Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Dolerman
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Hidden 7 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by Polymorpheus
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by IceHeart
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But don't you know that praying for hurricane victims actually prevents future hurricanes? Thoughts and prayers is the most powerful thing in the world. Not donating money, or time, or any other form of actual aid.


Thoughts and prayers are more powerful than you think. That said, I think most people realize that a large majority of people who give their money, time, and medical aid are Christians and other religious folk who believe it is their duty to help out those in need. Many of the largest charities that do good work around the world were started by religious groups and a lot of those types still give to charities, help out in the community, etc.

Well just going to say also I'm a Sola Scriptura[Bible Only] type of person so even if @Andreyich doesn't consider me a Christian I certainly do, though I consider myself a follow of Christ first and foremost before any such grouping.

Well since I wanted to get in something more political now here we have an unashamed defending of Antifa by non-other than the good old Huffpost. Pretty much they seem to be trying to sneak in ANTIFA with all the various anti-fascists groups in order to defend their violent tendencies. Real classy.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Dion
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<Snipped quote by Odin>

There's some good suicide? How exactly does one define that? It's literally dying from lack of any hope. <.< Spin that into a positive. Because everything you said, didn't make that case. I already made things debunking those ideas presented. So I won't repeat myself.



I feel like you attempted to put in a contrary opinion, but failed to make a comprehensible case. What you MEANT was, "claiming all suicide isn't viable (meaning something that wouldn't necessarily be a pleasant or good choice, but something that solves a problem.) insert thing here" That's still wrong, as I pointed out. Unless like Penny, you love the idea of rising suicide rates among demographics.


NIVEA. Niet invullen voor een ander. That's not what I meant at all. I would've gone into depth about why your analysis (is it yours or did you just copy paste stuff?) on Dutch euthanasia laws was inherently flawed because you don't understand how it actually works but just parrot whatever you read without a second thought or counter-hearing.

My late grandfather passed a year ago of Alzheimers. The suffering he went through was not physical - no amount of pain relief medication would've helped him or us. The way he was living was not human-worthy. It sounds morbid but if I had been asked whether we should euthanize him, my answer would've been yes. But that's not how euthanasia works in the Netherlands (contrary to your/popular belief apparently). He himself and only he himself can give the okay to euthanize, and even then it's such a long process that the chance of him being granted the request before his natural death at the hands of this disease would've very slim.

I am not bringing this forth as a personal anecdote - I am using it to show you that pain is not always fixed by pumping more drugs into somebodies body. Something you do not seem to comprehend on a human level also is that when you are in a hospital 24/7, being pumped full of drugs just to perform pain management, you are already in the last stages of your life. Doctors don't move towards pain management at such a level if they haven't already done everything they can for you.

But, anyway, getting back to it - you lack the emotional understanding to comprehend what drives people towards these sorts of choices. You sound very ignorant when you say these things without consideration for why these people want to do things like this. You say that people don't even consider 'pain' to be a top priority. Okay, so? So fucking what? If I lost autonomy over my own life I'd probably wanna end it too. I'm sorry, I just don't really feel like sitting in a home for older people for the rest of my life waiting for it all to end. If I lose the ability to do what makes my life enjoyable, I'd probably want my life to end. There is so little to live for at that point.

You imposing the idea that pain is the only reason to euthanize is not only ignorant, your attempt to fall back on that same argument isn't really truthful too. If I had a disease that was incurable and made my life into 'stare at a wall simulator 2k17' I'd end it. With or without doctors' help, but preferably with so I can at least die with dignity. And these diseases exist.
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by mdk
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Terror attack at the Port Authority in NYC. Early reporting says the fucker did it wrong and injured himself too much to set off a suicide vest, got taken alive; two hurt, including the """"""suspect""""".

edit: not a serious injury to the bystander. Nice bomb, loser.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Mao Mao
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Terror attack at the Port Authority in NYC. Early reporting says the fucker did it wrong and injured himself too much to set off a suicide vest, got taken alive; two hurt, including the """"""suspect""""".

