• Re: Jews hit Palestinean hospital, kill hundreds

    From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to All on Tue Oct 17 11:39:47 2023
    On Tuesday, October 17, 2023 at 2:27:51 PM UTC-4, *skriptis wrote:
    At least 500 killed in Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews

    https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast




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    Who cares? Is it not the current state of affairs?
    It's really sad.

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  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to All on Tue Oct 17 20:27:46 2023
    At least 500 killed in Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews

    https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast




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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 00:36:01 2023
    *skriptis kirjoitti 17.10.2023 klo 21.27:
    At least 500 killed in Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews

    https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast


    "The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza says an Israeli airstrike caused
    the blast, and that it killed some 500 people"

    Apparently fake news...
    Israel says it was misfired Hamas rocket.

    It's Hamas' word against Israel's, with couple vids which would seem to
    support the latter...

    https://x.com/sentdefender/status/1714383923881373908?s=20

    https://x.com/manniefabian/status/1714377828131553446?s=20

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  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 01:36:38 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    *skriptis kirjoitti 17.10.2023 klo 21.27:> At least 500 killed in Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews> > https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast> "The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza says an Israeli
    airstrike caused the blast, and that it killed some 500 people"Apparently fake news...Israel says it was misfired Hamas rocket.It's Hamas' word against Israel's, with couple vids which would seem to support the latter...https://x.com/sentdefender/status/
    1714383923881373908?s=20https://x.com/manniefabian/status/1714377828131553446?s=20




    It's a high priority for all to deflect responsibility for this.


    Sound analysis would suggest it's the Jews.


    https://twitter.com/jacksonhinklle/status/1714399005399011406?t=eUu1uBNh_yTYEmuCNkWIAQ&s=19




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  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 00:15:14 2023
    On Tuesday, 17 October 2023 at 19:39:49 UTC+1, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Tuesday, October 17, 2023 at 2:27:51 PM UTC-4, *skriptis wrote:
    At least 500 killed in Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews

    https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast




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    Who cares? Is it not the current state of affairs?
    It's really sad.

    yes very sad :(
    zero comment from anyone, especially radio silence from all the Marxist RST activists, no points in it for them.

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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 11:51:11 2023
    *skriptis kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 2.36:
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    *skriptis kirjoitti 17.10.2023 klo 21.27:> At least 500 killed in Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews> > https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast> "The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza says an Israeli
    airstrike caused the blast, and that it killed some 500 people"Apparently fake news...Israel says it was misfired Hamas rocket.It's Hamas' word against Israel's, with couple vids which would seem to support the latter...https://x.com/sentdefender/status/
    1714383923881373908?s=20https://x.com/manniefabian/status/1714377828131553446?s=20




    It's a high priority for all to deflect responsibility for this.


    Sound analysis would suggest it's the Jews.


    https://twitter.com/jacksonhinklle/status/1714399005399011406?t=eUu1uBNh_yTYEmuCNkWIAQ&s=19


    BS

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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 12:05:16 2023
    PeteWasLucky kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 5.26:
    *skriptis <skriptis@post.t-com.hr> Wrote in message:r
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r> *skriptis kirjoitti 17.10.2023 klo 21.27:> At least 500 killed in Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews> > https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast> "The Hamas-run Health
    Ministry in Gaza says an Israeli airstrike caused the blast, and that it killed some 500 people"Apparently fake news...Israel says it was misfired Hamas rocket.It's Hamas' word against Israel's, with couple vids which would seem to support the latter...
    https://x.com/sentdefender/status/1714383923881373908?s=20https://x.com/manniefabian/status/1714377828131553446?s=20It's a high priority for all to deflect responsibility for this.Sound analysis would suggest it's the Jews.https://twitter.com/
    jacksonhinklle/status/1714399005399011406?t=eUu1uBNh_yTYEmuCNkWIAQ&s=19-- ----Android NewsGroup Reader----https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html

    So the issue became centered around the 400-500 that were in the hospital? But the thousands that got killed and wounded just in October don't matter?

    Clearly Hamas didn't care about Palestinians when they did their operation, but Israel isn't acting great either and its influence is forcing all politicians and world forces to be blind when Israel is hammering the civilians and kicking them out to
    the borders.
    I definitely get what JD keeps saying about religions, but this isn't religions. It's an unrestrained unmerciful application of a devastating one-sided military power on civilians.

    The hospital was destroyed by strayed Hamas rocket aimed at Israel. If
    it even was a hospital.

    Israel has full right to destroy Hamas and Gaza. The count is at like
    3000 which is nothing. Would be in hundreds of thousands if Israel was
    using its firepower indiscriminately. Israel has shown great restriction
    so far.

    If anyone was really worried about people in Gaza, or even cared about
    them... then arab countries, including West Bank, could easily negotiate
    a human corridor for refugees. But they don't. Dead civilian in Gaza is
    more valuable as propaganda tool to Arab nations than the lives of the
    people.
    So nobody cares about people in Gaza, not even so-called Palestinians at
    West Bank.

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  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 11:31:25 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    PeteWasLucky kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 5.26:> *skriptis <skriptis@post.t-com.hr> Wrote in message:r>> TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r> *skriptis kirjoitti 17.10.2023 klo 21.27:> At least 500 killed in Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews> > https://
    www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast> "The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza says an Israeli airstrike caused the blast, and that it killed some 500 people"Apparently fake news...Israel says it was misfired Hamas
    rocket.It's Hamas' word against Israel's, with couple vids which would seem to support the latter...https://x.com/sentdefender/status/1714383923881373908?s=20https://x.com/manniefabian/status/1714377828131553446?s=20It's a high priority for all to
    deflect responsibility for this.Sound analysis would suggest it's the Jews.https://twitter.com/jacksonhinklle/status/1714399005399011406?t=eUu1uBNh_yTYEmuCNkWIAQ&s=19-- ----Android NewsGroup Reader----https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/
    index.html> > So the issue became centered around the 400-500 that were in the hospital? But the thousands that got killed and wounded just in October don't matter?> > Clearly Hamas didn't care about Palestinians when they did their operation, but Israel
    isn't acting great either and its influence is forcing all politicians and world forces to be blind when Israel is hammering the civilians and kicking them out to the borders.> I definitely get what JD keeps saying about religions, but this isn't
    religions. It's an unrestrained unmerciful application of a devastating one-sided military power on civilians.The hospital was destroyed by strayed Hamas rocket aimed at Israel. If it even was a hospital.Israel has full right to destroy Hamas and Gaza.
    The count is at like 3000 which is nothing. Would be in hundreds of thousands if Israel was using its firepower indiscriminately. Israel has shown great restriction so far.If anyone was really worried about people in Gaza, or even cared about them...
    then arab countries, including West Bank, could easily negotiate a human corridor for refugees. But they don't. Dead civilian in Gaza is more valuable as propaganda tool to Arab nations than the lives of the people.So nobody cares about people in Gaza,
    not even so-called Palestinians at West Bank.



    Stupid post.


    We don't know who hit it yet since Jews refuse to admit it was them so we're left uncertain until this is solved.

    I've heard it might have been Islamic jihad, which is not Hamas.

    I'm always wary of those "islamic radicals" kinda like Slavic neonazis, because if you dig enough, there's always a Jew behind those absurd organisations.


    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palestinian_Islamic_Jihad

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamas



    Btw it's very interesting to open wiki pages of all these organisations or even political parties and check their ideologies, it's very useful for grasping the full situation and who's who.




    So back to the point, we don't know even if it was Hamas, and a stray Hamas rocket means even less, since Israel has all sorts of high tech stuff, they could take control or change the path of a rocket in theory, so even if it was stray Hamas rocket it
    might have not strayed by accident but by Jews themselves ok purpose.


    In greater scheme of things, even this incident is irrelevant because there's a quota of Palestineans that Jews want to kill (it's usually eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth per old Jewish logic but 5 or 10 dead Palestineans for 1 dead Jew).

    Until they don't achieve that, they won't stop.

    I think they're at 2 or 3 to 1 now?





    Your genocidal idea that "Israel has a right to destroy Hamas and Gaza" is laughable.

    They have an obligation to end the blockade of Gaza and pay reparations to Palestineans for holding them in captivity and murdering them for 50 years.


    As for your ideas of relocating people, do you agree to take stupid Estonians your cousins?

    They're on Russian land after all, Russia bought Estonia from Sweden in 1709 and their entire independence is a hoax.


    If you don't want to take your cousins Estonians and allow Russia to retake what's their, why should any Arab country take their cousins in order to let Israel to expand?

    Care to explain?







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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 13:29:19 2023
    *skriptis kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 12.31:
    We don't know who hit it yet

    No, we know already...

    Hamas fired a rocket towards Tel Aviv, it misfunctioned and destroyed a
    parking lot with few cars in Gaza.

    That's what really happened.

    https://x.com/Nrg8000/status/1714535497958334678?s=20

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  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 13:37:19 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    *skriptis kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 12.31:> We don't know who hit it yetNo, we know already...Hamas fired a rocket towards Tel Aviv, it misfunctioned and destroyed a parking lot with few cars in Gaza.That's what really happened.https://x.com/Nrg8000/
    status/1714535497958334678?s=20



    We know what happened because a guy named Nathan Ruser said:

    I'm willing to share some PRELIMINARY thoughts on...


    Nathan Ruser's preliminary thoughts = TT knows what happened


    Clown
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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 18:31:02 2023
    *skriptis kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 14.37:
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    *skriptis kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 12.31:> We don't know who hit it yetNo, we know already...Hamas fired a rocket towards Tel Aviv, it misfunctioned and destroyed a parking lot with few cars in Gaza.That's what really happened.https://x.com/Nrg8000/
    status/1714535497958334678?s=20



    We know what happened because a guy named Nathan Ruser said:

    I'm willing to share some PRELIMINARY thoughts on...


    Nathan Ruser's preliminary thoughts = TT knows what happened


    Clown

    He also shared some pics & evidence, not only thoughts.

    Fool

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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 18:28:34 2023
    TT kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 11.51:
    *skriptis kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 2.36:
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    *skriptis kirjoitti 17.10.2023 klo 21.27:> At least 500 killed in
    Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews> >
    https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast> "The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza says an Israeli airstrike caused the blast, and that it killed some 500 people"Apparently fake news...Israel says it was
    misfired Hamas rocket.It's Hamas' word against Israel's, with couple vids which would seem to support the latter...https://x.com/sentdefender/status/1714383923881373908?s=20https://x.com/manniefabian/status/1714377828131553446?s=20




    It's a high priority for all to deflect responsibility for this.


    Sound analysis would suggest it's the Jews.


    https://twitter.com/jacksonhinklle/status/1714399005399011406?t=eUu1uBNh_yTYEmuCNkWIAQ&s=19


    BS


    Here's a nice comparison too...

    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/F8ulHjxXUAA-pV1?format=jpg&name=medium

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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 18:46:55 2023
    TT kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 18.28:
    TT kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 11.51:
    *skriptis kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 2.36:
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    *skriptis kirjoitti 17.10.2023 klo 21.27:> At least 500 killed in
    Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews> >
    https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast> "The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza says an Israeli airstrike caused the blast, and that it killed some 500 people"Apparently fake news...Israel says it was
    misfired Hamas rocket.It's Hamas' word against Israel's, with couple vids which would seem to support the latter...https://x.com/sentdefender/status/1714383923881373908?s=20https://x.com/manniefabian/status/1714377828131553446?s=20




    It's a high priority for all to deflect responsibility for this.


    Sound analysis would suggest it's the Jews.


    https://twitter.com/jacksonhinklle/status/1714399005399011406?t=eUu1uBNh_yTYEmuCNkWIAQ&s=19


    BS


    Here's a nice comparison too...

    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/F8ulHjxXUAA-pV1?format=jpg&name=medium

    https://x.com/visegrad24/status/1714598373230088346?s=20

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  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 11:53:56 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    PeteWasLucky kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 5.26:> *skriptis <skriptis@post.t-com.hr> Wrote in message:r>> TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r> *skriptis kirjoitti 17.10.2023 klo 21.27:> At least 500 killed in Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews> > https://
    www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast> "The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza says an Israeli airstrike caused the blast, and that it killed some 500 people"Apparently fake news...Israel says it was misfired Hamas
    rocket.It's Hamas' word against Israel's, with couple vids which would seem to support the latter...https://x.com/sentdefender/status/1714383923881373908?s=20https://x.com/manniefabian/status/1714377828131553446?s=20It's a high priority for all to
    deflect responsibility for this.Sound analysis would suggest it's the Jews.https://twitter.com/jacksonhinklle/status/1714399005399011406?t=eUu1uBNh_yTYEmuCNkWIAQ&s=19-- ----Android NewsGroup Reader----https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/
    index.html> > So the issue became centered around the 400-500 that were in the hospital? But the thousands that got killed and wounded just in October don't matter?> > Clearly Hamas didn't care about Palestinians when they did their operation, but Israel
    isn't acting great either and its influence is forcing all politicians and world forces to be blind when Israel is hammering the civilians and kicking them out to the borders.> I definitely get what JD keeps saying about religions, but this isn't
    religions. It's an unrestrained unmerciful application of a devastating one-sided military power on civilians.The hospital was destroyed by strayed Hamas rocket aimed at Israel. If it even was a hospital.Israel has full right to destroy Hamas and Gaza.
    The count is at like 3000 which is nothing. Would be in hundreds of thousands if Israel was using its firepower indiscriminately. Israel has shown great restriction so far.If anyone was really worried about people in Gaza, or even cared about them...
    then arab countries, including West Bank, could easily negotiate a human corridor for refugees. But they don't. Dead civilian in Gaza is more valuable as propaganda tool to Arab nations than the lives of the people.So nobody cares about people in Gaza,
    not even so-called Palestinians at West Bank.

    So you see a video in which few lights coming up in the sky and they tell you it's Hamas rockets and this is the proof for you?

    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?

    And assuming these were Hamas rockets, in the same day, in the same time, in the same location, wouldn't it make sense to hit these locations to silence their firing power?

    And then you want Arabs to accommodate all these refugees to grant Israel their wish to take whatever 3% of whatever remaining land as it has always been planned?

    Seriously your post shows you live in a different reality and I was like I just need to ignore it, but I decided to reply anyway.




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  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 08:14:21 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> writes:


    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?

    Let's start with religion..

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  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 12:38:52 2023
    jdeluise <jdeluise@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> writes:>> Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?Let's start with religion..

    Sure, please start another dedicated thread.
    It will be interesting.
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  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 08:44:52 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> writes:

    jdeluise <jdeluise@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> writes:>> Did we become that
    stupid believing anything we were told?Let's start with religion..

    Sure, please start another dedicated thread. It will be interesting.

    No, it's very relevant to your comment.

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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 19:43:12 2023
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    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Wed Oct 18 08:52:34 2023
    Gracchus <gracchado@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?

    Let's start with religion..

    Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen charlatan, thus rendering all religious leaders frauds, all religions shams, and all spiritual traditions hocus pocus perpetuated by people who believe in
    Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. And this connection thereby proves we
    need to base our conclusions on empirical evidence rather than
    hearsay. Thanks for the reminder.

    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the damn hospital.

    And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 09:50:11 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?

    Let's start with religion..

    Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen charlatan, thus rendering all religious leaders frauds, all religions shams, and all spiritual traditions hocus pocus perpetuated by people who believe in Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. And this
    connection thereby proves we need to base our conclusions on empirical evidence rather than hearsay. Thanks for the reminder.

    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the damn hospital.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 19:53:17 2023
    jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.47:
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> writes:


    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.

    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a hospital.

    The hospital appears to be a red herring...
    Parking place of a hospital would be more accurate.

    https://x.com/visegrad24/status/1714598373230088346?s=20

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 09:54:26 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:


    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.

    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a hospital.

    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 20:08:28 2023
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.50:
    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the damn hospital.

    Hospital parking area, rather.

    Here's the best image: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/F8s3tZ3XwAAg7cG?format=jpg&name=medium

    Here's a good one too... https://edition.cnn.com/2023/10/18/politics/us-intel-gaza-hospital-blast/index.html

    ...How the hell would that cause 500 dead?

    This BBC article has interesting video: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-67144061

    ... Pay attention to people arriving with ambulance. All seem fake
    injuries, people walking holding their head etc.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 13:10:12 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    PeteWasLucky kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 18.53:> TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r>> PeteWasLucky kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 5.26:> *skriptis <skriptis@post.t-com.hr> Wrote in message:r>> TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r> *skriptis kirjoitti 17.10.2023
    klo 21.27:> At least 500 killed in Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews> > https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast> "The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza says an Israeli airstrike caused the blast, and that it
    killed some 500 people"Apparently fake news...Israel says it was misfired Hamas rocket.It's Hamas' word against Israel's, with couple vids which would seem to support the latter...https://x.com/sentdefender/status/1714383923881373908?s=20https://x.com/
    manniefabian/status/1714377828131553446?s=20It's a high priority for all to deflect responsibility for this.Sound analysis would suggest it's the Jews.https://twitter.com/jacksonhinklle/status/1714399005399011406?t=eUu1uBNh_yTYEmuCNkWIAQ&s=19-- ----
    Android NewsGroup Reader----https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html> > So the issue became centered around the 400-500 that were in the hospital? But the thousands that got killed and wounded just in October don't matter?> > Clearly
    Hamas didn't care about Palestinians when they did their operation, but Israel isn't acting great either and its influence is forcing all politicians and world forces to be blind when Israel is hammering the civilians and kicking them out to the borders.>
    I definitely get what JD keeps saying about religions, but this isn't religions. It's an unrestrained unmerciful application of a devastating one-sided military power on civilians.The hospital was destroyed by strayed Hamas rocket aimed at Israel. If it
    even was a hospital.Israel has full right to destroy Hamas and Gaza. The count is at like 3000 which is nothing. Would be in hundreds of thousands if Israel was using its firepower indiscriminately. Israel has shown great restriction so far.If anyone was
    really worried about people in Gaza, or even cared about them... then arab countries, including West Bank, could easily negotiate a human corridor for refugees. But they don't. Dead civilian in Gaza is more valuable as propaganda tool to Arab nations
    than the lives of the people.So nobody cares about people in Gaza, not even so-called Palestinians at West Bank.> > So you see a video in which few lights coming up in the sky and they tell you it's Hamas rockets and this is the proof for you?> There are
    2-3 videos and many pics.Hospital is still standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.> Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?> I never believe Twitter instantly.But there's some time about the incident already
    and Twitter hive-intelligence is very fast on finding the truth. People geolocate the videos etc.I'd go as far as to claim that Twitter is faster and even more reliable than news outlets. But you have to be familiar with it... see if many and which kind
    of sources pick the news... and read some comments, since if the news is anywhere viral but false it WILL be debunked rather quickly.> And assuming these were Hamas rockets, in the same day, in the same time, in the same location, wouldn't it make sense
    to hit these locations to silence their firing power?> > And then you want Arabs to accommodate all these refugees to grant Israel their wish to take whatever 3% of whatever remaining land as it has always been planned?> You think it's better to continue
    having people firing rockets from Gaza another 50 years? 2 million people cramped in small spot of desert, the only way to survive being aid from other countries.That's just not viable long term solution.

    I guess it would be fine too if Putin kept bombing Kiev and forced all its civilians moving out to other countries. Oh wait, he will warn them first before the bombing :)
    --




    ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 20:13:35 2023
    jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.52:
    Gracchus <gracchado@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?

    Let's start with religion..

    Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen charlatan, thus
    rendering all religious leaders frauds, all religions shams, and all
    spiritual traditions hocus pocus perpetuated by people who believe in
    Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. And this connection thereby proves we
    need to base our conclusions on empirical evidence rather than
    hearsay. Thanks for the reminder.

    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the damn
    hospital.

    And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.

    He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 10:14:34 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:08:33 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.50:
    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the damn hospital.
    Hospital parking area, rather.

    Here's the best image: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/F8s3tZ3XwAAg7cG?format=jpg&name=medium

    Here's a good one too... https://edition.cnn.com/2023/10/18/politics/us-intel-gaza-hospital-blast/index.html

    ...How the hell would that cause 500 dead?

    This BBC article has interesting video: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-67144061

    ... Pay attention to people arriving with ambulance. All seem fake
    injuries, people walking holding their head etc.

    Yes, I should have added, "....if a hospital was in fact blown up at all." We are now in a new era of war "coverage."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 08:47:29 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> writes:


    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.

    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Wed Oct 18 10:23:16 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:16:44 AM UTC-7, Gracchus wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:13:39 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:

    And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.

    He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.
    Don't assume I haven't become enlightened since our last discussion.

    I knew it!

    BTW, here are some interesting numbers:
    Gaza population: 2.4M
    Gaza area: 365 square km
    West Bank population: 2.9M
    West Bank area: 5655 square km

    I know it's not so simple, but...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 09:29:50 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> writes:

    jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.52:
    Gracchus <gracchado@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?

    Let's start with religion..

    Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen charlatan,
    thus rendering all religious leaders frauds, all religions shams,
    and all spiritual traditions hocus pocus perpetuated by people who
    believe in Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. And this connection
    thereby proves we need to base our conclusions on empirical evidence
    rather than hearsay. Thanks for the reminder.

    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the
    damn hospital.
    And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.

    He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.

    You're probably right. It's bizarre how eye-poppingly angry he seems to
    get if someone expresses doubt about organized religious belief, or if
    someone blames religion for religious conflicts. He'd rather doubt the
    doubter than question the faith of the indoctrinated.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 10:16:42 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:13:39 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:

    And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.

    He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.

    Don't assume I haven't become enlightened since our last discussion.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 10:35:11 2023
    T24gMTAvMTgvMjMgODo1MyBBTSwgUGV0ZVdhc0x1Y2t5IHdyb3RlOg0KPiBUVCA8VFRAZHBy ay5rcD4gV3JvdGUgaW4gbWVzc2FnZTpyDQo+PiBQZXRlV2FzTHVja3kga2lyam9pdHRpIDE4 LjEwLjIwMjMga2xvIDUuMjY6PiAqc2tyaXB0aXMgPHNrcmlwdGlzQHBvc3QudC1jb20uaHI+ IFdyb3RlIGluIG1lc3NhZ2U6cj4+IFRUIDxUVEBkcHJrLmtwPiBXcm90ZSBpbiBtZXNzYWdl OnI+ICpza3JpcHRpcyBraXJqb2l0dGkgMTcuMTAuMjAyMyBrbG8gMjEuMjc6PiBBdCBsZWFz dCA1MDAga2lsbGVkIGluIEdhemEgQ2l0eSBob3NwaXRhbCBibGFzdCB8IEV1cm9uZXdzPiA+ IGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmV1cm9uZXdzLmNvbS8yMDIzLzEwLzE3L2F0LWxlYXN0LTUwMC1raWxs ZWQtaW4tZ2F6YS1jaXR5LWhvc3BpdGFsLWJsYXN0PiAiVGhlIEhhbWFzLXJ1biBIZWFsdGgg TWluaXN0cnkgaW4gR2F6YSBzYXlzIGFuIElzcmFlbGkgYWlyc3RyaWtlIGNhdXNlZCB0aGUg Ymxhc3QsIGFuZCB0aGF0IGl0IGtpbGxlZCBzb21lIDUwMCBwZW9wbGUiQXBwYXJlbnRseSBm YWtlIG5ld3MuLi5Jc3JhZWwgc2F5cyBpdCB3YXMgbWlzZmlyZWQgSGFtYXMgcm9ja2V0Lkl0 J3MgSGFtYXMnIHdvcmQgYWdhaW5zdCBJc3JhZWwncywgd2l0aCBjb3VwbGUgdmlkcyB3aGlj aCB3b3VsZCBzZWVtIHRvIHN1cHBvcnQgdGhlIGxhdHRlci4uLmh0dHBzOi8veC5jb20vc2Vu dGRlZmVuZGVyL3N0YXR1cy8xNzE0MzgzOTIzODgxMzczOTA4P3M9MjBodHRwczovL3guY29t L21hbm5pZWZhYmlhbi9zdGF0dXMvMTcxNDM3NzgyODEzMTU1MzQ0Nj9zPTIwSXQncyBhIGhp Z2ggcHJpb3JpdHkgZm9yIGFsbCB0byBkZWZsZWN0IHJlc3BvbnNpYmlsaXR5IGZvciB0aGlz LlNvdW5kIGFuYWx5c2lzIHdvdWxkIHN1Z2dlc3QgaXQncyB0aGUgSmV3cy5odHRwczovL3R3 aXR0ZXIuY29tL2phY2tzb25oaW5rbGxlL3N0YXR1cy8xNzE0Mzk5MDA1Mzk5MDExNDA2P3Q9 ZVV1MXVCTmhfeVRZRW11Q05rV0lBUSZzPTE5LS0gLS0tLUFuZHJvaWQgTmV3c0dyb3VwIFJl YWRlci0tLS1odHRwczovL3BpYW9ob25nLnMzLXVzLXdlc3QtMi5hbWF6b25hd3MuY29tL3Vz ZW5ldC9pbmRleC5odG1sPiA+IFNvIHRoZSBpc3N1ZSBiZWNhbWUgY2VudGVyZWQgYXJvdW5k IHRoZSA0MDAtNTAwIHRoYXQgd2VyZSBpbiB0aGUgaG9zcGl0YWw/IEJ1dCB0aGUgdGhvdXNh bmRzIHRoYXQgZ290IGtpbGxlZCBhbmQgd291bmRlZCBqdXN0IGluIE9jdG9iZXIgZG9uJ3Qg bWF0dGVyPz4gPiBDbGVhcmx5IEhhbWFzIGRpZG4ndCBjYXJlIGFib3V0IFBhbGVzdGluaWFu cyB3aGVuIHRoZXkgZGlkIHRoZWlyIG9wZXJhdGlvbiwgYnV0IElzcmFlbCBpc24ndCBhY3Rp bmcgZ3JlYXQgZWl0aGVyIGFuZCBpdHMgaW5mbHVlbmNlIGlzIGZvcmNpbmcgYWxsIHBvbGl0 aWNpYW5zIGFuZCB3b3JsZCBmb3JjZXMgdG8gYmUgYmxpbmQgd2hlbiBJc3JhZWwgaXMgaGFt bWVyaW5nIHRoZSBjaXZpbGlhbnMgYW5kIGtpY2tpbmcgdGhlbSBvdXQgdG8gdGhlIGJvcmRl cnMuPiBJIGRlZmluaXRlbHkgZ2V0IHdoYXQgSkQga2VlcHMgc2F5aW5nIGFib3V0IHJlbGln aW9ucywgYnV0IHRoaXMgaXNuJ3QgcmVsaWdpb25zLiBJdCdzIGFuIHVucmVzdHJhaW5lZCB1 bm1lcmNpZnVsIGFwcGxpY2F0aW9uIG9mIGEgZGV2YXN0YXRpbmcgb25lLXNpZGVkIG1pbGl0 YXJ5IHBvd2VyIG9uIGNpdmlsaWFucy5UaGUgaG9zcGl0YWwgd2FzIGRlc3Ryb3llZCBieSBz dHJheWVkIEhhbWFzIHJvY2tldCBhaW1lZCBhdCBJc3JhZWwuIElmIGl0IGV2ZW4gd2FzIGEg aG9zcGl0YWwuSXNyYWVsIGhhcyBmdWxsIHJpZ2h0IHRvIGRlc3Ryb3kgSGFtYXMgYW5kIEdh emEuIFRoZSBjb3VudCBpcyBhdCBsaWtlIDMwMDAgd2hpY2ggaXMgbm90aGluZy4gV291bGQg YmUgaW4gaHVuZHJlZHMgb2YgdGhvdXNhbmRzIGlmIElzcmFlbCB3YXMgdXNpbmcgaXRzIGZp cmVwb3dlciBpbmRpc2NyaW1pbmF0ZWx5LiBJc3JhZWwgaGFzIHNob3duIGdyZWF0IHJlc3Ry aWN0aW9uIHNvIGZhci5JZiBhbnlvbmUgd2FzIHJlYWxseSB3b3JyaWVkIGFib3V0IHBlb3Bs ZSBpbiBHYXphLCBvciBldmVuIGNhcmVkIGFib3V0IHRoZW0uLi4gdGhlbiBhcmFiIGNvdW50 cmllcywgaW5jbHVkaW5nIFdlc3QgQmFuaywgY291bGQgZWFzaWx5IG5lZ290aWF0ZSBhIGh1 bWFuIGNvcnJpZG9yIGZvciByZWZ1Z2Vlcy4gQnV0IHRoZXkgZG9uJ3QuIERlYWQgY2l2aWxp YW4gaW4gR2F6YSBpcyBtb3JlIHZhbHVhYmxlIGFzIHByb3BhZ2FuZGEgdG9vbCB0byBBcmFi IG5hdGlvbnMgdGhhbiB0aGUgbGl2ZXMgb2YgdGhlIHBlb3BsZS5TbyBub2JvZHkgY2FyZXMg YWJvdXQgcGVvcGxlIGluIEdhemEsIG5vdCBldmVuIHNvLWNhbGxlZCBQYWxlc3RpbmlhbnMg YXQgV2VzdCBCYW5rLg0KPiBTbyB5b3Ugc2VlIGEgdmlkZW8gaW4gd2hpY2ggZmV3IGxpZ2h0 cyBjb21pbmcgdXAgaW4gdGhlIHNreSBhbmQgdGhleSB0ZWxsIHlvdSBpdCdzIEhhbWFzIHJv Y2tldHMgYW5kIHRoaXMgaXMgdGhlIHByb29mIGZvciB5b3U/DQoNClRoaXMgaXMganVzdCB0 aGUgYmVnaW5uaW5nLg0KDQpXaXRoIGFkdmVudCBvZiBBSSBpbWFnZS9zb3VuZCBtYW5pcHVs YXRpb24gd2UncmUgZ29pbmcgdG8gaGF2ZSB0byByZWZ1c2UgDQp0byBiZWxpZXZlIGFueSBy ZWNvcmRlZCBldmVudC4gVGhlIHJlc3VsdCB3aWxsIGJlIHRvIGVpdGhlciBqb2luIGEgaGFw cHkgDQp0aHJvbmcgb2YgbHluY2hlcnMsIG9yIGJlY29tZSBpbmNyZWFzaW5nbHkgYWxpZW5h dGVkIGZyb20gdGhlIHJlc3Qgb2YgDQpzb2NpZXR5Lg0KDQo+DQo+IERpZCB3ZSBiZWNvbWUg dGhhdCBzdHVwaWQgYmVsaWV2aW5nIGFueXRoaW5nIHdlIHdlcmUgdG9sZD8NCj4NCj4gQW5k IGFzc3VtaW5nIHRoZXNlIHdlcmUgSGFtYXMgcm9ja2V0cywgaW4gdGhlIHNhbWUgZGF5LCBp biB0aGUgc2FtZSB0aW1lLCBpbiB0aGUgc2FtZSBsb2NhdGlvbiwgd291bGRuJ3QgaXQgbWFr ZSBzZW5zZSB0byBoaXQgdGhlc2UgbG9jYXRpb25zIHRvIHNpbGVuY2UgdGhlaXIgZmlyaW5n IHBvd2VyPw0KPg0KPiBBbmQgdGhlbiB5b3Ugd2FudCBBcmFicyB0byBhY2NvbW1vZGF0ZSBh bGwgdGhlc2UgcmVmdWdlZXMgdG8gZ3JhbnQgSXNyYWVsIHRoZWlyIHdpc2ggdG8gdGFrZSB3 aGF0ZXZlciAzJSBvZiB3aGF0ZXZlciByZW1haW5pbmcgbGFuZCBhcyBpdCBoYXMgYWx3YXlz IGJlZW4gcGxhbm5lZD8NCj4NCj4gU2VyaW91c2x5IHlvdXIgcG9zdCBzaG93cyB5b3UgbGl2 ZSBpbiBhIGRpZmZlcmVudCByZWFsaXR5IGFuZCBJIHdhcyBsaWtlIEkganVzdCBuZWVkIHRv IGlnbm9yZSBpdCwgYnV0IEkgZGVjaWRlZCB0byByZXBseSBhbnl3YXkuDQo+DQo+DQo+DQo+ DQoNCi0tIA0KIkl0IGlzIFBvaW50bGVzcywgYW5kIGVuZGxlc3MgVHJvdWJsZSwgdG8gY2Fz dCBhIHN0b25lIGF0IGV2ZXJ5IGRvZw0KdGhhdCBiYXJrcyBhdCB5b3UuIg0KDQotLVNhd2Zp c2gNCg0K

