Ok. Well I'm all talked out here. I think we've long forgotten the topic. — fishfry
I agree. But I would like a better mutual understanding before we move on. I don't know for sure about you, but my comments were intended to provoke a reply, but only in the interests of a discussion. I thought you were doing the same. I didn't realize that you thought I was baiting you, which is a different kettle of fish. So I apologize.Let's agree to disagree. Sorry I brought it up. No wait, you brought it up and I let you bait me for a while. — fishfry
I wasn't complaining that you did. In fact, in our disagreement, the vagueness of meaning enables a diagnosis of what we disagree about, so it was actually useful. (I'm not sure whether the same applies to the concept of metaphysics.)Sorry I mentioned it. — fishfry
Quite so. I'm afraid I was guilty of irony, which is always dangerous. His inability to recognize when the game is up is not particularly unusual. I can think of other examples.Oh please. He left as gracefully as Caesar did. — fishfry
I agree with you that the hysteria around everything is very damaging. But I think both sides are to blame. Each side thinks that it can win by escalating the emotional temperature; the media feeds on that and joins in. The question who started it is a good one - unless the answer is to be used as a weapon of further escalation.The Dem hysteria that started on election night of 2016 has been extremely damaging to the country. — fishfry
Well toss a can of soup on a painting then. You lost me here. — fishfry
Couple of soup throwers were convicted, they're going to jail. So never mind on the soup. Looks like England has had enough of the eco-loons. — fishfry
I see from the reports that the soup did actually damage the paint of the frame, so I was wrong about that.At least they threw tomato soup, which is easier to clean than pain. — Ludwig V
I'm not sure what you expect me to say. It's definitely a bad thing. Needs to be checked out and any problems resolved - and any parties who haven't been doing their job properly held to account.Did you hear about that windmill that fell apart, closing a beach during the height of tourist season? Fiberglass shards everywhere. — fishfry
I agree. But I would like a better mutual understanding before we move on. I don't know for sure about you, but my comments were intended to provoke a reply, but only in the interests of a discussion. I thought you were doing the same. I didn't realize that you thought I was baiting you, which is a different kettle of fish. So I apologize. — Ludwig V
Quite so. I'm afraid I was guilty of irony, which is always dangerous. His inability to recognize when the game is up is not particularly unusual. I can think of other examples. — Ludwig V
I agree with you that the hysteria around everything is very damaging. But I think both sides are to blame. Each side thinks that it can win by escalating the emotional temperature; the media feeds on that and joins in. The question who started it is a good one - unless the answer is to be used as a weapon of further escalation.
But neither side is really to blame. There can be little doubt that a large part of the problem is systemic - the whole set-up encourages escalation and the desire to win, rather than compromise. Again, it's not unique to the US. It's not difficult to think of other examples. — Ludwig V
I see from the reports that the soup did actually damage the paint of the frame, so I was wrong about that. — Ludwig V
Responding to those protests with outrage and attempts to suppress is exactly what they want - to attract attention and controversy. Difficult as it may be, the only thing that would persuade them to stop is ignoring them. But it is also important to reward them when they do the right thing, there should be a reasonable response to civilized and legal protests.
