's enough of us as it is, and more every day. Thinking that we have a responsibility to keep people from dying causes more harm than good, in my opinion. Long term, sure, that's the goal, but I don't want to save people now at the cost of another decade of conflict.

    7. Re:Targeting Civilians by goose-incarnated · · Score: 1

      Here I actually agree with you. I think that overwhelming force is going to be the only possible solution here - to utterly remove the enemy's ability to wage war of any sort.

      Haven't Iraq, Afghanistan, and Vietnam demonstrated that this doesn't work either?

      Didn't world war II prove that it *does* work?

      --
      I'm a minority race. Save your vitriol for white people.
    8. Re:Targeting Civilians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was a stupid retort.
      1) We don't have WWII force levels, and won't.
      2) WWII was a conventional (not asymmetric) conflict. Did you read the rest of that post?

    9. Re:Targeting Civilians by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      "given that there has been no formal declaration of war against these people, I would be inclined to think it illegal, yes."

      I was thinking about this and I think that we can't actually declare war because we do not want to recognize "IS" as a country, and we can't declare war if there is no country to declare war against.

      That being said I agree that there should still be congressional approval of this war against a non-state.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
  93. He's absolutely right, though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ISIS is no more necessarily evil than WBS is necessarily evil.

    But you want to be DEFINITELY the good guys, so therefore whoever you're against must be CLEARLY the bad guys.

    So his comment, which would likely lead to at least SOME progress with getting extremist muslims as socially ignored as WBS is, must be shouted down.

    Because you'll damn well not like what he says, and FUCK that "fight to the death" shit to ensure he can say it!

  94. Yeah, right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have as much proof of the former claim as the latter.

    Did you take a poll? When was the last time you heard some christian on TV telling the world that they abhorred the attacks and said that they were DEFINITELY NOT christian acts?

    Can't remember one time it being done, never mind the last.

    CAN remember the last time some christian whined about someone who committed an atrocity was called a christian, though.

    1. Re:Yeah, right. by Wootery · · Score: 0

      You seem to be right: no-one's bothered to do a survey.

      Even if they had, and I turn out to be wrong, would that make the Islam numbers less worrying?

      When was the last time you heard some christian on TV telling the world that they abhorred the attacks and said that they were DEFINITELY NOT christian acts?

      But Christian terrorism is very rare in the first world. When Christian terrorism is somewhere near as prevalent as Islamic terrorism, then, you get to make this comparison.

      Wikipedia lists serious modern incidents of Christian terrorism in Africa, but I think the problem here is with the media: I'd never even heard of that stuff.

  95. Not a democrat. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    There are North Dakota Democratic-Nonpartisan League Party and Democratic farmers party in minnesota. This guy belongs to the later. They are far more like the old style dems from the 40-60s, rather than the losers of today. Of course, this guy still needs to go.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  96. Re:Sigh by jafiwam · · Score: 1

    Advocating politics that killed a hundred million last century.

    And not having any way to pay for it.

  97. righteous? ORLY? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Way to paint 100% of religious righteous as the same as these ISIS animals. Such "tolerance" by the stereotypers.

    Can't tell the difference between the true religious righteous who are serving the poor, feeding the hungry, treating the sick in poor countries, and those.

    Nope. They're just the same as ISIS according to this person. Clearly the bigotry is huge in this one.

    I bet this guy thinks all religions are exactly the same.
    Mother Theresa is the same as ISIS. Dalai Lama is the same as ISIS. This is what that poster believes.

  98. You forgot the atheist religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    300 million murdered in the 20th century by the atheists.

    But your facts miss this #1 most violent religion: Atheism.

    1. Re:You forgot the atheist religion by xevioso · · Score: 1

      And what deity or god do atheists worship again?

    2. Re:You forgot the atheist religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what deity or god do atheists worship again?

      Themselves, generally. Praising themselves for being smarter than all those with a different perspective. Humanism is about humans.

    3. Re:You forgot the atheist religion by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Can we call them "specieists"?

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    4. Re: You forgot the atheist religion by LinuxLuver · · Score: 1

      Atheism isn't a religion. Dictatorial Communism was the revolutionary religion. It was basically a murderous hissy fit against how hard it is to change anything. To the revolutionaries it was obvious we all needed to share for the benefit of everyone. But so many people do not work that way that theses guys thought that killing the ones who refused to share would leave only those to do share. It would be like the Army of Jesus killing everyone who didn't look after the poor and follow the Golden Rule. The Dictatorship of the Proletariat was a secular religion.

      --
      Only boring people are ever bored.
  99. ISIL turnkey for clash of ancient civilizations. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ISIS/ISIL/Daesh was created by USA and Saudi Arabia for israeli benefit. As soon as ISIS manages to largely depopulate the Sinai, Iraq and Syria and totally destroy their statehood in a chaos of bloodbath, Merkava tanks will roll in among worldwide cheering as saviours of mankind. Voila, the Greater Israel is created with the conquered territory, as depicted on the 10 agorot coin, spanning from the Nile to the rivers of Tiger and Euphrates.

    Third Temple of Jerusalem is then built and large-scale ritual animal sacrifices restart, with the daily slaughter of genetically engineered red heifers serving as detonators for eventual violent conflict between the semitic-carnivorous posse of jews, arabs and the aryan-vegan posse of India and much of Far East Asia. One must wonder whom Europe will side with, the hindi vegans led by the Society of the Nine Unknown Men or the animal sacrificers led by the Sanhedrin? Anglo-americans will surely side with the israeli-saudi confederation.

