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ACA Repeal/Replace: Progressives Face Moral Dilemma
(03-15-2017, 01:16 PM)SomeGuy Wrote:
Quote:Usually it is excuse making, but sometimes it isn't.

I don't know, but if they weren't wearing a burka we all know men can't help themselves.

Whoa!  Whoa!  Not cool, man!  Rape is NEVER funny.  I was thinking more like thisAngry

Wow, that got dark.

Rape may not be funny, but watching leftists twist and turn over Islam is.

Yeah I saw that.  I thought "are these people stupid?" then I realized they were at a university and concluded "of course they are".

What do you mean got dark?  You trying to say something?


*note:  the last part is tongue in cheek.
It really is all mathematics.

Turn on to Daddy, Tune in to Nationalism, Drop out of UN/NATO/WTO/TPP/NAFTA/CAFTA Globalism.
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Quote:What do you mean got dark?  You trying to say something?

Yes.  I was trying to say that things got dark.  Wink
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Yeah happens. Its been warming up so I've been spending more time generating in the sun.
It really is all mathematics.

Turn on to Daddy, Tune in to Nationalism, Drop out of UN/NATO/WTO/TPP/NAFTA/CAFTA Globalism.
Reply
(03-15-2017, 01:16 PM)SomeGuy Wrote:
Quote:Usually it is excuse making, but sometimes it isn't.

I don't know, but if they weren't wearing a burka we all know men can't help themselves.

Whoa!  Whoa!  Not cool, man!  Rape is NEVER funny.

Well that's what you were implying.  Kinser was just going with the flow.
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*whoosh*

That's the sound of that exchange going right over your head. Wink

I have a response for you in the aggressive withdrawal thread.  Are you done with that particular conversation, or have you just not noticed it?
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(03-15-2017, 04:19 AM)Galen Wrote: I remember the seventies and that was a decade I could have just as soon done without.  The only thing Eric the Obtuse remembers about the sixties and seventies is that he had a good time but he is lacking the details due to all of the recreational pharmaceuticals.  I rather liked the eighties and the nineties weren't too bad but you got the twenty-first century right.

Galen,  geeze I suppose you're not a Jonser then. Tongue Fuck , man. I'm a 1962 cohort who enjoyed the fuck out of recreational pharmaceuticals. So here's Rag's attitudes wrt decades.

1960's :  Awesome, grade school Rags wore clover jewelry, like his peers.
1970's : Do Drugs.  That was the message and yeah, it was really fun.
1980's : Do Career. : Do shit to make lots of $$$$$.  Job/poker/ride the stock market escalator to the top:





Yeah, I don't give a fuck the "Jefferson's were of "color", hell, I was movin' to the top in the 1980's/1990's.
"nuf said, man. 

*Rags is of assorted races, so, fuck man.  I guess I'm "of color" as well.

2000's:  Fucking outsourcing fad started.  You know, Galen, I'd love to fuck over the CEOL's and outsourcers.  Taxes, burn at the stake, shoot with gun, etc.  I hate CEO's and outsourcers with a pasion.

2010's.  Fucking sucking green donkey dicks decade of shit/corporate Lords/CEO's need some lead. Cool
---Value Added Cool
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(03-15-2017, 05:53 PM)Ragnarök_62 Wrote:
(03-15-2017, 04:19 AM)Galen Wrote: I remember the seventies and that was a decade I could have just as soon done without.  The only thing Eric the Obtuse remembers about the sixties and seventies is that he had a good time but he is lacking the details due to all of the recreational pharmaceuticals.  I rather liked the eighties and the nineties weren't too bad but you got the twenty-first century right.

Galen,  geeze I suppose you're not a Jonser then. Tongue Fuck , man. I'm a 1962 cohort who enjoyed the fuck out of recreational pharmaceuticals. So here's Rag's attitudes wrt decades.

