Why Are Republicans At War With Reality?
Comments
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It's been almost 10 years since I read it, and I've been thinking about rereading it again. (thanks for the reminder!) If any book has gotten me to think about things, it's that book. One of my all-time faves.benjs said:
Not sure if you've read Ishmael, but that book always got me thinking. If we accept that we evolve in ways that lead to our continued existence in this universe (like animals with defences from predators, trees with roots to collect moisture, etc), then the evolution to feel so deeply as we do is a factor in our continued existence too (i.e. the fact that we are inherently empathetic is by design, not coincidence). Then, what does it say about us as a species if we opt to neglect a feature intrinsic to our design in favour of ones that aren't (like gluttony, greed, and apathy)?backseatLover12 said:
Finally, yes it did.hedonist said:
Having emotions isn't a bad thing (and for whatever it's worth, one can feel and react, and not have it "get the best of us"). It's not necessarily tantamount to stomping feet and calling names. It can guide us, lend to insights.backseatLover12 said:I just think that this topic is a perfect example of how our emotions can get the best of us, things are taken personally when they shouldn't be, and the staying on track is often lost due to emotional charge. The sooner we stop taking things emotionally personal, the better these forums can be.
Again, this post is not meant toward anyone specific, and my words are just words.
I'd rather have that humanness enter into issues constructively. Seems like it did here.
What I was talking about with acting on our emotions rather than cool-headed logic, is that perhaps when it comes to politics, keeping logic in check rather than getting carried away with emotions, that lead to acting on our emotions rather than logic, doesn't work out. It doesn't work out for the country. It doesn't work out in the forum settings when one carries that emotion onto a personal level, for sure, making a topic into a personal feelings and emotions and losing logic altogether. Somewhere there's got to be a balance.
But you've got me thinking about evolution and how we may neglect that natural empathetic nature. Certainly power, money, and ego have something to do with it. The artificial things… But I'm going to think more about that.0 -
Well, yeah, I actually think that's about right... only I wouldn't use words like "stupid" or "rubes", but I would say too many of my fellow citizens are uninformed, uneducated, incurious, apathetic, disinterested, lazy or any combination of those traits. And I know some people who are very much like that whom I care very much for but I also know I wouldn't want them making major decisions regarding important matters... unless it's something like bringing the guacamole to the party.brianlux said:
The problem with this quote is that it assumes your fellow citizens are stupid. That they cannot think for themselves. That you are enlightened yet they are rubes. You are rational while their minds arw under the control of the 0.01%. It's quite an elitist attitude.BS44325 said:backseatLover12 said:To think “logically,” people must think calmly and clearly, rationally, so obviously to keep that from happening emotions must be created to keep rational thinking out of the picture. Fear, racism, anger, selfishness, hatred and war all drive out cool, collected thinking, so obviously fear, racism, anger, selfishness, hatred and war have to be promoted at all cost … cost is no problem when the future of the 0.01 percent’s fortunes and power are at stake.
I go back and forth on this. Sometimes I judge others for not having a clue what is going on beyond their own household fence.
Other times, I envy it.
I think the article is bunk, to be honest. comparing the current political climate in america to pre-nazi germany? that's a stretch at best.
I'm a little uneasy with people so easily dismissing an entire group who vote one way as ignorant or stupid or whatever it is you want to call it.
now where's that guacamole recipe......
By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0 -
and most of the reason i discuss current events here is because, save for the one-off "political cartoon" that people will post on facebook, most people I talk to either don't want to talk current events with friends, or they simply aren't able to.
and sometimes I really don't want to know how bigoted and ignorant my loved ones are. LOL.By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0 -
This I won't even attemp to talk to family & friends about politics I keep my thoughts to myself that shit will create a divide amongst family & friends just like borrowing $ or having work done by family or friends I won't do it ...HughFreakingDillon said:and most of the reason i discuss current events here is because, save for the one-off "political cartoon" that people will post on facebook, most people I talk to either don't want to talk current events with friends, or they simply aren't able to.
