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chang50 wrote:As an outsider the us appears to be contradictory and paradoxical on so many levels,do the people who live there feel this at all?





chang50 wrote:As an outsider the us appears to be contradictory and paradoxical on so many levels,do the people who live there feel this at all?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880












saxitoxin wrote:The Guardian has an entire section devoted to the United States,



Symmetry wrote:saxitoxin wrote:The Guardian has an entire section devoted to the United States,
indeed, an entire department and group of journalists with their own website. Is that bad?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880












saxitoxin wrote:Symmetry wrote:saxitoxin wrote:The Guardian has an entire section devoted to the United States,
indeed, an entire department and group of journalists with their own website. Is that bad?
Do they work closely with the "Portugal" section of the Guardian?



Symmetry wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Symmetry wrote:saxitoxin wrote:The Guardian has an entire section devoted to the United States,
indeed, an entire department and group of journalists with their own website. Is that bad?
Do they work closely with the "Portugal" section of the Guardian?
Is there a Portugal section?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880












saxitoxin wrote:Symmetry wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Symmetry wrote:saxitoxin wrote:The Guardian has an entire section devoted to the United States,
indeed, an entire department and group of journalists with their own website. Is that bad?
Do they work closely with the "Portugal" section of the Guardian?
Is there a Portugal section?
No



Symmetry wrote:
Don't get pissy simply because I didn't explain how you were wrong in the manner that you would have preferred.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880












Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880










































Phatscotty wrote:So the Guardian is what is responsible for these Brits obsessions with America?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880












Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880












/ wrote:The majority of the people in the world are ignorant about certain subjects, after all it is only practical to learn what we can use. Will knowing about the creation of the universe ever be used by you personally, in a practical manner in your lifetime? If you aren't a biologist, historian or theoretical physicist, the answer is most likely no.
In that respect it is not irrational to be ignorant as long as it doesn't bring harm. On the other hand, harmful beliefs, such as the ignorance of climate change, insistence of some sort of conspiracy of medicine and science, or South African "treatments" involving rape, all need to be stopped by every means.

















saxitoxin wrote:Chang, here's another example of the Guardian's peculiar brand of left-oriented nationalism.
Fifty-four percent of Icelanders think there could be elves living in Iceland. As reported by Slate, this is an interesting, and cute, slice-of-life story that celebrates some aspect of a folk culture. If it involved an aspect of U.S. folk culture, and were reported by The Guardian, however, it would be toned in the most bellicose rhetoric and framed as another example of the fundamental, underlying idiocy of some segment of the American population.This kind of near-obsessive fault-searching by The Guardian (almost unique, among non-US western media) speaks to the very frightened state in which the British people live - a culture that believes it is under siege from all sides (with armed militias roving through English towns it may - in fact - be a legitimate fear) and in which even the Left - the standard-bearers of internationalism - have wrapped themselves inside a peculiar type of nationalist hysteria.












chang50 wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Chang, here's another example of the Guardian's peculiar brand of left-oriented nationalism.
Fifty-four percent of Icelanders think there could be elves living in Iceland. As reported by Slate, this is an interesting, and cute, slice-of-life story that celebrates some aspect of a folk culture. If it involved an aspect of U.S. folk culture, and were reported by The Guardian, however, it would be toned in the most bellicose rhetoric and framed as another example of the fundamental, underlying idiocy of some segment of the American population.This kind of near-obsessive fault-searching by The Guardian (almost unique, among non-US western media) speaks to the very frightened state in which the British people live - a culture that believes it is under siege from all sides (with armed militias roving through English towns it may - in fact - be a legitimate fear) and in which even the Left - the standard-bearers of internationalism - have wrapped themselves inside a peculiar type of nationalist hysteria.
Having 54% of Icelanders believe nonesense ain't good but they don't have a nuclear arsenal capable of ending life on our planet.So,yes,I'm less concerned by what they believe.The us as the pre-eminent economic and military force on the planet should be held to a higher standard.Please don't misconstrue this as us bashing,I agree Europeans can be smug and superior in their assessments of Americans.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880