No, I am not since being 1965 vintage.  By the time my contemporaries started using weed the seventies were winding down.  My teenage years started while Carter was still president which was a real downer.  I expect by that time you were zoned out like the Boomers so you may have missed that.  Life was one big exercise in damage control around the nominal adults at the time.
Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard. -- H.L. Mencken

If one rejects laissez faire on account of man's fallibility and moral weakness, one must for the same reason also reject every kind of government action.   -- Ludwig von Mises
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(03-16-2017, 03:04 AM)Galen Wrote:
(03-15-2017, 05:53 PM)Ragnarök_62 Wrote:
(03-15-2017, 04:19 AM)Galen Wrote: I remember the seventies and that was a decade I could have just as soon done without.  The only thing Eric the Obtuse remembers about the sixties and seventies is that he had a good time but he is lacking the details due to all of the recreational pharmaceuticals.  I rather liked the eighties and the nineties weren't too bad but you got the twenty-first century right.

Galen,  geeze I suppose you're not a Jonser then. Tongue Fuck , man. I'm a 1962 cohort who enjoyed the fuck out of recreational pharmaceuticals. So here's Rag's attitudes wrt decades.

No, I am not since being 1965 vintage.  By the time my contemporaries started using weed the seventies were winding down.  My teenage years started while Carter was still president which was a real downer.  I expect by that time you were zoned out like the Boomers so you may have missed that.  Life was one big exercise in damage control around the nominal adults at the time.


Well, that sux. Off by 1 year and all.  But you are correct, I was zoned out At  period of time.
A sound and all of that. 





So here's to the 1970's., man. Cool
---Value Added Cool
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(03-15-2017, 12:45 PM)Kinser79 Wrote:
(03-15-2017, 12:33 PM)The Wonkette Wrote:
(03-11-2017, 09:39 AM)Galen Wrote: If people are not allowed to experience the consequences of their decisions then they will have no clue as to what is right or wrong.
Yeah, but sometimes sh*t happens to people that they had no choice in and they still pay.  Your employer goes bankrupt and there goes your job, you are healthy and eat nutritional food and exercise and figure you can ride it out without health insurance until you get a new job, but then you find that lump...

Gee kinda makes you think that health insurance should follow the patient and not be based on their employment status.  I wonder who has posted about that in this thread before. Cool
Absolutely. I was just responding to the quote that I just bolded.
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(03-16-2017, 11:03 AM)X_4AD_84 Wrote:
(03-15-2017, 05:53 PM)Ragnarök_62 Wrote: Galen,  geeze I suppose you're not a Jonser then. Tongue Fuck , man. I'm a 1962 cohort who enjoyed the fuck out of recreational pharmaceuticals. So here's Rag's attitudes wrt decades.

1960's :  Awesome, grade school Rags wore clover jewelry, like his peers.
1970's : Do Drugs.  That was the message and yeah, it was really fun.

1980's : Do Career. : Do shit to make lots of $$$$$.  Job/poker/ride the stock market escalator to the top:





Yeah, I don't give a fuck the "Jefferson's were of "color", hell, I was movin' to the top in the 1980's/1990's.
"nuf said, man. 

*Rags is of assorted races, so, fuck man.  I guess I'm "of color" as well.

2000's:  Fucking outsourcing fad started.  You know, Galen, I'd love to fuck over the CEOL's and outsourcers.  Taxes, burn at the stake, shoot with gun, etc.  I hate CEO's and outsourcers with a pasion.

2010's.  Fucking sucking green donkey dicks decade of shit/corporate Lords/CEO's need some lead. Cool

I'm not a shrink but you seem to have this thing about wanting to be a Boomer. You either knowingly or unknowingly add about 5 years to your real age. 1960s? Grade school? OK, you went into Kindergarten fall of '67 (unless a very late in  1962 birth in which case it might have been fall of '68). You went into 1st grade in fall of '68. So, you had 2-1/2 school years "in the 1960s."



Hell, I'm only year behind you.

There might have been a few kids doing drugs when I was in 6th grade (1974 - 75). If so, I was not directly aware of it.

7th grade was where "the burnouts" really started to become "a thing" in terms of student subcultures. They would sneak off campus into the adjacent park, a typical Bay Area one with some nice (planted) Redwood circles you could duck into. Now, to be honest, I wanted to be a burn out but I was not one to cut class or take bong hits during school hours. I loved learning. My own "first weed" would have to wait until very late in my Freshman Year of HS. In any case, when I reached 7th grade, I'd say a single digit percentage of your cohort (8th graders) were doing bongs (or any thing in terms of drugs). That was the 1975 - 76 school year, half way through the 70s.