and sometimes I really don't want to know how bigoted and ignorant my loved ones are. LOL.jesus greets me looks just like me ....0 -
I go back and forth on this. Sometimes I judge others for not having a clue what is going on beyond their own household fence.HughFreakingDillon said:
Well, yeah, I actually think that's about right... only I wouldn't use words like "stupid" or "rubes", but I would say too many of my fellow citizens are uninformed, uneducated, incurious, apathetic, disinterested, lazy or any combination of those traits. And I know some people who are very much like that whom I care very much for but I also know I wouldn't want them making major decisions regarding important matters... unless it's something like bringing the guacamole to the party.brianlux said:
The problem with this quote is that it assumes your fellow citizens are stupid. That they cannot think for themselves. That you are enlightened yet they are rubes. You are rational while their minds arw under the control of the 0.01%. It's quite an elitist attitude.BS44325 said:backseatLover12 said:To think “logically,” people must think calmly and clearly, rationally, so obviously to keep that from happening emotions must be created to keep rational thinking out of the picture. Fear, racism, anger, selfishness, hatred and war all drive out cool, collected thinking, so obviously fear, racism, anger, selfishness, hatred and war have to be promoted at all cost … cost is no problem when the future of the 0.01 percent’s fortunes and power are at stake.
Other times, I envy it.
I think the article is bunk, to be honest. comparing the current political climate in america to pre-nazi germany? that's a stretch at best.
I'm a little uneasy with people so easily dismissing an entire group who vote one way as ignorant or stupid or whatever it is you want to call it.
now where's that guacamole recipe......
Good post Hugh.
And I fucking hate Cilantro and Red Onions in Guacamole for the record.0 -
Good post Hugh.rr165892 said:
I go back and forth on this. Sometimes I judge others for not having a clue what is going on beyond their own household fence.HughFreakingDillon said:
Well, yeah, I actually think that's about right... only I wouldn't use words like "stupid" or "rubes", but I would say too many of my fellow citizens are uninformed, uneducated, incurious, apathetic, disinterested, lazy or any combination of those traits. And I know some people who are very much like that whom I care very much for but I also know I wouldn't want them making major decisions regarding important matters... unless it's something like bringing the guacamole to the party.brianlux said:
The problem with this quote is that it assumes your fellow citizens are stupid. That they cannot think for themselves. That you are enlightened yet they are rubes. You are rational while their minds arw under the control of the 0.01%. It's quite an elitist attitude.BS44325 said:backseatLover12 said:To think “logically,” people must think calmly and clearly, rationally, so obviously to keep that from happening emotions must be created to keep rational thinking out of the picture. Fear, racism, anger, selfishness, hatred and war all drive out cool, collected thinking, so obviously fear, racism, anger, selfishness, hatred and war have to be promoted at all cost … cost is no problem when the future of the 0.01 percent’s fortunes and power are at stake.
Other times, I envy it.
I think the article is bunk, to be honest. comparing the current political climate in america to pre-nazi germany? that's a stretch at best.
I'm a little uneasy with people so easily dismissing an entire group who vote one way as ignorant or stupid or whatever it is you want to call it.
now where's that guacamole recipe......
And I fucking hate Cilantro and Red Onions in Guacamole for the record.
Cilantro is not a food. It's a weed. Yuk! Haha!
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
Screw you all. Cilantro is awesome.
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thread derailed.Falling down,...not staying down0
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By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0
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So then I guess its run its course? And by the way, Cilantro, aka Coriander, is awesome. Start with a few flakes and work your way up.Falling down,...not staying down0
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You are either with us or with the Cilantro0
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Cilantro is not a food. It's a weed. Yuk! Haha!brianlux said:
Good post Hugh.rr165892 said:
I go back and forth on this. Sometimes I judge others for not having a clue what is going on beyond their own household fence.HughFreakingDillon said:
Well, yeah, I actually think that's about right... only I wouldn't use words like "stupid" or "rubes", but I would say too many of my fellow citizens are uninformed, uneducated, incurious, apathetic, disinterested, lazy or any combination of those traits. And I know some people who are very much like that whom I care very much for but I also know I wouldn't want them making major decisions regarding important matters... unless it's something like bringing the guacamole to the party.brianlux said:
The problem with this quote is that it assumes your fellow citizens are stupid. That they cannot think for themselves. That you are enlightened yet they are rubes. You are rational while their minds arw under the control of the 0.01%. It's quite an elitist attitude.BS44325 said:backseatLover12 said:To think “logically,” people must think calmly and clearly, rationally, so obviously to keep that from happening emotions must be created to keep rational thinking out of the picture. Fear, racism, anger, selfishness, hatred and war all drive out cool, collected thinking, so obviously fear, racism, anger, selfishness, hatred and war have to be promoted at all cost … cost is no problem when the future of the 0.01 percent’s fortunes and power are at stake.