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 19:35:04 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r> PeteWasLucky kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 18.53:> TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r>> PeteWasLucky kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 5.26:> *skriptis <skriptis@post.t-com.hr> Wrote in message:r>> TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:
    *skriptis kirjoitti 17.10.2023 klo 21.27:> At least 500 killed in Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews> > https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast> "The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza says an Israeli
    airstrike caused the blast, and that it killed some 500 people"Apparently fake news...Israel says it was misfired Hamas rocket.It's Hamas' word against Israel's, with couple vids which would seem to support the latter...https://x.com/sentdefender/status/
    1714383923881373908?s=20https://x.com/manniefabian/status/1714377828131553446?s=20It's a high priority for all to deflect responsibility for this.Sound analysis would suggest it's the Jews.https://twitter.com/jacksonhinklle/status/1714399005399011406?t=
    eUu1uBNh_yTYEmuCNkWIAQ&s=19-- ----Android NewsGroup Reader----https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html> > So the issue became centered around the 400-500 that were in the hospital? But the thousands that got killed and wounded just
    in October don't matter?> > Clearly Hamas didn't care about Palestinians when they did their operation, but Israel isn't acting great either and its influence is forcing all politicians and world forces to be blind when Israel is hammering the civilians
    and kicking them out to the borders.> I definitely get what JD keeps saying about religions, but this isn't religions. It's an unrestrained unmerciful application of a devastating one-sided military power on civilians.The hospital was destroyed by
    strayed Hamas rocket aimed at Israel. If it even was a hospital.Israel has full right to destroy Hamas and Gaza. The count is at like 3000 which is nothing. Would be in hundreds of thousands if Israel was using its firepower indiscriminately. Israel has
    shown great restriction so far.If anyone was really worried about people in Gaza, or even cared about them... then arab countries, including West Bank, could easily negotiate a human corridor for refugees. But they don't. Dead civilian in Gaza is more
    valuable as propaganda tool to Arab nations than the lives of the people.So nobody cares about people in Gaza, not even so-called Palestinians at West Bank.> > So you see a video in which few lights coming up in the sky and they tell you it's Hamas
    rockets and this is the proof for you?> There are 2-3 videos and many pics.Hospital is still standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.> Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?> I never believe Twitter instantly.
    But there's some time about the incident already and Twitter hive-intelligence is very fast on finding the truth. People geolocate the videos etc.I'd go as far as to claim that Twitter is faster and even more reliable than news outlets. But you have to
    be familiar with it... see if many and which kind of sources pick the news... and read some comments, since if the news is anywhere viral but false it WILL be debunked rather quickly.> And assuming these were Hamas rockets, in the same day, in the same
    time, in the same location, wouldn't it make sense to hit these locations to silence their firing power?> > And then you want Arabs to accommodate all these refugees to grant Israel their wish to take whatever 3% of whatever remaining land as it has
    always been planned?> You think it's better to continue having people firing rockets from Gaza another 50 years? 2 million people cramped in small spot of desert, the only way to survive being aid from other countries.That's just not viable long term
    solution.I guess it would be fine too if Putin kept bombing Kiev and forced all its civilians moving out to other countries. Oh wait, he will warn them first before the bombing :)-- ----Android NewsGroup Reader----https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.
    com/usenet/index.html



    Putin annexed parts of borderlands (oukraina) and basically returned it to Mother Russia.

    People were given Russian passports immediately.

    Look at how Jewish German media interpreted it?


    https://www.dw.com/en/russia-forces-occupied-ukrainians-to-change-citizenship/a-65522524


    Russia "forces" people to receive citizenship and with it full civil and human rights.

    Lol



    Meanwhile Jews occupied Palestine 56 years ago and haven't annexed it to avoid giving citizenship to Arabs.

    They're not leaving either.

    What they're doing is keeping poor people under military occupation for 56 years.


    Try to grasp that.


    Bush was a notorious criminal but even he held Iraq under militarily occupation for just 1 year.

    Already in 2004, they restored civil life and created puppet Iraqi government etc.



    Military occupation.


    Iraq after Sadam Husein, 2003-2004
    Cca 1 year

    Germany after Adolf Hitler, 1945-1949.
    Cca 4 year

    Palestine after no one, just Jews wanting their land
    1967-present
    Cca 56 years and counting







    --




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  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 19:36:02 2023
    jdeluise <jdeluise@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> writes:> jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.52:>> Gracchus <gracchado@gmail.com> writes:>> >>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>> PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Did we
    become that stupid believing anything we were told?>>>>>>> Let's start with religion..>>>>>> Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen charlatan,>>> thus rendering all religious leaders frauds, all religions shams,>>> and all spiritual
    traditions hocus pocus perpetuated by people who>>> believe in Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. And this connection>>> thereby proves we need to base our conclusions on empirical evidence>>> rather than hearsay. Thanks for the reminder.>>>>>> But back to
    the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the>>> damn hospital.>> And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.>> He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.You're probably right. It's bizarre how eye-poppingly angry he
    seems toget if someone expresses doubt about organized religious belief, or ifsomeone blames religion for religious conflicts. He'd rather doubt thedoubter than question the faith of the indoctrinated.



    Atheism is childish.


    --




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  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 10:37:11 2023
    On 10/18/23 9:53 AM, TT wrote:
    jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.47:
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> writes:


    There are 2-3 videos and many pics.  Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.

    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.

    The hospital appears to be a red herring...
    Parking place of a hospital would be more accurate.

    https://x.com/visegrad24/status/1714598373230088346?s=20

    Is this the hospital where they were beheading babies?...

    :^)

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "The food at the new restaurant was awful--but at least the portions
    were large!" --Sawfish

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Wed Oct 18 19:38:33 2023
    Sawfish <sawfish666@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    On 10/18/23 8:53 AM, PeteWasLucky wrote:> TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r>> PeteWasLucky kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 5.26:> *skriptis <skriptis@post.t-com.hr> Wrote in message:r>> TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r> *skriptis kirjoitti 17.10.2023 klo
    21.27:> At least 500 killed in Gaza City hospital blast | Euronews> > https://www.euronews.com/2023/10/17/at-least-500-killed-in-gaza-city-hospital-blast> "The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza says an Israeli airstrike caused the blast, and that it
    killed some 500 people"Apparently fake news...Israel says it was misfired Hamas rocket.It's Hamas' word against Israel's, with couple vids which would seem to support the latter...https://x.com/sentdefender/status/1714383923881373908?s=20https://x.com/
    manniefabian/status/1714377828131553446?s=20It's a high priority for all to deflect responsibility for this.Sound analysis would suggest it's the Jews.https://twitter.com/jacksonhinklle/status/1714399005399011406?t=eUu1uBNh_yTYEmuCNkWIAQ&s=19-- ----
    Android NewsGroup Reader----https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html> > So the issue became centered around the 400-500 that were in the hospital? But the thousands that got killed and wounded just in October don't matter?> > Clearly
    Hamas didn't care about Palestinians when they did their operation, but Israel isn't acting great either and its influence is forcing all politicians and world forces to be blind when Israel is hammering the civilians and kicking them out to the borders.>
    I definitely get what JD keeps saying about religions, but this isn't religions. It's an unrestrained unmerciful application of a devastating one-sided military power on civilians.The hospital was destroyed by strayed Hamas rocket aimed at Israel. If it
    even was a hospital.Israel has full right to destroy Hamas and Gaza. The count is at like 3000 which is nothing. Would be in hundreds of thousands if Israel was using its firepower indiscriminately. Israel has shown great restriction so far.If anyone was
    really worried about people in Gaza, or even cared about them... then arab countries, including West Bank, could easily negotiate a human corridor for refugees. But they don't. Dead civilian in Gaza is more valuable as propaganda tool to Arab nations
    than the lives of the people.So nobody cares about people in Gaza, not even so-called Palestinians at West Bank.> So you see a video in which few lights coming up in the sky and they tell you it's Hamas rockets and this is the proof for you?This is just
    the beginning.With advent of AI image/sound manipulation we're going to have to refuse to believe any recorded event. The result will be to either join a happy throng of lynchers, or become increasingly alienated from the rest of society.>> Did we become
    that stupid believing anything we were told?>> And assuming these were Hamas rockets, in the same day, in the same time, in the same location, wouldn't it make sense to hit these locations to silence their firing power?>> And then you want Arabs to
    accommodate all these refugees to grant Israel their wish to take whatever 3% of whatever remaining land as it has always been planned?>> Seriously your post shows you live in a different reality and I was like I just need to ignore it, but I decided to
    reply anyway.>>>>-- "It is Pointless, and endless Trouble, to cast a stone at every dogthat barks at you."--Sawfish



    You know, even then there will be ways to know the truth.

    For example, with or without AI, jdeluise types will always be anti-Christian.


    --




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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to skriptis@post.t-com.hr on Wed Oct 18 09:40:08 2023
    *skriptis <skriptis@post.t-com.hr> writes:

    jdeluise <jdeluise@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> writes:> jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.52:>>
    Gracchus <gracchado@gmail.com> writes:>> >>> On Wednesday, October 18,
    2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>> PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?>>>>>>> Let's start with
    religion..>>>>>> Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen charlatan,>>> thus rendering all religious leaders frauds, all
    religions shams,>>> and all spiritual traditions hocus pocus
    perpetuated by people who>>> believe in Santa Claus and the Tooth
    Fairy. And this connection>>> thereby proves we need to base our
    conclusions on empirical evidence>>> rather than hearsay. Thanks for
    the reminder.>>>>>> But back to the issue at hand....none of us know
    who blew up the>>> damn hospital.>> And Gracchus drops in to defend
    religion, yet again.>> He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.You're probably right. It's bizarre how eye-poppingly
    angry he seems toget if someone expresses doubt about organized
    religious belief, or ifsomeone blames religion for religious
    conflicts. He'd rather doubt thedoubter than question the faith of
    the indoctrinated.



    Atheism is childish.

    I'm agnostic, basically. I just don't believe your or any traditional, organized religious nonsense I've encountered. According to Gracchus
    that makes me the next Bill Maher

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 10:40:16 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:29:55 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.52:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>> PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?

    Let's start with religion..

    Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen charlatan,
    thus rendering all religious leaders frauds, all religions shams,
    and all spiritual traditions hocus pocus perpetuated by people who
    believe in Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. And this connection
    thereby proves we need to base our conclusions on empirical evidence
    rather than hearsay. Thanks for the reminder.

    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the
    damn hospital.
    And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.

    He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.

    You're probably right. It's bizarre how eye-poppingly angry he seems to
    get if someone expresses doubt about organized religious belief, or if someone blames religion for religious conflicts. He'd rather doubt the doubter than question the faith of the indoctrinated.

    You see it as "defending religion" because you equate all spiritual traditions with monotheistic fundamentalism and characterize all "religious people" as warmongering hypocrites because of a nominally religious subset who are. I'm just pointing out this
    is another form of extremism and suggesting your family experiences have "radicalized" you.

    As to your other points, I'm not a morning person and it's way too early in the day for me to be eye-poppingly angry. I merely wrote an acerbic response to an acerbic post. And I think my history of comments here on religion over the years shows that I
    very much do question the faith of the indoctrinated as well. For example, I recently said I believed a historical Jesus existed, but went on to say I had doubts as to whether he was more than a human man and did not accept on faith that he died for
    humanity's sins, and so on. That's just one example among many others.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 10:52:05 2023
    On 10/18/23 10:08 AM, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.50:
    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the damn
    hospital.

    Hospital parking area, rather.

    Yes, but let's not forget: they spared the handicapped parking.

    The Israelis are not complete savages, you know...


    Here's the best image: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/F8s3tZ3XwAAg7cG?format=jpg&name=medium

    Here's a good one too... https://edition.cnn.com/2023/10/18/politics/us-intel-gaza-hospital-blast/index.html


    ...How the hell would that cause 500 dead?

    This BBC article has interesting video: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-67144061

    ... Pay attention to people arriving with ambulance. All seem fake
    injuries, people walking holding their head etc.


    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sawfish: A totally unreconstructed elasmobranch. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to bmoore on Wed Oct 18 10:49:12 2023
    On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.
    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.

    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "The food at the new restaurant was awful--but at least the portions
    were large!" --Sawfish

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 11:01:38 2023
    T24gMTAvMTgvMjMgMTA6MzYgQU0sICpza3JpcHRpcyB3cm90ZToNCj4gamRlbHVpc2UgPGpk ZWx1aXNlQGdtYWlsLmNvbT4gV3JvdGUgaW4gbWVzc2FnZTpyDQo+PiBUVCA8VFRAZHByay5r cD4gd3JpdGVzOj4gamRlbHVpc2Uga2lyam9pdHRpIDE4LjEwLjIwMjMga2xvIDE5LjUyOj4+ IEdyYWNjaHVzIDxncmFjY2hhZG9AZ21haWwuY29tPiB3cml0ZXM6Pj4gPj4+IE9uIFdlZG5l c2RheSwgT2N0b2JlciAxOCwgMjAyMyBhdCA5OjE0OjI24oCvQU0gVVRDLTcsIGpkZWx1aXNl IHdyb3RlOj4+Pj4gUGV0ZVdhc0x1Y2t5IDx3YWxlZWQuLi5AZ21haWwuY29tPiB3cml0ZXM6 Pj4+Pj4+Pj4+Pj4+Pj4gRGlkIHdlIGJlY29tZSB0aGF0IHN0dXBpZCBiZWxpZXZpbmcgYW55 dGhpbmcgd2Ugd2VyZSB0b2xkPz4+Pj4+Pj4gTGV0J3Mgc3RhcnQgd2l0aCByZWxpZ2lvbi4u Pj4+Pj4+IE9oLCB5ZXMtLXlvdXIgcGFyZW50cyBoYWQgYSBiYWQgZXhwZXJpZW5jZSB3aXRo IGEgWmVuIGNoYXJsYXRhbiw+Pj4gdGh1cyByZW5kZXJpbmcgYWxsIHJlbGlnaW91cyBsZWFk ZXJzIGZyYXVkcywgYWxsIHJlbGlnaW9ucyBzaGFtcyw+Pj4gYW5kIGFsbCBzcGlyaXR1YWwg dHJhZGl0aW9ucyBob2N1cyBwb2N1cyBwZXJwZXR1YXRlZCBieSBwZW9wbGUgd2hvPj4+IGJl bGlldmUgaW4gU2FudGEgQ2xhdXMgYW5kIHRoZSBUb290aCBGYWlyeS4gQW5kIHRoaXMgY29u bmVjdGlvbj4+PiB0aGVyZWJ5IHByb3ZlcyB3ZSBuZWVkIHRvIGJhc2Ugb3VyIGNvbmNsdXNp b25zIG9uIGVtcGlyaWNhbCBldmlkZW5jZT4+PiByYXRoZXIgdGhhbiBoZWFyc2F5LiBUaGFu a3MgZm9yIHRoZSByZW1pbmRlci4+Pj4+Pj4gQnV0IGJhY2sgdG8gdGhlIGlzc3VlIGF0IGhh bmQuLi4ubm9uZSBvZiB1cyBrbm93IHdobyBibGV3IHVwIHRoZT4+PiBkYW1uIGhvc3BpdGFs Lj4+IEFuZCBHcmFjY2h1cyBkcm9wcyBpbiB0byBkZWZlbmQgcmVsaWdpb24sIHlldCBhZ2Fp bi4+PiBIZSdzIGtlZXBpbmcgYWxsIGRvb3JzIG9wZW4gdG8gaGlzIHVwY29taW5nIGVubGln aHRlbm1lbnQuWW91J3JlIHByb2JhYmx5IHJpZ2h0LiAgSXQncyBiaXphcnJlIGhvdyBleWUt cG9wcGluZ2x5IGFuZ3J5IGhlIHNlZW1zIHRvZ2V0IGlmIHNvbWVvbmUgZXhwcmVzc2VzIGRv dWJ0IGFib3V0IG9yZ2FuaXplZCByZWxpZ2lvdXMgYmVsaWVmLCBvciBpZnNvbWVvbmUgYmxh bWVzIHJlbGlnaW9uIGZvciByZWxpZ2lvdXMgY29uZmxpY3RzLiAgSGUnZCByYXRoZXIgZG91 YnQgdGhlZG91YnRlciB0aGFuIHF1ZXN0aW9uIHRoZSBmYWl0aCBvZiB0aGUgaW5kb2N0cmlu YXRlZC4NCj4NCj4NCj4gQXRoZWlzbSBpcyBjaGlsZGlzaC4NCj4NCj4NCkF0aGVpc20gaXMg c2ltcGx5IGFuIG9yZ2FuaXplZCByZWxpZ2lvbiB3aXRoIHRoZSBwb2xhcml0aWVzIGZsaXBw ZWQuDQoNCi0tIA0Kfn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+ fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+DQoiVGhlIHdvcmxkJ3MgdHJ1dGgg Y29uc3RpdHV0ZXMgYSB2aXNpb24gc28gdGVycmlmeWluZyBhcyB0byBiZWdnYXIgdGhlIHBy b3BoZWNpZXMgb2YgdGhlIGJsZWFrZXN0IHNlZXIgd2hvIGV2ZXIgd2Fsa2VkIGl0LiINCn5+ fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+ fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fn5+fg0KDQo=

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Wed Oct 18 10:05:08 2023
    Gracchus <gracchado@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:29:55 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.52:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?

    Let's start with religion..

    Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen charlatan,
    thus rendering all religious leaders frauds, all religions shams,
    and all spiritual traditions hocus pocus perpetuated by people
    who believe in Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. And this
    connection thereby proves we need to base our conclusions on
    empirical evidence rather than hearsay. Thanks for the reminder.

    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the
    damn hospital.
    And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.

    He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.

    You're probably right. It's bizarre how eye-poppingly angry he seems
    to get if someone expresses doubt about organized religious belief,
    or if someone blames religion for religious conflicts. He'd rather
    doubt the doubter than question the faith of the indoctrinated.

    You see it as "defending religion" because you equate all spiritual traditions with monotheistic fundamentalism and characterize all
    "religious people" as warmongering hypocrites because of a nominally religious subset who are. I'm just pointing out this is another form
    of extremism and suggesting your family experiences have "radicalized"
    you.

    A lot of assumptions about me there. The thing with my parents and the
    zendo happened fairly recently, within the last 10-15 years. LONG after
    I formed my beliefs. They were always spiritual to some degree, I was
    not. They encouraged me to look at different religions including
    judaism and christianity and I was never pressured to get into Zen or
    anything else. It never interested me. But I'm generally OK with
    personal spirituality and belief systems.


    As to your other points, I'm not a morning person and it's way too
    early in the day for me to be eye-poppingly angry. I merely wrote an
    acerbic response to an acerbic post. And I think my history of
    comments here on religion over the years shows that I very much do
    question the faith of the indoctrinated as well. For example, I
    recently said I believed a historical Jesus existed, but went on to
    say I had doubts as to whether he was more than a human man and did
    not accept on faith that he died for humanity's sins, and so
    on. That's just one example among many others.

    OK.. fair enough. But it seems like wherever there is a religious
    debate you're quick to defend people's beliefs because "maybe, we don't
    know everything". I'm well aware we don't know everything, and I'm well
    aware that not everything can be confirmed through empirical evidence.
    I'd argue most of the time religion has nothing to do with that though,
    it's more like glorified sports team worship a la "My Bills", GOAT talk
    with Fed/Djok, etc. except we kill each other over it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Wed Oct 18 11:07:57 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.
    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?

    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.

    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.

    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Wed Oct 18 10:16:34 2023
    Sawfish <sawfish666@gmail.com> writes:



    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.

    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 11:30:01 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:16:40 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:



    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    Now you don't like the absolute statement that was made about Atheism and you started to get into the different details and varieties of it, something you failed to do when you keep attacking religions.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to bmoore on Wed Oct 18 11:35:43 2023
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.
    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever
    increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.

    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.

    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.

    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in
    nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal considerations as unaffordable luxuries.

    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.

    To me, it's an essential skill for the last 100 years or so, and
    becoming increasing valuable for individuals in society.


    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Goodness could be found sometimes in the middle of hell."

    --Charles Bukowski ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 11:26:56 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:05:14 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:29:55 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.52:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >> >>>> PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?

    Let's start with religion..

    Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen charlatan,
    thus rendering all religious leaders frauds, all religions shams,
    and all spiritual traditions hocus pocus perpetuated by people
    who believe in Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. And this
    connection thereby proves we need to base our conclusions on
    empirical evidence rather than hearsay. Thanks for the reminder.

    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the
    damn hospital.
    And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.

    He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.

    You're probably right. It's bizarre how eye-poppingly angry he seems
    to get if someone expresses doubt about organized religious belief,
    or if someone blames religion for religious conflicts. He'd rather
    doubt the doubter than question the faith of the indoctrinated.

    You see it as "defending religion" because you equate all spiritual traditions with monotheistic fundamentalism and characterize all "religious people" as warmongering hypocrites because of a nominally religious subset who are. I'm just pointing out this is another form
    of extremism and suggesting your family experiences have "radicalized" you.
    A lot of assumptions about me there. The thing with my parents and the
    zendo happened fairly recently, within the last 10-15 years. LONG after
    I formed my beliefs. They were always spiritual to some degree, I was
    not. They encouraged me to look at different religions including
    judaism and christianity and I was never pressured to get into Zen or anything else. It never interested me. But I'm generally OK with
    personal spirituality and belief systems.

    As to your other points, I'm not a morning person and it's way too
    early in the day for me to be eye-poppingly angry. I merely wrote an acerbic response to an acerbic post. And I think my history of
    comments here on religion over the years shows that I very much do question the faith of the indoctrinated as well. For example, I
    recently said I believed a historical Jesus existed, but went on to
    say I had doubts as to whether he was more than a human man and did
    not accept on faith that he died for humanity's sins, and so
    on. That's just one example among many others.
    OK.. fair enough. But it seems like wherever there is a religious
    debate you're quick to defend people's beliefs because "maybe, we don't
    know everything". I'm well aware we don't know everything, and I'm well aware that not everything can be confirmed through empirical evidence.

    Okay the last two sentences sound like good start.

    I'd argue most of the time religion has nothing to do with that though,
    it's more like glorified sports team worship a la "My Bills", GOAT talk

    Again, you undid the good promising start we hoped for :)

    with Fed/Djok, etc. except we kill each other over it.

    It's clear it makes you angry that others believe in something you don't. Let people believe and practice what makes them feel good in their lives.
    I honestly respect all religions, and respect people that practice them until any of them jump in my face to tell me I'm doing something wrong or want to dictate something on me.


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 10:40:22 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:16:40 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:



    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities
    flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define
    any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism,
    but that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    Now you don't like the absolute statement that was made about Atheism
    and you started to get into the different details and varieties of it, something you failed to do when you keep attacking religions.

    I've never heard of an "implicit Christian" though. The concepts that
    you learn in the bible aren't anything you'd see, think of, or
    experience on your own without being "taught". At least not in
    totality.