    Something strange to consider: the soil in much of India is still highly radioactive from a large-scale nuclear war that was waged there app. 8000 years ago. A large percentage of hindi people are born with mutation-based disfigurations and disabilities (hare-lip, congenital eye problems, etc.) Repeat, they had nukes at the time when the very first, illiterate town-dwellers in the Levante just started to lay mud bricks on top of each other.

  100. Sigh^2 by Pollux · · Score: 1

    All I can say is wow. I came back to check on responses to my comment four hours after posting it, and it looks like only the parent seems to have understood my meaning.

    I know very well that the 1st Amendment is a limitation on actions the government may take against the people. My point had nothing to do with government action against an individual. My point is that we as a society would rather lynch anyone who dares to rationalize the actions of these bombers before we ever will find the courage to consider it ourselves.

    In our rush to defend the victims of this tragedy and protect them from further harm, we are quick to decry any-and-all rhetoric that fails to condemn those responsible as anything less than psycopathic, sadistic, demented, and/or depraved. So, when someone has the courage to merely suggest that these individuals may be acting out in a manner that is, dare I say, human, we must as a society silence that voice. We will not allow ourselves to, as the parent put it, "foster debate, free from intrusion". These individuals who attacked civilians in Paris were/are monsters, we must forever see them that way, and we must treat them that way.

    But it's that exact point-of-view that got us into a 10-year war in Iraq. It's that exact point-of-view that is keeping us in a 14-year war in Afghanistan. We as westerners do not understand the Arab mindset. (A decade ago, I lived for a year in Cairo, Egypt, myself. I'm not a Muslim, but it did certainly give me perspective on this subject.) The more we seek revenge / justice / reparations / etc. from these individuals, the more it will inflame them. We're pouring water on a gas fire, and it's only spreading further and further. If we want to ever succeed in solving this Crisis in the middle east, we -must- see these terrorists not as savages, but as humans. We need to understand what drives them to such ends, and cure the sickness rather than treat the symptoms.

    And when a politician of all people has the courage to suggest as such, we cannot treat him or her as a monster either.

  101. Naah, they're evil. by WheezyJoe · · Score: 1

    While it's a good thing to take a moment and thoughtfully consider where ISIS may be coming from ("know your enemy" is may be distasteful for the impatient, but it's the smart way to go), once you get past all the smoke and mirrors of all the religious and political propaganda, ISIS is a blown up street gang making their way by the classic trades of evil: murder, rape, pillaging, and extortion. That's how they survive. That's how the organization sustains itself, and the unknown fatcats who run it.

    You think ISIS takes territory in Iraq over some holy mission? The Caliphate? Bullshit! They take territory because they gotta eat and buy more ammunition, or else the whole thing will start coming apart leaving the leaders with no protection. They rape and blow up ancient artifacts to keep themselves occupied during down time, lest some of the new recruits leave or start fighting each other or seek out revenge against the bosses who beat on them.

    Every crime organization has some narrative for excusing the fact that they have to steal or extort everything they have, why they can't lead ordinary lives. ISIS is a glorified street gang, and once their completely invested in rape-murder-pillage-extortion for making their way in the world such that there's no turning back, you've got evil.

    Again, it's good to think about them and figure their point of view, but recall the President in Independent Day. Even after DC, New York, and god knows where else had been blown up by the aliens, he was still like "they're not evil" until he accidentally mind-melded with one of them. Then, that idiot finally got what everyone in the audience already knew. Don't be like him. You don't have to mind-meld with a guy who makes a living strapping bombs onto kids to know he's an evil fuck, no matter what religious verses come out of his mouth.

    --
    Take it easy, Charlie, I've got an Angle...
    1. Re:Naah, they're evil. by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      They are definitely evil, but they are also mostly sincere. We just need to understand that sincerity does not equate to "good".

      I think Westerners are too used to having insincere people around them, so they assume everyone else is just an insincere criminal trying to justify their crimes. But this is also why we have trouble understanding why young people in the West would go to Syria and join them.

      Those kids see people who are "doing something". They're seeing actual sincerity and it is affecting them. Not being used to that from the West, it confuses them into thinking that these guys are righteous and that allows those leaders to convince them that they need to do what it takes to sacrifice for a better world, the House of Peace.

      They believe that drawing the West into a war with them will herald the end of the world and the victory of Islam and a return to when the Caliphate was on top of the world.

      This doesn't mean that we stop fighting them. It just means that we can't be laughing at people like McCain, for instance, who indicated truthfully in his campaign that we needed to stay in Iraq as long as it takes. Sincere people won't be stopped by some drones. They will only be stopped by killing or neutralizing enough of them that the remainder loses faith and disperses on their own.

      I don't want to go fight a war. I'd very much prefer to keep our soldiers out of harm's way, but I look at these terrorists attacking unarmed people in rock concerts, and if someone has to be shot at, I want it to be a soldier who has body armor, a rifle, some grenades and air support. And if we do go to war, the war needs to be "all in". War is hell, and you don't make it any better by dragging it out over 20 years out of a mistaken sense of mercy.

  102. In the search for truth by Pollux · · Score: 1

    We must be willing to accept any and every possible examination of the truth.

    Comments like yours are what's making our country more difficult to live in. People are too afraid to share ideas, because they fear being judged for them.

    In fact, the very essence of your comment is a quintessential illustration of the problem I was trying to highlight. Let's not debate the idea. Let's judge the voice.

    1. Re:In the search for truth by bws111 · · Score: 1

      Holy crap. What is the point of making a speech if not to get people to form some sort of reaction? If you don't want people to judge and form opinions based on your speech, why make it? Is everyone else supposed to just censor themselves and not say what they think of your speech? Isn't that repression of THEIR free speech?

    2. Re:In the search for truth by Pollux · · Score: 1

      I welcome the opinions of others, especially those that differ with my own. I don't welcome the name calling that accompanies it.

