but never for deliberate acts (which would be contrary to the whole idea of insurances, anyway).
Though I was told authoritatively that a life insurance policy will pay out for suicide if the act is 1 or 2 years after the policy purchase. Odd.
but never for deliberate acts (which would be contrary to the whole idea of insurances, anyway).
Natural assumptions are often wrong. I thought this thread was going to turn into another tedious round of French bashing, so I got into the defensive. As for my opinions on economics as a descriptive science, I wasn't kidding. To me, the interpretation of economic data is very dependent on the political opinion of the person doing the interpretation, that's a clear fact that I don't think is worth disputing.This is not true. My first post said "they also face discrimination."
Your first post about unemployment was:
Your next three posts about econimics were jokes. The natural assumption was that you did not see unemployment as a problem. It was not until dozens of post later that you admitted that unemployment was part of the problem.
You and most internet posters have an immediate tendency to look for points of disagreement instead of agreement. Especially when it is someone you habitually disagree with.
CBL
Most migrants had an idea how they'd make a living in the US, and expected to make a better one than they would in Europe. Cheap land was the incentive for many. It wasn't to be had in Europe, where the land had been claimed long before. The mass migration of the late 19th/early 20thCE often involved groups from one European community joining or creating a linked community. Growing US industries recruited people directly from Europe (just as fading European industries recruited labour directly from the faded Empires, leading to the current problems).This kinda supports a hypothesis I've been working on for a couple of years, regarding why Americans and Europeans, despite a common heritage, are in some ways so different.
The vast majority of us on the west side of the Atlantic are here because our ancestors were fed up with life in the Old Country. Most of them didn't know anyone here and a great many of them didn't speak the language, and had no clear idea how they would earn a living once they got here. They were often leaving behind friends and even family - my parents are people's exhibit A. They did all this because they no longer wanted to be taxed to death by the king, or burned to death by the priest, and were willing to risk the devil they didn't know as long as it got them away from the devil they did. Those restless, dissatisfied people came over here and they passed their lives' lessons and their values on to their children.
They left behind people who liked the way things were in Europe; very few princes and dukes came over to strike out a new life in the New World. And they also left behind the people who might not have liked the way things were in Europe, but were more afraid of the devil they didn't know than the devil they already did. And those people passed their lives' lessons and their values on to their children.
So today we see the Americans here shaking our heads in baffled wonder at the Frenchmen who won't shoot at people trying to burn down their homes and their businesses. And the French here shaking their heads in baffled wonder at people who would shoot at someone who was trying to burn down their homes and their businesses.
This kinda supports a hypothesis I've been working on for a couple of years, regarding why Americans and Europeans, despite a common heritage, are in some ways so different.
The vast majority of us on the west side of the Atlantic are here because our ancestors were fed up with life in the Old Country. Most of them didn't know anyone here and a great many of them didn't speak the language, and had no clear idea how they would earn a living once they got here. They were often leaving behind friends and even family - my parents are people's exhibit A. They did all this because they no longer wanted to be taxed to death by the king, or burned to death by the priest, and were willing to risk the devil they didn't know as long as it got them away from the devil they did. Those restless, dissatisfied people came over here and they passed their lives' lessons and their values on to their children.
They left behind people who liked the way things were in Europe; very few princes and dukes came over to strike out a new life in the New World. And they also left behind the people who might not have liked the way things were in Europe, but were more afraid of the devil they didn't know than the devil they already did. And those people passed their lives' lessons and their values on to their children.
So today we see the Americans here shaking our heads in baffled wonder at the Frenchmen who won't shoot at people trying to burn down their homes and their businesses. And the French here shaking their heads in baffled wonder at people who would shoot at someone who was trying to burn down their homes and their businesses.
Correct, but in the case of life insurance policies the guy who gets paid is different from the guy who is insured (for obvious reasons). A policy will not pay out if the beneficiary committed homicide upon the insured.Though I was told authoritatively that a life insurance policy will pay out for suicide if the act is 1 or 2 years after the policy purchase. Odd.
Correct, but in the case of life insurance policies the guy who gets paid is different from the guy who is insured (for obvious reasons). A policy will not pay out if the beneficiary committed homicide upon the insured.
One of the results of our modern, protected life is that the reality of the world is hidden from obvious view.Dude, I know your avatar is John Wayne, but gunning down a person to prevent destruction of property? Shirley, you jest!
One little niggle : I find the term "Arab" most unhelpful in this context. It's such a wide-ranging term. "North-African" is more descriptive.The majority of Arabs (Algerians, Moroccans, Malians, etc.) came to France as soldiers and laborers at a time when their countries of origins were still French colonies. They therefore were French citizens. Some more were "invited" to come afterwards since France lacked labourers in some industrial and agricultural sectors.
Not everything is about Islam. People might claim it is, but it ain't necessarily so. I'm not convinced the rioting was started by the deaths of those two boys. I think it started because of the local blackout they caused. Their deaths became a justification after the fact.When calm returned on Monday, after 63 cars had been burnt and 53 people arrested, the police could not claim credit. Spirits had been calmed thanks to the intervention of a handful of young men from the mosque, known as les grands-frères, who stood between the rioters and the police, shouting 'Allahu akbar!' - 'God is great'.