Thoughts and prayer for those hurt in the terror attack.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by The Harbinger of Ferocity
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People claim god is righteous and omnipotent. I guess I'm a fucking idiot because my definition of what's right and wrong goes against what's preached all the time: "It's all part of his plan, trust in him and he won't fail you," etc. I'm not okay with these things happening, even though people pray against it. But somehow, Suzie prayed hard enough and x amount of times so she could get an "A" instead of a "B" on her final, and it happened. But fuck the millions of others suffering, right?

I'm not here to change anyone's mind, just here to show why I think such delusion is bullshit.

Also, Bob could do all those things and more, but the second he makes that prayer, he's golden. No hell for him.


This is a non-argument because you openly admit this goes against the general philosophy of "It's all part of his plan, trust in him and he won't fail you.", whatever you as a mere person believe to be right or just pales utterly in comparison to that plan. That goes hand in hand with the other idea that the plan itself is beyond any measure of human comprehension or understanding. Of course you at your level may not be approving, but the greater scheme needed it to transpire for some other working component to succeed. This is not some closely kept secret of the belief system in question, which is why I call it a non-argument.

As for "praying hard enough" and "enough times", the general idea is that it has nothing to do with how hard you pray or the amount of times - although this varies with the different forms of Christianity - and has significantly more to do with the idea that without God man can truly accomplish nothing of value by himself. Suzie's request might have fulfilled some specific component of the greater plan, that she could have always had it if she so much as thought to ask for it because it was already in alignment with the will; one way or another she was going to take the test and pass in this example, but because she sought out that trust and looking to God she did better. This stems off into your other commentary about suffering people, where any number of factors - just as with Suzie in the earlier example - could be.

Why are people allowed to suffer in this context? For one, bringing it up you likely know the phrase that goes something along the lines of "It was never promised to be easy." and or that "There will always be suffering on Earth.", et cetera, et cetera. Not a sufficient answer, that I can recognize, but again this is not some unexplained concept in the philosophy of the religion. There are a multitude of interlocking, interwoven reasons for this that are elaborated upon. Some to this day are adamant it is "Just because of sin.", but when you ask them if that is original sin or the sins of the father or individual troubles, so on and so forth, there is not going to be a clear answer there.

As for Bob, my point is going to be summarized with a "Yes, and?"

When you are speaking to this religion's doctrine, you are needing to understand it with the perspective of that mankind is not the arbiter of fates. God in such a case would be the one to determine if Bob truly was repentant or if he was attempting to skirt the consequences of his actions just because he was on his deathbed. You as a person cannot determine that either, no amount of effort could you put forward to do that. So again, another non-issue in the context of how the system operates.
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by SleepingSilence
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<Snipped quote by SleepingSilence>

NIVEA. Niet invullen voor een ander. That's not what I meant at all. I would've gone into depth about why your analysis (is it yours or did you just copy paste stuff?) on Dutch euthanasia laws was inherently flawed because you don't understand how it actually works but just parrot whatever you read without a second thought or counter-hearing.

My late grandfather passed a year ago of Alzheimers. The suffering he went through was not physical - no amount of pain relief medication would've helped him or us. The way he was living was not human-worthy. It sounds morbid but if I had been asked whether we should euthanize him, my answer would've been yes. But that's not how euthanasia works in the Netherlands (contrary to your/popular belief apparently). He himself and only he himself can give the okay to euthanize, and even then it's such a long process that the chance of him being granted the request before his natural death at the hands of this disease would've very slim.

I am not bringing this forth as a personal anecdote - I am using it to show you that pain is not always fixed by pumping more drugs into somebodies body. Something you do not seem to comprehend on a human level also is that when you are in a hospital 24/7, being pumped full of drugs just to perform pain management, you are already in the last stages of your life. Doctors don't move towards pain management at such a level if they haven't already done everything they can for you.