      There's a big difference between saying, "I disagree with your idea" and "Your idea is stupid." The former leaves room for discussion. The latter is designed to censor or invalidate the statement based on emotional argument, leaving no room for debate.

      There's an even wider difference between saying "Your idea is stupid", and "You are stupid for having come up with such a stupid idea." Gstoddart transitioned from the former to the latter, though, instead of calling me stupid, he called me a "fucking idiot." Now we're not only invalidating the statement, but also the person who made it. But the individual being censored is not silenced for valid reasons, but rather over emotions.

      And there is an irony in that. These terrorists have abandoned reason in their acts; emotion has clouded their judgement, emotion influenced by corrupt religious leaders. We should not allow emotion to cloud our judgements in the same way. (No, our judgements are not anything near the same as their atrocious acts. But we still are allowing emotions to interfere with the ability to scrutinize them properly.)

    3. Re:In the search for truth by bws111 · · Score: 1

      Gdstoddart did not do any of the things you accuse him of. Here is what he said:

      you are free to say any stupid shit you want to. You are not free from the public telling you that what you said was stupid.

      There is no personal attack in there. What he said is 100% true. You (and I, and everyone else) ARE free to say any stupid shit we want. And you, and I, and everyone else ARE free to say what someone else said is stupid.

      ou are legally free to say any stupid crap which you choose. And others are free to decide you're a fucking idiot.

      Again, no personal attack, just a simpe statement of the freedoms we have.

      You, on the other hand, decided (and stated) that people stating their opinions 'is what is making our country more difficult to live in'. The only way to interpret that is to come to the conclusion that you think some people (namely those that disagree with some position) should NOT be free to state their opinions, or should suppress their opinions. And, yes, their opinion may very well be that both the original opinion and the person who said it are stupid. Kind of hard to reconcile that with a stated belief in freedom of speech.

  103. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since when does it apply or since when *should* it have applied? If the latter - then always. (Actionable threats or incitations have always been illegal.) If the former, probably not in a long time (i'd say the 1970s as a guess.) Are you advocating prohibited speech based on location alone? That seems a dumb thing to advocate. Why would you do such a thing? Given that Democrats started the Free Speech Zones, I'm inclined to expect you are one.

  104. Re:ISIL turnkey for clash of ancient civilizations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's time to reduce the middle-east to a steamin' pile of fking rubble. Let's have the five (six?) nuclear players contribute 50 nukes each and reduce that area of the planet to unlivable freakin' waste land. May your camels grow nuts from their foreheads for the next 10k years. Long live freedom.

  105. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You want to try to live peacefully with a group that burns people at the stake and beheads them regularly?

    Yes but not in the false dichotomy you're presenting. We want them to stop their behavior and then live peacefully with them. However unrealistic this goal is, why is it not laudable to at least want that as a preference even if it is unlikely? If we can get them to stop, maybe prosecute the guilty, and then work to establish human rights in the region why would you NOT want to live at peace with them?

    Your statement can only be taken to conclude that you want continued conflict with them. If that is what your intent is then you're an idiot. Presumably, you're not an idiot (such is in doubt at present) and simply haven't thought this through or have worded it poorly. There is no way to "kill them all" in a realistic manner. Your anger may blind you but that's the truth.

    So, yes, we want to live peacefully with these people so long as they stop their current behavior. Prosecuting the guilty would also be beneficial. Reaching an agreement for peace, however unlikely, is a worthy goal and should not be considered a bad idea at face value. Is it unlikely? Yes, it certainly is. That does not make the goal less acceptable. It just makes the goal unrealistic. Even if it is unrealistic, it's still laudable so long as we don't let the lunatics who think that be the *only* ones to be policy makers without oversight.

  106. You forget the end-game of Twitter by rsborg · · Score: 1

    You know, sooner or later people might get it through their heads that using Twitter is a strategy for fools.

    You have two choices with Twitter: either you tweet some meaningless groupthink post, guaranteed not to offend anyone, OR you post something that offends someone, somewhere. And if you offend enough people, suddenly your life and career are in tatters when the Internet mob turns on you.

    You'd think that enough peoples' lives have been ruined by thoughtless tweets that the lesson would have been learned. But it seems there's always another fool just waiting to make an example of him/herself.

    Ah, but there is a third-way: you tweet something that's considered to be cool and sparks a firestorm of debate and interest and sells a product. Corporation rewards you in some small but essentially meaningless way, hoping you'll keep promoting.

    See, that's the real goal - as an advertising channel, Twitter can collect rents from their real customers who own large brand names! Free tchotchkes for all! Who would't want in on that?

    --
    Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
  107. the bible DOES say to kill adulterers & witche by Ionized · · Score: 1

    hell, the bible advocates stoning for lots of things!

    what was your point again?

  108. What does "evil" even mean? by SoftwareArtist · · Score: 1

    This really illustrates what a problematic concept "evil" is. What does it mean? How do you determine what is evil?

    He's entirely right that ISIS is doing what they believe to be right. They're fighting a holy war, and they're on the side of God. How do you categorize a person who believes "goodness" consists of doing something you believe is entirely evil? Do you judge them based on their actions? Their beliefs? The consistency between the two? Which is worse, a person who does terrible things because they think that's right, or a person who wants to be evil but accidentally ends up accomplishing good things instead? If someone sincerely believes that killing innocents is the right thing to do, is it better for them to act on their beliefs, or ignore their beliefs out of fear of taking risks? What's the "right" way to judge them?

    Answer: you don't judge them. ISIS is dangerous. They're doing a huge amount of harm. Therefore, we need to stop them. But don't pretend that you have any right to cast moral judgements on any other human being.