    On the other hand, do you have to "learn" to be an atheist or is that
    actually our default state before the indoctrination begins?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 11:31:40 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:



    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    True. It is an ideology that some (the Bill Maher sorts) espouse with such dogmatic fervor that it sometimes---ironically--resembles radical religious zealotry. One time a guest on Maher's show stated that atheism was a religion and he gave her his look
    of supercilious contempt and sneered, "No it isn't" A week or two later, he gave a mini monologue about this obviously aimed at the guest who was no longer there to defend herself. Typical Maher M.O., although in this case I agreed with his main point.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 11:40:23 2023
    On 10/18/23 11:26 AM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:05:14 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:29:55 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.52:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>>>> PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:

    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?
    Let's start with religion..
    Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen charlatan, >>>>>>> thus rendering all religious leaders frauds, all religions shams, >>>>>>> and all spiritual traditions hocus pocus perpetuated by people
    who believe in Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. And this
    connection thereby proves we need to base our conclusions on
    empirical evidence rather than hearsay. Thanks for the reminder. >>>>>>>
    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the >>>>>>> damn hospital.
    And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.
    He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.
    You're probably right. It's bizarre how eye-poppingly angry he seems
    to get if someone expresses doubt about organized religious belief,
    or if someone blames religion for religious conflicts. He'd rather
    doubt the doubter than question the faith of the indoctrinated.
    You see it as "defending religion" because you equate all spiritual
    traditions with monotheistic fundamentalism and characterize all
    "religious people" as warmongering hypocrites because of a nominally
    religious subset who are. I'm just pointing out this is another form
    of extremism and suggesting your family experiences have "radicalized"
    you.
    A lot of assumptions about me there. The thing with my parents and the
    zendo happened fairly recently, within the last 10-15 years. LONG after
    I formed my beliefs. They were always spiritual to some degree, I was
    not. They encouraged me to look at different religions including
    judaism and christianity and I was never pressured to get into Zen or
    anything else. It never interested me. But I'm generally OK with
    personal spirituality and belief systems.
    As to your other points, I'm not a morning person and it's way too
    early in the day for me to be eye-poppingly angry. I merely wrote an
    acerbic response to an acerbic post. And I think my history of
    comments here on religion over the years shows that I very much do
    question the faith of the indoctrinated as well. For example, I
    recently said I believed a historical Jesus existed, but went on to
    say I had doubts as to whether he was more than a human man and did
    not accept on faith that he died for humanity's sins, and so
    on. That's just one example among many others.
    OK.. fair enough. But it seems like wherever there is a religious
    debate you're quick to defend people's beliefs because "maybe, we don't
    know everything". I'm well aware we don't know everything, and I'm well
    aware that not everything can be confirmed through empirical evidence.
    Okay the last two sentences sound like good start.

    I'd argue most of the time religion has nothing to do with that though,
    it's more like glorified sports team worship a la "My Bills", GOAT talk
    Again, you undid the good promising start we hoped for :)

    with Fed/Djok, etc. except we kill each other over it.
    It's clear it makes you angry that others believe in something you don't. Let people believe and practice what makes them feel good in their lives.
    I honestly respect all religions, and respect people that practice them until any of them jump in my face to tell me I'm doing something wrong or want to dictate something on me.


    That's it in a nutshell, although I'll admit to currently entertaining a
    facet for social stability and peace.

    --
    --Sawfish

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Those are my principles, and if you don't like them...well, I have others." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Shakes@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 12:08:21 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe
    all this nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a
    stand one way or another.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 10:45:33 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:05:14 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:29:55 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.52:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >> >> >>>> PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?

    Let's start with religion..

    Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen
    charlatan, thus rendering all religious leaders frauds, all
    religions shams, and all spiritual traditions hocus pocus
    perpetuated by people who believe in Santa Claus and the Tooth
    Fairy. And this connection thereby proves we need to base our
    conclusions on empirical evidence rather than hearsay. Thanks
    for the reminder.

    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up
    the damn hospital.
    And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.

    He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.

    You're probably right. It's bizarre how eye-poppingly angry he
    seems to get if someone expresses doubt about organized religious
    belief, or if someone blames religion for religious
    conflicts. He'd rather doubt the doubter than question the faith
    of the indoctrinated.

    You see it as "defending religion" because you equate all spiritual
    traditions with monotheistic fundamentalism and characterize all
    "religious people" as warmongering hypocrites because of a
    nominally religious subset who are. I'm just pointing out this is
    another form of extremism and suggesting your family experiences
    have "radicalized" you.
    A lot of assumptions about me there. The thing with my parents and
    the zendo happened fairly recently, within the last 10-15 years. LONG
    after I formed my beliefs. They were always spiritual to some degree,
    I was not. They encouraged me to look at different religions
    including judaism and christianity and I was never pressured to get
    into Zen or anything else. It never interested me. But I'm generally
    OK with personal spirituality and belief systems.

    As to your other points, I'm not a morning person and it's way too
    early in the day for me to be eye-poppingly angry. I merely wrote
    an acerbic response to an acerbic post. And I think my history of
    comments here on religion over the years shows that I very much do
    question the faith of the indoctrinated as well. For example, I
    recently said I believed a historical Jesus existed, but went on to
    say I had doubts as to whether he was more than a human man and did
    not accept on faith that he died for humanity's sins, and so
    on. That's just one example among many others.
    OK.. fair enough. But it seems like wherever there is a religious
    debate you're quick to defend people's beliefs because "maybe, we
    don't know everything". I'm well aware we don't know everything, and
    I'm well aware that not everything can be confirmed through empirical
    evidence.

    Okay the last two sentences sound like good start.

    I'd argue most of the time religion has nothing to do with that
    though, it's more like glorified sports team worship a la "My Bills",
    GOAT talk

    Again, you undid the good promising start we hoped for :)

    with Fed/Djok, etc. except we kill each other over it.

    It's clear it makes you angry that others believe in something you
    don't. Let people believe and practice what makes them feel good in
    their lives. I honestly respect all religions, and respect people
    that practice them until any of them jump in my face to tell me I'm
    doing something wrong or want to dictate something on me.


    Not angry, I'm just embarrassed for your stupidity. You just admonished
    TT for believing a video. You admonished all of us for believing COVID
    stats a couple years ago. But you're totally fine believing in
    something written in a book thousands of years ago and translated
    multiple times since then, or because mommy told you so when you were in
    your crib, or because some "authority" at your place of worship told you
    you're going to hell (or some other similar threat) if you didn't
    believe them. You didn't get any of these beliefs on your own, I'd be
    willing to bet Whisper's house on it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Kalevi Kolttonen@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 19:24:46 2023
    jdeluise <jdeluise@gmail.com> wrote:
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> writes:

    jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.52:
    Gracchus <gracchado@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>> PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?

    Let's start with religion..

    Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen charlatan,
    thus rendering all religious leaders frauds, all religions shams,
    and all spiritual traditions hocus pocus perpetuated by people who
    believe in Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. And this connection
    thereby proves we need to base our conclusions on empirical evidence
    rather than hearsay. Thanks for the reminder.

    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up the
    damn hospital.
    And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.

    He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.

    You're probably right. It's bizarre how eye-poppingly angry he seems to
    get if someone expresses doubt about organized religious belief, or if someone blames religion for religious conflicts. He'd rather doubt the doubter than question the faith of the indoctrinated.

    Religions are so fucking sick and stupid. Oh no! Hah hah haa!

    br,
    KK

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 12:22:47 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:40:28 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:16:40 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:



    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities
    flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define
    any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism,
    but that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    Now you don't like the absolute statement that was made about Atheism
    and you started to get into the different details and varieties of it, something you failed to do when you keep attacking religions.
    I've never heard of an "implicit Christian" though. The concepts that
    you learn in the bible aren't anything you'd see, think of, or
    experience on your own without being "taught". At least not in
    totality.

    On the other hand, do you have to "learn" to be an atheist or is that actually our default state before the indoctrination begins?

    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old, so I guess there was no default state for me.
    Before all religions came, people created their own God figures/symbols and worshipped them.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to Shakes on Wed Oct 18 12:28:04 2023
    On 10/18/23 12:08 PM, Shakes wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any
    specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't
    believe all this nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take
    a stand one way or another.

    When I said that it is an organized religion, essentially reversed, I
    was thinking of a) organization (lack of); b) disbelief in a god (they *believe* that there is *not* a god (belief in the negative position
    rather than the positive); liturgical tracts (lack of).

    To me, absolute knowledge is unattainable for humanity at this time,
    therefore I cannot say with certainty that there is no god or divinity.
    It could be that there is, but I must live my life day-to-day by
    evaluating sensory data; it has been the most reliable course this far.
    It works, mostly, but just as it's possible to walk into a radioactive environment without any sensory warning (to one's possible detriment),
    so it is possible that there is a divine entity that gives no sensory information of its existence. And ignoring this could also prove to my detriment...who knows?

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Man! I'd give my right arm to be ambidextrous!"
    --Sawfish

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 12:26:27 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:45:39 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:05:14 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:29:55 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >> >> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    jdeluise kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 19.52:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:14:26 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?

    Let's start with religion..

    Oh, yes--your parents had a bad experience with a Zen
    charlatan, thus rendering all religious leaders frauds, all
    religions shams, and all spiritual traditions hocus pocus
    perpetuated by people who believe in Santa Claus and the Tooth
    Fairy. And this connection thereby proves we need to base our
    conclusions on empirical evidence rather than hearsay. Thanks
    for the reminder.

    But back to the issue at hand....none of us know who blew up
    the damn hospital.
    And Gracchus drops in to defend religion, yet again.

    He's keeping all doors open to his upcoming enlightenment.

    You're probably right. It's bizarre how eye-poppingly angry he
    seems to get if someone expresses doubt about organized religious
    belief, or if someone blames religion for religious
    conflicts. He'd rather doubt the doubter than question the faith
    of the indoctrinated.

    You see it as "defending religion" because you equate all spiritual
    traditions with monotheistic fundamentalism and characterize all
    "religious people" as warmongering hypocrites because of a
    nominally religious subset who are. I'm just pointing out this is
    another form of extremism and suggesting your family experiences
    have "radicalized" you.
    A lot of assumptions about me there. The thing with my parents and
    the zendo happened fairly recently, within the last 10-15 years. LONG
    after I formed my beliefs. They were always spiritual to some degree,
    I was not. They encouraged me to look at different religions
    including judaism and christianity and I was never pressured to get
    into Zen or anything else. It never interested me. But I'm generally
    OK with personal spirituality and belief systems.

    As to your other points, I'm not a morning person and it's way too
    early in the day for me to be eye-poppingly angry. I merely wrote
    an acerbic response to an acerbic post. And I think my history of
    comments here on religion over the years shows that I very much do
    question the faith of the indoctrinated as well. For example, I
    recently said I believed a historical Jesus existed, but went on to
    say I had doubts as to whether he was more than a human man and did
    not accept on faith that he died for humanity's sins, and so
    on. That's just one example among many others.
    OK.. fair enough. But it seems like wherever there is a religious
    debate you're quick to defend people's beliefs because "maybe, we
    don't know everything". I'm well aware we don't know everything, and
    I'm well aware that not everything can be confirmed through empirical
    evidence.

    Okay the last two sentences sound like good start.

    I'd argue most of the time religion has nothing to do with that
    though, it's more like glorified sports team worship a la "My Bills",
    GOAT talk

    Again, you undid the good promising start we hoped for :)

    with Fed/Djok, etc. except we kill each other over it.

    It's clear it makes you angry that others believe in something you
    don't. Let people believe and practice what makes them feel good in
    their lives. I honestly respect all religions, and respect people
    that practice them until any of them jump in my face to tell me I'm
    doing something wrong or want to dictate something on me.

    Not angry, I'm just embarrassed for your stupidity. You just admonished
    TT for believing a video. You admonished all of us for believing COVID
    stats a couple years ago. But you're totally fine believing in
    something written in a book thousands of years ago and translated
    multiple times since then, or because mommy told you so when you were in your crib, or because some "authority" at your place of worship told you you're going to hell (or some other similar threat) if you didn't
    believe them. You didn't get any of these beliefs on your own, I'd be willing to bet Whisper's house on it.

    You are angry, obviously, calling me names. Clearly I can do the same but religious people don't act this way :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Kalevi Kolttonen@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 19:37:14 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> wrote:
    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old

    So pathetic it is hilarious! Hah hah!

    br,
    KK

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 12:35:08 2023
    On 10/18/23 12:22 PM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:40:28 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:16:40 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities
    flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define
    any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism,
    but that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    Now you don't like the absolute statement that was made about Atheism
    and you started to get into the different details and varieties of it,
    something you failed to do when you keep attacking religions.
    I've never heard of an "implicit Christian" though. The concepts that
    you learn in the bible aren't anything you'd see, think of, or
    experience on your own without being "taught". At least not in
    totality.

    On the other hand, do you have to "learn" to be an atheist or is that
    actually our default state before the indoctrination begins?
    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old, so I guess there was no default state for me.
    Before all religions came, people created their own God figures/symbols and worshipped them.

    The first time you hear thunder while out of doors, you will believe in *something*...

    Prior to that, one's parents are close to god-like.

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "The world's truth constitutes a vision so terrifying as to beggar the prophecies of the bleakest seer who ever walked it."
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 23:02:02 2023
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any
    specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't
    believe all this nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take
    a stand one way or another.

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it without thinking. This is not so.

    As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but
    it's still self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which
    one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in something... be
    it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's
    *my* God that is the right one... it's the other gods that are just
    primitive superstition - not mine!

    If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed.

    As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't
    BELIEVE in something of which you don't have evidence of, then you will
    go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been
    invented by rather primitive people.

    If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear
    to modern man that he indeed exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and
    wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity? Why
    does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he
    watches why does he not do anything?

    Why did he create mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's
    the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc...





    Etc.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to Kalevi Kolttonen on Wed Oct 18 13:11:31 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 3:37:18 PM UTC-4, Kalevi Kolttonen wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> wrote:
    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old
    So pathetic it is hilarious! Hah hah!

    br,
    KK

    Insults don't affect me really, it just reflects the person behind the writing, specially when we discuss topics like this one.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Wed Oct 18 13:10:29 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 3:35:13 PM UTC-4, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 12:22 PM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:40:28 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:16:40 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote: >>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities
    flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, >>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define >>>> any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism,
    but that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    Now you don't like the absolute statement that was made about Atheism >>> and you started to get into the different details and varieties of it, >>> something you failed to do when you keep attacking religions.
    I've never heard of an "implicit Christian" though. The concepts that
    you learn in the bible aren't anything you'd see, think of, or
    experience on your own without being "taught". At least not in
    totality.

    On the other hand, do you have to "learn" to be an atheist or is that
    actually our default state before the indoctrination begins?
    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old, so I guess there was no default state for me.
    Before all religions came, people created their own God figures/symbols and worshipped them.
    The first time you hear thunder while out of doors, you will believe in *something*...

    Prior to that, one's parents are close to god-like.
    -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "The world's truth constitutes a vision so terrifying as to beggar the prophecies of the bleakest seer who ever walked it."
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    AS a five years old child, remember sitting in the balcony at night, looking at the stars and the universe, wondering how it all existed, how it holds itself together, etc.
    Then, I would reach a conclusion there must be a creator that created all of this, and this is when my brain would tell me okay, it was all created but what was there before creation?
    Empty space, vacuum, null, what? but empty space or vacuum is a creation by itself, how was it created or what is it exactly, and my brain keeps going from one level to another.
    But I would always conclude that I can't keep thinking beyond the first levels that I don't have answers for.
    This is when I was five years old.

    On the funny side, sometimes I honestly feel this entire thing called life is all virtual, a game or a program and we are just what is happening in the program.

    But again, who is the coder? :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 13:43:06 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any >> specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't
    believe all this nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then
    take a stand one way or another.

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.

    You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it without thinking. This is not so.

    Many have thought about it. Many haven't. Atheists aren't a monolithic bloc of singular thinking any more than non-atheists are.

    As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but

    it's still self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which
    one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in something... be
    it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's
    *my* God that is the right one... it's the other gods that are just primitive superstition - not mine!

    If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed.

    As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't
    BELIEVE in something of which you don't have evidence of, then you will
    go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been invented by rather primitive people.

    If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear
    to modern man that he indeed exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity? Why does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he watches why does he not do anything?

    Why did he create mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's
    the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc...

    It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old bearded guy in the sky with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting like a human imbued with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be nothing at all! No wonder you find it so easy to
    decide all the universe amounts to.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Shakes@21:1/5 to Like I on Wed Oct 18 13:43:40 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any >> specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't
    believe all this nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then
    take a stand one way or another.
    Agnostic approach is a copout.


    Why so ? I believe it is the most balanced approach considering most of us agree that not everything can be measured or known by current scientific instruments and theories.

    It is hardcore Atheism that is a copout because it dismisses something it cannot measure, right from the get-go.

    Like I said, there are actual experiments (and measurements) done on some well-known spiritual leaders. A balanced approach would be to read them before claiming that all spiritual practices are hocus-pocus etc.

    You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it without thinking. This is not so.


    Thinking is fine for Theology or Philosophy. But, for something that is experiential (like all spiritual practices), thinking will not cut it. Either you experience it yourself, or you could conduct scientific studies on people who are known to have
    genuine experiences.


    As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but
    it's still self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which
    one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in something... be
    it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's
    *my* God that is the right one... it's the other gods that are just primitive superstition - not mine!

    If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed.

    As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't
    BELIEVE in something of which you don't have evidence of, then you will
    go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been invented by rather primitive people.

    If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear
    to modern man that he indeed exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity? Why does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he watches why does he not do anything?

    Why did he create mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's
    the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc...


    This is all true if you go with a man-made idea of "God". An idea from those who don't have any direct experiences.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 22:45:49 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 3:35:13 PM UTC-4, Sawfish wrote:> On 10/18/23 12:22 PM, PeteWasLucky wrote: > > On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:40:28 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote: > >> PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes: > >> > >>> On
    Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:16:40 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote: > >>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes: > >>>> > >>>>>> > >>>>> Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities > >>>>> flipped. > >>>> That depends a lot on if you're
    talking about explicit atheists or > >>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, > >>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted > >>>> practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or
    define > >>>> any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher). > >>>> > >>>> Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, > >>>> but that doesn't make atheism a religion. > >>> Now you don't like the absolute statement that was made
    about Atheism > >>> and you started to get into the different details and varieties of it, > >>> something you failed to do when you keep attacking religions. > >> I've never heard of an "implicit Christian" though. The concepts that > >> you learn in
    the bible aren't anything you'd see, think of, or > >> experience on your own without being "taught". At least not in > >> totality. > >> > >> On the other hand, do you have to "learn" to be an atheist or is that > >> actually our default state before
    the indoctrination begins? > > My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old, so I guess there was no default state for me. > > Before all religions came, people created their own God figures/symbols and worshipped them.> The first time you
    hear thunder while out of doors, you will believe in > *something*... > > Prior to that, one's parents are close to god-like.> -- > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > "The world's truth constitutes a vision so
    terrifying as to beggar the prophecies of the bleakest seer who ever walked it." > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~AS a five years old child, remember sitting in the balcony at night, looking at the stars and
    the universe, wondering how it all existed, how it holds itself together, etc.Then, I would reach a conclusion there must be a creator that created all of this, and this is when my brain would tell me okay, it was all created but what was there before
    creation?Empty space, vacuum, null, what? but empty space or vacuum is a creation by itself, how was it created or what is it exactly, and my brain keeps going from one level to another.But I would always conclude that I can't keep thinking beyond the
    first levels that I don't have answers for.This is when I was five years old.On the funny side, sometimes I honestly feel this entire thing called life is all virtual, a game or a program and we are just what is happening in the program.But again, who is
    the coder? :)


    V'ger


    --




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  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 13:46:12 2023
    On 10/18/23 1:10 PM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 3:35:13 PM UTC-4, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 12:22 PM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:40:28 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:16:40 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:

    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities
    flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or >>>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, >>>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define >>>>>> any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, >>>>>> but that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    Now you don't like the absolute statement that was made about Atheism >>>>> and you started to get into the different details and varieties of it, >>>>> something you failed to do when you keep attacking religions.
    I've never heard of an "implicit Christian" though. The concepts that
    you learn in the bible aren't anything you'd see, think of, or
    experience on your own without being "taught". At least not in
    totality.

    On the other hand, do you have to "learn" to be an atheist or is that
    actually our default state before the indoctrination begins?
    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old, so I guess there was no default state for me.
    Before all religions came, people created their own God figures/symbols and worshipped them.
    The first time you hear thunder while out of doors, you will believe in
    *something*...

    Prior to that, one's parents are close to god-like.
    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >> "The world's truth constitutes a vision so terrifying as to beggar the prophecies of the bleakest seer who ever walked it."
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    AS a five years old child, remember sitting in the balcony at night, looking at the stars and the universe, wondering how it all existed, how it holds itself together, etc.
    Then, I would reach a conclusion there must be a creator that created all of this, and this is when my brain would tell me okay, it was all created but what was there before creation?
    Empty space, vacuum, null, what? but empty space or vacuum is a creation by itself, how was it created or what is it exactly, and my brain keeps going from one level to another.
    But I would always conclude that I can't keep thinking beyond the first levels that I don't have answers for.
    This is when I was five years old.

    On the funny side, sometimes I honestly feel this entire thing called life is all virtual, a game or a program and we are just what is happening in the program.

    But again, who is the coder? :)

    This is really an interesting thing to talk about.

    Thinking about it, I was much less "cosmically" curious. Literally, I
    DID NOT expect to understand the mechanics of the cosmos; I was
    more-or-less content to try to understand physical realty on this
    planet. I cared little about extra-terrestrial phenomenon.

    There was very little cosmic "gee whiz" in me.

    Later, when I heard/read about the late 19th/early 20th C physicists and mathematicians theorizing, I became tangentially interested in the
    cosmos, but more interested in their methodologies--as I understood
    them--for developing their theories. It seemed to me that they were
    attempting to characterize the cosmos by eliminating that which could
    not be verified by lab experiment and/or mathematical modeling.

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe.

    Barbecue grills on fire behind the condominiums that line the 9th fairway.

    I watched casual strollers slip on dog excrement on the boardwalk near the amusement pier.

    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.

    Time for lunch.

    --Sawfish

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 22:54:37 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:>>>>>>> Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.>> That depends a lot on if
    you're talking about explicit atheists or>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted>> practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any>>
    specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).>>>> Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but>> that doesn't make atheism a religion.> > I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that
    is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.> > A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever
    the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this nonsense"."> > Further there have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they
    are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a stand one way or another.Agnostic approach is a copout.You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it without thinking. This is
    not so.As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but it's still self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in something... be it Christian god, Allah, Zeus,
    Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's *my* God that is the right one... it's the other gods that are just primitive superstition - not mine!If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed.As for Christianity, what twisted and
    cruel idea that if you don't BELIEVE in something of which you don't have evidence of, then you will go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been invented by rather primitive people.If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't
    make it unequivocally clear to modern man that he indeed exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity? Why does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he watches
    why does he not do anything?Why did he create mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc...Etc.



    Because He set the rules, not you.

    E.g. Djokovic used to ask himself, "why am I so unlucky to play in same era as Federer and Nadal, two awesome players, it's so not fair".

    Then you become even more humble, accept God's plan, and embrace the challenge.

    10, 20 years later, the burden (the cross) that was given to you is actually a blessing, it helped you to transform yourself, to grow beyond.


    Think of life as surfing, you don't get to control the waves, your task is to ride them.



    And btw collective punishment does exist because everything is intertwined.







    --




    ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to Shakes on Wed Oct 18 13:57:02 2023
    On 10/18/23 1:43 PM, Shakes wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any >>>> specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but >>>> that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't
    believe all this nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then
    take a stand one way or another.
    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    Why so ? I believe it is the most balanced approach considering most of us agree that not everything can be measured or known by current scientific instruments and theories.

    Yes. This is how I see it, too.

    Before the advent of the microscope, there was no awareness of
    paramecia. We are currently further along than that, but it is
    inconceivable to me that we now possess the equipment to detect the
    entire physical universe.

    Think dark matter, e.g.


    It is hardcore Atheism that is a copout because it dismisses something it cannot measure, right from the get-go.
    It is like claiming to have *all* the devices to examine the
    constituents of the cosmos. This is just plain silly.

    Like I said, there are actual experiments (and measurements) done on some well-known spiritual leaders. A balanced approach would be to read them before claiming that all spiritual practices are hocus-pocus etc.

    You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it
    without thinking. This is not so.

    Thinking is fine for Theology or Philosophy. But, for something that is experiential (like all spiritual practices), thinking will not cut it. Either you experience it yourself, or you could conduct scientific studies on people who are known to have
    genuine experiences.


    As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but
    it's still self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which
    one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in something... be
    it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's
    *my* God that is the right one... it's the other gods that are just
    primitive superstition - not mine!

    If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed.

    As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't
    BELIEVE in something of which you don't have evidence of, then you will
    go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been
    invented by rather primitive people.

    If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear
    to modern man that he indeed exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and
    wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity? Why
    does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he
    watches why does he not do anything?

    Why did he create mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why
    sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's
    the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc... >>
    This is all true if you go with a man-made idea of "God". An idea from those who don't have any direct experiences.


    --
    --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "I wouldn't want to belong to a club that would accept someone like me
    as a member." --G. Marx

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Wed Oct 18 12:58:10 2023
    Gracchus <gracchado@gmail.com> writes:

    It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old bearded guy in the sky
    with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting like a
    human imbued with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be nothing at
    all! No wonder you find it so easy to decide all the universe amounts
    to.

    I'd say the VAST majority of religious thinking is exactly along these
    lines though. Only rare outliers have unique beliefs or belief systems
    that they acquired or developed on their own, or that don't involve some
    kind of super-powered deity who is also human-like.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Kalevi Kolttonen@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 21:00:26 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 3:37:18 PM UTC-4, Kalevi Kolttonen wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> wrote:
    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old
    So pathetic it is hilarious! Hah hah!

    br,
    KK

    Insults don't affect me really, it just reflects the person
    behind the writing, specially when we discuss topics like
    this one.

    Well, let us see the quality of your "argument". When *I* was
    about five years old, my brain told me that Santa Claus
    is so real. I saw that bastard every fucking Christmas after
    all. He even gave me some presents.

    Those fucking delusions of the deluded minds... :-)

    br,
    KK

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 23:02:06 2023
    jdeluise <jdeluise@gmail.com> Wrote in message:
    Only rare outliers have unique beliefs or belief systems that they acquired or developed on their own...


    That's heresy.


    Even tennis players are taught how to hit ball from an early age, mastering technique, they're not left on their own to "acquire their own technique".


    How can you be so arrogant?


    --




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  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Wed Oct 18 14:04:51 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 4:46:17 PM UTC-4, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 1:10 PM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 3:35:13 PM UTC-4, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 12:22 PM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:40:28 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote: >>>> PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:16:40 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:

    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities
    flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or >>>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, >>>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted >>>>>> practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define >>>>>> any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, >>>>>> but that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    Now you don't like the absolute statement that was made about Atheism >>>>> and you started to get into the different details and varieties of it, >>>>> something you failed to do when you keep attacking religions.
    I've never heard of an "implicit Christian" though. The concepts that >>>> you learn in the bible aren't anything you'd see, think of, or
    experience on your own without being "taught". At least not in
    totality.

    On the other hand, do you have to "learn" to be an atheist or is that >>>> actually our default state before the indoctrination begins?
    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old, so I guess there was no default state for me.
    Before all religions came, people created their own God figures/symbols and worshipped them.
    The first time you hear thunder while out of doors, you will believe in >> *something*...

    Prior to that, one's parents are close to god-like.
    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "The world's truth constitutes a vision so terrifying as to beggar the prophecies of the bleakest seer who ever walked it."
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    AS a five years old child, remember sitting in the balcony at night, looking at the stars and the universe, wondering how it all existed, how it holds itself together, etc.
    Then, I would reach a conclusion there must be a creator that created all of this, and this is when my brain would tell me okay, it was all created but what was there before creation?
    Empty space, vacuum, null, what? but empty space or vacuum is a creation by itself, how was it created or what is it exactly, and my brain keeps going from one level to another.
    But I would always conclude that I can't keep thinking beyond the first levels that I don't have answers for.
    This is when I was five years old.