Let's say the typical stoner really got going Freshman year. For you, that was '76 - 77. So, yeah, you probably did some drugs during the mid to late 70s. Probably more during the 80s in your case.

1, Grade school:  We did have some ciggie puffers out at recess. Yeah, I know that probably doesn't count, but there you have it.

2. Jr. High.  Yeah, there were some folks who smelled like weed while boarding the bus to Jr. high. So yeah, burnouts or "heads" as we called them existed.  The ciggie puffers were pretty common. There's a tunnel under the main drag between the 2 Jr. high buildings.  Lot's of ciggie puffers there.

3. We're both talking  about, as it pertains to substances, folks our age doing those, yes, in the 1970's.  That's why I put it down. So, you're right, that's the mid to late 70's, which , again is why I put that decade down as "fun".

4. I'm pretty sure the clover and stuff got there due to my class mates having older siblings. That was quite common as well.

5. The 1960's.  So, did you enjoy the 1960's ? I think most folks like being young kids.  Young kids do tend to mimic  assorted things in their environment. I'm sure there's stuff I picked up from my paternal cousins, who are all ... Boomers

6. There is Xer stuff as well. I left that out 'cause it's supposed to be self evident. Like I told Eric, I'm pretty pecuniary.  You know anything to make a buck.  That's not Boom, nor is what should be evident here is my distrust of authority.   That came from Tricky Dick, you know.
---Value Added Cool
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I'd say distrust of authority is also characteristic of Boomers; at any rate when they were younger.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
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(03-17-2017, 04:21 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: I'd say distrust of authority is also characteristic of Boomers; at any rate when they were younger.

You're not helping my cause there.  I guess a yen for noisy music may work?
---Value Added Cool
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(03-17-2017, 04:51 PM)Ragnarök_62 Wrote:
(03-17-2017, 04:21 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: I'd say distrust of authority is also characteristic of Boomers; at any rate when they were younger.

You're not helping my cause there.  I guess a yen for noisy music may work?

Not sure what you mean.

Now I'm opposing Trump. Anti-authority as you can get. 

Voted for Hill. Also anti-authority, because anti-Trump.

Anti-authority is to go for quiet music.

YMMV

Eric
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
So voting for the moat status quo/business as usual presidential candidate in the last 50 years is now "anti-authority". Rolleyes

The TDS is strong with Eric.  So strong I may need a booster shot.  But it does prove one thing conclusively, he has no idea who is and who is not the the Establishment.  Cool
It really is all mathematics.

Turn on to Daddy, Tune in to Nationalism, Drop out of UN/NATO/WTO/TPP/NAFTA/CAFTA Globalism.
Reply
(03-16-2017, 11:03 AM)X_4AD_84 Wrote:
(03-15-2017, 05:53 PM)Ragnarök_62 Wrote:
(03-15-2017, 04:19 AM)Galen Wrote: I remember the seventies and that was a decade I could have just as soon done without.  The only thing Eric the Obtuse remembers about the sixties and seventies is that he had a good time but he is lacking the details due to all of the recreational pharmaceuticals.  I rather liked the eighties and the nineties weren't too bad but you got the twenty-first century right.

Galen,  geeze I suppose you're not a Jonser then. Tongue Fuck , man. I'm a 1962 cohort who enjoyed the fuck out of recreational pharmaceuticals. So here's Rag's attitudes wrt decades.

1960's :  Awesome, grade school Rags wore clover jewelry, like his peers.
1970's : Do Drugs.  That was the message and yeah, it was really fun.

1980's : Do Career. : Do shit to make lots of $$$$$.  Job/poker/ride the stock market escalator to the top:





Yeah, I don't give a fuck the "Jefferson's were of "color", hell, I was movin' to the top in the 1980's/1990's.
"nuf said, man. 

*Rags is of assorted races, so, fuck man.  I guess I'm "of color" as well.

2000's:  Fucking outsourcing fad started.  You know, Galen, I'd love to fuck over the CEOL's and outsourcers.  Taxes, burn at the stake, shoot with gun, etc.  I hate CEO's and outsourcers with a pasion.