    --
    "I'm too busy to research this and form an educated opinion, but I do have time to tell everyone my uninformed opinion."
  109. It is for the fun of it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not necessary to be evil, but for alienated young people, flocking around, it is a form of releasing endorphins. Disperse the flock, disperse the "evil". It's not that they want to create a stable Caliphate or anything of the sort.

  110. and what is so false about it? by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    The only thing separating the two is that the genuinely ethical people are able to keep the right wing nut cases around here under a little bit of control.

  111. so they are the same by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    you just think you can insult everyone's intelligence by pretending otherwise with some no true scottsman thrown in for further shame fullness.

    1. Re:so they are the same by Wootery · · Score: 1

      I honestly have no idea what point you're trying to make.

    2. Re:so they are the same by publiclurker · · Score: 1

      I'll try to use smaller words next time. Do you have a respectable person there to help you out. You know, someone that has enough IQ points to realize that trying to justify your bigotry with blatant hypocrisy does not work when you are speaking with adults?

    3. Re: so they are the same by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Righteous indignation with insults is hardly likely to persuade anyone to change their position. Perhaps you derived psychic gratification by venting, but how are the rest of us supposed to find any value in your words?

    4. Re: so they are the same by publiclurker · · Score: 1

      you seem to be of the overly inflated opinion that your beliefs about my words or anything else actually matter. you have already shown yourself to be a blatant bigot and a hypocrite. While you might think that it is PC to pretend that you have a reason to show yourself in polite company, pretending that only serves to legitimize your failings, and I have much more important things to do with my life.

    5. Re:so they are the same by Wootery · · Score: 1

      someone that has enough IQ points to realize that trying to justify your bigotry with blatant hypocrisy does not work when you are speaking with adults?

      You do realise I was making a factual statement, and that I provided sources, right?

      You seem to think that reasoning seriously about global Islam (and that means without the everything-is-lovely liberal blinders) is bigotry. Unfortunately this mind-set is rather widespread.

    6. Re: so they are the same by Wootery · · Score: 1

      you have already shown yourself to be a blatant bigot and a hypocrite

      Nope. I simply stated facts. Acknowledging facts doesn't make me a bigot.

      Do you deny the facts that I pointed out (if you do, you'll need to provide a better source than the Pew studies), or do you just think I'm a bigot for mentioning them?

  112. i.e. I think my bigotry entitles me by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    to pretend that other people are bad for doing the exact same things that me any my friends do.

  113. Typical Liberal Thinking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A demoncrap wouldn't think ISIS evil, by comparison to its own "political" "party".

  114. Re:Cry me a river. by Ionized · · Score: 1

    you can have two different bad things, with one being worse than the other.

    but they are both bad.

    get it now?

  115. Right and Wrong by PineHall · · Score: 1

    All this talk about evil means there is some definition of evil that has at its foundation the belief in right and wrong. We all have our definitions, but in general we agree for the most part what is right and what is wrong. We tend save the term evil for the worst and most blatant wrongdoing though you can argue that subtle wrong doing and wrong thinking can be evil too. No one is free from wrongdoing. The problem is we all have this tendency to be selfish and self-centered and that makes our wrong doing easy to do and easy to rationalize our wrong doing. The problem with evil is right in front of us or in us. We are the problem. We all hurt people. We are broken and messed up, because we do not always live up to the ideals of right living that we aspire to. People through out the ages have tried fix ourselves and produce a utopian society of well behaved people. They all have failed. Some have had some good ideas, but I believe they fail to get to the root of the problem, our selfishness. We are able to dream of utopia, where everyone is well behaved and loved, and everyone works for the common good, but we are not able to achieve that. Our self-centeredness is the real evil.

    1. Re:Right and Wrong by PineHall · · Score: 1

      I believe there is a solution to our selfish brokenness. We can not fix ourselves but God can. God loves each and every one of us. He desires that we would all be fixed without turning us into little robots. Because of what Jesus has done for us, we can have new lives and live in love. Though we are not yet perfect, you can see many people around the world, who follow Jesus, are working to make things right. Followers of Jesus are in the process of being fixed themselves. We, followers, are not there yet. I know that I am a better and more loving person today than who I was 20 years ago. I am still broken but God is at work in me making me better. That is what I have experienced.

    2. Re:Right and Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We all have our definitions, but in general we agree for the most part what is right and what is wrong.

      No, we do not "agree for the most part". Two points in particular include the war on drugs and - needless (IMO) - military interventions. These are both evil endeavors. Most people - AFAIK - disagree with me. Certainly, upwards of 90% of our DC-bound elected officials disagree strongly.

      There is little agreement on the specifics or the generalities of evil.

      The problem is we all have this tendency to be selfish and self-centered and that makes our wrong doing easy to do and easy to rationalize our wrong doing.

      Perhaps you ought to read "The Virtue of Selfishness" if only to find more people with whom you disagree. ...

      (in your follow-up post)

      I believe there is a solution to our selfish brokenness. We can not fix ourselves but God can.

      WOW! I had no idea at the start of your posts you were this far off the rails. Please expand your horizons before making generalizations. Of course, you have to be selfish to do so. You need to want to learn and to truly better yourself. You have to question your premises because if they are false or incorrect or just not right for you, then all conclusions drawn from them will be suspect.