    On the funny side, sometimes I honestly feel this entire thing called life is all virtual, a game or a program and we are just what is happening in the program.

    But again, who is the coder? :)
    This is really an interesting thing to talk about.

    Thinking about it, I was much less "cosmically" curious. Literally, I
    DID NOT expect to understand the mechanics of the cosmos; I was
    more-or-less content to try to understand physical realty on this
    planet. I cared little about extra-terrestrial phenomenon.

    There was very little cosmic "gee whiz" in me.

    Later, when I heard/read about the late 19th/early 20th C physicists and mathematicians theorizing, I became tangentially interested in the
    cosmos, but more interested in their methodologies--as I understood them--for developing their theories. It seemed to me that they were attempting to characterize the cosmos by eliminating that which could
    not be verified by lab experiment and/or mathematical modeling.

    -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe.

    Barbecue grills on fire behind the condominiums that line the 9th fairway.

    I watched casual strollers slip on dog excrement on the boardwalk near the amusement pier.

    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.

    Time for lunch.

    --Sawfish

    Science in general tries to describe the observed behavior using math, and of course the captured variables that are used in these formulas are the ones we only know about or have been observing, but there could be many other variables that we don't know
    yet that could fail these formulas in different cases, and still it's only about describing what we observe instead of explaining it.
    For example, gravity and masses' attraction, Newton just put a law for it, Einstein came with the valley and distortion of space/time theory, then now we have masses emitting gravitons.



    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to Kalevi Kolttonen on Wed Oct 18 14:08:03 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 5:00:29 PM UTC-4, Kalevi Kolttonen wrote:

    Those fucking delusions of the deluded minds... :-)

    You meant jdeluise?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 13:07:06 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> writes:


    You are angry, obviously, calling me names.

    Not angry, just stating facts.

    Clearly I can do the same
    but religious people don't act this way :)

    You're not so unflappable, just get you in a room with Courty and the
    claws come out :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 14:12:47 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 5:07:11 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    You are angry, obviously, calling me names.
    Not angry, just stating facts.

    It's a fact for you, but this does not make it a universal fact.

    Clearly I can do the same
    but religious people don't act this way :)
    You're not so unflappable, just get you in a room with Courty and the
    claws come out :)

    I have been here in rst for maybe 20 years, I got the durability stamp.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to skriptis@post.t-com.hr on Wed Oct 18 13:23:17 2023
    *skriptis <skriptis@post.t-com.hr> writes:

    jdeluise <jdeluise@gmail.com> Wrote in message:
    Only rare outliers have unique beliefs or belief systems that they
    acquired or developed on their own...


    That's heresy.


    Even tennis players are taught how to hit ball from an early age,
    mastering technique, they're not left on their own to "acquire their
    own technique".


    How can you be so arrogant?

    But the point stands. Most people DO believe in super-powered deities
    in human form, or just buy in to whatever mommy said or whatever the
    preacher bullied them into accepting. Others use church as some kind of
    social club or a place where they can drum up business from other
    churchgoers.

    No, the vast majority of the religious people didn't follow some long, thoughtful, personal journey to arrive at their faith. Their faith WAS
    the path of least resistance. Why should I treat such beliefs with any deference?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 14:16:17 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 5:02:05 PM UTC-4, *skriptis wrote:
    jdeluise <jdel...@gmail.com> Wrote in message:
    Only rare outliers have unique beliefs or belief systems that they acquired or developed on their own...


    That's heresy.


    Even tennis players are taught how to hit ball from an early age, mastering technique, they're not left on their own to "acquire their own technique".


    How can you be so arrogant?

    https://www.conservapedia.com/Atheism_and_arrogance



    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 13:36:58 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> writes:



    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old, so I guess
    there was no default state for me. Before all religions came, people
    created their own God figures/symbols and worshipped them.

    Five is plenty of time to become indoctrinated into religion.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 23:26:57 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 5:02:05 PM UTC-4, *skriptis wrote:> jdeluise <jdel...@gmail.com> Wrote in message: > > Only rare outliers have unique beliefs or belief systems that they acquired or developed on their own... > > > That's heresy. > >
    Even tennis players are taught how to hit ball from an early age, mastering technique, they're not left on their own to "acquire their own technique". > > > How can you be so arrogant?https://www.conservapedia.com/Atheism_and_arrogance



    Tnx
    --




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  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 13:31:32 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 5:02:05 PM UTC-4, *skriptis wrote:
    jdeluise <jdel...@gmail.com> Wrote in message:
    Only rare outliers have unique beliefs or belief systems that they
    acquired or developed on their own...


    That's heresy.


    Even tennis players are taught how to hit ball from an early age,
    mastering technique, they're not left on their own to "acquire their
    own technique".


    How can you be so arrogant?

    https://www.conservapedia.com/Atheism_and_arrogance



    You could easily replace the word "atheist" with "believer" in that
    quote and it would have the same meaning.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 13:24:56 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 5:07:11 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    You are angry, obviously, calling me names.
    Not angry, just stating facts.

    It's a fact for you, but this does not make it a universal fact.

    Obviously, there are no universal facts.


    Clearly I can do the same but religious people don't act this way
    :)
    You're not so unflappable, just get you in a room with Courty and the
    claws come out :)

    I have been here in rst for maybe 20 years, I got the durability
    stamp.

    non-sequitur

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 00:39:47 2023
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any >>>> specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but >>>> that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't
    believe all this nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then
    take a stand one way or another.

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.


    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you
    "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution,
    except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic?

    You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it
    without thinking. This is not so.

    Many have thought about it. Many haven't. Atheists aren't a monolithic bloc of singular thinking any more than non-atheists are.


    Pretty sure that everyone has thought about religion to some degree.

    As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but

    it's still self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which
    one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in something... be
    it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's
    *my* God that is the right one... it's the other gods that are just
    primitive superstition - not mine!

    If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed.

    As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't
    BELIEVE in something of which you don't have evidence of, then you will
    go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been
    invented by rather primitive people.

    If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear
    to modern man that he indeed exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and
    wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity? Why
    does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he
    watches why does he not do anything?

    Why did he create mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why
    sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's
    the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc...

    It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old bearded guy in the sky with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting like a human imbued with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be nothing at all! No wonder you find it so easy to
    decide all the universe amounts to.

    Not easy at all. On the contrary, isn't "God" the easy way out... the
    primitive way.

    And how do you figure I was talking only about the 'bearded sky guy'?
    ...Those examples on useless planets, deadly radiation etc refer to god
    which 'just created universe' - and then let it develop without
    interference.
    BUT... what the hell is the POINT believing in such god?

    And what would be the point with a god which creates beginning of
    universe, and then does nothing to it. Yet sends Jesus here to tell us
    that he exists and we must believe in him. Then leaves again. No point
    at all. Absurd idea.

    ...So clearly only point in believing to this god is that he guides
    universe and our existence. Hence I listed his incapability to coherent evolution, why have those planets without purpose etc. Or to the morals
    that bible teaches. Why are children born with sickesses. Why is there
    an insect that plants eggs in butterfly larvae, then the larvae makes a
    cocoon to become a beautiful butterfly... but is eaten alive by the
    insect. Disgusting and extremely cruel. So that counts out intelligent
    design as well.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 01:01:14 2023
    Sawfish kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.57:
    On 10/18/23 1:43 PM, Shakes wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped. >>>>> That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, >>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define
    any
    specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but >>>>> that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly
    disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just
    as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said
    about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to
    paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me
    instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this
    nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the
    spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal
    people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly
    scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a
    stand one way or another.
    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    Why so ? I believe it is the most balanced approach considering most
    of us agree that not everything can be measured or known by current
    scientific instruments and theories.

    Yes. This is how I see it, too.

    Before the advent of the microscope, there was no awareness of
    paramecia. We are currently further along than that, but it is
    inconceivable to me that we now possess the equipment to detect the
    entire physical universe.

    Think dark matter, e.g.


    Yes, we haven't figured out everything. Not sure if we ever can - or
    even need to.

    But before the microscope we thought that diseases were punishment from
    god etc. Replacing what we know with same ages old superstition is still
    no answer.

    Why would there need to be a living being that created universe in first
    place.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 23:48:19 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:>> Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com>
    writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>> Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.>>>> That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,>>>> but even then
    there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted>>>> practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any>>>> specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).>>>>>>>> Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but>>
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.>>>>>> I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.>>>>>> A truly agnostic approach would be akin
    to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this nonsense".">>>>>> Further there
    have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a stand one way
    or another.> >> Agnostic approach is a copout.> > If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.> So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you "can't know". My theory is
    that everything was created by evolution, except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic?>> You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it>> without thinking. This is not so.> > Many have thought about it. Many
    haven't. Atheists aren't a monolithic bloc of singular thinking any more than non-atheists are.> Pretty sure that everyone has thought about religion to some degree.>> As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but> >> it's still
    self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which>> one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in something... be>> it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's>> *my* God that is the right one... it's the
    other gods that are just>> primitive superstition - not mine!>>>> If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed.>>>> As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't>> BELIEVE in something of which you don't
    have evidence of, then you will>> go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been>> invented by rather primitive people.>>>> If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear>> to modern man that he indeed
    exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and>> wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity? Why>> does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he>> watches why does he not do anything?>>>> Why did he create
    mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why>> sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's>> the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc...> > It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old
    bearded guy in the sky with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting like a human imbued with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be nothing at all! No wonder you find it so easy to decide all the universe amounts to.Not easy at all.
    On the contrary, isn't "God" the easy way out... the primitive way.And how do you figure I was talking only about the 'bearded sky guy'?...Those examples on useless planets, deadly radiation etc refer to god which 'just created universe' - and then let
    it develop without interference.BUT... what the hell is the POINT believing in such god?And what would be the point with a god which creates beginning of universe, and then does nothing to it. Yet sends Jesus here to tell us that he exists and we must
    believe in him. Then leaves again. No point at all. Absurd idea....So clearly only point in believing to this god is that he guides universe and our existence. Hence I listed his incapability to coherent evolution, why have those planets without purpose
    etc. Or to the morals that bible teaches. Why are children born with sickesses. Why is there an insect that plants eggs in butterfly larvae, then the larvae makes a cocoon to become a beautiful butterfly... but is eaten alive by the insect. Disgusting
    and extremely cruel. So that counts out intelligent design as well.


    But why not?


    --




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  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 00:52:02 2023
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any >>>> specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but >>>> that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't
    believe all this nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then
    take a stand one way or another.
    Agnostic approach is a copout.


    Why so ? I believe it is the most balanced approach considering most of us agree that not everything can be measured or known by current scientific instruments and theories.

    It is hardcore Atheism that is a copout because it dismisses something it cannot measure, right from the get-go.


    Anyone can make an incredible story. That doesn't mean every
    supernatural story should be considered as valid... especially when
    there's no evidence or even sound logic behind the story.

    Like I said, there are actual experiments (and measurements) done on some well-known spiritual leaders. A balanced approach would be to read them before claiming that all spiritual practices are hocus-pocus etc.


    What kind of experiments & measurements on spiritual leaders? What are
    you referring to? How would a human experiment tell about existence of god?

    You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it
    without thinking. This is not so.


    Thinking is fine for Theology or Philosophy. But, for something that is experiential (like all spiritual practices), thinking will not cut it. Either you experience it yourself, or you could conduct scientific studies on people who are known to have
    genuine experiences.



    Are you talking about out-of-body experience or something? Cue card reading?

    I don't think there have been proven supernatural phenomenon. There have
    been big prizes even (and I think still are) for anyone to make one
    miracle in controlled environment....nobody has collected the prize.

    Google James Randi etc.

    As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but
    it's still self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which
    one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in something... be
    it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's
    *my* God that is the right one... it's the other gods that are just
    primitive superstition - not mine!

    If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed.

    As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't
    BELIEVE in something of which you don't have evidence of, then you will
    go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been
    invented by rather primitive people.

    If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear
    to modern man that he indeed exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and
    wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity? Why
    does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he
    watches why does he not do anything?

    Why did he create mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why
    sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's
    the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc... >>

    This is all true if you go with a man-made idea of "God". An idea from those who don't have any direct experiences.


    That makes it all of us.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 14:01:34 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> writes:


    ...So clearly only point in believing to this god is that he guides
    universe and our existence. Hence I listed his incapability to
    coherent evolution, why have those planets without purpose etc. Or to
    the morals that bible teaches. Why are children born with
    sickesses. Why is there an insect that plants eggs in butterfly
    larvae, then the larvae makes a cocoon to become a beautiful
    butterfly... but is eaten alive by the insect. Disgusting and
    extremely cruel. So that counts out intelligent design as well.

    God put us here so we could eventually invent the medical technology
    necessary for us to all change our genders. I mean, why not? We don't
    know everything.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 14:03:30 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> writes:

    Sawfish kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.57:
    On 10/18/23 1:43 PM, Shakes wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities
    flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists
    or implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit
    atheists, but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly
    accepted practices and rituals. No figures that set the
    boundaries or define any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill
    Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or
    fanaticism, but that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly
    disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's
    just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said
    about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW,
    to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes
    me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this
    nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the
    spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal
    people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly
    scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a
    stand one way or another.
    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    Why so ? I believe it is the most balanced approach considering most
    of us agree that not everything can be measured or known by current
    scientific instruments and theories.
    Yes. This is how I see it, too. Before the advent of the microscope,
    there was no awareness of paramecia. We are currently further along
    than that, but it is inconceivable to me that we now possess the
    equipment to detect the entire physical universe. Think dark matter,
    e.g.


    Yes, we haven't figured out everything. Not sure if we ever can - or
    even need to.

    But before the microscope we thought that diseases were punishment
    from god etc. Replacing what we know with same ages old superstition
    is still no answer.

    Why would there need to be a living being that created universe in
    first place.

    You dummy, didn't you know its "God's Plan"?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Kalevi Kolttonen@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 22:04:37 2023
    jdeluise <jdeluise@gmail.com> wrote:
    Five is plenty of time to become indoctrinated into religion.

    Yes, indeed.

    The fucking priests, kings, presidents, politicians etc.
    absolutely love religion. Using their "holy" texts they
    make common people their brainslaves and obedient servants.

    Don't believe me, no?

    Just look at fucking Putlerlandia. The fucking Russian
    Orthodox priests praise Putler and Putler praises them.
    They piss in the eyes of the common people. So disgusting.

    br,
    KK

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 01:06:31 2023
    PeteWasLucky kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 0.04:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 4:46:17 PM UTC-4, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 1:10 PM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 3:35:13 PM UTC-4, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 12:22 PM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:40:28 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>> PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:16:40 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:

    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities
    flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or >>>>>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, >>>>>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted >>>>>>>> practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define >>>>>>>> any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, >>>>>>>> but that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    Now you don't like the absolute statement that was made about Atheism >>>>>>> and you started to get into the different details and varieties of it, >>>>>>> something you failed to do when you keep attacking religions.
    I've never heard of an "implicit Christian" though. The concepts that >>>>>> you learn in the bible aren't anything you'd see, think of, or
    experience on your own without being "taught". At least not in
    totality.

    On the other hand, do you have to "learn" to be an atheist or is that >>>>>> actually our default state before the indoctrination begins?
    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old, so I guess there was no default state for me.
    Before all religions came, people created their own God figures/symbols and worshipped them.
    The first time you hear thunder while out of doors, you will believe in >>>> *something*...

    Prior to that, one's parents are close to god-like.
    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "The world's truth constitutes a vision so terrifying as to beggar the prophecies of the bleakest seer who ever walked it."
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    AS a five years old child, remember sitting in the balcony at night, looking at the stars and the universe, wondering how it all existed, how it holds itself together, etc.
    Then, I would reach a conclusion there must be a creator that created all of this, and this is when my brain would tell me okay, it was all created but what was there before creation?
    Empty space, vacuum, null, what? but empty space or vacuum is a creation by itself, how was it created or what is it exactly, and my brain keeps going from one level to another.
    But I would always conclude that I can't keep thinking beyond the first levels that I don't have answers for.
    This is when I was five years old.

    On the funny side, sometimes I honestly feel this entire thing called life is all virtual, a game or a program and we are just what is happening in the program.

    But again, who is the coder? :)
    This is really an interesting thing to talk about.

    Thinking about it, I was much less "cosmically" curious. Literally, I
    DID NOT expect to understand the mechanics of the cosmos; I was
    more-or-less content to try to understand physical realty on this
    planet. I cared little about extra-terrestrial phenomenon.

    There was very little cosmic "gee whiz" in me.

    Later, when I heard/read about the late 19th/early 20th C physicists and
    mathematicians theorizing, I became tangentially interested in the
    cosmos, but more interested in their methodologies--as I understood
    them--for developing their theories. It seemed to me that they were
    attempting to characterize the cosmos by eliminating that which could
    not be verified by lab experiment and/or mathematical modeling.

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >> I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe.

    Barbecue grills on fire behind the condominiums that line the 9th fairway. >>
    I watched casual strollers slip on dog excrement on the boardwalk near the amusement pier.

    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.

    Time for lunch.

    --Sawfish

    Science in general tries to describe the observed behavior using math, and of course the captured variables that are used in these formulas are the ones we only know about or have been observing, but there could be many other variables that we don't
    know yet that could fail these formulas in different cases, and still it's only about describing what we observe instead of explaining it.
    For example, gravity and masses' attraction, Newton just put a law for it, Einstein came with the valley and distortion of space/time theory, then now we have masses emitting gravitons.



    Physical phenomenons are probably best explained by physics - even
    flawed physics - than theology.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 01:18:09 2023
    Kalevi Kolttonen kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.04:
    jdeluise <jdeluise@gmail.com> wrote:
    Five is plenty of time to become indoctrinated into religion.

    Yes, indeed.

    The fucking priests, kings, presidents, politicians etc.
    absolutely love religion. Using their "holy" texts they
    make common people their brainslaves and obedient servants.


    There's much truth to this. Think of church in Middle Ages. Think of
    Muslim priests. Think of taxes.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 01:15:28 2023
    jdeluise kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.01:
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> writes:


    ...So clearly only point in believing to this god is that he guides
    universe and our existence. Hence I listed his incapability to
    coherent evolution, why have those planets without purpose etc. Or to
    the morals that bible teaches. Why are children born with
    sickesses. Why is there an insect that plants eggs in butterfly
    larvae, then the larvae makes a cocoon to become a beautiful
    butterfly... but is eaten alive by the insect. Disgusting and
    extremely cruel. So that counts out intelligent design as well.

    God put us here so we could eventually invent the medical technology necessary for us to all change our genders. I mean, why not? We don't
    know everything.

    Now there's an argument to mess up with heads of woke believers.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 01:25:48 2023
    TT kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.01:
    Sawfish kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.57:
    On 10/18/23 1:43 PM, Shakes wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped. >>>>>> That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or >>>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, >>>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or
    define any
    specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, >>>>>> but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly
    disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just
    as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said
    about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW,
    to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes
    me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this
    nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the
    spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal
    people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly
    scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a
    stand one way or another.
    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    Why so ? I believe it is the most balanced approach considering most
    of us agree that not everything can be measured or known by current
    scientific instruments and theories.

    Yes. This is how I see it, too.

    Before the advent of the microscope, there was no awareness of
    paramecia. We are currently further along than that, but it is
    inconceivable to me that we now possess the equipment to detect the
    entire physical universe.

    Think dark matter, e.g.


    Yes, we haven't figured out everything. Not sure if we ever can - or
    even need to.

    But before the microscope we thought that diseases were punishment from
    god etc. Replacing what we know with same ages old superstition is still
    no answer.


    "Replacing what we DON'T know", rather.

    Why would there need to be a living being that created universe in first place.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Custos Custodum@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 23:28:06 2023
    On Thu, 19 Oct 2023 01:06:31 +0300, TT <TT@dprk.kp> wrote:

    PeteWasLucky kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 0.04:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 4:46:17?PM UTC-4, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 1:10 PM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 3:35:13?PM UTC-4, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 12:22 PM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:40:28?PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>>> PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:16:40?PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:

    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities >>>>>>>>>> flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or >>>>>>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, >>>>>>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted >>>>>>>>> practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define >>>>>>>>> any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, >>>>>>>>> but that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    Now you don't like the absolute statement that was made about Atheism >>>>>>>> and you started to get into the different details and varieties of it, >>>>>>>> something you failed to do when you keep attacking religions.
    I've never heard of an "implicit Christian" though. The concepts that >>>>>>> you learn in the bible aren't anything you'd see, think of, or
    experience on your own without being "taught". At least not in
    totality.

    On the other hand, do you have to "learn" to be an atheist or is that >>>>>>> actually our default state before the indoctrination begins?
    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old, so I guess there was no default state for me.
    Before all religions came, people created their own God figures/symbols and worshipped them.
    The first time you hear thunder while out of doors, you will believe in >>>>> *something*...

    Prior to that, one's parents are close to god-like.
    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "The world's truth constitutes a vision so terrifying as to beggar the prophecies of the bleakest seer who ever walked it."
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    AS a five years old child, remember sitting in the balcony at night, looking at the stars and the universe, wondering how it all existed, how it holds itself together, etc.
    Then, I would reach a conclusion there must be a creator that created all of this, and this is when my brain would tell me okay, it was all created but what was there before creation?
    Empty space, vacuum, null, what? but empty space or vacuum is a creation by itself, how was it created or what is it exactly, and my brain keeps going from one level to another.
    But I would always conclude that I can't keep thinking beyond the first levels that I don't have answers for.
    This is when I was five years old.

    On the funny side, sometimes I honestly feel this entire thing called life is all virtual, a game or a program and we are just what is happening in the program.

    But again, who is the coder? :)
    This is really an interesting thing to talk about.

    Thinking about it, I was much less "cosmically" curious. Literally, I
    DID NOT expect to understand the mechanics of the cosmos; I was
    more-or-less content to try to understand physical realty on this
    planet. I cared little about extra-terrestrial phenomenon.

    There was very little cosmic "gee whiz" in me.

    Later, when I heard/read about the late 19th/early 20th C physicists and >>> mathematicians theorizing, I became tangentially interested in the
    cosmos, but more interested in their methodologies--as I understood
    them--for developing their theories. It seemed to me that they were
    attempting to characterize the cosmos by eliminating that which could
    not be verified by lab experiment and/or mathematical modeling.

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >>> I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe.

    Barbecue grills on fire behind the condominiums that line the 9th fairway. >>>
    I watched casual strollers slip on dog excrement on the boardwalk near the amusement pier.

    All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.

    Time for lunch.

    --Sawfish

    Science in general tries to describe the observed behavior using math, and of course the captured variables that are used in these formulas are the ones we only know about or have been observing, but there could be many other variables that we don't
    know yet that could fail these formulas in different cases, and still it's only about describing what we observe instead of explaining it.
    For example, gravity and masses' attraction, Newton just put a law for it, Einstein came with the valley and distortion of space/time theory, then now we have masses emitting gravitons.



    Physical phenomenons are probably best explained by physics - even
    flawed physics - than theology.

    As Richard Feynman put it: "I would rather have questions that cannot
    be answered, than answers that cannot be questioned."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Wed Oct 18 15:31:30 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:58:16 PM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:

    It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old bearded guy in the sky with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting like a human imbued with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be nothing at
    all! No wonder you find it so easy to decide all the universe amounts
    to.

    I'd say the VAST majority of religious thinking is exactly along these
    lines though. Only rare outliers have unique beliefs or belief systems
    that they acquired or developed on their own, or that don't involve some kind of super-powered deity who is also human-like.

    The majority who call themselves members of the major monotheistic religions may think that way or something too close to it. But I don't believe less conventional religious or spiritual thought is as rare as you are saying.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Wed Oct 18 19:04:33 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09PM UTC-7, TT wrote:>> Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com>
    writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>> Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.>>>> That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,>>>> but even then
    there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted>>>> practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any>>>> specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).>>>>>>>> Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but>>
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.>>>>>> I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.>>>>>> A truly agnostic approach would be akin
    to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this nonsense".">>>>>> Further there
    have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a stand one way
    or another.> >> Agnostic approach is a copout.> > If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.> So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you "can't know". My theory is
    that everything was created by evolution, except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic?>> You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it>> without thinking. This is not so.> > Many have thought about it. Many
    haven't. Atheists aren't a monolithic bloc of singular thinking any more than non-atheists are.> Pretty sure that everyone has thought about religion to some degree.>> As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but> >> it's still
    self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which>> one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in something... be>> it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's>> *my* God that is the right one... it's the
    other gods that are just>> primitive superstition - not mine!>>>> If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed.>>>> As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't>> BELIEVE in something of which you don't
    have evidence of, then you will>> go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been>> invented by rather primitive people.>>>> If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear>> to modern man that he indeed
    exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and>> wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity? Why>> does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he>> watches why does he not do anything?>>>> Why did he create
    mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why>> sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's>> the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc...> > It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old
    bearded guy in the sky with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting like a human imbued with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be nothing at all! No wonder you find it so easy to decide all the universe amounts to.Not easy at all.
    On the contrary, isn't "God" the easy way out... the primitive way.And how do you figure I was talking only about the 'bearded sky guy'?...Those examples on useless planets, deadly radiation etc refer to god which 'just created universe' - and then let
    it develop without interference.BUT... what the hell is the POINT believing in such god?And what would be the point with a god which creates beginning of universe, and then does nothing to it. Yet sends Jesus here to tell us that he exists and we must
    believe in him. Then leaves again. No point at all. Absurd idea....So clearly only point in believing to this god is that he guides universe and our existence. Hence I listed his incapability to coherent evolution, why have those planets without purpose
    etc. Or to the morals that bible teaches. Why are children born with sickesses. Why is there an insect that plants eggs in butterfly larvae, then the larvae makes a cocoon to become a beautiful butterfly... but is eaten alive by the insect. Disgusting
    and extremely cruel. So that counts out intelligent design as well.

    Forcing our paths or to be given free will? Which one would you choose?

    It's free will. Living our lives thinking about the stuff we are discussing now, taking things by reasons, understanding consequences and harvesting the fruit of what we do, is what we were given in this life.

    We were given the option to build and shape our lives, come with science and medics, invent weapons, wipe out each other, or live in peace, it's all up to us to decide.

    It seems the more advanced we get, and more we think we invented, the more arrogant we get assuming we know everything, and we are too good to have a creator :)

    You wake up in the morning, you find a nice made breakfast, you never say wow, I love evolution that made me this breakfast.

    You never question there is a maker of every object in your life, phone, car, bread, etc, but when it has to do with us humans, animals, everything in our lives, we deny there is a creator, and we contribute all of this to evolution.

    Sickness and poverty is something we are supposed to address ourselves but you are blaming God for it instead of saying why we are ignoring it

    Isn't free will interesting?

    No one said it's supposed to be heaven, but if you want to talk about heavens, it's detailed in religions.
    --




    ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to Classic strawman. I on Wed Oct 18 15:53:07 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:39:52 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.

    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution,
    except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic?

    Classic strawman. I said I kept my mind open to possibilities, which is not the same as "believing in." Many things which "rationalists" or scientists of their time once ridiculed were later validated by science. Others which science once accepted as
    incontrovertible fact turned out to be bogus. But you seem to believe science is close to knowing most of what matters already. Most reasonable scientists (those for whom humility counterbalances arrogance) will admit the state of humankind's collective
    knowledge is a work in progress and probably always will be.

    You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it >> without thinking. This is not so.

    Many have thought about it. Many haven't. Atheists aren't a monolithic bloc of singular thinking any more than non-atheists are.

    Pretty sure that everyone has thought about religion to some degree.
    As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but

    it's still self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which
    one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in something... be >> it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's >> *my* God that is the right one... it's the other gods that are just
    primitive superstition - not mine!

    If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed. >>
    As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't
    BELIEVE in something of which you don't have evidence of, then you will >> go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been
    invented by rather primitive people.

    If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear >> to modern man that he indeed exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and >> wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity? Why >> does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he
    watches why does he not do anything?