Failure to recognize when one is being baited is very common and failure to deal with it rationally - by not rising to the bait - frequently underlies escalation. — Ludwig V
I'm not sure what you expect me to say. — Ludwig V
It's definitely a bad thing. Needs to be checked out and any problems resolved - and any parties who haven't been doing their job properly held to account. — Ludwig V
But does it show that wind farms should be abolished? — Ludwig V
I don't think so. The fact that so many people dislike them is much more relevant and it's right to be cautious about setting them up. Off-shore farms seem to be more acceptable, so it's better to be content with them. (There's the question of bird strikes as well, though I've heard that they may have found a solution to that.) — Ludwig V
I think it's unlikely that that on-shore farms can be a major contributor to the project of finding renewable sources of energy. For on-shore generation, solar farms may be more appropriate. — Ludwig V
I'm not going to argue the rights and wrongs of all of that. I don't know enough. But I don't believe that Trump's hands are clean, either. Even if Trump himself didn't intend to encourage them, which is very hard indeed to believe, his supporters invaded the Capitol on Jan 6 2021.The Dems refused to accept the result of the 2016 election and have been causing mischief since then, with Russiagate, two fake impeachments, lawfare, and then weakening Trump's Secret Service protection to the degree that he almost got killed. I doubt they're done yet. — fishfry
I don't think the courts will deter anyone. The protesters are getting what they wanted. Publicity, fuss, arguments.I hope these court cases will deter some of the vandalism. — fishfry
Maybe so. But not because a single blade on a single tower snapped off.Many of those projects should be abolished, for good and sound reasons. — fishfry
Well, I'm not keen on any of it. Not least because I'm not anywhere near wealthy enough to avoid the negative economic impacts - and you are right, it will not be the wealthy who bear the brunt of them. On the contrary, they are quite likely to make money out of it. But I don't see any evidence that the whole thing is a scam. True, we're not having much effect yet. But we are nowhere near the level where we might actually slow climate change down. All I see is oil companies defending their profits and nuclear companies returning to profitability by polluting the planet for the next 100,000 years.Point being, EV's are a disaster. Green energy is a disaster. If the eco measures actually worked, I'd support them. They don't. They're a scam, and their negative impact falls mostly on the poor of the world, so that the upscale can feel better about themselves. — fishfry
That made me laugh. A lot of those birds taste and smell very strongly of fish. Not surprising. They mostly eat fish and that makes them very unappetizing. They reckon that painting one of the blades black, instead of white, makes them flicker, which is enough to deter them.Bird stew? — fishfry
China has invested a great deal of money and years of effort in cornering the market for rare metals. They must be very confident about where we are going in the long run.You're halfway to my point of view. And now that Germany, for one, is starting to see the economic downsides of their green energy programs, the tide is turning. — fishfry
I'm not going to argue the rights and wrongs of all of that. I don't know enough. But I don't believe that Trump's hands are clean, either. Even if Trump himself didn't intend to encourage them, which is very hard indeed to believe, his supporters invaded the Capitol on Jan 6 2021. — Ludwig V
Maybe so. But not because a single blade on a single tower snapped off. — Ludwig V
Well, I'm not keen on any of it. Not least because I'm not anywhere near wealthy enough to avoid the negative economic impacts - and you are right, it will not be the wealthy who bear the brunt of them. On the contrary, they are quite likely to make money out of it. But I don't see any evidence that the whole thing is a scam. True, we're not having much effect yet. But we are nowhere near the level where we might actually slow climate change down. All I see is oil companies defending their profits and nuclear companies returning to profitability by polluting the planet for the next 100,000 years. — Ludwig V
That made me laugh. A lot of those birds taste and smell very strongly of fish. Not surprising. They mostly eat fish and that makes them very unappetizing. They reckon that painting one of the blades black, instead of white, makes them flicker, which is enough to deter them. — Ludwig V
China has invested a great deal of money and years of effort in cornering the market for rare metals. They must be very confident about where we are going in the long run. — Ludwig V
I can see you are serious. But I have no idea what you are talking about. — Ludwig V
OK. I didn't grasp the significance of J6 until later. I'm sorry I upset you. It wasn't in any way intended as baiting, or even provocation. — Ludwig V