But, anyway, getting back to it - you lack the emotional understanding to comprehend what drives people towards these sorts of choices. You sound very ignorant when you say these things without consideration for why these people want to do things like this. You say that people don't even consider 'pain' to be a top priority. Okay, so? So fucking what? If I lost autonomy over my own life I'd probably wanna end it too. I'm sorry, I just don't really feel like sitting in a home for older people for the rest of my life waiting for it all to end. If I lose the ability to do what makes my life enjoyable, I'd probably want my life to end. There is so little to live for at that point.

You imposing the idea that pain is the only reason to euthanize is not only ignorant, your attempt to fall back on that same argument isn't really truthful too. If I had a disease that was incurable and made my life into 'stare at a wall simulator 2k17' I'd end it. With or without doctors' help, but preferably with so I can at least die with dignity. And these diseases exist.


I feel like almost all of that, was saying the exact same thing. But the thing in bold, is what I'll focus on. You may not be trying to just use a personal story to point out sheer lack of evidence on why all the failed suicides is worth the 300 billion dollars in cost and all the negative ramifications of assisted suicide and what it can lead to. All you said, was personal, emotional and nothing factual.

I've already pointed out multiple times, I've been suicidal before, so it's just outright disingenuous to say I don't know what it feels like to feel that way. Also the way YOU describe your scenario it sounds like you would push him into suicide with how your talking about it. "The way he was living was not human-worthy" what makes you or anyone decide that? Because that gets into slippery slope argument that leads people to killing people that are disabled. The "thing I parroted" was an argument done by someone who knows what they're talking about and just went through why "dying with dignity" isn't a viable argument. I wasn't imposing that pain was the reason to offing oneself, but you seemed to be.

"The state's “Death with Dignity Act Annual Report” for 2014 shows that the top reason is “losing autonomy” (Oregon Public Health Division 2015, 5). Concern about pain was not even the second or third reason: “Less able to engage in activities making life enjoyable” and “Loss of dignity.” It was ranked sixth out of seven, above only financial concerns, and included not only “inadequate pain control,” but also “concern about it.” These patients were not necessarily in uncontrollable pain themselves, however they were concerned about it (as are we all). But even that concern did not rank high on their list of reasons that they wanted to commit suicide. Even if the line drawn is unbearable pain, how can that be restricted to only physical pain? Who can judge that mental anguish is not unbearable pain? Or that economic distress (or anything else that causes anguish) is not unbearable pain?"

The idea that making assisted suicide legal, we somehow only be restricted to "unbearable pain" cases, is naive at best and delusional at worst. You want to make that legal? You're going to have to deal with the oncoming slippery slope that becomes "anyone who pays" maybe even "anyone over 18, because free care." maybe children or teenagers with disabilities.

Since I'll never get you to admit, your idea comes from emotion and nothing more. Can I at least grasp what type of suicide is "not bad" to you? You want suicide bombers to have a right to do it? People who jump of bridges and make their deaths public? Just assisted suicide? All suicide should be legalized and judged since all of it should be treated with the same? My point is, you want assisted suicide? You get the transgender communities suicide rate to maybe go up to well over 50%. You get people arguing in favor of killing people with down syndrome, or autism. You get people that die from diseases they were only told they have. Because you're arguing not for defending those that take their own lifes, but that all people should have a right to commit suicide. (and I assume that's what you want, since you're pro-abortion and correctly pointed out this the same, "this is inconvenient for me" so I have the right to eliminate the problem issue.)


Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by cpldingo
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Terror attack at the Port Authority in NYC. Early reporting says the fucker did it wrong and injured himself too much to set off a suicide vest, got taken alive; two hurt, including the """"""suspect""""".

edit: not a serious injury to the bystander. Nice bomb, loser.