    Why did he create mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why
    sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's
    the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc...

    It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old bearded guy in the sky with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting like a human imbued with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be nothing at all! No wonder you find it so easy to
    decide all the universe amounts to.

    Not easy at all. On the contrary, isn't "God" the easy way out... the primitive way.

    And how do you figure I was talking only about the 'bearded sky guy'?

    Because what you are saying would only make sense in that context.

    ...Those examples on useless planets, deadly radiation etc refer to god which 'just created universe' - and
    then let it develop without
    interference.
    BUT... what the hell is the POINT believing in such god?

    And what would be the point with a god which creates beginning of
    universe, and then does nothing to it. Yet sends Jesus here to tell us
    that he exists and we must believe in him. Then leaves again. No point
    at all. Absurd idea.

    ...So clearly only point in believing to this god is that he guides
    universe and our existence. Hence I listed his incapability to coherent evolution, why have those planets without purpose etc. Or to the morals
    that bible teaches. Why are children born with sickesses. Why is there
    an insect that plants eggs in butterfly larvae, then the larvae makes a cocoon to become a beautiful butterfly... but is eaten alive by the
    insect. Disgusting and extremely cruel. So that counts out intelligent design as well.

    Intelligent design doesn't necessarily mean KIND design. :) When thinking about these things, I barely take the Bible into account.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Wed Oct 18 15:46:24 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> writes:


    Forcing our paths or to be given free will? Which one would you
    choose?

    It's free will. Living our lives thinking about the stuff we are
    discussing now, taking things by reasons, understanding consequences
    and harvesting the fruit of what we do, is what we were given in this
    life.

    We were given the option to build and shape our lives, come with
    science and medics, invent weapons, wipe out each other, or live in
    peace, it's all up to us to decide.

    It seems the more advanced we get, and more we think we invented, the
    more arrogant we get assuming we know everything, and we are too good
    to have a creator :)

    You wake up in the morning, you find a nice made breakfast, you never
    say wow, I love evolution that made me this breakfast.

    You never question there is a maker of every object in your life,
    phone, car, bread, etc, but when it has to do with us humans, animals, everything in our lives, we deny there is a creator, and we contribute
    all of this to evolution.

    Sickness and poverty is something we are supposed to address ourselves
    but you are blaming God for it instead of saying why we are ignoring
    it

    Isn't free will interesting?

    No one said it's supposed to be heaven, but if you want to talk about heavens, it's detailed in religions.

    Here's a very fitting quote for you :)

    The religious community has a lamentable tendency to make the same
    mistakes over and over...

    Yet there are those who seem to believe that, just by becoming a
    believer, they've proven their superior rationality and are qualified to
    opine on any subject. Worse, this attitude often comes with an arrogant
    certainty that they have no need to listen or learn from people who've
    actually lived through moral dilemmas that are merely abstract to
    them.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 17:05:36 2023
    On 10/18/23 2:39 PM, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped. >>>>> That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, >>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or
    define any
    specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism,
    but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly
    disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just
    as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said
    about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW,
    to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes
    me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this
    nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the
    spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal
    people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly
    scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a
    stand one way or another.

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's
    extreme limitations, count me in.


    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because
    you "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by
    evolution, except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger.
    Agnostic?

    You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but
    dismissed it
    without thinking. This is not so.

    Many have thought about it. Many haven't. Atheists aren't a
    monolithic bloc of singular thinking any more than non-atheists are.


    Pretty sure that everyone has thought about religion to some degree.

    As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but

    it's still self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which
    one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in
    something... be
    it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's
    *my* God that is the right one... it's the other gods that are just
    primitive superstition - not mine!

    If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be
    allowed.

    As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't
    BELIEVE in something of which you don't have evidence of, then you will
    go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been
    invented by rather primitive people.

    If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear
    to modern man that he indeed exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and
    wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity?
    Why
    does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he
    watches why does he not do anything?

    Why did he create mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why
    sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's
    the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer?
    etc...

    It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old bearded guy in the
    sky with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting
    like a human imbued with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be
    nothing at all! No wonder you find it so easy to decide all the
    universe amounts to.

    Not easy at all. On the contrary, isn't "God" the easy way out... the primitive way.

    And how do you figure I was talking only about the 'bearded sky guy'? ...Those examples on useless planets, deadly radiation etc refer to
    god which 'just created universe' - and then let it develop without interference.
    BUT... what the hell is the POINT believing in such god?

    And what would be the point with a god which creates beginning of
    universe, and then does nothing to it. Yet sends Jesus here to tell us
    that he exists and we must believe in him. Then leaves again. No point
    at all. Absurd idea.

    Kinda makes sense as a controlled experiment.

    Pleasant thought, that...


    ...So clearly only point in believing to this god is that he guides
    universe and our existence. Hence I listed his incapability to
    coherent evolution, why have those planets without purpose etc. Or to
    the morals that bible teaches. Why are children born with sickesses.
    Why is there an insect that plants eggs in butterfly larvae, then the
    larvae makes a cocoon to become a beautiful butterfly... but is eaten
    alive by the insect. Disgusting and extremely cruel. So that counts
    out intelligent design as well.

    I see your point, TT, but what you've described might also be the
    product of a different set of priorities *that are not human-centric*.
    One might even characterize  these as essentially malevolent.

    I think that some religions, instead of characterizing our perceived
    existence as the product of a benign god, being plagued by an annoying
    fallen angel with a chip on his shoulder, the cosmos are an equal
    playing fielded being contested between "good" and "evil".

    Me, I never really think this way, merely thinking that yep, against all
    odds maybe this is accurate, but I'm much too busy living my life in a Newtonian reality to care much.

    ...and consider this...

    I'm now pretty old, pushing my genetic limit. For my entire life there
    has never been any lever on me, such that I modify my behavior to
    conform to a certain dogma, or else suffer endless torment. So it goes
    beyond fear of death, itself, and into fear of what happens *after* death.

    ...which so far as I can see does not exist.

    Imagine being buffaloed into conformity for your entire life by vaporware.

    If one really needs to be threatened by damnation to act like a decent
    human being, I'd argue that they're not really decent, at all. Just
    fearful opportunists.

    --
    --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "The big print gives it to you; the small print takes it away."

    Andy, from Amos 'n' Andy, on legal contracts... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 17:10:42 2023
    On 10/18/23 2:39 PM, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped. >>>>> That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, >>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or
    define any
    specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism,
    but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly
    disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just
    as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said
    about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW,
    to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes
    me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this
    nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the
    spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal
    people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly
    scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a
    stand one way or another.

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's
    extreme limitations, count me in.


    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because
    you "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by
    evolution, except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger.
    Agnostic?

    You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but
    dismissed it
    without thinking. This is not so.

    Many have thought about it. Many haven't. Atheists aren't a
    monolithic bloc of singular thinking any more than non-atheists are.


    Pretty sure that everyone has thought about religion to some degree.

    As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but

    it's still self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which
    one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in
    something... be
    it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's
    *my* God that is the right one... it's the other gods that are just
    primitive superstition - not mine!

    If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be
    allowed.

    As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't
    BELIEVE in something of which you don't have evidence of, then you will
    go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been
    invented by rather primitive people.

    If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear
    to modern man that he indeed exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and
    wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity?
    Why
    does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he
    watches why does he not do anything?

    Why did he create mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why
    sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's
    the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer?
    etc...

    It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old bearded guy in the
    sky with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting
    like a human imbued with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be
    nothing at all! No wonder you find it so easy to decide all the
    universe amounts to.

    Not easy at all. On the contrary, isn't "God" the easy way out... the primitive way.

    And how do you figure I was talking only about the 'bearded sky guy'? ...Those examples on useless planets, deadly radiation etc refer to
    god which 'just created universe' - and then let it develop without interference.
    BUT... what the hell is the POINT believing in such god?

    And what would be the point with a god which creates beginning of
    universe, and then does nothing to it. Yet sends Jesus here to tell us
    that he exists and we must believe in him. Then leaves again. No point
    at all. Absurd idea.

    Kinda makes sense as a controlled experiment.

    Pleasant thought, that...


    ...So clearly only point in believing to this god is that he guides
    universe and our existence. Hence I listed his incapability to
    coherent evolution, why have those planets without purpose etc. Or to
    the morals that bible teaches. Why are children born with sickesses.
    Why is there an insect that plants eggs in butterfly larvae, then the
    larvae makes a cocoon to become a beautiful butterfly... but is eaten
    alive by the insect. Disgusting and extremely cruel. So that counts
    out intelligent design as well.

    I see your point, TT, but what you've described might also be the
    product of a different set of priorities *that are not human-centric*.
    One might even characterize  these as essentially malevolent.

    I think that some religions, instead of characterizing our perceived
    existence as the product of a benign god, being plagued by an annoying
    fallen angel with a chip on his shoulder, the cosmos are an equal
    playing fielded being contested between "good" and "evil".

    Me, I never really think this way, merely thinking that yep, against all
    odds maybe this is accurate, but I'm much too busy living my life in a Newtonian reality to care much.

    ...and consider this...

    I'm now pretty old, pushing my genetic limit. For my entire life there
    has never been any lever on me, such that I modify my behavior to
    conform to a certain dogma, or else suffer endless torment. So it goes
    beyond fear of death, itself, and into fear of what happens *after* death.

    ...which so far as I can see does not exist.

    Imagine being buffaloed into conformity for your entire life by vaporware.

    If one really needs to be threatened by damnation to act like a decent
    human being, I'd argue that they're not really decent, at all. Just
    fearful opportunists.

    --
    --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "The big print gives it to you; the small print takes it away."

    Andy, from Amos 'n' Andy, on legal contracts... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Wed Oct 18 16:11:01 2023
    Gracchus <gracchado@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:58:16 PM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    Gracchus <grac...@gmail.com> writes:

    It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old bearded guy in the
    sky with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting
    like a human imbued with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be
    nothing at all! No wonder you find it so easy to decide all the
    universe amounts to.

    I'd say the VAST majority of religious thinking is exactly along
    these lines though. Only rare outliers have unique beliefs or belief
    systems that they acquired or developed on their own, or that don't
    involve some kind of super-powered deity who is also human-like.

    The majority who call themselves members of the major monotheistic
    religions may think that way or something too close to it. But I don't believe less conventional religious or spiritual thought is as rare as
    you are saying.

    Okay, I don't tend to agree but maybe you have evidence to the contrary.
    At any rate, in the context of this thread it's not very relevant. PWL
    is not one of those non-conventional religious or spiritual thinkers and
    he was the one I was responding to. Ironically he was telling TT not to believe his lying eyes... LOL!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 18 17:19:57 2023
    On 10/18/23 3:01 PM, TT wrote:
    Sawfish kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.57:
    On 10/18/23 1:43 PM, Shakes wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities
    flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or >>>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, >>>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or
    define any
    specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or
    fanaticism, but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly
    disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's
    just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said
    about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW,
    to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes
    me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this
    nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the
    spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal
    people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly
    scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a
    stand one way or another.
    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    Why so ? I believe it is the most balanced approach considering most
    of us agree that not everything can be measured or known by current
    scientific instruments and theories.

    Yes. This is how I see it, too.

    Before the advent of the microscope, there was no awareness of
    paramecia. We are currently further along than that, but it is
    inconceivable to me that we now possess the equipment to detect the
    entire physical universe.

    Think dark matter, e.g.


    Yes, we haven't figured out everything. Not sure if we ever can - or
    even need to.

    But before the microscope we thought that diseases were punishment
    from god etc. Replacing what we know with same ages old superstition
    is still no answer.

    Why would there need to be a living being that created universe in
    first place.

    One thing that seems to be hard for anti-evolutionists to conceive of is
    the timescale on which evolution, *on earth*, has played out. In a
    sense, we're 4 B years into the "room full of monkeys with typewriters", pounding out endless reams of gibberish, some of which is the complete
    works of Shakespeare.

    And guess what? They finished Shakespeare sometime in the early
    Mesozoic, and there's no sign that they're stopping. Shakespeare is
    meaningless to them.

    And is evolution strictly confined to life?  One might argue that the
    course of water, as it flows over landscapes of varied terrain, wearing
    away limestone more rapidly than granite, it the same mechanism as
    animate evolution.

    Evolution is wholly a physical, not moral or spiritual, phenomenon.

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. But give a man a boat,
    a case of beer, and a few sticks of dynamite..." -- Sawfish

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Thu Oct 19 01:53:13 2023
    On Wednesday, 18 October 2023 at 17:14:26 UTC+1, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:


    Did we become that stupid believing anything we were told?
    Let's start with religion..

    your religion of unquestioning Marxism is by far the worst!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to bmoore on Thu Oct 19 01:54:43 2023
    On Wednesday, 18 October 2023 at 17:54:29 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:


    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.

    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.

    it good the media have told you which side to pick, so now you can join in the debate at last :D

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Thu Oct 19 02:35:06 2023
    On Wednesday, 18 October 2023 at 19:16:40 UTC+1, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:



    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    atheism is definitely a religion, the boundary is that the whole universe came from a big bang and literally NOTHING, also everything is just a chemical reaction.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to Kalevi Kolttonen on Thu Oct 19 02:43:16 2023
    On Wednesday, 18 October 2023 at 20:37:18 UTC+1, Kalevi Kolttonen wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> wrote:
    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old
    So pathetic it is hilarious! Hah hah!

    yet your brain tells you a man in a dress = a woman and you "don't care about women's sports being wrecked by men in dresses" LOL

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to Shakes on Thu Oct 19 02:38:49 2023
    On Wednesday, 18 October 2023 at 20:08:23 UTC+1, Shakes wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't
    believe all this nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take
    a stand one way or another.

    agnostics are just cowardly fence-sitters, they want the best of both worlds, just means they can't take the whole world being nothing but chemical reactions?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Thu Oct 19 02:41:08 2023
    On Wednesday, 18 October 2023 at 20:22:49 UTC+1, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:40:28 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> writes:

    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:16:40 PM UTC-4, jdeluise wrote:
    Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:



    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities
    flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or
    implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,
    but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted
    practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define
    any specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism,
    but that doesn't make atheism a religion.

    Now you don't like the absolute statement that was made about Atheism and you started to get into the different details and varieties of it, something you failed to do when you keep attacking religions.
    I've never heard of an "implicit Christian" though. The concepts that
    you learn in the bible aren't anything you'd see, think of, or
    experience on your own without being "taught". At least not in
    totality.

    On the other hand, do you have to "learn" to be an atheist or is that actually our default state before the indoctrination begins?
    My brain told me there is a God when I was five years old, so I guess there was no default state for me.
    Before all religions came, people created their own God figures/symbols and worshipped them.

    yes archaelogical evidence looks to show that religion came before everything else, including farming, it's built into people. It's why "atheists" like jdeluise and bmoore grab onto Marxism or "The Party" as their religion instead.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Thu Oct 19 03:07:55 2023
    On Wednesday, 18 October 2023 at 22:23:22 UTC+1, jdeluise wrote:
    *skriptis <skri...@post.t-com.hr> writes:

    jdeluise <jdel...@gmail.com> Wrote in message:
    Only rare outliers have unique beliefs or belief systems that they
    acquired or developed on their own...


    That's heresy.


    Even tennis players are taught how to hit ball from an early age, mastering technique, they're not left on their own to "acquire their
    own technique".


    How can you be so arrogant?
    But the point stands. Most people DO believe in super-powered deities
    in human form, or just buy in to whatever mommy said or whatever the preacher bullied them into accepting. Others use church as some kind of social club or a place where they can drum up business from other churchgoers.

    No, the vast majority of the religious people didn't follow some long, thoughtful, personal journey to arrive at their faith. Their faith WAS
    the path of least resistance. Why should I treat such beliefs with any deference?

    err No, you're clearly wrong cos you don't know any church people. Can guarantee you can't name a single real person who has "taken the path of less resistance" cos you've never gone to church so you wouldn't know anyone that has, now let me guess, did
    you get that wrong impression off atheist TV by chance?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to Kalevi Kolttonen on Thu Oct 19 03:15:21 2023
    On Wednesday, 18 October 2023 at 23:04:40 UTC+1, Kalevi Kolttonen wrote:
    jdeluise <jdel...@gmail.com> wrote:
    Five is plenty of time to become indoctrinated into religion.
    Yes, indeed.

    The fucking priests, kings, presidents, politicians etc.
    absolutely love religion. Using their "holy" texts they
    make common people their brainslaves and obedient servants.

    Don't believe me, no?

    hey you're the sicko who wants to do gender bending mutilation trans surgery on 5 year olds without telling parents!

    Just look at fucking Putlerlandia. The fucking Russian
    Orthodox priests praise Putler and Putler praises them.
    They piss in the eyes of the common people. So disgusting.

    Putler is a proven great humanitarian, he is even trying to solve the Middle East Arab-Israel problem cos the West are so useless at it, like when he had to step in and solve Syria cos Obama was so useless there.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 03:17:10 2023
    On Wednesday, 18 October 2023 at 23:15:32 UTC+1, TT wrote:
    jdeluise kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.01:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:


    ...So clearly only point in believing to this god is that he guides
    universe and our existence. Hence I listed his incapability to
    coherent evolution, why have those planets without purpose etc. Or to
    the morals that bible teaches. Why are children born with
    sickesses. Why is there an insect that plants eggs in butterfly
    larvae, then the larvae makes a cocoon to become a beautiful
    butterfly... but is eaten alive by the insect. Disgusting and
    extremely cruel. So that counts out intelligent design as well.

    God put us here so we could eventually invent the medical technology necessary for us to all change our genders. I mean, why not? We don't
    know everything.
    Now there's an argument to mess up with heads of woke believers.

    not really, it's called living in a fallen world as described in the Bible, none of this woke "oh nobody is actually evil" nonsense.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 13:39:27 2023
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    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 13:26:22 2023
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.53:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:39:52 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.

    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you
    "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution,
    except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic?

    Classic strawman. I said I kept my mind open to possibilities, which is not the same as "believing in." Many things which "rationalists" or scientists of their
    time once ridiculed were later validated by science.

    So you're expecting that science will some day conclude that the
    universe was created by god. Rrrright.

    Intelligent design doesn't necessarily mean KIND design. :) When thinking about > these things, I barely take the Bible into account.

    That's another copout...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Thu Oct 19 03:20:55 2023
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 00:04:39 UTC+1, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:>> Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com>
    writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>> Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.>>>> That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,>>>> but even then
    there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted>>>> practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or define any>>>> specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).>>>>>>>> Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but>>
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.>>>>>> I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.>>>>>> A truly agnostic approach would be akin
    to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this nonsense".">>>>>> Further there
    have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a stand one way
    or another.> >> Agnostic approach is a copout.> > If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.> So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you "can't know". My theory is
    that everything was created by evolution, except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic?>> You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it>> without thinking. This is not so.> > Many have thought about it. Many
    haven't. Atheists aren't a monolithic bloc of singular thinking any more than non-atheists are.> Pretty sure that everyone has thought about religion to some degree.>> As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but> >> it's still
    self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which>> one(s). It comes from primitive human will to believe in something... be>> it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's>> *my* God that is the right one... it's the
    other gods that are just>> primitive superstition - not mine!>>>> If religion includes stuff like Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed.>>>> As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't>> BELIEVE in something of which you don't
    have evidence of, then you will>> go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has been>> invented by rather primitive people.>>>> If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear>> to modern man that he indeed
    exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and>> wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for eternity? Why>> does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he>> watches why does he not do anything?>>>> Why did he create
    mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why>> sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background radiation? What's>> the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc...> > It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old
    bearded guy in the sky with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting like a human imbued with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be nothing at all! No wonder you find it so easy to decide all the universe amounts to.Not easy at all.
    On the contrary, isn't "God" the easy way out... the primitive way.And how do you figure I was talking only about the 'bearded sky guy'?...Those examples on useless planets, deadly radiation etc refer to god which 'just created universe' - and then let
    it develop without interference.BUT... what the hell is the POINT believing in such god?And what would be the point with a god which creates beginning of universe, and then does nothing to it. Yet sends Jesus here to tell us that he exists and we must
    believe in him. Then leaves again. No point at all. Absurd idea....So clearly only point in believing to this god is that he guides universe and our existence. Hence I listed his incapability to coherent evolution, why have those planets without purpose
    etc. Or to the morals that bible teaches. Why are children born with sickesses. Why is there an insect that plants eggs in butterfly larvae, then the larvae makes a cocoon to become a beautiful butterfly... but is eaten alive by the insect. Disgusting
    and extremely cruel. So that counts out intelligent design as well.

    Forcing our paths or to be given free will? Which one would you choose?

    It's free will. Living our lives thinking about the stuff we are discussing now, taking things by reasons, understanding consequences and harvesting the fruit of what we do, is what we were given in this life.

    We were given the option to build and shape our lives, come with science and medics, invent weapons, wipe out each other, or live in peace, it's all up to us to decide.

    It seems the more advanced we get, and more we think we invented, the more arrogant we get assuming we know everything, and we are too good to have a creator :)

    You wake up in the morning, you find a nice made breakfast, you never say wow, I love evolution that made me this breakfast.

    You never question there is a maker of every object in your life, phone, car, bread, etc, but when it has to do with us humans, animals, everything in our lives, we deny there is a creator, and we contribute all of this to evolution.

    Sickness and poverty is something we are supposed to address ourselves but you are blaming God for it instead of saying why we are ignoring it

    Isn't free will interesting?

    No one said it's supposed to be heaven, but if you want to talk about heavens, it's detailed in religions.

    with atheism there's no such thing as free will, as everything is just a planned predictable chemical reaction.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 14:03:00 2023
    Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 3.19:
    Evolution is wholly a physical, not moral or spiritual, phenomenon.

    Yes.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 13:53:43 2023
    Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 3.05:

    If one really needs to be threatened by damnation to act like a decent
    human being, I'd argue that they're not really decent, at all. Just
    fearful opportunists.


    Yup.

    And the idea that god is not human centric would be against the bible I
    think. Why do we believe in god... because of the bible.

    So if you take away the bible and make your own "god exists but it's not
    same as in bible & Jesus wasn't son of god" religion... Then what are
    you left with?
    You're left with a religion which you just made up. There must god
    because I say so.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Thu Oct 19 03:26:56 2023
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 01:20:01 UTC+1, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 3:01 PM, TT wrote:
    Sawfish kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.57:
    On 10/18/23 1:43 PM, Shakes wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities
    flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or >>>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, >>>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted >>>>>> practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or
    define any
    specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or
    fanaticism, but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly
    disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's
    just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said >>>>> about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, >>>>> to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes >>>>> me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this
    nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the
    spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal >>>>> people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly
    scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a >>>>> stand one way or another.
    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    Why so ? I believe it is the most balanced approach considering most
    of us agree that not everything can be measured or known by current
    scientific instruments and theories.

    Yes. This is how I see it, too.

    Before the advent of the microscope, there was no awareness of
    paramecia. We are currently further along than that, but it is
    inconceivable to me that we now possess the equipment to detect the
    entire physical universe.

    Think dark matter, e.g.


    Yes, we haven't figured out everything. Not sure if we ever can - or
    even need to.

    But before the microscope we thought that diseases were punishment
    from god etc. Replacing what we know with same ages old superstition
    is still no answer.

    Why would there need to be a living being that created universe in
    first place.
    One thing that seems to be hard for anti-evolutionists to conceive of is
    the timescale on which evolution, *on earth*, has played out. In a
    sense, we're 4 B years into the "room full of monkeys with typewriters", pounding out endless reams of gibberish, some of which is the complete
    works of Shakespeare.

    And guess what? They finished Shakespeare sometime in the early
    Mesozoic, and there's no sign that they're stopping. Shakespeare is meaningless to them.

    And is evolution strictly confined to life? One might argue that the
    course of water, as it flows over landscapes of varied terrain, wearing
    away limestone more rapidly than granite, it the same mechanism as
    animate evolution.

    Evolution is wholly a physical, not moral or spiritual, phenomenon.

    this is evolution that came from literally nothing, yes. The same evolution that over 4billion years produced the ultra-complex DNS double-helix yet still has endless flaws and has these weird "dead ends" like crocodiles cos of course a crocodile couldn'
    t evolve a single thing better no, zero, not over X MILLIONS of years LOL

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 14:33:41 2023
    The Iceberg kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 13.26:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 01:20:01 UTC+1, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 3:01 PM, TT wrote:
    Sawfish kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.57:
    On 10/18/23 1:43 PM, Shakes wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:


    Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities
    flipped.
    That depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or >>>>>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists, >>>>>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted >>>>>>>> practices and rituals. No figures that set the boundaries or
    define any
    specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).

    Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or
    fanaticism, but
    that doesn't make atheism a religion.
    I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it very strongly >>>>>>> disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's
    just as dogmatic in its approach.

    A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said >>>>>>> about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, >>>>>>> to paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes >>>>>>> me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this
    nonsense"."

    Further there have been studies done on people who are on the
    spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that are beyond normal >>>>>>> people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly
    scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a >>>>>>> stand one way or another.
    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    Why so ? I believe it is the most balanced approach considering most >>>>> of us agree that not everything can be measured or known by current
    scientific instruments and theories.

    Yes. This is how I see it, too.

    Before the advent of the microscope, there was no awareness of
    paramecia. We are currently further along than that, but it is
    inconceivable to me that we now possess the equipment to detect the
    entire physical universe.

    Think dark matter, e.g.


    Yes, we haven't figured out everything. Not sure if we ever can - or
    even need to.

    But before the microscope we thought that diseases were punishment
    from god etc. Replacing what we know with same ages old superstition
    is still no answer.

    Why would there need to be a living being that created universe in
    first place.
    One thing that seems to be hard for anti-evolutionists to conceive of is
    the timescale on which evolution, *on earth*, has played out. In a
    sense, we're 4 B years into the "room full of monkeys with typewriters",
    pounding out endless reams of gibberish, some of which is the complete
    works of Shakespeare.

    And guess what? They finished Shakespeare sometime in the early
    Mesozoic, and there's no sign that they're stopping. Shakespeare is
    meaningless to them.

    And is evolution strictly confined to life? One might argue that the
    course of water, as it flows over landscapes of varied terrain, wearing
    away limestone more rapidly than granite, it the same mechanism as
    animate evolution.

    Evolution is wholly a physical, not moral or spiritual, phenomenon.

    this is evolution that came from literally nothing, yes. The same evolution that over 4billion years produced the ultra-complex DNS double-helix yet still has endless flaws and has these weird "dead ends" like crocodiles cos of course a crocodile
    couldn't evolve a single thing better no, zero, not over X MILLIONS of
    years LOL

    What would you like crocodiles evolve to?

    It's not necessarily that a crocodile couldn't be better. (look at those
    puny legs)
    ...It's just that it didn't need to, it survived as is.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Kalevi Kolttonen@21:1/5 to The Iceberg on Thu Oct 19 12:03:13 2023
    The Iceberg <iceberg.rules@gmail.com> wrote:
    On Wednesday, 18 October 2023 at 23:04:40 UTC+1, Kalevi Kolttonen wrote:
    jdeluise <jdel...@gmail.com> wrote:
    Five is plenty of time to become indoctrinated into religion.
    Yes, indeed.

    The fucking priests, kings, presidents, politicians etc.
    absolutely love religion. Using their "holy" texts they
    make common people their brainslaves and obedient servants.

    Don't believe me, no?

    hey you're the sicko who wants to do gender bending mutilation trans surgery on 5 year olds without telling parents!

    You bastard, I never said anything like that! :-)

    Just look at fucking Putlerlandia. The fucking Russian
    Orthodox priests praise Putler and Putler praises them.
    They piss in the eyes of the common people. So disgusting.

    Putler is a proven great humanitarian, he is even trying
    to solve the Middle East Arab-Israel problem cos the West
    are so useless at it, like when he had to step in and
    solve Syria cos Obama was so useless there.