Thanks for explaining. It would be absurd for me to argue with you. I don't know anything like enough. It is indeed to be hoped that (more of) the truth, or, maybe a better balanced account, will emerge one day. I can even accept that Trump did not intend to overturn the whole constitution, but it does seem inescapable that he was not prepared to accept the election result until he had tried everything possible to overturn it. Calling it a coup, in the normal sense, is an exaggeration. — Ludwig V
But, if I may, my perspective is that all politicians will play dirty when push comes to shove and the opportunity arises. There's no point in moralizing about it, that's how the world is. So there's no reason to think that Trump (or his supporters) are an exception. That's not an unreasonable view, is it? — Ludwig V
We have been pushing the boundaries for a long time. I'm finding the thread via the list of "mentions". I think they are trying to persuade us to move to private discussion or stop. I'll send you my response to this post in that way. If you really want to stop, just tell me. But I think we've just opened up another layer of discussion.I can't find what category this thread is in. It says .999... = 1 but I can't find this on the main page or in the Lounge. — fishfry
We have been pushing the boundaries for a long time. I'm finding the thread via the list of "mentions". I think they are trying to persuade us to move to private discussion or stop. I'll send you my response to this post in that way. If you really want to stop, just tell me. But I think we've just opened up another layer of discussion. — Ludwig V
I have no objection to the public space. But it seems that this is no longer really a public space.We're having an interesting discussion, but I prefer for such discussions to be in the public space. — fishfry
Yes, it's helping me in the same way. It's rare to find people who are willing to emerge from their bunkers and actually discuss things. If it has to be in private, so be it.On the other hand, our convo is helping me to at least articulate some of my thoughts. Especially about J6. J6 is an article of faith for the True Believers. That's why I reacted as I did. — fishfry
I have no objection to the public space. But it seems that this is no longer really a public space. — Ludwig V
Yes, it's helping me in the same way. It's rare to find people who are willing to emerge from their bunkers and actually discuss things. If it has to be in private, so be it. — Ludwig V
Test. Political discussion so often turns into Punch and Judy. There are several reasons for that. But it is often not helpful but actually harmful.Yes I think the politics threads are a loss anyway. — fishfry
Yes, I take your point. Really, I do. I don't know how to open up a discussion about this without seeming to trigger the righteous anger, not only of victims, but of many decent citizens as well.Compassion to the criminals is anti-compassion to their victims. Compassion for the homeless drug addicts is anti-compassion for the decent citizens who have to live in the city. — fishfry
OK. I don't feel entirely comfortable about private threads. It's just that I've picked up references and deduced that some people take their discussions to private threads to avoid intrusive or annoying comments, which you can get on public threads. — Ludwig V
I found this thread in "All discussions". But it says the last post was 24 days ago. It's way down on page 2. But when I look at your last post in the thread, it says you posted it 11 hours ago. Whatever the reason, pushing it down the list means that fewer people are likely to visit it. — Ludwig V
Test. Political discussion so often turns into Punch and Judy. There are several reasons for that. But it is often not helpful but actually harmful.
Real discussion is not possible unless one is willing to endanger oneself, by allowing one's own position (and self-esteem) to be on the table. That applies to all philosophy and possibly even more widely. — Ludwig V
Yes, I take your point. Really, I do. I don't know how to open up a discussion about this without seeming to trigger the righteous anger, not only of victims, but of many decent citizens as well. — Ludwig V
There are issues that need to be recognized, and I hope that you will be able to see them. I do not mean to deny righteous anger, which is expressed in the desire for revenge and to exclude the offender from one's society. — Ludwig V
First, there is the familiar problem of the cycle of revenge - the blood feud, continuing a cycle of violence which can even be inherited for generations. It is the result of what is often forgotten, that what we think of as punishment may not be "accepted" by the criminal, who then gets angry and seeks revenge in turn. — Ludwig V
Second, there is the issue of proportionate revenge. The traditional "eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth" is an early attempt to limit the revenge response, which can easily go way beyond what is reasonable. — Ludwig V
Third, handling the revenge response is not the only issue when a crime is committed. There is the question of prevention and the question of what happens after revenge is exacted. This is where the issues arise. But let's pause there and see how far we agree thus far.