    3. Re:Right and Wrong by PineHall · · Score: 1

      We are far apart, but I would hazard a guess that the Objectivism of Ayn Rand is more a minority viewpoint than my Christianity (which is not the moralistic legalism of many Americans). Maybe I am wrong. Both are views are minority viewpoints today, though on the topic of right and wrong I think most people would agree with my thinking because of the past influence of Christianity in Western World. I don't think objective selfishness will bring about world peace. I think altruism could if we could not be selfish, but selfishness is part of our nature and so it is a nonstarter for us. As I see it, the problem is I desire something; I then rationalize why I should have it; and then I take it. That does not bring about peace. That rationalization is flawed because I can not guarantee that my reason will be impartial and perfect. I am not certain if it ever can be.

      Note from the book you recommended, I made an assumption that you follow the teachings of Ayn Rand. Correct me if I am wrong.

  116. Re: Sigh by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    Yes but not in the false dichotomy you're presenting. We want them to stop their behavior and then live peacefully with them. However unrealistic this goal is, why is it not laudable to at least want that as a preference even if it is unlikely? If we can get them to stop, maybe prosecute the guilty, and then work to establish human rights in the region why would you NOT want to live at peace with them?

    Because it's completely impossible. They don't want peace. They're a doomsday cult; their goal is to either establish a Caliphate (which means control and domination by them), or to bring about the end of the world as prophesied in the Quran. Peace is the last thing they want, unless perhaps you'd like to just voluntarily give them control over everything and just do whatever they want.

    Your statement can only be taken to conclude that you want continued conflict with them.

    You have two choices: either do whatever you can to eradicate them, OR pursue a strict policy of containment. There can be no peace with a group like that (unless you consider containment and isolation "peace").

    If that is what your intent is then you're an idiot.

    If you think you can have peaceful relations with ISIS, you're a complete moron.

    There is no way to "kill them all" in a realistic manner.

    Sure there is: you flatten all their cities with fuel-air bombs. Of course, no one wants to do that because it's genocide, so we're stuck with the current state of affairs. However, if ISIS goes too far, I do think that's *exactly* what's going to happen. My money's on Russia: they're going to piss off Russia somehow in a big way, and Russia is simply going to drop MOABs on them, civilian casualties be damned. What happens after that I really don't know. People like you say it'll drive recruitment, but it's pretty hard to recruit people when your entire organization has been obliterated, so at best it could end up creating a new version of ISIS, which could be sorta like how attacking Al Qaeda, plus the power vacuum in Iraq, ended up spawning ISIS.

    So, yes, we want to live peacefully with these people so long as they stop their current behavior

    They're not going to stop. That's the problem. That's like asking all Americans to willingly join Wahhabist Islam. You're dealing with a suicidal death cult that's reached a very large scale, and you're not going to convince them to abandon their ideology.

  117. Re:Sigh by ScentCone · · Score: 1

    The government also makes laws that states you could be fired from your job for expressing an opinion

    You are not forced to have such a job. That's the difference. If you want to go work for the government, you have to agree to be careful about the circumstances in which you say certain things. Why? Because YOU ARE NOW PART OF THE GOVERNMENT. And that changes your relationship with the rest of society. If you don't like being put in that position of having to be thoughtful about the sounds that come out of your mouth, just don't look to be part of the government. Get a job where the boss really doesn't care what you say or when or where you say it. How is this complicated?

    Your line logic lead to free speech zones, which yes; you are free to say what ever you want (just like you could in prison), but far away from it being meaningful.

    Ah, that old canard. Are you just pretending to not understand that topic, or have you simply never thought through what it's all about?

    Let's say your favored political party just won an election. You, as a caucus of legislators and as a group of people who have assembled under the protections of the first amendment, make the well understood arrangements to host a parade down Pennsylvania Avenue, to celebrate your candidate's inauguration. Traffic has to be controlled, police have to be around to deal with those who might want to hurt attendees, etc.

    Now say that your political opponents would rather that your peaceful assembly is not allowed to go on, just because they don't like you and what you stand for. They didn't make arrangements for the use of the public space in question ... but your objection to control over that space would mean that all they have to do is show up in bigger numbers and shout down your assembly. Beautiful, right? Just how you'd like things to go on? Do you really want a bunch of Occupy idiots sitting in the middle of the street stopping your planned, permitted, and carefully-made-safe event? Or the KKK? Or the local chapter of Islamic Jihad? Or Greenpeace, who will do anything for camera time?

    EVERY ONE of those groups can do exactly the same thing YOU did: call up the Parks Department, and make arrangements to hold their OWN event in that same public space - with all of the same permitting costs and logistics that YOU had to take care of. And because it's their event, YOU don't get to gather a bunch of your friends and shout down their event. If they want to be magnanimous, perhaps they'll let you use some of the park space for which they obtained a permit, so that you can blow off some steam. And maybe you'll grant them the same courtesy when you hold a similar event.

    You ARE free to say whatever you want. But if you want to crash someone else's pre-arranged, permitted, and secured event on what amounts to rented public property, too bad. Book the same space and do your own thing next week ... and enjoy the same protections for YOUR free speech that they're enjoying by not allowing you to shout them down if you don't like them.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  118. Wrong group! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, dude, there's only one terror group with delusions of statehood founded on inflicting its medieval view of humanity on others, including human slavery, that you're allowed to defend in this country, and that's the Confederacy. Easy to get the two confused, though.

  119. wrong. burden of proof is on the religious by Ionized · · Score: 1

    i can say 'there is no god' and it doesn't require any faith to do so. i can also say 'there are no ghosts' and 'there are no aliens' and that requires no faith.

    the burden of proof is on religions. until they have proof, saying 'there are no god, ghosts, or aliens' are the obvious and default rational beliefs.

    atheism is the default natural state. any child raised in a religious vacuum would be an atheist.

  120. Re:Sigh by quintessencesluglord · · Score: 1

    freedom of speech is not freedom of consequences

    It's platitudes all the way down!