    Now you are making progress, mate. You called Putler
    "Putler" so you will soon get the whole truth.

    br,
    KK

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 14:24:57 2023
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  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Thu Oct 19 09:26:43 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    The Iceberg kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 13.20:> On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 00:04:39 UTC+1, PeteWasLucky wrote:>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r>>> Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7, TT
    wrote:>> Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>> Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.>>>> That
    depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted>>>> practices and rituals. No figures that set the
    boundaries or define any>>>> specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).>>>>>>>> Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but>>>> that doesn't make atheism a religion.>>>>>> I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it
    very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.>>>>>> A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to
    paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this nonsense".">>>>>> Further there have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that
    are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a stand one way or another.> >> Agnostic approach is a copout.> > If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in
    light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.> So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution, except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger.
    Agnostic?>> You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it>> without thinking. This is not so.> > Many have thought about it. Many haven't. Atheists aren't a monolithic bloc of singular thinking any more than non-atheists are.>
    Pretty sure that everyone has thought about religion to some degree.>> As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but> >> it's still self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which>> one(s). It comes from primitive human
    will to believe in something... be>> it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's>> *my* God that is the right one... it's the other gods that are just>> primitive superstition - not mine!>>>> If religion includes stuff like
    Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed.>>>> As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't>> BELIEVE in something of which you don't have evidence of, then you will>> go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has
    been>> invented by rather primitive people.>>>> If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear>> to modern man that he indeed exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and>> wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for
    eternity? Why>> does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he>> watches why does he not do anything?>>>> Why did he create mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why>> sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background
    radiation? What's>> the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc...> > It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old bearded guy in the sky with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting like a human imbued
    with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be nothing at all! No wonder you find it so easy to decide all the universe amounts to.Not easy at all. On the contrary, isn't "God" the easy way out... the primitive way.And how do you figure I was talking only
    about the 'bearded sky guy'?...Those examples on useless planets, deadly radiation etc refer to god which 'just created universe' - and then let it develop without interference.BUT... what the hell is the POINT believing in such god?And what would be the
    point with a god which creates beginning of universe, and then does nothing to it. Yet sends Jesus here to tell us that he exists and we must believe in him. Then leaves again. No point at all. Absurd idea....So clearly only point in believing to this
    god is that he guides universe and our existence. Hence I listed his incapability to coherent evolution, why have those planets without purpose etc. Or to the morals that bible teaches. Why are children born with sickesses. Why is there an insect that
    plants eggs in butterfly larvae, then the larvae makes a cocoon to become a beautiful butterfly... but is eaten alive by the insect. Disgusting and extremely cruel. So that counts out intelligent design as well.>>>> Forcing our paths or to be given free
    will? Which one would you choose?>>>> It's free will. Living our lives thinking about the stuff we are discussing now, taking things by reasons, understanding consequences and harvesting the fruit of what we do, is what we were given in this life.>>>> We
    were given the option to build and shape our lives, come with science and medics, invent weapons, wipe out each other, or live in peace, it's all up to us to decide.>>>> It seems the more advanced we get, and more we think we invented, the more arrogant
    we get assuming we know everything, and we are too good to have a creator :)>>>> You wake up in the morning, you find a nice made breakfast, you never say wow, I love evolution that made me this breakfast.>>>> You never question there is a maker of every
    object in your life, phone, car, bread, etc, but when it has to do with us humans, animals, everything in our lives, we deny there is a creator, and we contribute all of this to evolution.>>>> Sickness and poverty is something we are supposed to address
    ourselves but you are blaming God for it instead of saying why we are ignoring it>>>> Isn't free will interesting?>>>> No one said it's supposed to be heaven, but if you want to talk about heavens, it's detailed in religions.> > with atheism there's no
    such thing as free will, as everything is just a planned predictable chemical reaction.If that's the truth then it is. Inventing gods doesn't change that.But we do have free will, at least illusion of it.Maybe unverse is like nuclear physics, based on
    probabilities. But amount of possible outcomes are so vast that anything can happen. Maybe universe unit sample "Iceberg" itself has so many different ways to function that we could say it has free will.And would having a god change anything how
    chemistry works?Does meteor moving in its predetermined path have chemistry, or freedom of choice? Does Universe Unit Sample One, Iceberg, have more?Hehehe

    Sure, that amazing big bang created the dinosaurs and every living creature, lol :)

    And humans and apes came from apes :)

    This is an example of scientists

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piltdown_Man



    --




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  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 08:38:11 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 3:26:45 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.53:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:39:52 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.

    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you >> "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution,
    except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic?

    Classic strawman. I said I kept my mind open to possibilities, which is not the same as "believing in." Many things which "rationalists" or scientists of their
    time once ridiculed were later validated by science.

    So you're expecting that science will some day conclude that the
    universe was created by god. Rrrright.

    You're still thinking in monotheistic, anthropomorphic terms--that's the guy in the sky with the beard, no matter what you call it.

    See, there's 's this omnipotent GUY sitting there with a mind that happens to be remarkably like that of the average human brain. He ponders, "What shall I do today? Create a universe? Should I start with light or darkness? Let's do light this time. Let
    there be light! Hmm....should there be creatures in this universe to make things fun? Sure--why not? I'll call them man and woman. Hey, why not test their faith and throw in some giant lizard skeletons.....yeah, sounds good.

    And our choice is either that goofball "god" or ZERO. Them's the rules.

    Intelligent design doesn't necessarily mean KIND design. :) When thinking about > these things, I barely take the Bible into account.

    That's another copout...

    Only for those who think in black & white.

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  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 08:37:24 2023
    On 10/19/23 3:53 AM, TT wrote:
    Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 3.05:

    If one really needs to be threatened by damnation to act like a
    decent human being, I'd argue that they're not really decent, at all.
    Just fearful opportunists.


    Yup.

    And the idea that god is not human centric would be against the bible
    I think. Why do we believe in god... because of the bible.

    So if you take away the bible and make your own "god exists but it's
    not same as in bible & Jesus wasn't son of god" religion... Then what
    are you left with?
    You're left with a religion which you just made up. There must god
    because I say so.


    TT, a serious question: do you think it's possible to make one's self
    into God--you know, your person deity whose power extends congruent to
    your own physical/mental powers?

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "I done created myself a monster."

    --Juan Carlos Ferrero ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Thu Oct 19 08:44:26 2023
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 14:26:49 UTC+1, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    The Iceberg kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 13.20:> On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 00:04:39 UTC+1, PeteWasLucky wrote:>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r>>> Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 1:02:09 PM UTC-7,
    TT wrote:>> Shakes kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 22.08:>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:16:40 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>> Sawfish <sawfi...@gmail.com> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>> Atheism is simply an organized religion with the polarities flipped.>>>> That
    depends a lot on if you're talking about explicit atheists or>>>> implicit atheists. I'd guess you're talking about explicit atheists,>>>> but even then there are no "holy books" or any commonly accepted>>>> practices and rituals. No figures that set the
    boundaries or define any>>>> specific belief system. (Sorry Bill Maher).>>>>>>>> Tt is true that atheists can be accused of zealotry or fanaticism, but>>>> that doesn't make atheism a religion.>>>>>> I think Atheism is a religion in the sense that it
    very strongly disbelieves anything that is not perceived by the senses. It's just as dogmatic in its approach.>>>>>> A truly agnostic approach would be akin to what Gracchus once said about reincarnation: I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. IOW, to
    paraphrase it, "I am open to going wherever the evidence takes me instead of coming from an angle of "I don't believe all this nonsense".">>>>>> Further there have been studies done on people who are on the spiritual path and acquired rare abilities that
    are beyond normal people. It's just that they are never highlighted. A truly scientific approach would be to read those studies and then take a stand one way or another.> >> Agnostic approach is a copout.> > If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in
    light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.> So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution, except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger.
    Agnostic?>> You sound like atheists have not thought about religion but dismissed it>> without thinking. This is not so.> > Many have thought about it. Many haven't. Atheists aren't a monolithic bloc of singular thinking any more than non-atheists are.>
    Pretty sure that everyone has thought about religion to some degree.>> As for religion... I guess it's ok if it makes you feel better... but> >> it's still self-deceit. No, gods do not exist, and if they did which>> one(s). It comes from primitive human
    will to believe in something... be>> it Christian god, Allah, Zeus, Quetzalcoatl or whatever. But yeah, it's>> *my* God that is the right one... it's the other gods that are just>> primitive superstition - not mine!>>>> If religion includes stuff like
    Jihad, then it shouldn't even be allowed.>>>> As for Christianity, what twisted and cruel idea that if you don't>> BELIEVE in something of which you don't have evidence of, then you will>> go and burn in hell for eternity. Clearly this religion, too, has
    been>> invented by rather primitive people.>>>> If that is so, why this God of ours doesn't make it unequivocally clear>> to modern man that he indeed exists and can do wonders? Is he cruel and>> wants least gullible / smartest of humankind to suffer for
    eternity? Why>> does the bastard watch what we do and using what sort of system? If he>> watches why does he not do anything?>>>> Why did he create mosquitoes? Why animals kill and eat each other? Why>> sicknesses? Why all useless planets? Why background
    radiation? What's>> the need for black holes, supernovas etc. Why sun gives skin cancer? etc...> > It always comes back to the anthropomorphic old bearded guy in the sky with you, doesn't it? There's either "him" sitting there acting like a human imbued
    with cosmic powers--or if not, there must be nothing at all! No wonder you find it so easy to decide all the universe amounts to.Not easy at all. On the contrary, isn't "God" the easy way out... the primitive way.And how do you figure I was talking only
    about the 'bearded sky guy'?...Those examples on useless planets, deadly radiation etc refer to god which 'just created universe' - and then let it develop without interference.BUT... what the hell is the POINT believing in such god?And what would be the
    point with a god which creates beginning of universe, and then does nothing to it. Yet sends Jesus here to tell us that he exists and we must believe in him. Then leaves again. No point at all. Absurd idea....So clearly only point in believing to this
    god is that he guides universe and our existence. Hence I listed his incapability to coherent evolution, why have those planets without purpose etc. Or to the morals that bible teaches. Why are children born with sickesses. Why is there an insect that
    plants eggs in butterfly larvae, then the larvae makes a cocoon to become a beautiful butterfly... but is eaten alive by the insect. Disgusting and extremely cruel. So that counts out intelligent design as well.>>>> Forcing our paths or to be given free
    will? Which one would you choose?>>>> It's free will. Living our lives thinking about the stuff we are discussing now, taking things by reasons, understanding consequences and harvesting the fruit of what we do, is what we were given in this life.>>>> We
    were given the option to build and shape our lives, come with science and medics, invent weapons, wipe out each other, or live in peace, it's all up to us to decide.>>>> It seems the more advanced we get, and more we think we invented, the more arrogant
    we get assuming we know everything, and we are too good to have a creator :)>>>> You wake up in the morning, you find a nice made breakfast, you never say wow, I love evolution that made me this breakfast.>>>> You never question there is a maker of every
    object in your life, phone, car, bread, etc, but when it has to do with us humans, animals, everything in our lives, we deny there is a creator, and we contribute all of this to evolution.>>>> Sickness and poverty is something we are supposed to address
    ourselves but you are blaming God for it instead of saying why we are ignoring it>>>> Isn't free will interesting?>>>> No one said it's supposed to be heaven, but if you want to talk about heavens, it's detailed in religions.> > with atheism there's no
    such thing as free will, as everything is just a planned predictable chemical reaction.If that's the truth then it is. Inventing gods doesn't change that.But we do have free will, at least illusion of it.Maybe unverse is like nuclear physics, based on
    probabilities. But amount of possible outcomes are so vast that anything can happen. Maybe universe unit sample "Iceberg" itself has so many different ways to function that we could say it has free will.And would having a god change anything how
    chemistry works?Does meteor moving in its predetermined path have chemistry, or freedom of choice? Does Universe Unit Sample One, Iceberg, have more?Hehehe

    Sure, that amazing big bang created the dinosaurs and every living creature, lol :)

    And humans and apes came from apes :)

    This is an example of scientists

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piltdown_Man

    crocodiles couldn't be bothered evolving any further! :D

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Thu Oct 19 09:01:35 2023
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.
    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a >>>> hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is >> probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically >> rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel >> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever
    increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide >> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.

    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if they see value in it.

    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal considerations as unaffordable luxuries.

    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?

    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.

    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.

    To me, it's an essential skill for the last 100 years or so, and
    becoming increasing valuable for individuals in society.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to bmoore on Thu Oct 19 09:25:11 2023
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.
    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a >>>>>> hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is >>>> probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically >>>> rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel >>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever
    increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty >>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide >>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the >>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer >>>> to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in
    nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?

    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?),
    Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long
    time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this
    or not.


    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.

    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?


    To me, it's an essential skill for the last 100 years or so, and
    becoming increasing valuable for individuals in society.


    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "I done created myself a monster."

    --Juan Carlos Ferrero ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to bmoore on Thu Oct 19 09:23:49 2023
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.
    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a >>>>>> hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is >>>> probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically >>>> rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel >>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever
    increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty >>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide >>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the >>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer >>>> to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in
    nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?

    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?),
    Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long
    time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this
    or not.


    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.

    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?


    To me, it's an essential skill for the last 100 years or so, and
    becoming increasing valuable for individuals in society.


    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "I done created myself a monster."

    --Juan Carlos Ferrero ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Thu Oct 19 09:39:18 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas. >>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a >>>>>> hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a >>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel >>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever >>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty >>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the >>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer >>>> to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in >>>> the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this. >> Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if >> they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in >> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind >> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?),
    Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long
    time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this
    or not.

    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.

    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do >> not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?

    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to bmoore on Thu Oct 19 09:46:16 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:39:20 AM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas. >>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a >>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever >>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for >>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in >>>> the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in >> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal >> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this
    or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).

    And BTW, I would also question the "sanity" of the Israeli youth who put on a rave 3 miles from the Gaza border.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to bmoore on Thu Oct 19 09:47:09 2023
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 17:39:20 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas. >>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a >>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever >>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for >>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in >>>> the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in >> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal >> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this
    or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).

    according to you a biological man who "thinks" he's a woman is not insane and we should all do what he says.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to bmoore on Thu Oct 19 09:56:03 2023
    On 10/19/23 9:46 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:39:20 AM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas. >>>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a >>>>>>>>> hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a >>>>>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel >>>>>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever >>>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for >>>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty >>>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the >>>>>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer >>>>>>> to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in >>>>>>> the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this. >>>>> Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if >>>>> they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in >>>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind >>>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal >>>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to >>> convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you
    intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?),
    Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long
    time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both >>> territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this
    or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do >>>>> not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and
    probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).
    And BTW, I would also question the "sanity" of the Israeli youth who put on a rave 3 miles from the Gaza border.

    It's this sort of nonsense that I wish to divorce myself from, and since
    it's halfway around the globe, and over which I  have no control, and it
    does not yet have any significant effect on my life, it's pretty easy to do.

    --
    --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "Would someone please tell me what 'diddy-wah-diddy' means?" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to The Iceberg on Thu Oct 19 10:01:58 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:47:11 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 17:39:20 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas. >>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever
    increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for >>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied >>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in
    nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal >> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).
    according to you a biological man who "thinks" he's a woman is not insane and we should all do what he says.

    See? Like clockwork, one of the usual gang of idiots chimes in with something irrelevant, stupid and false. I hope somebody gets what I'm saying.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Thu Oct 19 10:03:25 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:59:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:46 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:39:20 AM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas. >>>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel. >>>>>>>
    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever >>>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for >>>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied >>>>>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in
    nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal >>>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to >>> convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you >>> intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?),
    Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet >>> we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long >>> time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love. >>>
    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both >>> territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this >>> or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control. >>>> Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and >>> probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).
    And BTW, I would also question the "sanity" of the Israeli youth who put on a rave 3 miles from the Gaza border.
    It's this sort of nonsense that I wish to divorce myself from, and since it's halfway around the globe, and over which I have no control, and it does not yet have any significant effect on my life, it's pretty easy to do.

    OK, but you're talking about it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to bmoore on Thu Oct 19 10:00:43 2023
    On 10/19/23 9:46 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:39:20 AM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas. >>>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a >>>>>>>>> hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a >>>>>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel >>>>>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever >>>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for >>>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty >>>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the >>>>>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer >>>>>>> to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in >>>>>>> the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this. >>>>> Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if >>>>> they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in >>>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind >>>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal >>>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to >>> convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you
    intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?),
    Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long
    time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both >>> territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this
    or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do >>>>> not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and
    probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).
    And BTW, I would also question the "sanity" of the Israeli youth who put on a rave 3 miles from the Gaza border.

    It's this sort of nonsense that I wish to divorce myself from, and since
    it's halfway around the globe, and over which I  have no control, and it
    does not yet have any significant effect on my life, it's pretty easy to do.

    --
    --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "Would someone please tell me what 'diddy-wah-diddy' means?" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Thu Oct 19 10:08:50 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 10:03:34 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:46 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:39:20 AM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas. >>>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel. >>>>>>>
    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever >>>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for >>>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied >>>>>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in
    nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal >>>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to >>> convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you >>> intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?),
    Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet >>> we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long >>> time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love. >>>
    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both >>> territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this >>> or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control. >>>> Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and >>> probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).
    And BTW, I would also question the "sanity" of the Israeli youth who put on a rave 3 miles from the Gaza border.
    It's this sort of nonsense that I wish to divorce myself from, and since
    it's halfway around the globe, and over which I have no control, and it
    does not yet have any significant effect on my life, it's pretty easy to do.

    No significant effect on my life either. Just having a conversation.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 20:23:17 2023
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 18.38:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 3:26:45 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.53:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:39:52 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.

    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you >>>> "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution,
    except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic?

    Classic strawman. I said I kept my mind open to possibilities, which is not the same as "believing in." Many things which "rationalists" or scientists of their
    time once ridiculed were later validated by science.

    So you're expecting that science will some day conclude that the
    universe was created by god. Rrrright.

    You're still thinking in monotheistic, anthropomorphic terms--that's the guy in the sky with the beard, no matter what you call it.

    See, there's 's this omnipotent GUY sitting there with a mind that happens to be remarkably like that of the average human brain. He ponders, "What shall I do today? Create a universe? Should I start with light or darkness? Let's do light this time.
    Let there be light! Hmm....should there be creatures in this universe to make things fun? Sure--why not? I'll call them man and woman. Hey, why not test their faith and throw in some giant lizard skeletons.....yeah, sounds good.

    And our choice is either that goofball "god" or ZERO. Them's the rules.


    Strawman.

    So what's your god like? Where did you get the idea that it exists?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 20:22:44 2023
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 18.38:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 3:26:45 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.53:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:39:52 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.

    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you >>>> "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution,
    except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic?

    Classic strawman. I said I kept my mind open to possibilities, which is not the same as "believing in." Many things which "rationalists" or scientists of their
    time once ridiculed were later validated by science.

    So you're expecting that science will some day conclude that the
    universe was created by god. Rrrright.

    You're still thinking in monotheistic, anthropomorphic terms--that's the guy in the sky with the beard, no matter what you call it.

    See, there's 's this omnipotent GUY sitting there with a mind that happens to be remarkably like that of the average human brain. He ponders, "What shall I do today? Create a universe? Should I start with light or darkness? Let's do light this time.
    Let there be light! Hmm....should there be creatures in this universe to make things fun? Sure--why not? I'll call them man and woman. Hey, why not test their faith and throw in some giant lizard skeletons.....yeah, sounds good.

    And our choice is either that goofball "god" or ZERO. Them's the rules.


    Strawman.

    So what's your god like? Where did you get the idea?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to bmoore on Thu Oct 19 10:27:23 2023
    On 10/19/23 10:08 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 10:03:34 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:46 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:39:20 AM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas. >>>>>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a >>>>>>>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel. >>>>>>>>>
    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever >>>>>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for >>>>>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied >>>>>>>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in >>>>>>>>> the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in >>>>>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal >>>>>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to >>>>> convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you >>>>> intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?),
    Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet >>>>> we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long >>>>> time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love. >>>>>
    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both >>>>> territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this >>>>> or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control. >>>>>> Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and >>>>> probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).
    And BTW, I would also question the "sanity" of the Israeli youth who put on a rave 3 miles from the Gaza border.
    It's this sort of nonsense that I wish to divorce myself from, and since
    it's halfway around the globe, and over which I have no control, and it
    does not yet have any significant effect on my life, it's pretty easy to do.
    No significant effect on my life either. Just having a conversation.

    Understood.

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Doncha know,
    That it's a shame and a pity
    You were raised
    Up in the city
    And you never learned nothin'
    'bout country ways."


    --Not So Sweet Martha Lorraine ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 20:36:03 2023
    Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: >>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: >>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas. >>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare
    attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could
    be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased
    it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are
    basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a >>>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that
    Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever >>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty >>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a
    slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the >>>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer >>>>> to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in >>>>> the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by
    this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say,
    this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if >>> they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in
    their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in
    nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind >>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?

    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?),
    Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long
    time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this
    or not.


    They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very
    much doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah
    shouting ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it bluntly.

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  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Thu Oct 19 20:05:10 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:> On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7,
    Sawfish wrote:>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still>>>>>>>> standing.
    There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare >>>>>>> attack a>>>>>>> hospital.>>>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could >>>>>> be more of the same.
    Hmmm...>>>>>>>>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased >>>>> it is>>>>> probably on the money.>>>>>>>>>> Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are >>>>> basically>>>>> rational (I do) what do they
    hope to gain?>>>>>>>>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a>>>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.>>>>>>>>>> However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that >>>>> Israel>>>>>
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.>>>>>>>>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive for>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would
    be a pretty>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied>>>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a >>>>> slide>>>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the>>>>> Israelis
    to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer>>>>> to the Hamas movement.>>>>>>>>>> A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in>>>>> the region, and beyond.>>>>>>>>>> What do you think?>>>> #2. There is a Saudi-
    Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by >>>> this.>>> Important point.>>>> Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, >>>> this is huge.>>> It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if>>> they
    see value in it.>>>> The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in >>>> their aim to destroy Israel.>>> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an
    existential axe to grind>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.>> But what is their goal, and is it realistic?> > Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was
    trying to > convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet > we have to recognize that
    most of them were in power for quite a long > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.> > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both > territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to
    think this > or not.> They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very much doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah shouting ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it bluntly.



    Well "rationality" the way you imagine it is a primitive concept.

    Of course you can not grasp, I won't even say "more than rationality", you simply can not grasp "other than rationality" since you're an atheist.

    A good example would be an average Joe not being able to understand e.g. Djokovic's motivation. Average Joe who is not a tennis fan would look at this and say: "He has over 300 millions, he's 36 years old, he could do anything, eat, drink, fuck
    supermodels, why does he train for hours every day, and eats herbs, I don't get him. It's not rational what he does".


    Find me rationality in Djokovic's actions?








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  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to TT@dprk.kp on Thu Oct 19 14:06:31 2023
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:> On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18AM UTC-7, Sawfish
    wrote:>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still>>>>>>>> standing. There's a
    small hole in the ground according to Hamas.>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare >>>>>>> attack a>>>>>>> hospital.>>>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could >>>>>> be more of the same.>>>>>
    Hmmm...>>>>>>>>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased >>>>> it is>>>>> probably on the money.>>>>>>>>>> Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are >>>>> basically>>>>> rational (I do) what do they hope
    to gain?>>>>>>>>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a>>>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.>>>>>>>>>> However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that >>>>> Israel>>>>> is a
    sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.>>>>>>>>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive for>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a
    pretty>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied>>>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a >>>>> slide>>>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the>>>>> Israelis to
    massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer>>>>> to the Hamas movement.>>>>>>>>>> A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in>>>>> the region, and beyond.>>>>>>>>>> What do you think?>>>> #2. There is a Saudi-
    Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by >>>> this.>>> Important point.>>>> Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, >>>> this is huge.>>> It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if>>> they
    see value in it.>>>> The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in >>>> their aim to destroy Israel.>>> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an
    existential axe to grind>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.>> But what is their goal, and is it realistic?> > Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was
    trying to > convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet > we have to recognize that
    most of them were in power for quite a long > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.> > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both > territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to
    think this > or not.> They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very much doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah shouting ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it bluntly.

    I am not sure Hamas cares much about Palestinians, but regarding the suicide bombing, I remember the Japanese and their Kamikaze attacks, and other cases in different conflicts. Clearly killing civilians is unacceptable and it should go both ways.

    Do you think you have the courage to be one of those that give their lives for a cause like these Japanese pilots or others in combat?

    I think it has to do with emotional and psychological state of the person at the time.
    --




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  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 11:40:52 2023
    Very few would do it gladly

    They do it but I am not sure it has to be done gladly :)

    We do most of our life commitments tasks, not gladly :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 11:35:18 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 10:24:05 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 18.38:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 3:26:45 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.53:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:39:52 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.

    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you >>>> "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution, >>>> except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic?

    Classic strawman. I said I kept my mind open to possibilities, which is not the same as "believing in." Many things which "rationalists" or scientists of their
    time once ridiculed were later validated by science.

    So you're expecting that science will some day conclude that the
    universe was created by god. Rrrright.

    You're still thinking in monotheistic, anthropomorphic terms--that's the guy in the sky with the beard, no matter what you call it.

    See, there's 's this omnipotent GUY sitting there with a mind that happens to be remarkably like that of the average human brain. He ponders, "What shall I do today? Create a universe? Should I start with light or darkness? Let's do light this time.
    Let there be light! Hmm....should there be creatures in this universe to make things fun? Sure--why not? I'll call them man and woman. Hey, why not test their faith and throw in some giant lizard skeletons.....yeah, sounds good.

    And our choice is either that goofball "god" or ZERO. Them's the rules.

    Strawman.

    So what's your god like? Where did you get the idea that it exists?

    Any force or forces responsible for the universe and life as we know it would something unfathomable and as far beyond us as we are to an amoeba. I don't even use the word "god" because it is a constraining concept fostered by monotheistic religions.
    Consequently, there can't be any "my" version of that god.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to PeteWasLucky on Thu Oct 19 20:36:07 2023
    PeteWasLucky <waleed.khedr@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r> Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:> On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>> On Wednesday, October 18,
    2023 at 10:49:18AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is
    still>>>>>>>> standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare >>>>>>> attack a>>>>>>> hospital.>>>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could >>>
    be more of the same.>>>>> Hmmm...>>>>>>>>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased >>>>> it is>>>>> probably on the money.>>>>>>>>>> Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are >>>>> basically>>>>>
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?>>>>>>>>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a>>>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.>>>>>>>>>> However, there is increasing popular perception in
    the west that >>>>> Israel>>>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.>>>>>>>>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive for>>>>> Hamas, and that is that
    they provoked what they knew would be a pretty>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied>>>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a >>>>> slide>>>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So
    they would invite the>>>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer>>>>> to the Hamas movement.>>>>>>>>>> A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in>>>>> the region, and beyond.>>>>>>>>>> What do
    you think?>>>> #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by >>>> this.>>> Important point.>>>> Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, >>>> this is huge.>>> It's clear to me that they have no problem
    with a strategic sacrifice if>>> they see value in it.>>>> The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in >>>> their aim to destroy Israel.>>> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in>>> nominal
    opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.>> But what is their goal, and is it realistic?> > Now we're talking
    about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to > convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity
    and worse, and yet > we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.> > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both > territory and
    vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this > or not.> They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very much doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah shouting ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it
    bluntly.I am not sure Hamas cares much about Palestinians, but regarding the suicide bombing, I remember the Japanese and their Kamikaze attacks, and other cases in different conflicts. Clearly killing civilians is unacceptable and it should go both ways.
    Do you think you have the courage to be one of those that give their lives for a cause like these Japanese pilots or others in combat?I think it has to do with emotional and psychological state of the person at the time. -- ----Android NewsGroup Reader---
    -https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html



    They claim kamikaze were locked inside their cockpits mostly?