Or perhaps I should start another thread? — Ludwig V
I started on this caper two years ago. I've found that there is some fun and instruction to be found, provided one understands how the game is played and doesn't take it too seriously. But every so often, one finds a more constructive engagement. It doesn't necessarily last forever. So it is important to recognize when one can go no further.I try doing it over there but to no avail. May have to let it all go. — fishfry
OK. There are many environments in which I don't make that point. However, I don't think that one can simply let anger rip. My main reason is pragmatic. It so easily feeds on itself and becomes destructive. It is important to be sure that one has the right target. But the worst effect is that it can so easily provoke a response in kind and a spiral of violence.If you don't deny the righteous anger, Keir Starmer might not be pleased! You are NOT ALLOWED to be angry at the fatal stabbing of three little girls at a Taylor Swift dance class. If you are angry at the stabber, you are a right winger. This is the official policy of your government as far as I can tell. — fishfry
That's the reason that Governments and similar authorities get so exercised about it. They need to stay in control, and not just because they are taking sides. (Though there is an element of that, of course.)Yes well these things do tend to escalate. — fishfry
Good question. It is true that it not wise to ask it in many environments. It does have some traction, though it is more complicated than it seems. (This is a different issue, though it is tangled up in the Southport business,)So why allow people into the country who may harbor ancient ethnic or religious grudges? I'm not arguing that but it's an argument put forth by the protesters. And frankly it's not a bad question. — fishfry
I started on this caper two years ago. I've found that there is some fun and instruction to be found, provided one understands how the game is played and doesn't take it too seriously. But every so often, one finds a more constructive engagement. It doesn't necessarily last forever. So it is important to recognize when one can go no further. — Ludwig V
OK. There are many environments in which I don't make that point. However, I don't think that one can simply let anger rip. My main reason is pragmatic. It so easily feeds on itself and becomes destructive. It is important to be sure that one has the right target. But the worst effect is that it can so easily provoke a response in kind and a spiral of violence. — Ludwig V
That's the reason that Governments and similar authorities get so exercised about it. They need to stay in control, and not just because they are taking sides. (Though there is an element of that, of course.) — Ludwig V
Good question. It is true that it not wise to ask it in many environments. It does have some traction, though it is more complicated than it seems. (This is a different issue, though it is tangled up in the Southport business,) — Ludwig V
How would you feel if the UK banned immigration from the USA because there are white supremacists there? Over-reaction, I think. One has to try and weed them out. Same for Muslim fundamentalists. In the UK, there is a lot going on to try to do that - most of it secret, so it is hard to know. — Ludwig V
Here's a couple of politically incorrect thoughts of my own.
1. I would not be happy to live in Cairo or Dubai. I've been there, though not lived there. So I would not be happy if those social and religious norms were imported to the UK. Same for many other countries. There is a fear that a substantial minority arriving in the UK will introduce ideas and practices that I don't like. I expect people coming to live here to assimilate.
But there are also ideas and practices in the UK that I don't like. So it's a question of balance - accommodating new ideas and practices and assimilating to what already exists here. It's not a black-and-white question. (Actually new ideas and practices are often harmless or even beneficial. Moreover, societies do better if they are willing to change and adapt.) — Ludwig V
2. Then there's the question of economic impact. There is an opinion, here, at least, that immigration drives wages down by increasing the supply of labour. No-one wants to end up with third world conditions in their own country (though they're quite happy to take the benefit of cheap imports). Economists insist that's not the case. I don't know the truth of it, the claim that it makes no difference seems implausible to me. There's also an argument that the UK benefits because immigrants also contribute to the economy. Which is true, so far as it goes. — Ludwig V
I don't know the answer, but I'm inclined to think that, again, it's a question of balance. It may seem feeble, so I should emphasize that I'm very happy to rigorously exclude people who are going to deliberately spread disinformation and provoke violence, for the same reason that when UK citizens do those things, they should be repressed. — Ludwig V
OK. I took it that you were referring to all the threads. Sorry.I did no understand what you are referring to. I just meant the political threads over at the Lounge. — fishfry
Are you sure it is not a fake?I happened to see a picture the other day of Keir Starmer taking the knee during the George Floyd protests. So when liberals are burning down the country, he supports them. And when people get angry that thee children were slaughtered, he comes out four square against the protesters. Never mind the stabbers. — fishfry
