brodski
Tea-Time toad
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2005
- Messages
- 15,516
not mourning = celebrating?
that depends how one choses to avoid mourning.
The point is that there is a distinction between being glad that someone is dead and calling for their death.
not mourning = celebrating?
that depends how one choses to avoid mourning.
The point is that there is a distinction between being glad that someone is dead and calling for their death.
Surely, if you're is glad that someone is dead, you must have wanted them to die? As far as I see it, the distinction is only in how vocal you are about it.
you do not see a distinction between being glad that someone is dead and calling for their death? You cannot see how someone can find a situation to either their personal benefit or to their personal liking without asking for that situation to be realised or working towards that realisation?
The fact is that everybody dies, some people do some god awful things when they are alive, and the fact that they are no longer doing those god awful things can be a reason to be cheerful. That is a damned sight different from calling for the deaths of those people.
I've made this argument in the past. I'm not so sure anymore. I think the notion that there is a "subtle" difference is a conclusion we come to in an attempt to resolve moral dissonance. They feel differently but are they? You don't have a problem with someone not existing you just don't wish for that non-existence. Meh~I would not be sad if W died, and took Cheney with him (*emphasis on the "and", I don't want dick running the country for the next few months).
That does not mean I WANT either of them to die...
Subtle difference, but there is certainly a difference...
But how is it different from hoping for the deaths of those people?
Death to/is dead. Notice the difference?Yeah! Death to the intolerant!!
oh, hang on...
Nonsense. You choose to frame it that way to suit your needs.Surely, if you're is glad that someone is dead, you must have wanted them to die? As far as I see it, the distinction is only in how vocal you are about it.
Nonsense. You choose to frame it that way to suit your needs.
My preference would have been for Falwell to repent.
You're comparing someone exercising freedom of speech with some causing physical harm? That's not a terribly difficult line to draw. Personally, I'd still prefer to see such a person locked up than dead.Tell me Egg, how's your tolerance of child rapists? Where do you draw the line?
One deals with the course of events as they come. If he were alive, I would wish for him to recognize the error of his ways. I don't have to wish harm on him. Once he is dead, I can readjust my view and be glad he is no longer spewing hate.If that's your preference then wouldn't you sad that he died because now he can't repent?
You seem to have no idea of the extent of the harm Falwell and his Moral Majority movement imposed upon our society. It's like saying Hitler wasn't the bad guy, his minions were.You're comparing someone exercising freedom of speech with some causing physical harm? That's not a terribly difficult line to draw. Personally, I'd still prefer to see such a person locked up than dead.
(I do like the specific reference to "godless" atheists. This is supposed to . . . what? Distinguish them from some other kind of atheists?)
"even from you godless athiests"
It's like all my friends are with me on the beach, looking out at the ocean. Half of them look at the water and say:
"This is Oceanis, the living Blue God! He is sacred!"
While the other half say,
"Here is a convenient place to dump our sewage."
The truth has to be somewhere in between.
Right?
No, wrong. Horribly, horribly wrong. Just because you have two possibilities does not mean they are both equally likely or that the truth is somewhere in between. A lot of the time it simply means one of the possibilities is just plain wrong.