Revealing of what?The people "left behind" (a rather revealing phrase, IMO)
Well, they were still slaughtering each other in frightful numbers just a few years before I was born, and three of its major powers were still charmed with the idea of rule by a man with a gun and a secret police.who didn't like things as they were changed Europe drastically.
Since you seem to disagree with my hypothesis (and I don't claim to have it completely worked out), why do you believe that's the case?There's a different value put on life vis-a-vis property. I don't think there's any question about that.
I'm not saying I wouldn't try to stop them, but immediately reaching for the gun, a potentially lethal instrument, is not warranted in this case.Grammatron said:I found the whole method of thinking bizzare, someone is burining your store and you hide and wait till it's over and not even try to stop them. What the heck kind of mindset is it?
Sure. But I still don't think it's ok to shoot him if he doesn't keep "it" in his pocket.manny said:Firebombing a building which has done nothing to you is not a proportional response in the first place. It is the firebomber who has complete control of the process. He keeps his matchbook in his pocket and limits himself to glowering or yelling or whatever and everyone's happy.
I totally agree with that. Europeans do seem to think differently than 'mericans.CapelDodger said:[...] There's a different value put on life vis-a-vis property. I don't think there's any question about that.
I'm not saying that you don't have a right to control what goes on on your property, but having the mindset that you're willing to kill to protect it?Risking lives for property is something that most of us do every day. I own a small apartment building. When I confront a bum who is doing something that I judge to be unacceptable on my property I might be killed.
I'm not saying I wouldn't try to stop them, but immediately reaching for the gun, a potentially lethal instrument, is not warranted in this case.
I'm not saying that you don't have a right to control what goes on on your property, but having the mindset that you're willing to kill to protect it?
No. I don't agree with that. That's what the police are for.
Yes. I think non-lethal weapons are fine.Grammatron said:Well first I'll ask them to take their firebomb and leave the vicinity of my property. If they do not comply I will wield my weapon and ask them again, then all bets are off.
Perhaps I'd use a gun with tear gas or rubber bullets if I had an option, does that make it more reasonable for you?
I edited my post right after I posted. My meaning should be clearer nowAre you implying that it's ok for police to kill to protect property? Or am I misreading your post.
Oh, don't get me wrong -- I'm all for calling the cops first to the extent it's practical. My icon is John Wayne, not Charlie Bronson.That's what the police are for.
I mean, the police are there to scare people off your property - not kill them![]()
Bien sur, mais j'essaye.Originally posted by Orwell
I agree. Even though I risk sounding like I'm invoking a Tu Quoque here, I should tell you that you're guilty of the same sin.
As stated above, I don't claim this hypothesis is by any means a finished product. It may even be wrong, in fact. I'd be delighted if you could show how it's wrong, instead of just tossing out a casual insult.Big generalisations, so large in fact that they're probably worthless, and are more an indication of your own biases than anything else.
If it's so "bleeding obvious", why have they not done so? At least one Frenchman* on this thread says people can own hunting rifles there without a permit, so if it's so "bleeding obvious" that the right-wing nutjobs would get a big charge out of gunning down a guy with a molotov cocktail, you'd think the streets would be littered with dead rioters and crashed scooters. So explain why it's so "bleeding obvious," 'cuz I, for one, sure don't see it.Let me point out the bleeding obvious for you: there's quite a lot of frenchmen, particularly on the right, that would probably not hesitate shooting these rioters.
Back off. I have never pointed a gun at anyone, and pray to the FSM (blessed be His noodley appendage) I never have to.And fortunately, I don't think that your particular thirst for blood
Yes, very violently, due to their perverted affection for emperors, kings, and dictators. Damn near destroyed themselves the last time out.Your little model also doesn't take into account that many of those "people left behind" went on to radically change Europe during the XIX and XX century, sometimes violently, and sometimes not for the best.
Though I was told authoritatively that a life insurance policy will pay out for suicide if the act is 1 or 2 years after the policy purchase. Odd.
That´s the one big exception. But then, technically speaking, it´s Life Assurance, not Life Insurance, so I´d still be right about insurances The assumption that there's a "going forward" in which some are "left behind". Progress being, as an unconscious axiom, becoming 'Murrican. You could have used "those who stayed", but you chose "left behind". I'm no disciple of Freud, but I'm a connoisseur of nuance.Revealing of what?
The advance of Europe from royal and priestly bondage to representative government over the last few centuries has been a bloody saga, but it was done. I doubt things would have been much different in the US if the whole population of Europe had moved in during the 19thCE. Despite the open land the US managed to have a pretty substantial blood-letting in the 1860's.Well, they were still slaughtering each other in frightful numbers just a few years before I was born, and three of its major powers were still charmed with the idea of rule by a man with a gun and a secret police.
Your expressed opinion vis-a-vis chran's, for starters.Since you seem to disagree with my hypothesis (and I don't claim to have it completely worked out), why do you believe that's the case?
No, they're not.But how are the cops doing here? Are they preventing people from having their livelyhoods destroyed by thugs?