I haven't heard/seen any reports of any violent Muslim extremists.It's the taking sides that's blatant here. Starmer took a knee for the American BLM/Antifa riots, and his police stand down in the face of violent Muslim extremists; then call out the dogs, running courts 24/7 to arrest and convict and imprison anyone who expresses a word of dissent. — fishfry
Yes. I broadly agree with that.Cheap labor is always good for business. Cheap labor that can't complain about exploitation, lack of safety, and being cheated, because they are illegal, is even better! There are many powerful interests perfectly happy with the corrupt and immoral system we have now. But at some point, when you have imported the Third World into your formerly First World country ... how do you think that's going to work out for you? You have to set some limits, you have to have some laws that you are willing to enforce, you have to try to reduce the corruption and brutality and evil in the system. — fishfry
The issue is that you can't enforce immigration laws unless most ordinary citizens will help you. Most ordinary people in the UK (and, so far as I can see, the US) will not (or perhaps cannot) help enforce the rules. It does mean something much more like a police state than we are happy to live with. But you can't have it both ways.I'm for serious immigration reform in the US, whatever that may look like. — fishfry
I think it became very clear during the last few days what the people think, don't you?I have been following this, it's really blowing up. Starmer is cracking down hard and calling them right wingers, but they're mostly working class folk whose lives are being impacted by immigration promoted by the government, despite the will of the people. — fishfry
It is indeed grossly over-blown.I'm hearing talk of a "civil war" in Britain, but I can't tell if this is overblown or not. — fishfry
Yes, I know that what happened to George Floyd was contested and I don't really know what the truth of the matter was. How do you know that the mainstream account is all a lie? Everyone lies, not just the Government.Who exactly are the people who "deliberately spread disinformation and provoke violence?" How do you know who they are? .... Twenty people died. There were two billion dollars in property damage. George Floyd was a violent career criminal who died of a fentanyl overdose. That doesn't make the cop officer of the year. But if all you know is the mainstream account, it's all a lie. The cop was following department protocol. His knee was on Floyd's upper back. Floyd did not die from strangulation, he died of an overdose. The police department threw Chauvin, the cop, under the bus and let him take the fall. — fishfry
I agree that things are different in the Middle East. But religion and state are also intertwined in the West. The relationship works differently, that's all.The Muslims have a bad track record. The religion and state are intertwined. They are fundamentally incompatible with western thought. Many integrate very successfully. I'm for human movement. Governments should set and enforce their own laws, not have open borders like the US and western Europe. — fishfry
I think you are paying to much attention to the fundamentalists - who are a problem, but not an existential threat, I think. The biggest threat is not from Islam, but from Putin and Xi Jinping. Putin is (officially) Christian and Xi Jinping (officially) communist. Both are actually old-fashioned imperialists, just like the West was in the 19th and early 20th century.Some say that the open-mindedness and acceptance of the West is exactly why they will be conquered by the East. I'm not wise enough to know. But it's a possibility. You see the liberals in cities voting in soft-on-crime prosecutors, then being overwhelmed by the crime they voted for. Islam does no seek to coexist. It seeks to conquer. I believe this is just how it is. Am I wrong? — fishfry
Are you sure it is not a fake? — Ludwig V
Taking the knee is not the same thing as burning down the country. — Ludwig V
You can't infer from the fact that he takes the knee against racism (or even against what happened to George Floyd), that he doesn't oppose burning down the country. — Ludwig V
I haven't heard/seen any reports of any violent Muslim extremists. — Ludwig V
The issue is that you can't enforce immigration laws unless most ordinary citizens will help you. — Ludwig V
Most ordinary people in the UK (and, so far as I can see, the US) will not (or perhaps cannot) help enforce the rules. It does mean something much more like a police state than we are happy to live with. But you can't have it both ways. — Ludwig V
I remember, back when UK was in the EU that the middle class (not just the rich) were delighted with the cheap Polish plumbers and builders that they could employ. UK plumbers and builders were somewhat less enthusiastic. Now, plumbing and building are much more expensive and difficult to get done. Again, after COVID there was a serious shortage of HGV drivers which resulted in rapid increases in transportation costs (and delays in supply chains). Manufacturers and customers alike were very unhappy. HGV drivers were too busy making lots of money by driving to tell anyone how happy they were. Nobody thinks about how things affect other people. — Ludwig V
You can't expect to tell the world how well you are doing economically and expect people who have no prospects where they are not to come and join in the feast. The root cause of immigration, legal and illegal, is the unequal distribution of wealth across the world. The only way to stop it is to make sure that international trade benefits everyone. — Ludwig V
I think it became very clear during the last few days what the people think, don't you? — Ludwig V
It is indeed grossly over-blown.