    And in this particular framing, government is some intractable beast held in check, but never a defender of those rights. Why it is perfectly apt to fire someone for being Jewish... oh, wait, no you can't; almost as if the government were also imbued with protecting the rights of the minority against the will of the majority.

    Congress shall make no law... abridging the freedom of speech

    You might want to revisit the meaning of this, since nowhere can it be found that this applies only to government, and the corollary to it is that congress is well within its powers to make laws promoting freedom of speech, of the press, and religion, as can be documented in hundreds of circumstances conveniently ignored.

    And just as McCarthyism is viewed distastefully now, only the dim would suppose that disfavor was exclusive to government action. which is why you can safely work for a Republican even though you are a Democrat, and even have the audacity to have Sanders bumper sticker on your car without fear of legally losing your job.

    I do believe that is freedom from consequences, damn that meddling government.

  121. Re: Sigh by Anguirel · · Score: 1

    You want to try to live peacefully with a group that burns people at the stake and beheads them regularly?

    Well, I do usually try to live peacefully with people from the South-Eastern US, where there is a history of similar sorts of killings happening from a certain Christian organization, and in many cases the people responsible could easily still be alive. Somehow, we all moved on. It might take a generation, but we can probably make it work.

    --
    ~Anguirel (lit. Living Star-Iron)
    QA: The art of telling someone that their baby is ugly without getting punched.
  122. Semantics by yusing · · Score: 1

    In the past it was said "History is written by the victors." When Reagan characterized the anti-Sandanistas as 'freedom fighters', that was the same process at work.

    Until recently, state violence was usually characterized as 'war'. You have two aggressors killing each other for some period of time. There may or may not be a winner.

    However politicized the language, however 'tres moderne' that language becomes, it's the same tactic in use for thousands of years. The hundreds of ancient dead countries in the middle east are proof are still Truth speaking. Rallying around the flag may discredit the truth-tellers, but not the Truth. The outcome has been the same for lo, these many thousands of years.

    --

    "You must try to forget all you have learned. You must begin to dream." -- Sherwood Anderson

  123. Re:Cry me a river. by Rakarra · · Score: 1

    Third: I cringe watching how those stupid terrorists are killing our open society "by proxy" -- the dirty job being taken up by all you right-wing nutjobs. Go get a life. Go to Syria or Irak and enjoy your phantasies.

    The right wingers just want to go kill the stupid terrorists. It's the left wingers who won't "let a good disaster to go to waste" (taking away rights) and actively seek such disasters when no options present themselves (growing ISIS via inaction).

    "Taking away rights" in the name of security isn't a left-wing thing, or at least it's not only a left-wing thing. The right is just as likely to restrict whatever is needed in the name of fighting terrorism. Just listen to Marco Rubio (I'm certain he'll be the Republican choice for President) blasting Rand Paul for his opposition to the US government's overarching surveillance program. He blames successful suicide attacks on people opposed to extreme actions justified by finding and defeating terrorists. Except for the few libertarian-leaning folks, the right-wing in the US is all about letting the national security folks do whatever they want to "keep America safe."

  124. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I prefer to live peacefully with people that bomb for resources, torture(sometimes by proxy) and have no problem with collateral damage they can most likely hide from public view whilst saying it is to spread mob rule ... err democracy. You mad?

  125. Re:the bible DOES say to kill adulterers & wit by Krishnoid · · Score: 1

    Everybody must get stoned?

  126. Re:Sigh by Sassinak · · Score: 1

    But that's just the thing.. what he said is not stupid.. At best its poor timing, and at worst, he needed to frame it and put a different spin on it so people understand what he means.

    You may not like it, or even agree with it, but I think his point is, not EVERYONE involved and on the mailing list agrees (or condones) the methods used, even if they agree with the sentiment. (for example, I HATE the TSA.. I'm not going to go bomb buildings or even agree those that do, but I agree with the sentiments of those that want to see it dismantled/tossed in the rubbish bin).. Does that mean that if someone DOES do that, I condone it.. of course not. But the problem is, this is a very emotional topic and what everyone seems to want is blood rather than using some clear and rational thinking to figure out how to end this without becoming the enemy (which will NEVER end)

    --
    God made the Idiot for practice, and then He made the School Board -- Mark Twain Look for http://Thebar.steelbeachca
  127. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Meanwhile, the US invasion of Iraq has led to the deaths of more than 1,000,000 non-combatants. Do you consider the US a hundred times more evil than Daesh?

  128. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I heard he was in favor of mandatory vaccines too.

  129. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It probably wont ever happen but Ill love to see that movie

  130. Re:Sigh by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

    Congress shall make no law... abridging the freedom of speech

    You might want to revisit the meaning of this, since nowhere can it be found that this applies only to government,

    The Congress shall make no law makes it pretty clear it applies to the Federal government; as does the history behind the Bill of Rights. To a rogue that it somehow applies to non-Federal actions; nor that it says anything, beyond preventing the establishment of a religion as to what Congress may do to promote the others.

    --
    I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
  131. Re:Cry me a river. by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

    The right wingers just want to go kill the stupid terrorists.

    And who exactly is a terrorist? That's the problem. The US Government has arrested and detained innocent people in the past. The US Government has mistakenly killed innocent people presumed to be terrorists in the past. Almost every anti-terrorism operation kills civilians. So "Just want to go kill stupid terrorists." also means invading Iraq, destabilizing the country and arguably creating the environment in which ISIS emerged. So saying that liberals are creating a disaster through inaction is no more true than saying that conservatives are creating a disaster through action. However when inaction and action both produce equally terrible outcomes--maybe the cheaper option is the better terrible outcome. That's not to say that every action is certainly or even most likely worse than inaction but it is to say that "Just go kill stupid terrorists" is not a logically acceptable path. It costs lives, it costs money and it will inevitably kill far more than 140 civilians so it had better be pretty clearly superior to inaction.