Worse thing is, I've actually seen an SVEST go off.
Seen the charge fail too, never turns out good for the bomber though...
VBIEDs are imo the worse, but SVESTs are horrifying.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Dion
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I feel like almost all of that, was saying the exact same thing. But the thing in bold, is what I'll focus on. You may not be trying to just use a personal story to point out sheer lack of evidence on why all the failed suicides is worth the 300 billion dollars in cost and all the negative ramifications of assisted suicide and what it can lead to. All you said, was personal, emotional and nothing factual.


Well, good news. Death is inherently emotional and personal and not at all financial which is the way you're putting it forth. This is how it works in a 2017 Western country with a social net that can afford to aid people even in things that aren't bare necessities purely because e can afford to, you know, give people a decent quality of life.

I've already pointed out multiple times, I've been suicidal before, so it's just outright disingenuous to say I don't know what it feels like to feel that way.


Have you been terminally ill? Have you been sick to the point of not being able to live your life anymore? If so, congratulations, you know how it feels. Having been suicidal has absolutely zero, nop, nihil, nothing to do with euthanasia.

Also the way YOU describe your scenario it sounds like you would push him into suicide with how your talking about it.
Nivea. Please don't strawman me or put words in my mouth. I would never do that.
"The way he was living was not human-worthy" what makes you or anyone decide that?


My own opinion built by experience on the matter decides that. Visit a nursing home for people with illnesses like alzheimers sometimes. You'll see the light.

Because that gets into slippery slope argument that leads people to killing people that are disabled. The "thing I parroted" was an argument done by someone who knows what they're talking about and just went through why "dying with dignity" isn't a viable argument. I wasn't imposing that pain was the reason to offing oneself, but you seemed to be.


Well, for one, it only leads to that argument if you're an absolute moron. You liked using Dutch euthanasia laws as an example (the country where I am from) so I have to ask you when are the Dutch going to start killing disabled people? These laws were created on the request of people who suffer and want to kill themselves in a dignified way. They weren't made by doctors that want to kill people - nor an evil government that wants to kill all the undesirables. They were made by patients. They were fought heavily and even the doctors themselves didn't really agree to it. It took many years for the organization of patients to even get an agenda on the board of the politicians - who also fought against it because it's new and unheard of.

I think that the 'person who knows what they are talking about' is the patient themselves. Whether you agree with euthanasia or not is up to you - I certainly see why one would be against it but strongly disagree. But the fact of the matter is... if you don't allow people to do it legally under the watchful eye of someone that is trained for it, they will DIY it. And that has far more harmful effects on society.

"The state's “Death with Dignity Act Annual Report” for 2014 shows that the top reason is “losing autonomy” (Oregon Public Health Division 2015, 5). Concern about pain was not even the second or third reason: “Less able to engage in activities making life enjoyable” and “Loss of dignity.” It was ranked sixth out of seven, above only financial concerns, and included not only “inadequate pain control,” but also “concern about it.” These patients were not necessarily in uncontrollable pain themselves, however they were concerned about it (as are we all). But even that concern did not rank high on their list of reasons that they wanted to commit suicide. Even if the line drawn is unbearable pain, how can that be restricted to only physical pain? Who can judge that mental anguish is not unbearable pain? Or that economic distress (or anything else that causes anguish) is not unbearable pain?"


Anyone can judge that. It's a judgement call. It's not factual. The line has to be drawn by the government and the doctors. But, really, doctors don't deal in financial pains. I certainly think mental anguish can be considered unbearable pain. Losing autonomy, lessened ability to do activities... etc. and loss of dignity are all very very valid reasons to request euthanasia to me. And that's really what this all comes down to - it's how you feel about the situation. You can say 'hurr they don't care about the pain' and all I can say is, ok, so what? because I don't think pain is the sole criteria that we should be looking at. Whether a doctor agrees with that is not really my problem - most of all it's not my problem because for him there are plenty of doctors who do not share his views.