I hear a lot about the possibility of civil war in the US. What do you think? — Ludwig V
Yes, I know that what happened to George Floyd was contested and I don't really know what the truth of the matter was. How do you know that the mainstream account is all a lie? Everyone lies, not just the Government. — Ludwig V
I agree that things are different in the Middle East. But religion and state are also intertwined in the West. The relationship works differently, that's all. — Ludwig V
I think you are paying to much attention to the fundamentalists - who are a problem, but not an existential threat, I think. — Ludwig V
The biggest threat is not from Islam, but from Putin and Xi Jinping. Putin is (officially) Christian and Xi Jinping (officially) communist. Both are actually old-fashioned imperialists, just like the West was in the 19th and early 20th century. — Ludwig V
I don't know for sure who will win. But I think the West has a very good chance. — Ludwig V
Sorry, I think you are a bit confused. He can arrest and deport (i.e. send back home) US citizens who misbehave. The UK also has free speech, but bans incitement to riot. That seems perfectly reasonable to me. They are lucky that he doesn't apply UK law and throw them in jail.He's threatened to arrest and extradite Americans for exercising our free speech rights. He can't do that, we have the First Amendment here. He's gone mad as far as I can tell. His double-standard with respect to violent Muslim rioting is obvious. — fishfry
Well, you know best about what's going in the USA. In the UK, the Government has been trying to prevent immigration across the Channel for decades. You would think it was easy enough. But they've failed.The current hordes coming in, in the US and in England, are a matter of government policy. — fishfry
People are who prepared to die to get here are very difficult to stop.You simply need to have the border guards do their jobs instead of telling them not to. — fishfry
Who employs the cheap labour? When those people are not prepared to employ them, the incentive will disappear. That's what I meant about lack of public support. People are happy to make a fuss, but not willing to pay a bit more for labour. You can't have it both ways.Cheap labor is always popular. But who gets hurt? The people legally here, the natives, who are perhaps in the trades themselves and who can't compete with the cheap labor. — fishfry
You're begging the question. The courts think that those people are rioting, and that's not free speech, it's violence. As for people's true feelings, you seem to trust the Telegraph.People who speak out against immigration are being thrown in Starmer's prisons. So clearly we are not hearing people's true feelings. — fishfry
Yes, but that was just one aspect of their failure to deliver any public services at all. Health, Education, Justice, Defence, not to mention the housing crisis - the list is endless. Obsessed by in-fighting and tax reduction, failed to do their job.Didn't the Tories just get swept out because they FAILED to deliver on their promise of controlling immigration? — fishfry
I'm very glad to hear it.I think that's overblown too!! — fishfry
I agree it is supported by some of the facts. But surely the police are not supposed to throw people under buses - arrest and fair trial?Floyd was a violent career criminal who died of a fentanyl overdose. His police force threw him under the bus. That's supported by the facts. — fishfry
Islam is a missionary religion. It seeks to become the universal religion. The idea of the theocratic Caliphate is an aim that some fundamentalists are committed to. That's true. It's just that I don't think they will succeed. Sadly, they can do a lot of damage while they are trying.We shall see. My understanding is that over the long term, Islamists seek to take over the west. Maybe that's just right wing propaganda. — fishfry
Oh, come on. I think that Islamic fundamentalism is not an existentialist threat to the West. That doesn't mean that terror bombings are ok with meSo, how many Islamic terror bombings are ok with you? — fishfry
I agree with you that they are complicated. The desire to suppress IS and similar groups is perfectly reasonable. But the means employed against Uighurs are grossly disproportionate.He puts them in concentration camps in western China. I don't support him in that. I support the plight of the Uyghurs. These are all complicated issues. — fishfry
You're missing the problem. People who are willing to die to get in to UK or US are very hard to stop. Public opinion won't support extreme measures (which would probably not work anyway)You simply need to have the border guards do their jobs instead of telling them not to. — fishfry
Strictly speaking, they are not terrorists. But both of them operate in secret in the UK and elsewhere.The Chinese are not US and British domestic terrorists. — fishfry
Fair enough.I don't have to be ignoring Xi just because I'm opposed to Islamic terrorism. — fishfry
Sorry, I think you are a bit confused. He can arrest and deport (i.e. send back home) US citizens who misbehave. — Ludwig V
The UK also has free speech, but bans incitement to riot. — Ludwig V
That seems perfectly reasonable to me. They are lucky that he doesn't apply UK law and throw them in jail.