    Lastly it was conservatives who opened Guantanamo and refuse to close it, conservatives who passed the Patriot Act, conservatives who called anti-war activists "treasonous". It's pretty hard to take the high road on liberties unless you mean "Gun Control" which is as much an innate right as "The Right to Own High Explosives" which nobody claims because thankfully it wasn't deemed sensible 300 years ago to say "the people's right to bare C4 shall not be infringed.".

  132. Re: the bible DOES say to kill adulterers & wi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Torah mandates stoning for a lot of things, Jesus however refutes it quite clearly: "let he who is without sin throw the first stone".

  133. Re:Sigh by bws111 · · Score: 1

    Of course it only applies to the government. Any law that attempted to say you can't be shouted down, or told to shut up, or to get off my property, or anything else would be a restriction on someone else's rights. And then we are right back to Congress shall make no law...

  134. Re: Sigh by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    The KKK never became a theocratic government, nor were they ever all that murderous. They just liked to scare people into submission mostly, and did a few lynchings here and there, but basically just operated as a criminal gang. ISIS is not a gang, it's a government. It has an army, military weaponry, and utterly controls a large amount of territory. The KKK never had any of that, and never had that many members. It was comparatively easy to marginalize the KKK. Not so with ISIS; the only way to dislodge them is to conquer them. And you're an idiot if you think you can live peacefully with them: their stated goal is to conquer all of the middle east and much of Europe to reinstate their Caliphate. The only way to live peacefully with them is to submit to their brutal rule under Sharia Law.

  135. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently you have not met PC principal.

  136. Re:Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you know we have killed more than 4 million of them.

  137. Not religion by jandersen · · Score: 1

    Hmm, how about commenting on what the guy actually said? But no, it has immediately descended into a stupid dick-waving contest about why Muslims with their Jihad are evil and Christians with their Crusades aren't. This is nothing to do with religion - terrorism is simply a form of organised crime with a thin veneer of 'ideology', 'religion' or 'honour'. There are many parallels with how the Mafia arose and operates.

    Now about mr Kimmel's comments - it is of course an amazingly clumsy way to put it, as well as being very uninformed, but he is actually trying to make us think a little bit deeper over the issues, instead of just screaming "Attack". After all, we haven't really had much success with that so far. So how about coming up with some intelligent ideas about what can be done?

    We shouldn't naively think that people we regard as evil, see themselves as evil - on the contrary, I strongly suspect that all of them - Hitler, Pol Pot, al Qaeda, ISIS etc - are or were convinced that they are good and stand for a noble cause, and that if they are harsh, it is only because it is necessary. I'm also sure that many, if not all, are fundamentally bullies - and bullies are fundametally cowards; it's just that what they are afraid of is not necessarily what normal people are afraid of.

    So how can we act against these bullies - what are they really afraid of, when they clearly aren't afraid of dying? They think they are going straight to Paradise if they go out and get themselves killed in a 'jihad' - so one way of might be to start teaching them that actually, it doesn't quitework that way. God is clever enough to understand that if you strive to get killed, it is no more than suicide with a bit of extra emphasis; dying for God may be right if you do so reluctantly, to protect what is holy, but being eager to die, hiding behind a feeble excuse and compounding it with crimes like murder is never going to be more than a perverse form of suicide. Probably the harshest punishment we can inflict on these people would be to force them to live, having to contemplate the vileness of their crimes - that and castration plus being force-fed pig blood.

    There is no doubt that we will wipe ISIS out in terms of military, but we have to look deeper and understand better why there are so many, who turn against normal society. We have to be willing to recognise our own role in creating this situation, not just what the Western powers have done during past imperialism, but also what we allow large corporations to do and perhaps even more importantly, how we treat immigrants, who come to live in our neighborhoods - if we regards them with suspicion and treat them as second class, it is hardly any wonder that they and their children become resentful. And when you have nothing to live for, maybe you can find something to die for? Some thing that can hurt the smug society that didn't let you in? We have to break out of this vicious cycle.

  138. SJWs are trying to normalize ISIS, Pedophillia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is just part of their thing. This guy obviously was part of the in crowd, and didn't realize how unpopular ISIS actually is. I mean, ISIS uses the SJW's blockbot for twitter. Go figure.

  139. MOST people are STUPID!!! by martinfb · · Score: 1

    Mr. Kimmel is actually correct: ISIS is NOT necessarily evil; albeit it certainly seems they do relatively evil things - from OUR perspective. ANY intelligent human can see that Mr. Kimmel's remark reflects that understanding the deeper MO of ISIS as being reactionary for their cause seems an important consideration in getting to an effective mitigation for ultimately ending the violence. I get nearly nowhere when I yell at my subordinates (i.e. proverbially cut off their heads). I get MUCH further when I take the time to understand my subordinates' mistake and work to show them a more effective and mutually beneficial resolution (i.e. explain the part they apparently misunderstood). (I guess I am luck that I have friends that do this for me!)

    --


    Self-importance and self-indulgence is the root of ALL evil.
    1. Re:MOST people are STUPID!!! by martinfb · · Score: 1

      For those that cannot see the point: It seems that MOST folks would immediately nuke all ISIS they can find. That MIGHT work - if we could be sure we get them all. Yet, we are likely not going to get them all, and may in fact 'feed the fire' and cause more factions against (us). It may be that ISIS are people too, that MAY be misled or misguided. There is more than one way to eradicate a deadly disease besides all-out mass violence.

