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Napoleon Ier wrote:reminisco wrote:part of me finds racism hilarious. because it's such a sign of stupidity, of limited mind. that since we can't laugh at retards (even though they are goofy, and it might be wrong to laugh about them) we can laugh at people so retarded as to believe that another race is inferior, or unequal in anything except pigment.
So how do you explain the fact that negroes have an IQ (which are 80% genetically determined) 14 points lower on average than Caucasians (genuine question, I'm not racist, but when friends say that to me, I genuinely can't answer)?
sam_levi_11 wrote:suggs wrote:Lets talk about the fact that the beginning of civilization began in Iraq?/Middle East/North west india.
Ummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
The defence rests, and the white man, well, he just moved north from those winners - only he weren't white when he started human civilization.
Relatively basic point i hope, and basic anthropology Nap.
why dont more people realise this?
OnlyAmbrose wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:reminisco wrote:part of me finds racism hilarious. because it's such a sign of stupidity, of limited mind. that since we can't laugh at retards (even though they are goofy, and it might be wrong to laugh about them) we can laugh at people so retarded as to believe that another race is inferior, or unequal in anything except pigment.
So how do you explain the fact that negroes have an IQ (which are 80% genetically determined) 14 points lower on average than Caucasians (genuine question, I'm not racist, but when friends say that to me, I genuinely can't answer)?
Does it matter? I know blacks who are equally as smart as and often smarter than me. That said, it would be irresponsible to presume that any given white is superior intellectually (or otherwise) to any given black.
reminisco wrote:Napoleon Ier = brilliant
also hilarious.
don't forget the glorious flag you used to fly nappy, be careful how far you go playing devil's advocate. cause what you pretend to be you, you end up becoming.
btownmeggy wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:DaGip wrote:
and of course the famous quote:“I hate the gooks,” said McCain, a Vietnam War POW more than a quarter-century ago, “and I will hate them for as long as I live . . . and you can quote me.”
Given that he had only recently been a PRISONER OF WAR, subject to TORTURE ... I think a bit of hatred can be excused. Has he repeated those sentiments today? NO, in fact, I strongly believe he has overcome them. One of the great things about human beings is our capacity to learn and grow. I hope I never have to find out if I can be as forgiving!
No, no, no, you're misreading the quotation. McCain said in 2000 that he hates gooks and will as long as he lives.
PLAYER57832 wrote:
Anyone who has been held prisoner and tortured as McCain was, can be excused for retaining some bitterness ... even many years later.
BUT, I still say that his actions and his later words prove that, while he may hold those feelings within himself... he does hold them within, he does not act upon them to any great extent. THAT speaks far louder than any words.
got tonkaed wrote:a short summation of why i dont think the findings matter...
1) The construct of race as anything approaching a pure describable entity is challenged. Race as a social construct is pretty common, but the fact that science must be tailored within this social construction, very likely presents a bias that will be difficult if not impossible to overcome, especially given the objectivity desired given the research.
2) the science of seems rather shoddy, and i think highlights a bit of a concern about psuedoscience and our failure as people to reason. When looking a few of those points of contention, it did not take very long to think about a number of reasons why there might be flaws or large gaps and jumps that should not require much further discussion. The fact that anyone takes the information seriously...suggests more about peoples ability to suspend their reason in place of "authoritated information".
3) I did a short little look on the general intelligence bit and found that it is somewhat criticized and seems to be disregarded by more mainstream individuals within the field. The fact that 1950's science and earlier (science that wasnt far removed from the eugenics era) is the bedrock for one of the pieces of evidence should be somewhat telling.
4) The utility argument is rather simple and probably doesnt need to be gone into, but further highlights the frivolity of the research and the group which attempts to promote it.
should there be the need for more, im sure i could go over it again...but its sort of wasting ones time to take any of this seriously.
Norse wrote:But, alas, you are all cock munching rent boys, with an IQ that would make my local spaco clinic blush.
jiminski wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:
Anyone who has been held prisoner and tortured as McCain was, can be excused for retaining some bitterness ... even many years later.
BUT, I still say that his actions and his later words prove that, while he may hold those feelings within himself... he does hold them within, he does not act upon them to any great extent. THAT speaks far louder than any words.
hmm what it proves is that he is fatally prejudiced towards an entire Nationality and, perhaps, race...
Do we allow for murderous prejudice against all Germans, within individuals who lost a family member in Nazi concentration camps? well perhaps we do; we justify it in the same way.."sheese that poor bastard.. if it were me, i would want to kill all Germans too!"
But, and this is the important point, do we want an eternally disgruntled individual, who understandably can not forgive, at the helm of the most powerful democracy in the world?
No thanks mate... Give me Nelson Mandela any day!
PLAYER57832 wrote:jiminski wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:
Anyone who has been held prisoner and tortured as McCain was, can be excused for retaining some bitterness ... even many years later.
BUT, I still say that his actions and his later words prove that, while he may hold those feelings within himself... he does hold them within, he does not act upon them to any great extent. THAT speaks far louder than any words.
hmm what it proves is that he is fatally prejudiced towards an entire Nationality and, perhaps, race...
Do we allow for murderous prejudice against all Germans, within individuals who lost a family member in Nazi concentration camps? well perhaps we do; we justify it in the same way.."sheese that poor bastard.. if it were me, i would want to kill all Germans too!"
But, and this is the important point, do we want an eternally disgruntled individual, who understandably can not forgive, at the helm of the most powerful democracy in the world?
No thanks mate... Give me Nelson Mandela any day!