/ wrote:The majority of the people in the world are ignorant about certain subjects, after all it is only practical to learn what we can use. Will knowing about the creation of the universe ever be used by you personally, in a practical manner in your lifetime? If you aren't a biologist, historian or theoretical physicist, the answer is most likely no.
In that respect it is not irrational to be ignorant as long as it doesn't bring harm. On the other hand, harmful beliefs, such as the ignorance of climate change, insistence of some sort of conspiracy of medicine and science, or South African "treatments" involving rape, all need to be stopped by every means.


















vodean wrote:whoa, whoa, whoa!!! hold on!
lots of people use creation theories in a practically manner... they use them to bash atheists, or to bash christians, or muslims, or whatever else. You would also be surprised about how many biologists, historians, and physicists there are.
Thank you for sharing this data with me, it's very interesting, my grandfather subscribes to the same theory but doesn't really know about the scientific data further than the actual trends mentioned. I will look it up.vodean wrote:Also, anthropogenic climate change is hardly science fact. The CLOUD theory suggests (with very good evidence, rather than graphs showing rise in temperature and a rise in CO2 emissions over the past 150 years... they have graphs showing cosmic ray concentration and temperature overlayed over the past 3-400,000 years (perhaps more) with very, very good correlation being apparent) that it is in fact the cyclic variations in strength of the sun which allows cyclic variations in the concentration of penetrating cosmic rays. That is why there was much greater climate change in the distant past than the present. That is why the ice age ended thousands of years before the dawn of human civilization (although the earth is still warming from THAT event), and explains the mini-ice age in england during the 17th (as i recall) century.
vodean wrote:You could, however say that ignorance on topics such as political leaders during elections, ignorance of the long-term costs and consequences of socialized medicine, and on the issue of electing charisma over tact.





/ wrote:vodean wrote:whoa, whoa, whoa!!! hold on!
lots of people use creation theories in a practical manner... they use them to bash atheists, or to bash christians, or muslims, or whatever else. You would also be surprised about how many biologists, historians, and physicists there are.
People are like that, many others live and let live, I blame their rampant personality disorders more than whatever they think is "right" or "wrong". They will do the exact same thing even if everyone knew all the facts, just because someone has a different opinion to something completely irrelevant with no factual answer. (see sports riots)Thank you for sharing this data with me, it's very interesting, my grandfather subscribes to the same theory but doesn't really know about the scientific data further than the actual trends mentioned. I will look it up.vodean wrote:Also, anthropogenic climate change is hardly science fact. The CLOUD theory suggests (with very good evidence, rather than graphs showing rise in temperature and a rise in CO2 emissions over the past 150 years... they have graphs showing cosmic ray concentration and temperature overlayed over the past 3-400,000 years (perhaps more) with very, very good correlation being apparent) that it is in fact the cyclic variations in strength of the sun which allows cyclic variations in the concentration of penetrating cosmic rays. That is why there was much greater climate change in the distant past than the present. That is why the ice age ended thousands of years before the dawn of human civilization (although the earth is still warming from THAT event), and explains the mini-ice age in england during the 17th (as i recall) century.
Still even if CO2 caused climate change is just an illogical hype to get us to be more environmentally conscious, it works. People are more apt to respond to "Oh my God, the earth is going to flood and we shall be smote with the eternal fires of the sun if you don't switch to alternative energy! " than a hippie telling the truth "Trees can only absorb so much CO2, it's necessary to preserve them and be environmentally conscious of our energy sources to maintain a balanced ecosystem.".vodean wrote:You could, however say that ignorance on topics such as political leaders during elections, ignorance of the long-term costs and consequences of socialized medicine, and on the issue of electing charisma over tact.
Indeed, it has become a pure "us versus them" race rather than looking at if the candidate on your "side" is even competent. It is largely the polarizing news media's fault in my opinion, a candidate cannot stand on their own merits because they have to act like a movie star just to get 14 seconds on the TV, otherwise they don't even exist. But on the other hand, even with the internet at our fingertips, there is still not way to get a fool-proof real non-biased look at a politician's merits short of stalking them yourself.
And it doesn't really help that American politics are so confusing that you probably need several dozen hours of research before you even understand what all of the minor local positions we are allowed to vote for even do, much less the individual candidates' actual histories.


















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