      --


      Self-importance and self-indulgence is the root of ALL evil.
  140. bernie sanders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sanders was on TeeVee the other day claiming that the Paris attacks were due to climate change. Faced with dwindling arable lands to grow their crops, farmers are pushing north.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-politics/wp/2015/11/15/bernie-sanders-explains-connection-between-climate-change-and-paris-attacks/

    “If we are going to see an increase in drought, flood and extreme weather disturbances as a result of climate change, what that means is that people all over the world are going to be fighting over limited natural resources,” Sanders said. “If there is not enough water, if there is not enough land to grow your crops, then you’re going to see migrations of people fighting over land that will sustain them, and that will lead to international conflicts.”

    “But how does drought connect with attacks by [the Islamic State] in the middle of Paris?” Dickerson asked.

    “When you have drought, when people can’t grow their crops, they’re going to migrate into cities, and when people migrate into cities and they don’t have jobs, there’s going to be a lot more instability, a lot more unemployment and people will be subject to the types of propaganda that al-Qaeda and ISIS are using right now,” Sanders said, using an alternative name for the Islamic State. “So where you have discontent, where you have instability, that’s where problems arise, and certainly, without a doubt, climate change will lead to that.”

  141. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Democrats started Free Speech Zones? Citation?

  142. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see what you're saying, but as an aside, I think it's a mistake to try to revise history by pretending that the KKK was never "mainstream" in this country. It had a major presence in every city and every state in the nation, including KKK parades right down Main Street with the blessings and participation of the city fathers. It's an ugly part of our history, but that doesn't make it untrue, just unpleasant. (And probably not something you will see in school history books anytime soon.)

  143. Re: Sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish that were true. Have you read any writing by college students these days? They aren't necessarily teenagers posting here (in fact I doubt that demographic is much represented at all), but there are a fair number of adults in the country with a teenager's worth of education under their belts. (Think Leno's man on the street questions, revealing just how many regular adult people believe things like 'World War II was in the 19th century'!)

  144. What he said is true... by ToddInSF · · Score: 1

    But Americans don't want that, they want to be lied to. They don't want to hear that we created ISIS, or that the USA is detested because we've meddled in their regional affairs and killed people's kids. Or that the USA supports murderous regimes and horrific Islamic violence in countries like Saudi Arabia. Nope, everybody is too busy covering their ears shouting USA USA USA.

  145. false equivalence run amok.. by h8sg8s · · Score: 1

    Let's turn his comment and audience around. If an up-and-coming ISIS leader said "America isn't necessarily evil. It is made up of people doing what they think is best for their community. Violence is not the answer, though." what would happen? You'd find his corpse being used as an illustration for others who question their ideology of violence. When you have no right to speak freely without fear, you have no rights at all.

    --
    Organization? You must be joking..
  146. ISIS *is* evil, but most members are just ignorant by Theovon · · Score: 1

    I’m not sure if this was his point or not, but there is a point to make about what motivates some people to join a terrorist group.

    Many huge companies are psychopathic in that they will “be evil” against consumers in order to maintain capital growth, but the individuals working there are not necessarily fully aware of what otherwise seemingly innocent decisions are causing the harm. The Nazi regime was pure evil and killed millions of innocent people, but Adolf Hitler thougth he was doing the right thing for his country. There’s this little boy who has been bullying my daughter, and he thinks it’s perfectly okay to grab her and push her around despite her objections, but as innocent as he thinks he is, he still has to be stopped.

    So probably the majority of people in ISIS think they’re doing the right thing. From their perspective, they are not evil. And this is because they have been brainwashed into an extreme form of a religion that already has belligerent tendencies. They’re taught that the West and non-Muslims in general are enemies of Allah, and that what Allah wants is to cleanse the world of those sinners and infidels who would otherwise corrupt their children with immoral ideas.

    It’s important to realize that a minority of these people, if any, are doing this because they enjoy violence and hurting people. They are urged to do this on the basis or an outrage that they have been indoctrinated into. ISIS as an organizatinon is evil. But its members? No, they’re just sad, ignorant, misinformed people. They’re also dangerous and must be stopped, and I am saddened that the only way to stop them is that many of them have to die. Because, sadly, they’re way beyond having their minds changed on this. A grizzly bear thinks you’re a threat, and no matter what you do, it’s going to try to kill you if you come upon each other in the woods, so your only option for saving your own life may be to kill the bear. And that’s sad for the bear.

    This is just one example of a general phenomenon found in many humans. Christianity says not to like and cheat, but many have been found to do just those things when they feel that the ends justify the means. There are non-believers who are a danger to their world view, and they’ll do whatever it takes to fight that, even if it means that they get to exempt themselves from the very same morals they insist on other people having. (See for instance https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitzmiller_v._Dover_Area_School_District and recall that there is a paper trail where people substituted “intelligent design” in place of “creationism” in literature, using clever wording an deception in order to trick educators into putting religious beliefs into science classes.) Muslims and Christians aren’t all that different. Go back 1000 years, and we have Catholics traipsing all over Eurasia killing heretics and nonbelievers.

    So, when you fight this evil, keep in mind that those people think they’re doing the right thing. This is an important element of the psychology of the situation and that awareness will make you more effective at fighting it. That’s because you’ll be fighting the real problem and not an “all those people are pure evil” fiction you’ve made up in your mind. The outrage felt by the victims is totally valid, but the response needs to be surgical to prevent future harm, as opposed to some disorganized blind rage where we go killing Syrians indiscriminately.

    It’s all terribly sad. It’s sad that terrorist organizations exist and kill innocent people, and it’s sad that they only way to stop them is millitary action, which results in even more deaths. You may have a different opinion, but I think every human life is important, not to be thrown away over differences of world view.