[quote=@SleepingSilence]The idea that making assisted suicide legal, we somehow only be restricted to "unbearable pain" cases, is naive at best and delusional at worst. You want to make that legal? You're going to have to deal with the oncoming slippery slope that becomes "anyone who pays" maybe even "anyone over 18, because free care." maybe children or teenagers with disabilities.[/qupte]

Again, we have made assisted suicide legal, we have restricted it to criteria that so far to my knowledge include only unbearable pain. Here you can read who can request euthanasia. I will summarize it for you since you obviously can't read Dutch (your summation of Dutch euthanasia would've been much more accurate if you did, and you'd certainly not have used it as a case study..). Here's the people who can request euthanasia.

  • A minor aged 12 and up can request euthanasia. Up to 16 years it requires agreement from parents.
  • 16, 17 year olds decide for themselves to request. The doctor is required to take parents into account, but agreement is not required.
  • 18 and up can request it on their own.
  • Demented people (people with a lessened capability mentally) can put in a euthanasia request.
  • Euthanasia can not be requested by family members. They can however bring the patients will to light that states they want to be euthanized under x conditions.
  • Foreign Dutch(wo)men can request euthanasia.


Notice how I boldened the word request a few times? That's because a request doesn't have to be granted. There are criteria that need to be legally qualified. Lawsuits have already been filled and won over these that have proven doctors were inadequately in control of the criteria. So, there are legal checks and balances.

De arts moet onder meer de medische geschiedenis van de patiënt kennen. Op basis daarvan moet hij tot de overtuiging kunnen komen dat de patiënt uitzichtloos lijdt. Ook moet de arts vaststellen dat de patiënt goed heeft nagedacht over het verzoek. En dat het lijden voor de patiënt ondraaglijk is.


"The doctor needs to know the medical history of the patient. On the basis of that he needs to be convinced that the patient will suffer without an end in sight. Also, the doctor must confirm that the patient has thought about the request very well. Finally, the suffering must be unbearable to the patient."

After the euthanasia has been performed, they must immediately make notice of this to the municipal coroner. Read more about that here.

There are legal punishments if a euthanasia isn't performed according to standard. For euthanasia this is maximum 12 years (about equal if not greater than manslaughter) and for assisted suicide it's a maximum of 3 years (long time for our justice system).

There are some things that don't fall under euthanasia law; a doctor ceasing a treatment on request of the patient, a doctor deciding not to perform a medically useless treatment, or a doctor that uses increasingly heavy medication to alleviate the pain with the trade off that the patient dies quicker. Read more about that here.

Since I'll never get you to admit, your idea comes from emotion and nothing more.

I don't really see your problem with emotional arguments. They're just as valid as yours, especially when discussing emotional matters such as suffering, death and euthanasia. These are not decisions people make lightly which you seem to think otherwise of. That is fine - you can pretend to be rational as long as you want and you will continue missing the core of the argument.

Can I at least grasp what type of suicide is "not bad" to you?


I have spoken about one type of suicide and one type only, so I don't think it is hard to imagine what suicide isn't bad to me. Perhaps you need additional help because you are special - it's euthanasia and assisted suicide. But, this is why...

You want suicide bombers to have a right to do it?

.. is such a dumb argument. I never said this. It's disgusting hyperbole. I'd almost think you were trying to make it look like I support suicide bombings, but I know you're not quite mentally capable of mental gymnastics like that, so I'll just assume you were trying to make some idiotic point here.

People who jump of bridges and make their deaths public?


They're dead. I don't think it matters whether they had a right to do it or not. But perhaps if euthanasia were legal and they could prove they were suffering, they wouldn't have to, yknow, jump off a bridge and make their deaths public DIY style. Maybe.

Just assisted suicide?


Yes. And euthanasia.
All suicide should be legalized and judged since all of it should be treated with the same?
Preferably not, but that is your input. Also, treated with the same.. same what?