    Asians might be yellow and a big different but they're still humans who want to live.

    I believe a tiny minority did it willingly.


    It's one thing to stand your ground and fight until the bitter end on some island and bunkers, even knowing you'll mostly die, but suicide mission is a different matter.

    Very few would do it gladly.


    --




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  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to bmoore on Thu Oct 19 11:33:38 2023
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 18:02:01 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:47:11 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 17:39:20 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.
    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel. >>>>
    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever
    increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied >>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in
    nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to
    convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you
    intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both
    territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and
    probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).
    according to you a biological man who "thinks" he's a woman is not insane and we should all do what he says.
    See? Like clockwork, one of the usual gang of idiots chimes in with something irrelevant, stupid and false. I hope somebody gets what I'm saying.

    no it's just you're too dumb to realise it was very relevant, as you keep hypocritically bandying around the term "insane" for your own politically-motivated enemies such as Hamas (ever since yesterday when the MSM told you to dislike them).

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  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 11:41:51 2023
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 19:36:06 UTC+1, *skriptis wrote:
    PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r> Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:> On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>> On Wednesday, October
    18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital
    is still>>>>>>>> standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare >>>>>>> attack a>>>>>>> hospital.>>>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could
    be more of the same.>>>>> Hmmm...>>>>>>>>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased >>>>> it is>>>>> probably on the money.>>>>>>>>>> Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are >>>>> basically>>>>>
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?>>>>>>>>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a>>>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.>>>>>>>>>> However, there is increasing popular perception in
    the west that >>>>> Israel>>>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.>>>>>>>>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive for>>>>> Hamas, and that is that
    they provoked what they knew would be a pretty>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied>>>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a >>>>> slide>>>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So
    they would invite the>>>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer>>>>> to the Hamas movement.>>>>>>>>>> A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in>>>>> the region, and beyond.>>>>>>>>>> What do
    you think?>>>> #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by >>>> this.>>> Important point.>>>> Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, >>>> this is huge.>>> It's clear to me that they have no problem
    with a strategic sacrifice if>>> they see value in it.>>>> The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in >>>> their aim to destroy Israel.>>> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in>>> nominal
    opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.>> But what is their goal, and is it realistic?> > Now we're talking
    about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to > convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity
    and worse, and yet > we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.> > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both > territory and
    vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this > or not.> They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very much doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah shouting ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it
    bluntly.I am not sure Hamas cares much about Palestinians, but regarding the suicide bombing, I remember the Japanese and their Kamikaze attacks, and other cases in different conflicts. Clearly killing civilians is unacceptable and it should go both ways.
    Do you think you have the courage to be one of those that give their lives for a cause like these Japanese pilots or others in combat?I think it has to do with emotional and psychological state of the person at the time. -- ----Android NewsGroup Reader---
    -https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html



    They claim kamikaze were locked inside their cockpits mostly?

    Asians might be yellow and a big different but they're still humans who want to live.

    I believe a tiny minority did it willingly.


    It's one thing to stand your ground and fight until the bitter end on some island and bunkers, even knowing you'll mostly die, but suicide mission is a different matter.

    Very few would do it gladly.

    heard that Hamas have big houses and villas on the coast and in Egypt, they get lots of $$$ and have that lifestyle by staying in power, there's your rationality and motivation to provoke attacks. It's prob like the mafia.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to The Iceberg on Thu Oct 19 20:44:20 2023
    The Iceberg <iceberg.rules@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 19:36:06 UTC+1, *skriptis wrote:> PeteWasLucky <waleed...@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r > > TT <T...@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r> Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:> On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:>> On Wednesday,
    October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34
    AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still>>>>>>>> standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers
    wouldn't dare >>>>>>> attack a>>>>>>> hospital.>>>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could >>>>>> be more of the same.>>>>> Hmmm...>>>>>>>>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased >>>>> it is>>>>>
    probably on the money.>>>>>>>>>> Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are >>>>> basically>>>>> rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?>>>>>>>>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a>>>>> given, so
    they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.>>>>>>>>>> However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that >>>>> Israel>>>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-
    Israeli.>>>>>>>>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive for>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied>>>>> territories. This
    might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a >>>>> slide>>>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the>>>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer>>>>> to the Hamas movement.>>>>>>>>>> A
    side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in>>>>> the region, and beyond.>>>>>>>>>> What do you think?>>>> #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by >>>> this.>>> Important point.>>>> Hamas has no regard
    for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, >>>> this is huge.>>> It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if>>> they see value in it.>>>> The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in >>>> their
    aim to destroy Israel.>>> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal>>>
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.>> But what is their goal, and is it realistic?> > Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to > convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > intended. The
    Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet > we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if
    not popular love.> > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both > territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this > or not.> They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very much
    doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah shouting ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it bluntly.I am not sure Hamas cares much about Palestinians, but regarding the suicide bombing, I remember the Japanese and their Kamikaze attacks,
    and other cases in different conflicts. Clearly killing civilians is unacceptable and it should go both ways.Do you think you have the courage to be one of those that give their lives for a cause like these Japanese pilots or others in combat?I think it
    has to do with emotional and psychological state of the person at the time. -- ----Android NewsGroup Reader----https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html > > > > They claim kamikaze were locked inside their cockpits mostly? > > Asians
    might be yellow and a big different but they're still humans who want to live. > > I believe a tiny minority did it willingly. > > > It's one thing to stand your ground and fight until the bitter end on some island and bunkers, even knowing you'll mostly
    die, but suicide mission is a different matter. > > Very few would do it gladly.heard that Hamas have big houses and villas on the coast and in Egypt, they get lots of $$$ and have that lifestyle by staying in power, there's your rationality and
    motivation to provoke attacks. It's prob like the mafia.


    Leaders never die because if they die there's no one to lead.


    --




    ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 11:44:25 2023
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    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 11:46:27 2023
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    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to The Iceberg on Thu Oct 19 11:51:09 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:33:41 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 18:02:01 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:47:11 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 17:39:20 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still >>>>>>> standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.
    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel. >>>>
    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever
    increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied >>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in
    nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to
    convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you
    intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long
    time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both
    territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this
    or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and
    probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).
    according to you a biological man who "thinks" he's a woman is not insane and we should all do what he says.
    See? Like clockwork, one of the usual gang of idiots chimes in with something irrelevant, stupid and false. I hope somebody gets what I'm saying.
    no it's just you're too dumb to realise it was very relevant, as you keep hypocritically bandying around the term "insane" for your own politically-motivated enemies such as Hamas (ever since yesterday when the MSM told you to dislike them).

    I live rent-free in your head. If I disappear you will seek another tenant.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Thu Oct 19 20:53:26 2023
    Sawfish <sawfish666@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    On 10/19/23 11:06 AM, PeteWasLucky wrote:> TT <TT@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r>> Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:> On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM,
    bmoore wrote:>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There
    are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still>>>>>>>> standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare >>>>>>> attack a>>>>>>> hospital.>>>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in
    order to provoke a response. This could >>>>>> be more of the same.>>>>> Hmmm...>>>>>>>>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased >>>>> it is>>>>> probably on the money.>>>>>>>>>> Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response.
    Assuming they are >>>>> basically>>>>> rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?>>>>>>>>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a>>>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.>>>>>>>>>> However, there
    is increasing popular perception in the west that >>>>> Israel>>>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.>>>>>>>>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied>>>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a >>>>> slide>>>>> in their
    influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the>>>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer>>>>> to the Hamas movement.>>>>>>>>>> A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in>>>>> the
    region, and beyond.>>>>>>>>>> What do you think?>>>> #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by >>>> this.>>> Important point.>>>> Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, >>>> this is huge.>>> It's
    clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if>>> they see value in it.>>>> The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in >>>> their aim to destroy Israel.>>> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to
    those who may be in>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.>> But what is their goal, and is it
    realistic?> > Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to > convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > Hussein, and even Idi
    Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet > we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.> > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that
    they are owed both > territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this > or not.> They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very much doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah shouting
    ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it bluntly.> I am not sure Hamas cares much about Palestinians, but regarding the suicide bombing, I remember the Japanese and their Kamikaze attacks, and other cases in different conflicts. Clearly killing civilians is
    unacceptable and it should go both ways.>> Do you think you have the courage to be one of those that give their lives for a cause like these Japanese pilots or others in combat?>> I think it has to do with emotional and psychological state of the person
    at the time.The kamikaze thing is interesting.I read a lot about it, about some pilots who would go out and return claiming mechanical problems, sometimes many, many times.The usual reason was that there is a strong culture value for sacrifice of the
    self for the benefit of the whole. You combine this with the idea of personal shame for not contributing when needed, and I think you had lots and lots of individuals who allowed themselves to incrementally get nearer and nearer life-ending dangerm right
    up to the point that they were more fearful of social disgrace than they were of dying quickly.I think that there was very little political, religious, or moral motivation for the WWII kamikazes. It was almost 100% social.I'm unsure how this aligns with
    the motivation of the Palistinian suicide bombers.



    That's a rare thing too. I mean suicide bombers from Palestine.

    When did you hear last one?

    And when it happens, it did not need to be as sofisticated as hijacking a plane then piloting it, it's just some person with a bomb walking somewhere, so I'm sure they find someone mentally retarded or someone who is desperate who lost e.g. loved ones in
    Israeli military terror attacks and has nothing to live for.

    Islam awarding sacrifice helps too.


    It's very social in Palestine too as those people live under occupation and share constant terror and humiliation.

    If Jews spit on Christian nuns, imagine what they do to male Moslems?


    https://youtube.com/shorts/7uL555xWQeE?si=rru1CQhARb6TaVxH














    --




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  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Thu Oct 19 11:54:32 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:47:00 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 11:06 AM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:> On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish
    wrote:>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still>>>>>>>> standing. There's a
    small hole in the ground according to Hamas.>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare >>>>>>> attack a>>>>>>> hospital.>>>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could >>>>>> be more of the same.>>>>>
    Hmmm...>>>>>>>>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased >>>>> it is>>>>> probably on the money.>>>>>>>>>> Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are >>>>> basically>>>>> rational (I do) what do they hope
    to gain?>>>>>>>>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a>>>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.>>>>>>>>>> However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that >>>>> Israel>>>>> is a
    sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.>>>>>>>>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive for>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a
    pretty>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied>>>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a >>>>> slide>>>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the>>>>> Israelis to
    massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer>>>>> to the Hamas movement.>>>>>>>>>> A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in>>>>> the region, and beyond.>>>>>>>>>> What do you think?>>>> #2. There is a Saudi-
    Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by >>>> this.>>> Important point.>>>> Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, >>>> this is huge.>>> It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if>>> they
    see value in it.>>>> The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in >>>> their aim to destroy Israel.>>> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an
    existential axe to grind>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.>> But what is their goal, and is it realistic?> > Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was
    trying to > convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet > we have to recognize that
    most of them were in power for quite a long > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.> > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both > territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to
    think this > or not.> They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very much doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah shouting ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it bluntly.
    I am not sure Hamas cares much about Palestinians, but regarding the suicide bombing, I remember the Japanese and their Kamikaze attacks, and other cases in different conflicts. Clearly killing civilians is unacceptable and it should go both ways.

    Do you think you have the courage to be one of those that give their lives for a cause like these Japanese pilots or others in combat?

    I think it has to do with emotional and psychological state of the person at the time.
    The kamikaze thing is interesting.

    I read a lot about it, about some pilots who would go out and return claiming mechanical problems, sometimes many, many times.

    The usual reason was that there is a strong culture value for sacrifice
    of the self for the benefit of the whole. You combine this with the idea
    of personal shame for not contributing when needed, and I think you had
    lots and lots of individuals who allowed themselves to incrementally get nearer and nearer life-ending dangerm right up to the point that they
    were more fearful of social disgrace than they were of dying quickly.

    I think that there was very little political, religious, or moral
    motivation for the WWII kamikazes. It was almost 100% social.

    I'm unsure how this aligns with the motivation of the Palistinian
    suicide bombers.

    The Islamic suicide bombers think that they have 72 virgins waiting for them.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to bmoore on Thu Oct 19 20:56:52 2023
    bmoore <bmoore@nyx.net> Wrote in message:r
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:47:00 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:> On 10/19/23 11:06 AM, PeteWasLucky wrote: > > TT <T...@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r > >> Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:> On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:>> On Wednesday,
    October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34
    AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still>>>>>>>> standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers
    wouldn't dare >>>>>>> attack a>>>>>>> hospital.>>>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could >>>>>> be more of the same.>>>>> Hmmm...>>>>>>>>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased >>>>> it is>>>>>
    probably on the money.>>>>>>>>>> Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are >>>>> basically>>>>> rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?>>>>>>>>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a>>>>> given, so
    they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.>>>>>>>>>> However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that >>>>> Israel>>>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-
    Israeli.>>>>>>>>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive for>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied>>>>> territories. This
    might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a >>>>> slide>>>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the>>>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer>>>>> to the Hamas movement.>>>>>>>>>> A
    side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in>>>>> the region, and beyond.>>>>>>>>>> What do you think?>>>> #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by >>>> this.>>> Important point.>>>> Hamas has no regard
    for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, >>>> this is huge.>>> It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if>>> they see value in it.>>>> The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in >>>> their
    aim to destroy Israel.>>> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal>>>
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.>> But what is their goal, and is it realistic?> > Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to > convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > intended. The
    Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet > we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if
    not popular love.> > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both > territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this > or not.> They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very much
    doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah shouting ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it bluntly. > > I am not sure Hamas cares much about Palestinians, but regarding the suicide bombing, I remember the Japanese and their Kamikaze
    attacks, and other cases in different conflicts. Clearly killing civilians is unacceptable and it should go both ways. > > > > Do you think you have the courage to be one of those that give their lives for a cause like these Japanese pilots or others in
    combat? > > > > I think it has to do with emotional and psychological state of the person at the time.> The kamikaze thing is interesting. > > I read a lot about it, about some pilots who would go out and return > claiming mechanical problems, sometimes
    many, many times. > > The usual reason was that there is a strong culture value for sacrifice > of the self for the benefit of the whole. You combine this with the idea > of personal shame for not contributing when needed, and I think you had > lots and
    lots of individuals who allowed themselves to incrementally get > nearer and nearer life-ending dangerm right up to the point that they > were more fearful of social disgrace than they were of dying quickly. > > I think that there was very little
    political, religious, or moral > motivation for the WWII kamikazes. It was almost 100% social. > > I'm unsure how this aligns with the motivation of the Palistinian > suicide bombers. The Islamic suicide bombers think that they have 72 virgins waiting
    for them.



    It shows why they're immune to western culture that offers used up sluts to men.

    They dream about virgins, not women who are promiscuous.


    --




    ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 12:03:20 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:56:51 AM UTC-7, *skriptis wrote:
    bmoore <bmo...@nyx.net> Wrote in message:r
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:47:00 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:> On 10/19/23 11:06 AM, PeteWasLucky wrote: > > TT <T...@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r > >> Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:> On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:>> On Wednesday,
    October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34
    AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still>>>>>>>> standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers
    wouldn't dare >>>>>>> attack a>>>>>>> hospital.>>>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could >>>>>> be more of the same.>>>>> Hmmm...>>>>>>>>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased >>>>> it is>>>>>
    probably on the money.>>>>>>>>>> Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are >>>>> basically>>>>> rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?>>>>>>>>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a>>>>> given, so
    they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.>>>>>>>>>> However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that >>>>> Israel>>>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-
    Israeli.>>>>>>>>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive for>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied>>>>> territories. This
    might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a >>>>> slide>>>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the>>>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer>>>>> to the Hamas movement.>>>>>>>>>> A
    side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in>>>>> the region, and beyond.>>>>>>>>>> What do you think?>>>> #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by >>>> this.>>> Important point.>>>> Hamas has no regard
    for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, >>>> this is huge.>>> It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if>>> they see value in it.>>>> The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in >>>> their
    aim to destroy Israel.>>> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal>>>
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.>> But what is their goal, and is it realistic?> > Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to > convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > intended. The
    Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet > we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if
    not popular love.> > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both > territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this > or not.> They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very much
    doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah shouting ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it bluntly. > > I am not sure Hamas cares much about Palestinians, but regarding the suicide bombing, I remember the Japanese and their Kamikaze
    attacks, and other cases in different conflicts. Clearly killing civilians is unacceptable and it should go both ways. > > > > Do you think you have the courage to be one of those that give their lives for a cause like these Japanese pilots or others in
    combat? > > > > I think it has to do with emotional and psychological state of the person at the time.> The kamikaze thing is interesting. > > I read a lot about it, about some pilots who would go out and return > claiming mechanical problems, sometimes
    many, many times. > > The usual reason was that there is a strong culture value for sacrifice > of the self for the benefit of the whole. You combine this with the idea > of personal shame for not contributing when needed, and I think you had > lots and
    lots of individuals who allowed themselves to incrementally get > nearer and nearer life-ending dangerm right up to the point that they > were more fearful of social disgrace than they were of dying quickly. > > I think that there was very little
    political, religious, or moral > motivation for the WWII kamikazes. It was almost 100% social. > > I'm unsure how this aligns with the motivation of the Palistinian > suicide bombers. The Islamic suicide bombers think that they have 72 virgins waiting
    for them.
    It shows why they're immune to western culture that offers used up sluts to men.

    They dream about virgins, not women who are promiscuous.

    So Skrip, you only sleep with virgins? :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 12:09:49 2023
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    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to bmoore on Thu Oct 19 12:12:30 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 3:03:23 PM UTC-4, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:56:51 AM UTC-7, *skriptis wrote:
    bmoore <bmo...@nyx.net> Wrote in message:r
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:47:00 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:> On 10/19/23 11:06 AM, PeteWasLucky wrote: > > TT <T...@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r > >> Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:> On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:>> On Wednesday,
    October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34
    AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still>>>>>>>> standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers
    wouldn't dare >>>>>>> attack a>>>>>>> hospital.>>>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could >>>>>> be more of the same.>>>>> Hmmm...>>>>>>>>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased >>>>> it is>>>>>
    probably on the money.>>>>>>>>>> Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are >>>>> basically>>>>> rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?>>>>>>>>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a>>>>> given, so
    they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.>>>>>>>>>> However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that >>>>> Israel>>>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-
    Israeli.>>>>>>>>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive for>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied>>>>> territories. This
    might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a >>>>> slide>>>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the>>>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer>>>>> to the Hamas movement.>>>>>>>>>> A
    side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in>>>>> the region, and beyond.>>>>>>>>>> What do you think?>>>> #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by >>>> this.>>> Important point.>>>> Hamas has no regard
    for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, >>>> this is huge.>>> It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if>>> they see value in it.>>>> The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in >>>> their
    aim to destroy Israel.>>> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal>>>
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.>> But what is their goal, and is it realistic?> > Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to > convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > intended. The
    Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet > we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if
    not popular love.> > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both > territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this > or not.> They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very much
    doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah shouting ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it bluntly. > > I am not sure Hamas cares much about Palestinians, but regarding the suicide bombing, I remember the Japanese and their Kamikaze
    attacks, and other cases in different conflicts. Clearly killing civilians is unacceptable and it should go both ways. > > > > Do you think you have the courage to be one of those that give their lives for a cause like these Japanese pilots or others in
    combat? > > > > I think it has to do with emotional and psychological state of the person at the time.> The kamikaze thing is interesting. > > I read a lot about it, about some pilots who would go out and return > claiming mechanical problems, sometimes
    many, many times. > > The usual reason was that there is a strong culture value for sacrifice > of the self for the benefit of the whole. You combine this with the idea > of personal shame for not contributing when needed, and I think you had > lots and
    lots of individuals who allowed themselves to incrementally get > nearer and nearer life-ending dangerm right up to the point that they > were more fearful of social disgrace than they were of dying quickly. > > I think that there was very little
    political, religious, or moral > motivation for the WWII kamikazes. It was almost 100% social. > > I'm unsure how this aligns with the motivation of the Palistinian > suicide bombers. The Islamic suicide bombers think that they have 72 virgins waiting
    for them.
    It shows why they're immune to western culture that offers used up sluts to men.

    They dream about virgins, not women who are promiscuous.
    So Skrip, you only sleep with virgins? :-)

    Are you offering him something?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 12:16:34 2023
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    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Thu Oct 19 12:26:04 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 12:10:47 PM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 11:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:47:00 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 11:06 AM, PeteWasLucky wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> Wrote in message:r
    Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:> On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7,
    Sawfish wrote:>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still>>>>>>>> standing. There'
    s a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare >>>>>>> attack a>>>>>>> hospital.>>>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could >>>>>> be more of the same.>>>>>
    Hmmm...>>>>>>>>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased >>>>> it is>>>>> probably on the money.>>>>>>>>>> Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are >>>>> basically>>>>> rational (I do) what do they hope
    to gain?>>>>>>>>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a>>>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.>>>>>>>>>> However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that >>>>> Israel>>>>> is a
    sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.>>>>>>>>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive for>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a
    pretty>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied>>>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a >>>>> slide>>>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the>>>>> Israelis to
    massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer>>>>> to the Hamas movement.>>>>>>>>>> A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in>>>>> the region, and beyond.>>>>>>>>>> What do you think?>>>> #2. There is a Saudi-
    Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by >>>> this.>>> Important point.>>>> Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, >>>> this is huge.>>> It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if>>> they
    see value in it.>>>> The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in >>>> their aim to destroy Israel.>>> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an
    existential axe to grind>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.>> But what is their goal, and is it realistic?> > Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was
    trying to > convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet > we have to recognize that
    most of them were in power for quite a long > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.> > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both > territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to
    think this > or not.> They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very much doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah shouting ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it bluntly.
    I am not sure Hamas cares much about Palestinians, but regarding the suicide bombing, I remember the Japanese and their Kamikaze attacks, and other cases in different conflicts. Clearly killing civilians is unacceptable and it should go both ways.

    Do you think you have the courage to be one of those that give their lives for a cause like these Japanese pilots or others in combat?

    I think it has to do with emotional and psychological state of the person at the time.
    The kamikaze thing is interesting.

    I read a lot about it, about some pilots who would go out and return
    claiming mechanical problems, sometimes many, many times.

    The usual reason was that there is a strong culture value for sacrifice >> of the self for the benefit of the whole. You combine this with the idea >> of personal shame for not contributing when needed, and I think you had >> lots and lots of individuals who allowed themselves to incrementally get >> nearer and nearer life-ending dangerm right up to the point that they
    were more fearful of social disgrace than they were of dying quickly.

    I think that there was very little political, religious, or moral
    motivation for the WWII kamikazes. It was almost 100% social.

    I'm unsure how this aligns with the motivation of the Palistinian
    suicide bombers.
    The Islamic suicide bombers think that they have 72 virgins waiting for them.
    ...or so we're told.

    No, so they are told. It's well known that that 72 virgins are promised to these guys in their version of heaven, if they fight their version of jihad. .

    Allah's running out of virgins.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 12:15:57 2023
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    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 22:51:50 2023
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 21.35:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 10:24:05 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 18.38:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 3:26:45 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.53:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:39:52 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.

    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you >>>>>> "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution, >>>>>> except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic?

    Classic strawman. I said I kept my mind open to possibilities, which is not the same as "believing in." Many things which "rationalists" or scientists of their
    time once ridiculed were later validated by science.

    So you're expecting that science will some day conclude that the
    universe was created by god. Rrrright.

    You're still thinking in monotheistic, anthropomorphic terms--that's the guy in the sky with the beard, no matter what you call it.

    See, there's 's this omnipotent GUY sitting there with a mind that happens to be remarkably like that of the average human brain. He ponders, "What shall I do today? Create a universe? Should I start with light or darkness? Let's do light this time.
    Let there be light! Hmm....should there be creatures in this universe to make things fun? Sure--why not? I'll call them man and woman. Hey, why not test their faith and throw in some giant lizard skeletons.....yeah, sounds good.

    And our choice is either that goofball "god" or ZERO. Them's the rules.

    Strawman.

    So what's your god like? Where did you get the idea that it exists?

    Any force or forces responsible for the universe and life as we know it would something unfathomable and as far beyond us as we are to an amoeba. I don't even use the word "god" because it is a constraining concept fostered by monotheistic religions.
    Consequently, there can't be any "my" version of that god.

    What's your reasoning behind existence of such being?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 12:17:57 2023
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    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 22:56:15 2023
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    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 23:02:33 2023
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    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Thu Oct 19 14:21:19 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 12:52:35 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 21.35:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 10:24:05 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 18.38:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 3:26:45 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.53:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:39:52 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.

    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you
    "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution, >>>>>> except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic?

    Classic strawman. I said I kept my mind open to possibilities, which is not the same as "believing in." Many things which "rationalists" or scientists of their
    time once ridiculed were later validated by science.

    So you're expecting that science will some day conclude that the
    universe was created by god. Rrrright.

    You're still thinking in monotheistic, anthropomorphic terms--that's the guy in the sky with the beard, no matter what you call it.

    See, there's 's this omnipotent GUY sitting there with a mind that happens to be remarkably like that of the average human brain. He ponders, "What shall I do today? Create a universe? Should I start with light or darkness? Let's do light this time.
    Let there be light! Hmm....should there be creatures in this universe to make things fun? Sure--why not? I'll call them man and woman. Hey, why not test their faith and throw in some giant lizard skeletons.....yeah, sounds good.

    And our choice is either that goofball "god" or ZERO. Them's the rules. >>>
    Strawman.

    So what's your god like? Where did you get the idea that it exists?

    Any force or forces responsible for the universe and life as we know it would something unfathomable and as far beyond us as we are to an amoeba. I don't even use the word "god" because it is a constraining concept fostered by monotheistic religions.
    Consequently, there can't be any "my" version of that god.

    What's your reasoning behind existence of such being?

    I just proved that an ineffable force is behind the formation of the universe and all existing life as we know it! Who said anything about a "being"?

    But if you still stubbornly resist that, let's ask Bard again...

    "The likelihood that a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of faith and personal belief. There is no scientific evidence to prove or disprove the existence of a higher power, so the answer ultimately comes down to
    individual judgment.

    Some people believe that the complexity and order of the universe are evidence of a creator. They point to the fine-tuning of the universe's physical constants, as well as the existence of complex life, as evidence that the universe was designed by a
    higher intelligence.

    Others believe that the universe can be explained by natural processes, such as the Big Bang and evolution. They argue that the complexity and order of the universe can be explained by the laws of physics, and that life arose through natural selection.

    There is no right or wrong answer to the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it. It is a matter of personal belief.

    According to a 2019 Pew Research Center survey, 63% of Americans believe in God or a higher power. However, there is a great deal of variation in beliefs about the nature of God and the role of religion in people's lives.

    Some people believe in a personal God who intervenes in the world, while others believe in a more impersonal force or energy. Some people believe that religion is essential to their lives, while others believe that it is a private matter.

    Ultimately, the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of personal faith."

    Pretty good answer, Bard.....

    Now, what does Claude have to say about it....?

    "I do not have a strong opinion on the origins of the universe or life. There are differing perspectives on this philosophical question that reasonable people can debate."