2010's.  Fucking sucking green donkey dicks decade of shit/corporate Lords/CEO's need some lead. Cool

I'm not a shrink but you seem to have this thing about wanting to be a Boomer. You either knowingly or unknowingly add about 5 years to your real age. 1960s? Grade school? OK, you went into Kindergarten fall of '67 (unless a very late in  1962 birth in which case it might have been fall of '68). You went into 1st grade in fall of '68. So, you had 2-1/2 school years "in the 1960s."

I am not really surprised by this.  Unlike most of Generation X he gets to participate in the tail end of the fun part but then gets to spend the rest of his life in the shitty parts the Boomers left behind.
Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard. -- H.L. Mencken

If one rejects laissez faire on account of man's fallibility and moral weakness, one must for the same reason also reject every kind of government action.   -- Ludwig von Mises
Reply
(03-18-2017, 04:22 AM)Galen Wrote:
(03-16-2017, 11:03 AM)X_4AD_84 Wrote:
(03-15-2017, 05:53 PM)Ragnarök_62 Wrote:
(03-15-2017, 04:19 AM)Galen Wrote: I remember the seventies and that was a decade I could have just as soon done without.  The only thing Eric the Obtuse remembers about the sixties and seventies is that he had a good time but he is lacking the details due to all of the recreational pharmaceuticals.  I rather liked the eighties and the nineties weren't too bad but you got the twenty-first century right.

Galen,  geeze I suppose you're not a Jonser then. Tongue Fuck , man. I'm a 1962 cohort who enjoyed the fuck out of recreational pharmaceuticals. So here's Rag's attitudes wrt decades.

1960's :  Awesome, grade school Rags wore clover jewelry, like his peers.
1970's : Do Drugs.  That was the message and yeah, it was really fun.

1980's : Do Career. : Do shit to make lots of $$$$$.  Job/poker/ride the stock market escalator to the top:





Yeah, I don't give a fuck the "Jefferson's were of "color", hell, I was movin' to the top in the 1980's/1990's.
"nuf said, man. 

*Rags is of assorted races, so, fuck man.  I guess I'm "of color" as well.

2000's:  Fucking outsourcing fad started.  You know, Galen, I'd love to fuck over the CEOL's and outsourcers.  Taxes, burn at the stake, shoot with gun, etc.  I hate CEO's and outsourcers with a pasion.

2010's.  Fucking sucking green donkey dicks decade of shit/corporate Lords/CEO's need some lead. Cool

I'm not a shrink but you seem to have this thing about wanting to be a Boomer. You either knowingly or unknowingly add about 5 years to your real age. 1960s? Grade school? OK, you went into Kindergarten fall of '67 (unless a very late in  1962 birth in which case it might have been fall of '68). You went into 1st grade in fall of '68. So, you had 2-1/2 school years "in the 1960s."

I am not really surprised by this.  Unlike most of Generation X he gets to participate in the tail end of the fun part but then gets to spend the rest of his life in the shitty parts the Boomers left behind.

? Why would the 1980's/1990's be shitty.  Like I said, those were the $/party/poker junket years.  Can't complains.
The only shitty stuff is the 4T.
---Value Added Cool
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(03-18-2017, 12:25 AM)Eric the Green Wrote:
(03-17-2017, 04:51 PM)Ragnarök_62 Wrote:
(03-17-2017, 04:21 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: I'd say distrust of authority is also characteristic of Boomers; at any rate when they were younger.

You're not helping my cause there.  I guess a yen for noisy music may work?

Not sure what you mean.

Now I'm opposing Trump. Anti-authority as you can get. 

Voted for Hill. Also anti-authority, because anti-Trump.

Anti-authority is to go for quiet music.

YMMV

Eric


You stepped on my feeble attempt to get some X-cred, man. I suppose noisy music could be a domain for X?
---Value Added Cool
Reply
(03-18-2017, 06:24 PM)Ragnarök_62 Wrote:
(03-18-2017, 04:22 AM)Galen Wrote: I am not really surprised by this.  Unlike most of Generation X he gets to participate in the tail end of the fun part but then gets to spend the rest of his life in the shitty parts the Boomers left behind.

? Why would the 1980's/1990's be shitty.  Like I said, those were the $/party/poker junket years.  Can't complains.
The only shitty stuff is the 4T.