My point is, you want assisted suicide?
I already have it.
You get the transgender communities suicide rate to maybe go up to well over 50%.
I don't think we have. I don't think we will either. They don't meet the criteria. :)
You get people arguing in favor of killing people with down syndrome, or autism.
We had those before euthanasialaws as well and they were just as retarded then as they were now. But there has not been an increase in the amount of these people we have.
You get people that die from diseases they were only told they have.
No they won't because they don't meet the criteria.
Because you're arguing not for defending those that take their own lifes, but that all people should have a right to commit suicide.


I'm not. Nice strawman, loser.

(and I assume that's what you want, since you're pro-abortion and correctly pointed out this the same, "this is inconvenient for me" so I have the right to eliminate the problem issue.)


I am in fact pro-life but because I'm not a controlling asshole I vote pro-choice because it's not my kid and not my body. I don't see that has anything at all to do with euthanasia, but I'll play ball. I don't think it's inconvenient to me (what is precisely? Your point is entirely lost on me here. Maybe if you wrote more coherently....)



Okay, someone disagrees with me. No harm no foul. He's free to think that. Like I said, for him there are plenty who don't feel this way. :)
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by SleepingSilence
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@Odin Since I saw a "loser" in there. (and Jesus everything else under the sun, now that I've read through it.) I've honestly never even seen children call each other "loser". While we're getting off into the weeds. May I point out that you've given me vague nonsense about my writing being hard to digest. Without giving any examples. Yet, you've already proven you're not writing coherently to make a case for your own arguments.

Why did you separate quotes that many times? When arguing, when you weren't concise and it wasn't remotely necessary and just makes it harder to read? (Rather unpleasant actually.) You can't talk about my writing, when you admit that you didn't understand my questions and your own writing is vitriolic and horribly unfocused.

I did my best to limit all the clutter, but you clearly can't talk to people without being disrespectful. So, I'll leave this as my last post...

Well, good news. Death is inherently emotional and personal and not at all financial which is the way you're putting it forth


I've already shown that you're incorrect. If death didn't cost anyone any money, which is literally what you're saying. The funeral business would not exist. Let alone the whole hundred billion dollars of just dealing with suicide attempts alone. That's money and productivity being wasted on something that isn't necessary.

Have you been terminally ill? ? If so, congratulations, you know how it feels.


yourlogicalfallacyis.com/appeal-to-au…

I think that the 'person who knows what they are talking about' is the patient themselves. Whether you agree with euthanasia or not is up to you - I certainly see why one would be against it but strongly disagree.


Claiming all suicide is bad is just willfully ignorant.


Those statement in bold, among many other things you said are contradictory. You can't recognize a gray area, if you don't differentiate what's acceptable and what's not. And demonize those who have that opinion as ignorant and stupid.

So despite all this talk about being a moron. You're tactically admitting that I'm correct by implying all suicide cannot be judged by anyone and is always a valid option if the person thinks so. (at least when we're talking about assisted suicide.) You haven't given me anything else. People aren't smart and some people are mentally ill and literally don't know what they're talking about. If someone is given a false diagnoses and gets depressed and kills themselves. Your argument is in favor of that happening, if no one can judge people who wish to kill themselves. (I've been talking about america law system and us enabling suicide, this whole time, by the by. Not like all my posts about it pointing that out matter...)

As for all this dutch stuff, you're making arguments I'm not even talking about or discussing. I don't want assisted suicide here in america or to legalize suicide here. But since you bring it up, is this really what you want? Because the dutch have an all time high suicide rate...is that something you're fine with? (Rhetorical question, not assuming or straw-manning anything. And I never did.)

nltimes.nl/2016/06/30/number-suicides…

Last year a massive 1,871 people committed suicide in the Netherlands, the highest number in the country's history, Statistics Netherlands announced on Thursday. That amounts to an average of five suicides a day in 2015.