I haven't seen anything about violent Muslim rioting recently - not in the UK, anyway. Obviously, if no Muslims are rioting, he can't throw them in jail. — Ludwig V
Well, you know best about what's going in the USA. In the UK, the Government has been trying to prevent immigration across the Channel for decades. You would think it was easy enough. But they've failed. — Ludwig V
People are who prepared to die to get here are very difficult to stop. — Ludwig V
Who employs the cheap labour? When those people are not prepared to employ them, the incentive will disappear. That's what I meant about lack of public support. People are happy to make a fuss, but not willing to pay a bit more for labour. You can't have it both ways. — Ludwig V
You're begging the question. The courts think that those people are rioting, and that's not free speech, it's violence. As for people's true feelings, you seem to trust the Telegraph.
Daily Telegraph Southport Counter-demonstrations — Ludwig V
Yes, but that was just one aspect of their failure to deliver any public services at all. Health, Education, Justice, Defence, not to mention the housing crisis - the list is endless. Obsessed by in-fighting and tax reduction, failed to do their job. — Ludwig V
I agree it is supported by some of the facts. But surely the police are not supposed to throw people under buses - arrest and fair trial? — Ludwig V
Islam is a missionary religion. It seeks to become the universal religion. The idea of the theocratic Caliphate is an aim that some fundamentalists are committed to. That's true. It's just that I don't think they will succeed. Sadly, they can do a lot of damage while they are trying. — Ludwig V
Christianity has the same ambitions. They are not terrorists, of course. Nonetheless, while I respect their right to campaign for their views, I object strongly to their desire to impose their views on me and suppress mine. — Ludwig V
Oh, come on. I think that Islamic fundamentalism is not an existentialist threat to the West. That doesn't mean that terror bombings are ok with me — Ludwig V
I agree with you that they are complicated. The desire to suppress IS and similar groups is perfectly reasonable. But the means employed against Uighurs are grossly disproportionate. — Ludwig V
You're missing the problem. People who are willing to die to get in to UK or US are very hard to stop. Public opinion won't support extreme measures (which would probably not work anyway) — Ludwig V
Strictly speaking, they are not terrorists. But both of them operate in secret in the UK and elsewhere. — Ludwig V
You're right. I was confused. But it is quite simple. If you break British law in Britain and go home, Britain can sue in US courts for extradition, take you to back Britain and try you. If you break US law in the US and go home, US can sue in British courts for extradition, take you to back to the US and try you. Seems fair enough to me. Most countries in the West have the same arrangement - by treaty, i.e. international law.He explicitly threatened non-Brits in their home countries. I am not confused about this, it has been extremely widely reported. — fishfry
Info or Incitement?You can be jailed for just reposting info about riots, not inciting them. — fishfry
I'm not sure who you trust on this. But Reuters have a pretty good reputation.Who is prepared to die? Impoverished peasants streaming across the US southern border? — fishfry
Yes, that's true. The UK does have protection for free speech. Just not as much as in the US. People resent they way the the US internet companies impose your law on us.The British courts don't have the US First Amendment, which provides legal protection for the most appalling expressions of ideas. I read that Prince Harry has called the First Amendment "bonkers." The US has very strong protections for speech not found in most other democratic nations. — fishfry
Starmer is at least less of a joke than the other lot. Rishi Sunak was better his immediate predecessors, but was undermined by his own party. I have the impression that Trump is still likely to win.And now you've got Starmer. Good luck! I should talk, right? We're about to have Queen Kamala. — fishfry
Hopefully, by that time, there will be more home-grown imams and fewer radicals imported from back home. There are already a good many of them (home-grown imams) - they just don't get the news coverage. Plus, generations born and brought up here are, on the whole, often atheists or moderates. I think they will settle down. If the other immigrant communities are anything to go by, there'll be a lot of inter-marriage with the general population, anyway.Well if Islam seeks to become a universal religion, what happens to your nation when there are enough of them to make a political difference? It's no hypothetical. — fishfry