I had to try to make a living in those two decades and it wasn't all that easy for Xers of my vintage.  Still, it beat the stagflation of thanks to the likes of Johnson and Nixon.
Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard. -- H.L. Mencken

If one rejects laissez faire on account of man's fallibility and moral weakness, one must for the same reason also reject every kind of government action.   -- Ludwig von Mises
Reply
(03-18-2017, 04:22 AM)Galen Wrote: I am not really surprised by this.  Unlike most of Generation X he gets to participate in the tail end of the fun part but then gets to spend the rest of his life in the shitty parts the Boomers left behind.

Still not sure why everyone wants to blame the Boomers. There was a high to unravelling shift. We went from ideals and working together from the common good to a time of selfishness. We went from the government aggressively attempting to solve problems to regarding the government as the problem. The National Malaise hit all generations. Even the GIs, who were as gung ho a bunch as we've ever had, willing to bear any burden, pay any price, shifted into neutral. Yes, the Blue Boomers, after pushing for transforming changes in their youth, got disgusted by the politics of Nixon, Ford and Carter, and abandoned street protests for disco. The Xers? They didn't lose the fire, the drive. They never had it.

The whole country shifted gears when the Unravelling started to unravel. It wasn't just one generation.
That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.
Reply
(03-18-2017, 02:02 AM)Kinser79 Wrote: So voting for the moat status quo/business as usual presidential candidate in the last 50 years is now "anti-authority". Rolleyes

The TDS is strong with Eric.  So strong I may need a booster shot.  But it does prove one thing conclusively, he has no idea who is and who is not the the Establishment.  Cool

In the days and years following the September 11th attacks, conservatives on the old forum were pushing Bush 43 as the Grey Champion and suggesting that the regeneracy was well underway.  He was pushing different values and foreign policy...  Invading the Middle East was considered a good idea.  I called it preemptive, unilateral, serial nation building.  We built huge military and embassy complexes in our new puppet state of Iraq.  There was a question of whether Syria or Iran was our next target.  We used every boot on the ground we had, turning around National Guard forces as fast as we could refurbish and retrain.

I have called this a false regeneracy.  Since the Bush 43 era, we have come to see meddling in the Middle East as expensive and not constructive.  We had a Pearl Harbor sort of trigger event that put the country in a militant mood.  The government shifted policies to go with the shifted values.  What they tried didn't work.  We had for a time a united people willing to try new ideas, but the new ideas didn't work.  From my perspective, we had a sorta half hearted crisis period, but the new values and policies flopped.  We ended up stepping back into a 3T mood of stagnation and stalemate.

So.  Is Trump triggering a regeneracy?  Have we a united people trying out new values, ideas, concepts that will transform the country?

  1. It is not clear he has united the country.  He has made a big splash for sure, but we seem to be as divided as ever.
  2. The ideas are not new.  He is for the most part pushing the unravelling memes of cut taxes, cut services, and assume the government is the problem not the solution.  If 'establishment' means doing the same thing as has we have been all along, it is possible to say Trump is establishment.  (This isn't to say Hillary wasn't also establishment.  I don't think she would have made a Grey Campion pushing a strong values shifting regeneracy either.  Bernie, maybe.)
  3. It's not clear that his 'new' values and ideas will work.  If borrow and spend trickle down does what it usually does, we will at best have another false regeneracy.  It's hard to transform the country when what you're trying to transform it into doesn't work.
It's still early days, but your father seems to be walking the country into a tangled mess.  There is no lack of energy.  Things are going to get shaken up.  I'm not expecting business as usual.  Still, he looks more to me like a Buchanan or Hoover than a Lincoln or FDR.  He seems more likely to prove that the unravelling values must go that set up a new transforming set of values.

A central abstract problem is that the unravelling values are unravelling values.  Come a crisis, one is supposed to solve the most drastic problems facing the country.  If one of the central memes of the unraveling values is that governments shouldn't solve problems, that one should cut taxes and cripple domestic problem solving efforts, you can't make the unraveling values stronger and end up with crisis values.  Trump is pushing hard, but in a direction that simply can't result in a successful crisis resolution.
That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.
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