theguardian.com/world/2016/oct/13/net…


"Allow dying for people's whose life is complete?" What the fuck? And hence, the slippery slope argument expands. Which is precisely why I'm against this. And I don't even have to call you stupid/special a dozen times in order to point out why. Because my argument stands on reason. (Also you keep bringing up that doctors don't like cost money or struggle with money...again couldn't be further from the truth.) Also I don't want to be like the dutch...

news.vice.com/article/only-in-the-net…

You never once stated before that you only just wanted assisted suicide. This is the first time, and it's also not a straw-man to ask, because you were previously vague in your statements and I just got through several people debating that. But now I get your point, you are simply defending the laws in the Netherlands you already have as viable and perfect without needs to make changes. Fine. Continue to eventually going down this path...

huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/05/nathan-…

medicaldaily.com/assisted-suicide-tou…



For anyone that cares to read, there's a lot more I didn't put in along with all my other links.

If you felt that I made any moral judgement on you for your opinion on assisted suicide. Your vagueness didn't help in that matter. But I apologize, and clarify. You aren't morally bankrupt if you happen to feel that certain way.

But with how you spoke to me, can you tell why I don't remotely take your personal judgement on my character seriously or treat it with a bit of respect? You clearly never had good intentions and can't express yourself without ad-hominems. So why should I respect or consider your opinion of me or my writing?

All that shit you flung at me, but where did I do the same? (period, let alone in this conversation.) If you want to fight the enemy, you first need a reason for that enemy to exist. And if it's "disagreeing" with you. You can't pretend you allow others to disagree with you. I know you don't have an answer, to be fair, you don't need one either, but I won't treat you politely in future, if you won't grant me the same common curiosity.
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Xandrya
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@The Harbinger of Ferocity

I'm not saying I believe in this "greater plan" or whatever it may be because that's obviously contradictory as you pointed out and I wouldn't have made such statement, but that's what the religion claims. My problem is (and I attended a Christian church with my parents for ~15 years) that they preach god is righteous and omnipotent. Now, he can't be both with all the shit going on. I'm well aware that in our world, there are processes that need to take place in order to achieve a goal. But to god, that shouldn't be an issue. He shouldn't need to sacrifice the lives of innocent kids so I don't know, I can get to work on time. He's omnipotent, after all. He can literally blink his eyes and the universe can very well cease to exist. If that's still the case, then he isn't righteous, not by our definition. He isn't good, unlike it's preached to the public, and he's doing whatever the hell he wants, but not in our own interest. Not in the best interest of the same mankind which he sent his only son to die for. Kinda redundant, really.

As to Bob, well that's a damn tragedy. The parents of the victims will more than likely never find peace, but Bob, well at least he's getting to heaven. One more reason why if I believed any of it, I wouldn't want to go up there anyway.
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The problem of evil is one of the oldest theological challenges. Basically all arguments on this point are explanations for why the world looks like there is no divine plan at all and people are just making it up as they go along. Weird.
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<Snipped quote by mdk>

Worse thing is, I've actually seen an SVEST go off.
Seen the charge fail too, never turns out good for the bomber though...
VBIEDs are imo the worse, but SVESTs are horrifying.


The VBIEDs are (much) stronger, but the vests go anywhere. If he'd done it right, made it into the subway system or even just blown it properly, the effects underground (in a pressurized tin can) woulda been pretty nasty. Thank god he was retarded.

Whattaya think Mad Dog does to repay the attempt? THAT is something I wanna see. We got like fifteen more MOABs and they're not getting any younger.
Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by mdk
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by POOHEAD189
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by AlteredTundra
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Just think about it guys: Trump drinks diet coke. That stuff is known to be bad for your health. The aspartame specifically is said to be worse for you than if you drank regular soda.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by POOHEAD189
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Just think about it guys: Trump drinks diet coke. That stuff is known to be bad for your health. The aspartame specifically is said to be worse for you than if you drank regular soda.


Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by AlteredTundra
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@POOHEAD189 Yo man, go look it up. There are scientific facts and shit. Totally legit.
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