Other times, I envy it.
I think the article is bunk, to be honest. comparing the current political climate in america to pre-nazi germany? that's a stretch at best.
I'm a little uneasy with people so easily dismissing an entire group who vote one way as ignorant or stupid or whatever it is you want to call it.
now where's that guacamole recipe......
And I fucking hate Cilantro and Red Onions in Guacamole for the record.
Hahaha that gives weeds a bad name! I think Cilantro is as useful for cooking as it is for smoking...Monkey Driven, Call this Living?0 -
I think we need to head Kat's subtle warning and get this thread back on track.
As much as I hate to admit it, The Republican party is not all evil. I know some very fine folks who are registered Republican. But the party is like a salad. When I was a kid it was fairly basic and there lots of greens in the party. Same with the Republican party. It once was populated with conservationists. For example, though not the perfect environmentalist, Teddy Roosevelt did pave the way to having much land set aside. But today, like the fancy salads we see now, we find some rather nasty ingredients like cilantro tossed in the mix which wrecks havoc on the whole party.
Boss Kat, please forgive me, the devil made me do it. (And if it makes you feel better, my wife loves cilantro too)."It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
Looking for a reply from Benjs.backseatLover12 said:
It's been almost 10 years since I read it, and I've been thinking about rereading it again. (thanks for the reminder!) If any book has gotten me to think about things, it's that book. One of my all-time faves.benjs said:
Not sure if you've read Ishmael, but that book always got me thinking. If we accept that we evolve in ways that lead to our continued existence in this universe (like animals with defences from predators, trees with roots to collect moisture, etc), then the evolution to feel so deeply as we do is a factor in our continued existence too (i.e. the fact that we are inherently empathetic is by design, not coincidence). Then, what does it say about us as a species if we opt to neglect a feature intrinsic to our design in favour of ones that aren't (like gluttony, greed, and apathy)?backseatLover12 said:
Finally, yes it did.hedonist said:
Having emotions isn't a bad thing (and for whatever it's worth, one can feel and react, and not have it "get the best of us"). It's not necessarily tantamount to stomping feet and calling names. It can guide us, lend to insights.backseatLover12 said:I just think that this topic is a perfect example of how our emotions can get the best of us, things are taken personally when they shouldn't be, and the staying on track is often lost due to emotional charge. The sooner we stop taking things emotionally personal, the better these forums can be.
Again, this post is not meant toward anyone specific, and my words are just words.
I'd rather have that humanness enter into issues constructively. Seems like it did here.
What I was talking about with acting on our emotions rather than cool-headed logic, is that perhaps when it comes to politics, keeping logic in check rather than getting carried away with emotions, that lead to acting on our emotions rather than logic, doesn't work out. It doesn't work out for the country. It doesn't work out in the forum settings when one carries that emotion onto a personal level, for sure, making a topic into a personal feelings and emotions and losing logic altogether. Somewhere there's got to be a balance.
But you've got me thinking about evolution and how we may neglect that natural empathetic nature. Certainly power, money, and ego have something to do with it. The artificial things… But I'm going to think more about that.
Back on topic. (because cilantro rules!)0 -
Fair enough!backseatLover12 said:
Looking for a reply from Benjs.backseatLover12 said:
It's been almost 10 years since I read it, and I've been thinking about rereading it again. (thanks for the reminder!) If any book has gotten me to think about things, it's that book. One of my all-time faves.benjs said:
Not sure if you've read Ishmael, but that book always got me thinking. If we accept that we evolve in ways that lead to our continued existence in this universe (like animals with defences from predators, trees with roots to collect moisture, etc), then the evolution to feel so deeply as we do is a factor in our continued existence too (i.e. the fact that we are inherently empathetic is by design, not coincidence). Then, what does it say about us as a species if we opt to neglect a feature intrinsic to our design in favour of ones that aren't (like gluttony, greed, and apathy)?backseatLover12 said:
Finally, yes it did.hedonist said:
Having emotions isn't a bad thing (and for whatever it's worth, one can feel and react, and not have it "get the best of us"). It's not necessarily tantamount to stomping feet and calling names. It can guide us, lend to insights.backseatLover12 said:I just think that this topic is a perfect example of how our emotions can get the best of us, things are taken personally when they shouldn't be, and the staying on track is often lost due to emotional charge. The sooner we stop taking things emotionally personal, the better these forums can be.