Sorry, I wasn't clear. No-one is suppressing my views. Fortunately, I'm pretty much mainstream. I've tried to clarify what I was trying to say and failed, so I'll have to let it go.Who is suppressing your views? — fishfry
So are many other Western countries, including Britain, not to mention Japan and Korea. There's a lot of argument about the reasons. Most plausible explanation is that that a modern capitalist economy makes it too hard to bring up children. Either you live in poverty with children or you work to make the money for a decent life without children. Not to mention the gloomy outlook for the West. That also is one of the reasons why Britain actually needs immigrants and allows many in, legally.Ok. China has its own problems though. I hear they're in demographic collapse. — fishfry
You're right. I was confused. But it is quite simple. If you break British law in Britain and go home, Britain can sue in US courts for extradition, take you to back Britain and try you. If you break US law in the US and go home, US can sue in British courts for extradition, take you to back to the US and try you. Seems fair enough to me. Most countries in the West have the same arrangement - by treaty, i.e. international law. — Ludwig V
Info or Incitement? — Ludwig V
There's an interesting question about people who are US citizens in the US posting something to Britain that is within US law but banned in Britain. There's a suggestion that they can be extradited, but I find it very hard to believe. — Ludwig V
There's a new law in Britain that if you re-post an illegal post by someone else, you are also guilty of incitement. I agree that's pushing it a bit, but if someone is inciting violence and you join in the incitement, I think there's a case for it - if you can prove it. After all, if you help someone committing a theft, you are also breaking the law. No? — Ludwig V
There's a big push in the UK and Europe to get the internet under control. You may not be aware of how much the big internet companies are resented over here. They have a very poor reputation. One has to give them credit for taking the issues seriously, but they don't take effective action. They plead free speech, but no-one believes that. It's about the bottom line and that's not acceptable. — Ludwig V
I'm not sure who you trust on this. But Reuters have a pretty good reputation.
Reuters on deaths on US-Mexico border
Certainly, people die in the Channel regularly. BBC on migrant deaths in the Channel
I don't know how many, if any, are illiterate. Why does it matter? — Ludwig V
Yes, that's true. The UK does have protection for free speech. Just not as much as in the US. People resent they way the the US internet companies impose your law on us.
However, I really don't care at all what Prince Harry's views are; he has no special knowledge or authority that I'm aware of. I can't understand why people in the US get so excited about our royal family. They are an embarrassment in a supposedly democratic country. — Ludwig V
Starmer is at least less of a joke than the other lot. Rishi Sunak was better his immediate predecessors, but was undermined by his own party. I have the impression that Trump is still likely to win. — Ludwig V
Hopefully, by that time, there will be more home-grown imams and fewer radicals imported from back home. — Ludwig V
There are already a good many of them (home-grown imams) - they just don't get the news coverage. Plus, generations born and brought up here are, on the whole, often atheists or moderates. I think they will settle down. If the other immigrant communities are anything to go by, there'll be a lot of inter-marriage with the general population, anyway. — Ludwig V
So are many other Western countries, including Britain, not to mention Japan and Korea. There's a lot of argument about the reasons. Most plausible explanation is that that a modern capitalist economy makes it too hard to bring up children. Either you live in poverty with children or you work to make the money for a decent life without children. Not to mention the gloomy outlook for the West. That also is one of the reasons why Britain actually needs immigrants and allows many in, legally.
The USA is not doing well but is not in collapse - yet. — Ludwig V
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.