1. I don't want McCain as president, for a lot of reasons.
2. I would have to see the context of this remark to know if it is significant or not.
3. I do not agree with or like racism.
I don't justify hatred of any kind. However, I do say that compassion goes two ways. I can say that we should forgive those who harm us because the hatred does US more harm than them ... but I cannot tell someone who was tortured or abused that their hatred and anger are "wrong". I CAN say that they must not act on that hatred in other than words ... and that they should moderate even those.
I remember reading that McCain was part of a reconcilliation tour not so long ago. That speaks louder than any statement repeated out of context.
As for Mandella ... I am not sure he is the most shining example, but I do look to Cory Ten Bauhm, Mother Teresa, etc. Unfortunately, none of them are running right now. ..
Norse wrote:But, alas, you are all cock munching rent boys, with an IQ that would make my local spaco clinic blush.
suggs wrote:The point is, the biological differences are ABSOLUTELY TINY. Essentially they boil down to small differences in pigmentation, and thats it.
Actually, this is when turning the other cheek is MOST appropriate ... or, following the examples of Ghandi and Martin Luther King.When one has little power, the only thing one CAN do is to submit, bide your time. If you rebel, then you are only feeding into their justification. If you calmly "take" what they dish out, then you show them for the abusers they are .. in time.suggs wrote:Some hatred is good. Compassion wouldnt have done you a lot of good if you were a slave in the 19th century. Turning the other cheek just isnt always appropriate.. Some times you need to fight, and sometimes you need to hate.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Actually, this is when turning the other cheek is MOST appropriate ... or, following the examples of Ghandi and Martin Luther King.When one has little power, the only thing one CAN do is to submit, bide your time. If you rebel, then you are only feeding into their justification. If you calmly "take" what they dish out, then you show them for the abusers they are .. in time.suggs wrote:Some hatred is good. Compassion wouldnt have done you a lot of good if you were a slave in the 19th century. Turning the other cheek just isnt always appropriate.. Some times you need to fight, and sometimes you need to hate.
suggs wrote:You know what happened if you were a slave, and turned the other cheek? They branded the other one, thats what.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Lincoln freed the slaves, thinking that the whole lot would rise up and join the ranks of the union armies. They didn't. THAT is the power of slavery.
PLAYER57832 wrote:I admire a lot of things about Mandella, particularly those things you mentioned. I do hold up Mother Teresa and Cory Ten Bauhm higher, probably because they were not politicians.
When I said Mandella was not the most shining example, I was referring to incidents of corruption and such, but I certainly agree those things pale in the face of what he did do.
At any rate, no one is perfect.
I think that is the biggest problem with these sorts of discussions. There is too much of a tendancy to both look at some individuals under a microscope ... and at the same time to dismiss even blatant and deserved criticism of others.
In truth, I don't like McCain for president, DO admire Mandella for much of what he did ... and don't really know either on a personal basis.
Although McCain said he was referring specifically to his prison guards, his use of the word "gook" is not only offensive but it is careless, short-sighted and alludes to a lack of self-control."I hated the gooks. I will hate them as long as I live."
PLAYER57832 wrote:suggs wrote:You know what happened if you were a slave, and turned the other cheek? They branded the other one, thats what.
And what happened when they DID rebel? They got whipped, at BEST. And, often, the rest of the group along with them.
It took powerful white folks to change things. This does NOT mean that blacks are in any way incapable, it does mean that in the times of slavery they were almost powerless. The only thing they COULD do was to practice subtle dissention. Ridicule in songs the white masters never bothered to hear. Slowing of work ... just enough to not get themselves beaten severely... and most of all, assuring the white folks again and again and again that they truly were as stupid as the white folks thought ... because if they did not, they would have been worse than killed. The greatest acts of sedition were to teach their children to read, to teach them stories of history and the like. NOT taking up arms or fighting.
Lincoln freed the slaves, thinking that the whole lot would rise up and join the ranks of the union armies. They didn't. THAT is the power of slavery.
As for the rest of your speil. You know someone hasn't a leg to stand upon when all they can do is send out insults.
jiminski wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:I admire a lot of things about Mandella, particularly those things you mentioned. I do hold up Mother Teresa and Cory Ten Bauhm higher, probably because they were not politicians.
When I said Mandella was not the most shining example, I was referring to incidents of corruption and such, but I certainly agree those things pale in the face of what he did do.
At any rate, no one is perfect.
I think that is the biggest problem with these sorts of discussions. There is too much of a tendancy to both look at some individuals under a microscope ... and at the same time to dismiss even blatant and deserved criticism of others.
In truth, I don't like McCain for president, DO admire Mandella for much of what he did ... and don't really know either on a personal basis.
I agree with much of that, but the point i am making is specifically about the qualities required of great leadership.
in 2000 Senator McCain told reportersAlthough McCain said he was referring specifically to his prison guards, his use of the word "gook" is not only offensive but it is careless, short-sighted and alludes to a lack of self-control."I hated the gooks. I will hate them as long as I live."
the man was a Senator at the time; a public servant and key arm of the legislature, he should be above such lapses into language indicative of a hate-filled time. Not because he does not deserve the luxury of hate but because he is staking a claim to power.
firstly he Isolates all Asian people by this comment and secondly he alludes to an inherent flaw in his character. A flaw fostered and born of the most extreme of circumstance but a very real one never-the-less.
Now the stress free, relaxing and mentally unchallenging position held by the President of the United States may not put him in such a difficult situation as being on a bus with reporters again.. but it might.
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