Again, this post is not meant toward anyone specific, and my words are just words.
I'd rather have that humanness enter into issues constructively. Seems like it did here.
What I was talking about with acting on our emotions rather than cool-headed logic, is that perhaps when it comes to politics, keeping logic in check rather than getting carried away with emotions, that lead to acting on our emotions rather than logic, doesn't work out. It doesn't work out for the country. It doesn't work out in the forum settings when one carries that emotion onto a personal level, for sure, making a topic into a personal feelings and emotions and losing logic altogether. Somewhere there's got to be a balance.
But you've got me thinking about evolution and how we may neglect that natural empathetic nature. Certainly power, money, and ego have something to do with it. The artificial things… But I'm going to think more about that.
Back on topic. (because cilantro rules!)
I loved the book ISHMAEL. Quinn quite a bit refers to tribalism with its roots in pre-agricultural humans. Empathy, cooperation, mutual support are key elements of tribal communities. We could use a lot more of that.
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
So what do you think about what I quoted from Benjs, Brian?0
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One of my favorites as well. Use some of it in my debates.brianlux said:
Fair enough!backseatLover12 said:
Looking for a reply from Benjs.backseatLover12 said:
It's been almost 10 years since I read it, and I've been thinking about rereading it again. (thanks for the reminder!) If any book has gotten me to think about things, it's that book. One of my all-time faves.benjs said:
Not sure if you've read Ishmael, but that book always got me thinking. If we accept that we evolve in ways that lead to our continued existence in this universe (like animals with defences from predators, trees with roots to collect moisture, etc), then the evolution to feel so deeply as we do is a factor in our continued existence too (i.e. the fact that we are inherently empathetic is by design, not coincidence). Then, what does it say about us as a species if we opt to neglect a feature intrinsic to our design in favour of ones that aren't (like gluttony, greed, and apathy)?backseatLover12 said:
Finally, yes it did.hedonist said:
Having emotions isn't a bad thing (and for whatever it's worth, one can feel and react, and not have it "get the best of us"). It's not necessarily tantamount to stomping feet and calling names. It can guide us, lend to insights.backseatLover12 said:I just think that this topic is a perfect example of how our emotions can get the best of us, things are taken personally when they shouldn't be, and the staying on track is often lost due to emotional charge. The sooner we stop taking things emotionally personal, the better these forums can be.
Again, this post is not meant toward anyone specific, and my words are just words.
I'd rather have that humanness enter into issues constructively. Seems like it did here.
What I was talking about with acting on our emotions rather than cool-headed logic, is that perhaps when it comes to politics, keeping logic in check rather than getting carried away with emotions, that lead to acting on our emotions rather than logic, doesn't work out. It doesn't work out for the country. It doesn't work out in the forum settings when one carries that emotion onto a personal level, for sure, making a topic into a personal feelings and emotions and losing logic altogether. Somewhere there's got to be a balance.
But you've got me thinking about evolution and how we may neglect that natural empathetic nature. Certainly power, money, and ego have something to do with it. The artificial things… But I'm going to think more about that.
Back on topic. (because cilantro rules!)
I loved the book ISHMAEL. Quinn quite a bit refers to tribalism with its roots in pre-agricultural humans. Empathy, cooperation, mutual support are key elements of tribal communities. We could use a lot more of that.
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I see what your doing here Brian.Your Tom foolery and hijinx and hatred of Cilantro is very much appreciated.lolbrianlux said:I think we need to head Kat's subtle warning and get this thread back on track.
As much as I hate to admit it, The Republican party is not all evil. I know some very fine folks who are registered Republican. But the party is like a salad. When I was a kid it was fairly basic and there lots of greens in the party. Same with the Republican party. It once was populated with conservationists. For example, though not the perfect environmentalist, Teddy Roosevelt did pave the way to having much land set aside. But today, like the fancy salads we see now, we find some rather nasty ingredients like cilantro tossed in the mix which wrecks havoc on the whole party.
Boss Kat, please forgive me, the devil made me do it. (And if it makes you feel better, my wife loves cilantro too).Post edited by rr165892 on0 -
As far as acting on our emotions rather than cool-headed logic... oh boy. I'm still working on that one. I get riled up too easily myself but I also believe I am good at looking at things logically. But there is probably a good reason I'm in the book business rather than politics if you know what I mean!backseatLover12 said:So what do you think about what I quoted from Benjs, Brian?
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0
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