StreetlightX who seemed to equate the notion of regulating exotic wild animal trade to being racist. — schopenhauer1
Yes, this came out during a discussion with StreetlightX who seemed to equate the notion of regulating exotic wild animal trade to being racist. — schopenhauer1
a) Supporting Trump in any way, and his bungling and ineptitude of this crisis. Nor
b) being in any way racist or being culturally insensitive.
Wanting to shut down wet market wild animal trade has no entailment nor affiliation with a or b. Do you see what prompted this? — schopenhauer1
Sure we can talk about regulation, but we're talking about countless of these markets all across the world in both rural and urban areas. I don't think we can just shut down wet markets because that's how millions of people earn their living. — BitconnectCarlos
So, he's trying to blame the Chinese, but not through any coherent argument, either because he simply can't formulate a coherent argument or because he knows that just leads to emphasizing that a lot of time has passed since the Chinese cover-up (so, if he complains about the Chinese actions in December, it's not really a good argument as he did nothing in January and February). — boethius
Don't see why we can't throw all of them into a firepit. — StreetlightX
You're ready to Guillotine Trump? — boethius
So we are living in an age of multiculturalism. — schopenhauer1
The mainstream media has painstakingly created an amazing system of propaganda where nothing is ever looked at critically, with nuance, or for very long, just constant noise from which the important messages can be imprinted on people's brains (from sponsors and elite centers of power); that Trump is easily able to manipulate to his benefit as the system is optimized to provide a platform for elites (which Trump qualifies as part of the club) and is designed above all to serve the interests of brands, which Trump is. Within this incoherent noise, it's impossible to make simultaneously the points "yes, China committed an international crime by covering up a potential pandemic; yes, Trump committed a treasonous offense in diminishing the US's capacity to meet a pandemic, "defend the fatherland", for corrupt motivations of filling the government with compliant sycophants and also a treasonous offense of ignoring the intelligence once it was available in order to protect a foreign entity, the stock market, from harm (however shortsighted that attempt was); yes, Trump is trying to tap into that frothy fountain of irrational racism to distract his base from looking at Trump's actions and words during this situation; yes, China has been committing international crimes by tolerating trade in endangered species, which may or may not be tied to this pandemic; yes, the leaders of Europe are simply clueless duffusses (who also could have acted when Trump was not acting, and could have invested in pandemic prevention when Trump was cutting, and could have put economic pressure on communist China to not undermine the entire capitalist system ... like, almost as if they want to own all the means of production, outflank shortsighted greedy capitalists pigs and, like, almost hold the world for ransom in some sort of neo-colonialist inversion or something, like, almost as if) when those European bureaucrats aren't corrupt, which is often, but luckily a whole bunch of our European leaders are just spineless idiots and can be corralled into doing something not so stupid every once and a while." — boethius
Cop out. — StreetlightX
Probably a whole bunch. For starters, everyone who signed off on those, what, 800 pages of pork that they all squeezed into the Corona emergency fund. Anyone who signed off on that atrocity, no matter what party, deserves your bonfire or the French solution.Then you should clarify that.
So, who in the Republican Senate and Congress are you ready to Guillotine? — boethius
Likewise, anyone in the Democratic party you would not Guillotine? — boethius
I am not a walking dictionary, but probably all of them, with the exception of Tulsi Gabbard.
What kind of question is this? As if practices that affect the health of the whole world would be culturally sensitive and go against multiculturalism? It sounds like you would assume someone would use the multiculturalism card on this case. I don't think so. I think that as the whole World, once containment hasn't worked, has opted to wreck the economy in order to save lives tells that the World takes the pandemic seriously. Human life is valued even in the worst places in this World. — ssu
Not so. Likely wild animals go far earlier extinct because of climate change than the last domesticated cow or chicken is eaten. The Chinese diet has gone the other way (more meat). And let's remember that human kind will likely hit Peak population soon as with prosperity fertility goes down. — ssu
ou cannot ban people from being poor. Exotic animals are different starting with the economic scale of the problem. — ssu
This thread misses the point. The problem isn't wet markets and wild food but the increased capitalisation of wild food and the physical pressure on hunting grounds due to mechanical agriculture requiring arable land. This forces hunters to hunt deeper in unknown areas and catch more to stay competitive. It's these twin pressures that simply increase the likelihood of pathogens transmitting to humans.
We've hunted as a species since we could draw and had wet markets for millenia. The problem isn't wet markets. — Benkei
We've hunted as a species since we could draw and had wet markets for millenia. The problem isn't wet markets. — Benkei
Learn to read. — Benkei
It's all in the sentence I wrote. Instead of jumping to conclusions that are patently absurd, if something is unclear you can ask questions. — Benkei
1) Is it right to ask another culture to change its practices, when those practices affect the health of the whole world, or would this be just cultural insensitivity played out as public health missionizing?
But that is a question of Justice. I don’t think such a question could extend to matters of health, for instance cultural eating practices, because it is not an unjust practice, and is often a matter of basic survival. — NOS4A2
StreetlightX who seemed to equate the notion of regulating exotic wild animal trade to being racist — schopenhauer1
So, who in the Republican Senate and Congress are you ready to Guillotine? — boethius
Probably a whole bunch. For starters, everyone who signed off on those, what, 800 pages of pork that they all squeezed into the Corona emergency fund. Anyone who signed off on that atrocity, no matter what party, deserves your bonfire or the French solution. — Nobeernolife
Just because it looks exotic to you, doesn't mean its wrong. — schopenhauer1
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.