    What a cop-out.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From *skriptis@21:1/5 to bmoore on Thu Oct 19 23:29:54 2023
    bmoore <bmoore@nyx.net> Wrote in message:r
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:56:51 AM UTC-7, *skriptis wrote:> bmoore <bmo...@nyx.net> Wrote in message:r> > On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:47:00 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:> On 10/19/23 11:06 AM, PeteWasLucky wrote: > > TT <T...@dprk.kp>
    Wrote in message:r > >> Sawfish kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 19.23:> On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>> On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:
    18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:>>>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:>>>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:>>>>>>> TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still>>>>>>>>
    standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.>>>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare >>>>>>> attack a>>>>>>> hospital.>>>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could >>>>>> be more
    of the same.>>>>> Hmmm...>>>>>>>>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased >>>>> it is>>>>> probably on the money.>>>>>>>>>> Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are >>>>> basically>>>>> rational (I do)
    what do they hope to gain?>>>>>>>>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a>>>>> given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.>>>>>>>>>> However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that >>>>>
    Israel>>>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever>>>>> increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.>>>>>>>>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive for>>>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what
    they knew would be a pretty>>>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied>>>>> territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a >>>>> slide>>>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer>>>>> to the Hamas movement.>>>>>>>>>> A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in>>>>> the region, and beyond.>>>>>>>>>> What do you think?>>>> #2.
    There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by >>>> this.>>> Important point.>>>> Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, >>>> this is huge.>>> It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic
    sacrifice if>>> they see value in it.>>>> The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in >>>> their aim to destroy Israel.>>> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in>>> nominal opposition. The Hamas
    leadership has an existential axe to grind>>> with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal>>> considerations as unaffordable luxuries.>> But what is their goal, and is it realistic?> > Now we're talking about rationality, not
    sanity, b. Like I was trying to > convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet > we
    have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.> > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both > territory and vengeance, whether ore
    not it is realistic to think this > or not.> They may have some incentives to do what they did... but I still very much doubt that Hamas is a rational actor. Suicide bombing Allah shouting ragheads with IQ of a rat, to put it bluntly. > > I am not sure
    Hamas cares much about Palestinians, but regarding the suicide bombing, I remember the Japanese and their Kamikaze attacks, and other cases in different conflicts. Clearly killing civilians is unacceptable and it should go both ways. > > > > Do you think
    you have the courage to be one of those that give their lives for a cause like these Japanese pilots or others in combat? > > > > I think it has to do with emotional and psychological state of the person at the time.> The kamikaze thing is interesting. >
    I read a lot about it, about some pilots who would go out and return > claiming mechanical problems, sometimes many, many times. > > The usual reason was that there is a strong culture value for sacrifice > of the self for the benefit of the whole. You
    combine this with the idea > of personal shame for not contributing when needed, and I think you had > lots and lots of individuals who allowed themselves to incrementally get > nearer and nearer life-ending dangerm right up to the point that they > were
    more fearful of social disgrace than they were of dying quickly. > > I think that there was very little political, religious, or moral > motivation for the WWII kamikazes. It was almost 100% social. > > I'm unsure how this aligns with the motivation of
    the Palistinian > suicide bombers. The Islamic suicide bombers think that they have 72 virgins waiting for them.> It shows why they're immune to western culture that offers used up sluts to men. > > They dream about virgins, not women who are promiscuous.
    So Skrip, you only sleep with virgins? :-)




    https://dailystormer.in/sexual-education-is-a-cancer-on-society/


    Here's something from you from Andre Anglin, he's just written it.

    --




    ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to skriptis@post.t-com.hr on Thu Oct 19 14:30:22 2023
    *skriptis <skriptis@post.t-com.hr> writes:


    https://dailystormer.in/sexual-education-is-a-cancer-on-society/


    Here's something from you from Andre Anglin, he's just written it.

    Isn't Andre himself a virgin?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Fri Oct 20 00:46:38 2023
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 23:30:26 UTC+1, jdeluise wrote:
    *skriptis <skri...@post.t-com.hr> writes:


    https://dailystormer.in/sexual-education-is-a-cancer-on-society/


    Here's something from you from Andre Anglin, he's just written it.
    Isn't Andre himself a virgin?

    not by the sounds of it, but it a Marxist culture thing, mostly promoted to destabilize society cos it wrecks the family unit, so no wonder jdeluise, bmoore saying they prefer this kind of chick! Sawfish was just tricked by the Hippy Marxists LOL

    https://nypost.com/2023/10/17/i-slept-with-300-people-in-a-year-haters-say-im-disgusting-but-i-feel-empowered/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Fri Oct 20 00:17:49 2023
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 22:21:21 UTC+1, Gracchus wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 12:52:35 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 21.35:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 10:24:05 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 18.38:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 3:26:45 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.53:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:39:52 PM UTC-7, TT wrote: >>>>>> Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.

    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you
    "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution,
    except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic? >>>
    Classic strawman. I said I kept my mind open to possibilities, which is not the same as "believing in." Many things which "rationalists" or scientists of their
    time once ridiculed were later validated by science.

    So you're expecting that science will some day conclude that the
    universe was created by god. Rrrright.

    You're still thinking in monotheistic, anthropomorphic terms--that's the guy in the sky with the beard, no matter what you call it.

    See, there's 's this omnipotent GUY sitting there with a mind that happens to be remarkably like that of the average human brain. He ponders, "What shall I do today? Create a universe? Should I start with light or darkness? Let's do light this
    time. Let there be light! Hmm....should there be creatures in this universe to make things fun? Sure--why not? I'll call them man and woman. Hey, why not test their faith and throw in some giant lizard skeletons.....yeah, sounds good.

    And our choice is either that goofball "god" or ZERO. Them's the rules.

    Strawman.

    So what's your god like? Where did you get the idea that it exists?

    Any force or forces responsible for the universe and life as we know it would something unfathomable and as far beyond us as we are to an amoeba. I don't even use the word "god" because it is a constraining concept fostered by monotheistic
    religions. Consequently, there can't be any "my" version of that god.

    What's your reasoning behind existence of such being?
    I just proved that an ineffable force is behind the formation of the universe and all existing life as we know it! Who said anything about a "being"?

    But if you still stubbornly resist that, let's ask Bard again...

    "The likelihood that a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of faith and personal belief. There is no scientific evidence to prove or disprove the existence of a higher power, so the answer ultimately comes down to
    individual judgment.

    Some people believe that the complexity and order of the universe are evidence of a creator. They point to the fine-tuning of the universe's physical constants, as well as the existence of complex life, as evidence that the universe was designed by a
    higher intelligence.

    Others believe that the universe can be explained by natural processes, such as the Big Bang and evolution. They argue that the complexity and order of the universe can be explained by the laws of physics, and that life arose through natural selection.

    There is no right or wrong answer to the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it. It is a matter of personal belief.

    According to a 2019 Pew Research Center survey, 63% of Americans believe in God or a higher power. However, there is a great deal of variation in beliefs about the nature of God and the role of religion in people's lives.

    Some people believe in a personal God who intervenes in the world, while others believe in a more impersonal force or energy. Some people believe that religion is essential to their lives, while others believe that it is a private matter.

    Ultimately, the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of personal faith."

    Pretty good answer, Bard.....

    Now, what does Claude have to say about it....?

    "I do not have a strong opinion on the origins of the universe or life. There are differing perspectives on this philosophical question that reasonable people can debate."

    What a cop-out.

    Bard is wrong, he missing out that you live longer if you believe in God, around 7 years extra, so there is definitely a right answer.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to bmoore on Fri Oct 20 02:22:47 2023
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 19:51:13 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:33:41 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 18:02:01 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:47:11 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 17:39:20 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still >>>>>>> standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.
    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever
    increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in
    nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to
    convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you
    intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long
    time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both
    territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this
    or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and
    probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).
    according to you a biological man who "thinks" he's a woman is not insane and we should all do what he says.
    See? Like clockwork, one of the usual gang of idiots chimes in with something irrelevant, stupid and false. I hope somebody gets what I'm saying.
    no it's just you're too dumb to realise it was very relevant, as you keep hypocritically bandying around the term "insane" for your own politically-motivated enemies such as Hamas (ever since yesterday when the MSM told you to dislike them).
    I live rent-free in your head. If I disappear you will seek another tenant.

    is this what Donald Trump says to you on a daily basis? LOL (P.S. thanks for using my quote)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to The Iceberg on Fri Oct 20 06:13:32 2023
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 2:22:49 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 19:51:13 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:33:41 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 18:02:01 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:47:11 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 17:39:20 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still >>>>>>> standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.
    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever
    increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in
    nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to
    convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you
    intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?),
    Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long
    time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both
    territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this
    or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and
    probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).
    according to you a biological man who "thinks" he's a woman is not insane and we should all do what he says.
    See? Like clockwork, one of the usual gang of idiots chimes in with something irrelevant, stupid and false. I hope somebody gets what I'm saying.
    no it's just you're too dumb to realise it was very relevant, as you keep hypocritically bandying around the term "insane" for your own politically-motivated enemies such as Hamas (ever since yesterday when the MSM told you to dislike them).
    I live rent-free in your head. If I disappear you will seek another tenant.
    is this what Donald Trump says to you on a daily basis? LOL (P.S. thanks for using my quote)

    Ann Landers coined it.

    https://slang.net/meaning/rent_free_in_my_head

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to The Iceberg on Fri Oct 20 11:49:23 2023
    The Iceberg <iceberg.rules@gmail.com> Wrote in message:r
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 17:39:20 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:> On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: > > On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote: > > > On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: > > >> On
    10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote: > > >>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote: > > >>>> On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote: > > >>>>> On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote: > > >>>>>> TT <T...@
    dprk.kp> writes: > > >>>>>> > > >>>>>>> There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still > > >>>>>>> standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas. > > >>>>>> PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a > >
    hospital. > > >>>>> Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same. > > >>>> Hmmm... > > >>>> > > >>>> Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is > > >>>> probably on the money. >
    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically > > >>>> rational (I do) what do they hope to gain? > > >>>> > > >>>> They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a > > >>>> given, so they
    do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel. > > >>>> > > >>>> However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel > > >>>> is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever > > >>>> increasing, too--that is anti-
    Israeli. > > >>>> > > >>>> There is another possible direction that is much less positive for > > >>>> Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty > > >>>> brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied > > >>>>
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide > > >>>> in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the > > >>>> Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer > > >>>> to the
    Hamas movement. > > >>>> > > >>>> A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in > > >>>> the region, and beyond. > > >>>> > > >>>> What do you think? > > >>> #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point. > > >>> Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge. > > >> It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if > > >> they see value in it. > > >>> The Hamas leaders may
    be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel. > > >> I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in > > >> nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind > > >> with the
    state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal > > >> considerations as unaffordable luxuries. > > > But what is their goal, and is it realistic? > > Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to > > convey, the
    use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you > > intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?), > > Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet > > we have to recognize that most of them were
    in power for quite a long > > time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love. > > > > So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both > > territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think
    this > > or not.> OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.> > >> I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do > > >> not directly affect me and/or over
    which I have no material control. > > > Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides. > > I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and > > probably we'll not have much to talk about. > > > > Sound OK?> Sure. I don't
    want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).according to you a biological man who "thinks" he's a woman is not insane and we should all do what he says.

    Which one is more weird? That the man thinks he is a woman, or
    that he wants others to think he isn't a man?
    I guess it starts with the first and gets followed by the latter
    --


    ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to The Iceberg on Fri Oct 20 08:26:24 2023
    On 10/20/23 12:46 AM, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 23:30:26 UTC+1, jdeluise wrote:
    *skriptis <skri...@post.t-com.hr> writes:


    https://dailystormer.in/sexual-education-is-a-cancer-on-society/


    Here's something from you from Andre Anglin, he's just written it.
    Isn't Andre himself a virgin?
    not by the sounds of it, but it a Marxist culture thing, mostly promoted to destabilize society cos it wrecks the family unit, so no wonder jdeluise, bmoore saying they prefer this kind of chick! Sawfish was just tricked by the Hippy Marxists LOL

    https://nypost.com/2023/10/17/i-slept-with-300-people-in-a-year-haters-say-im-disgusting-but-i-feel-empowered/

    Hah!

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Shit <-----------------------------------------------------> Shinola
    "Which is which?" --Sawfish

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to bmoore on Fri Oct 20 08:16:34 2023
    On Friday, 20 October 2023 at 14:13:36 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 2:22:49 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 19:51:13 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 11:33:41 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 18:02:01 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:47:11 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 17:39:20 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 9:28:41 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/19/23 9:01 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 11:35:48 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 11:07 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 10:49:18 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/18/23 9:54 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 9:47:34 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    TT <T...@dprk.kp> writes:

    There are 2-3 videos and many pics. Hospital is still >>>>>>> standing. There's a small hole in the ground according to Hamas.
    PWL wants to believe a pack of suicide bombers wouldn't dare attack a
    hospital.
    Hamas attacked Israel in order to provoke a response. This could be more of the same.
    Hmmm...

    Let's consider this for a minute. I think that the way you phrased it is
    probably on the money.

    Hamas wanted to provoke an Israeli response. Assuming they are basically
    rational (I do) what do they hope to gain?

    They must know that all western leadership will back Israel. That's a
    given, so they do not hope to undercut western aid for Israel.

    However, there is increasing popular perception in the west that Israel
    is a sort of a bully. So this would provoke a popular response--ever
    increasing, too--that is anti-Israeli.

    There is another possible direction that is much less positive for
    Hamas, and that is that they provoked what they knew would be a pretty
    brutal Israeli response in order to unify all Arabs in occupied
    territories. This might indicate that Hamas leadership perceived a slide
    in their influence. maybe towards moderation. So they would invite the
    Israelis to massively retaliate so as to weld the Arab populace closer
    to the Hamas movement.

    A side effect would be to appeal emotionally to all Islamic states in
    the region, and beyond.

    What do you think?
    #2. There is a Saudi-Iraeli peace plan that is getting derailed by this.
    Important point.
    Hamas has no regard for dead Palestinans. No matter what haters say, this is huge.
    It's clear to me that they have no problem with a strategic sacrifice if
    they see value in it.
    The Hamas leaders may be rational tactically, but they are insane in their aim to destroy Israel.
    I'm always wary about assigning a lack of sanity to those who may be in
    nominal opposition. The Hamas leadership has an existential axe to grind
    with the state of Israel, and because of this they suspend all normal
    considerations as unaffordable luxuries.
    But what is their goal, and is it realistic?
    Now we're talking about rationality, not sanity, b. Like I was trying to
    convey, the use of "insane" carries propaganda baggage that I doubt you
    intended. The Allies used it for Hitler, later both Qaddafi (sp?),
    Hussein, and even Idi Amin, were accused of insanity and worse, and yet
    we have to recognize that most of them were in power for quite a long
    time, which implies a degree of popular support, if not popular love.

    So to answer directly, I think that Hamas thinks that they are owed both
    territory and vengeance, whether ore not it is realistic to think this
    or not.
    OK, let's not use the word insane then. But they are quite unrealistic and look at all the death it is causing.
    I find life much easier to bear if I do not take sides in issues that do
    not directly affect me and/or over which I have no material control.
    Judging someone as insane need not involve taking sides.
    I can see that you are much more deeply affected by this than I am, and
    probably we'll not have much to talk about.

    Sound OK?
    Sure. I don't want to get too involved in discussion lest the usual gang of idiots chime in (not you).
    according to you a biological man who "thinks" he's a woman is not insane and we should all do what he says.
    See? Like clockwork, one of the usual gang of idiots chimes in with something irrelevant, stupid and false. I hope somebody gets what I'm saying.
    no it's just you're too dumb to realise it was very relevant, as you keep hypocritically bandying around the term "insane" for your own politically-motivated enemies such as Hamas (ever since yesterday when the MSM told you to dislike them).
    I live rent-free in your head. If I disappear you will seek another tenant.
    is this what Donald Trump says to you on a daily basis? LOL (P.S. thanks for using my quote)
    Ann Landers coined it.

    https://slang.net/meaning/rent_free_in_my_head

    yes but you stole it from me, thief! see your other "alter ego" bruce bowser was real useful after all LOLski

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to The Iceberg on Fri Oct 20 09:45:17 2023
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:17:51 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Thursday, 19 October 2023 at 22:21:21 UTC+1, Gracchus wrote:

    But if you still stubbornly resist that, let's ask Bard again...

    "The likelihood that a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of faith and personal belief. There is no scientific evidence to prove or disprove the existence of a higher power, so the answer ultimately comes down to
    individual judgment.

    Some people believe that the complexity and order of the universe are evidence of a creator. They point to the fine-tuning of the universe's physical constants, as well as the existence of complex life, as evidence that the universe was designed by a
    higher intelligence.

    Others believe that the universe can be explained by natural processes, such as the Big Bang and evolution. They argue that the complexity and order of the universe can be explained by the laws of physics, and that life arose through natural
    selection.

    There is no right or wrong answer to the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it. It is a matter of personal belief.

    According to a 2019 Pew Research Center survey, 63% of Americans believe in God or a higher power. However, there is a great deal of variation in beliefs about the nature of God and the role of religion in people's lives.

    Some people believe in a personal God who intervenes in the world, while others believe in a more impersonal force or energy. Some people believe that religion is essential to their lives, while others believe that it is a private matter.

    Ultimately, the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of personal faith."

    Pretty good answer, Bard.....

    Now, what does Claude have to say about it....?

    "I do not have a strong opinion on the origins of the universe or life. There are differing perspectives on this philosophical question that reasonable people can debate."

    What a cop-out.

    Bard is wrong, he missing out that you live longer if you believe in God, around 7 years extra, so there is definitely a right answer.

    ChatGPT-4 probably has the definitive answer, including loopholes and cheat codes. I just wonder if the keys to the universe are worth a monthly subscription fee.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Gracchus on Fri Oct 20 10:00:19 2023
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 2:21:21 PM UTC-7, Gracchus wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 12:52:35 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 21.35:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 10:24:05 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 18.38:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 3:26:45 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.53:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:39:52 PM UTC-7, TT wrote: >>>>>> Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.

    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you
    "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution,
    except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic? >>>
    Classic strawman. I said I kept my mind open to possibilities, which is not the same as "believing in." Many things which "rationalists" or scientists of their
    time once ridiculed were later validated by science.

    So you're expecting that science will some day conclude that the
    universe was created by god. Rrrright.

    You're still thinking in monotheistic, anthropomorphic terms--that's the guy in the sky with the beard, no matter what you call it.

    See, there's 's this omnipotent GUY sitting there with a mind that happens to be remarkably like that of the average human brain. He ponders, "What shall I do today? Create a universe? Should I start with light or darkness? Let's do light this
    time. Let there be light! Hmm....should there be creatures in this universe to make things fun? Sure--why not? I'll call them man and woman. Hey, why not test their faith and throw in some giant lizard skeletons.....yeah, sounds good.

    And our choice is either that goofball "god" or ZERO. Them's the rules.

    Strawman.

    So what's your god like? Where did you get the idea that it exists?

    Any force or forces responsible for the universe and life as we know it would something unfathomable and as far beyond us as we are to an amoeba. I don't even use the word "god" because it is a constraining concept fostered by monotheistic
    religions. Consequently, there can't be any "my" version of that god.

    What's your reasoning behind existence of such being?
    I just proved that an ineffable force is behind the formation of the universe and all existing life as we know it! Who said anything about a "being"?

    Yes, God need not be a being.

    But if you still stubbornly resist that, let's ask Bard again...

    "The likelihood that a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of faith and personal belief. There is no scientific evidence to prove or disprove the existence of a higher power, so the answer ultimately comes down to
    individual judgment.

    Some people believe that the complexity and order of the universe are evidence of a creator. They point to the fine-tuning of the universe's physical constants, as well as the existence of complex life, as evidence that the universe was designed by a
    higher intelligence.

    Others believe that the universe can be explained by natural processes, such as the Big Bang and evolution. They argue that the complexity and order of the universe can be explained by the laws of physics, and that life arose through natural selection.

    There is no right or wrong answer to the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it. It is a matter of personal belief.

    According to a 2019 Pew Research Center survey, 63% of Americans believe in God or a higher power. However, there is a great deal of variation in beliefs about the nature of God and the role of religion in people's lives.

    Polls may matter in politics, but not in the nature of existence.

    Some people believe in a personal God who intervenes in the world, while others believe in a more impersonal force or energy. Some people believe that religion is essential to their lives, while others believe that it is a private matter.

    It is both essential and private.

    Ultimately, the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of personal faith."

    Pretty good answer, Bard.....

    Agreed. What is Bard, AI?

    Now, what does Claude have to say about it....?

    "I do not have a strong opinion on the origins of the universe or life. There are differing perspectives on this philosophical question that reasonable people can debate."

    What a cop-out.

    :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to bmoore on Fri Oct 20 10:42:55 2023
    On 10/20/23 10:00 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 2:21:21 PM UTC-7, Gracchus wrote:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 12:52:35 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 21.35:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 10:24:05 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 18.38:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 3:26:45 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.53:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:39:52 PM UTC-7, TT wrote: >>>>>>>>> Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:
    Agnostic approach is a copout.
    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.
    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you
    "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution, >>>>>>>>> except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic? >>>>>>>> Classic strawman. I said I kept my mind open to possibilities, which is not the same as "believing in." Many things which "rationalists" or scientists of their
    time once ridiculed were later validated by science.
    So you're expecting that science will some day conclude that the >>>>>>> universe was created by god. Rrrright.
    You're still thinking in monotheistic, anthropomorphic terms--that's the guy in the sky with the beard, no matter what you call it.

    See, there's 's this omnipotent GUY sitting there with a mind that happens to be remarkably like that of the average human brain. He ponders, "What shall I do today? Create a universe? Should I start with light or darkness? Let's do light this
    time. Let there be light! Hmm....should there be creatures in this universe to make things fun? Sure--why not? I'll call them man and woman. Hey, why not test their faith and throw in some giant lizard skeletons.....yeah, sounds good.

    And our choice is either that goofball "god" or ZERO. Them's the rules. >>>>>>
    Strawman.

    So what's your god like? Where did you get the idea that it exists?
    Any force or forces responsible for the universe and life as we know it would something unfathomable and as far beyond us as we are to an amoeba. I don't even use the word "god" because it is a constraining concept fostered by monotheistic religions.
    Consequently, there can't be any "my" version of that god.
    What's your reasoning behind existence of such being?
    I just proved that an ineffable force is behind the formation of the universe and all existing life as we know it! Who said anything about a "being"?
    Yes, God need not be a being.

    But if you still stubbornly resist that, let's ask Bard again...

    "The likelihood that a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of faith and personal belief. There is no scientific evidence to prove or disprove the existence of a higher power, so the answer ultimately comes down to
    individual judgment.

    Some people believe that the complexity and order of the universe are evidence of a creator. They point to the fine-tuning of the universe's physical constants, as well as the existence of complex life, as evidence that the universe was designed by a
    higher intelligence.

    Others believe that the universe can be explained by natural processes, such as the Big Bang and evolution. They argue that the complexity and order of the universe can be explained by the laws of physics, and that life arose through natural selection.

    There is no right or wrong answer to the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it. It is a matter of personal belief.

    According to a 2019 Pew Research Center survey, 63% of Americans believe in God or a higher power. However, there is a great deal of variation in beliefs about the nature of God and the role of religion in people's lives.
    Polls may matter in politics, but not in the nature of existence.

    The main problem with polls is that people lie all the time, and
    especially to themselves.

    So the result of most polls is a compendium of what the participants
    were lying about on that particular day, if they were even motivated
    enough to construct a falsehood.

    Polls are "interesting" but far from definitive.

    For a really clear example of polls, see The Bradley Effect.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley_effect

    This is a simple example. The same mechanism is at work in virtually all surveys, to varying degrees.


    Some people believe in a personal God who intervenes in the world, while others believe in a more impersonal force or energy. Some people believe that religion is essential to their lives, while others believe that it is a private matter.
    It is both essential and private.

    Ultimately, the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of personal faith."

    Pretty good answer, Bard.....
    Agreed. What is Bard, AI?

    Now, what does Claude have to say about it....?

    "I do not have a strong opinion on the origins of the universe or life. There are differing perspectives on this philosophical question that reasonable people can debate."

    What a cop-out.
    :-)


    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Reality is that thing that does not go away when you stop believing in it."

    --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From TT@21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 20 21:06:19 2023
    Gracchus kirjoitti 20.10.2023 klo 0.21:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 12:52:35 PM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 21.35:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 10:24:05 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 18.38:
    On Thursday, October 19, 2023 at 3:26:45 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 19.10.2023 klo 1.53:
    On Wednesday, October 18, 2023 at 2:39:52 PM UTC-7, TT wrote: >>>>>>>> Gracchus kirjoitti 18.10.2023 klo 23.43:

    Agnostic approach is a copout.

    If it's a cop-out to keep one's mind open in light of of humanity's extreme limitations, count me in.

    So basically you believe in anything imaginary supernatural because you
    "can't know". My theory is that everything was created by evolution, >>>>>>>> except rats were created by a tooth fairy called Roger. Agnostic? >>>>>
    Classic strawman. I said I kept my mind open to possibilities, which is not the same as "believing in." Many things which "rationalists" or scientists of their
    time once ridiculed were later validated by science.

    So you're expecting that science will some day conclude that the
    universe was created by god. Rrrright.

    You're still thinking in monotheistic, anthropomorphic terms--that's the guy in the sky with the beard, no matter what you call it.

    See, there's 's this omnipotent GUY sitting there with a mind that happens to be remarkably like that of the average human brain. He ponders, "What shall I do today? Create a universe? Should I start with light or darkness? Let's do light this time.
    Let there be light! Hmm....should there be creatures in this universe to make things fun? Sure--why not? I'll call them man and woman. Hey, why not test their faith and throw in some giant lizard skeletons.....yeah, sounds good.

    And our choice is either that goofball "god" or ZERO. Them's the rules. >>>>>
    Strawman.

    So what's your god like? Where did you get the idea that it exists?

    Any force or forces responsible for the universe and life as we know it would something unfathomable and as far beyond us as we are to an amoeba. I don't even use the word "god" because it is a constraining concept fostered by monotheistic religions.
    Consequently, there can't be any "my" version of that god.

    What's your reasoning behind existence of such being?

    I just proved that an ineffable force is behind the formation of the universe and all existing life as we know it! Who said anything about a "being"?


    Ummm...

    But if you still stubbornly resist that, let's ask Bard again...

    "The likelihood that a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of faith and personal belief. There is no scientific evidence to prove or disprove the existence of a higher power, so the answer ultimately comes down to
    individual judgment.


    Likelihood is not about faith.

    Some people believe that the complexity and order of the universe are evidence of a creator. They point to the fine-tuning of the universe's physical constants, as well as the existence of complex life, as evidence that the universe was designed by a
    higher intelligence.


    While others debunk that pointing to flawed / nonsensical design.

    Others believe that the universe can be explained by natural processes, such as the Big Bang and evolution. They argue that the complexity and order of the universe can be explained by the laws of physics, and that life arose through natural selection.


    Yes

    There is no right or wrong answer to the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it. It is a matter of personal belief.


    No

    According to a 2019 Pew Research Center survey, 63% of Americans believe in God or a higher power. However, there is a great deal of variation in beliefs about the nature of God and the role of religion in people's lives.


    Uh-huh

    Some people believe in a personal God who intervenes in the world, while others believe in a more impersonal force or energy. Some people believe that religion is essential to their lives, while others believe that it is a private matter.


    Song for Gracchus:
    https://youtu.be/cNd4eocq2K0?si=8WueYAopBRQVi-_r

    Ultimately, the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of personal faith."


    No

    Pretty good answer, Bard.....


    A bit woke... or perhaps more accurately put "politically correct"
    answer. Like something you'd find on a US website...

    Now, what does Claude have to say about it....?

    "I do not have a strong opinion on the origins of the universe or life. There are differing perspectives on this philosophical question that reasonable people can debate."


    I kinda like this better.
    Claude sounds like a honest frenchman.

    What a cop-out.



    Ummm-uh...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to bmoore on Fri Oct 20 10:29:33 2023
    bmoore <bmoore@nyx.net> writes:


    It is both essential and private.

    Yet it's neither essential nor private. If it were essential I'd be
    dead or doing very poorly in life. If it were private, we wouldn't see thousands of years of wars, death, destruction and poverty in its wake.

    Religion is a mental illness and should be treated as such.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Gracchus@21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 20 11:42:18 2023
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 11:06:25 AM UTC-7, TT wrote:
    Gracchus kirjoitti 20.10.2023 klo 0.21:

    I just proved that an ineffable force is behind the formation of the universe and all existing life as we know it! Who said anything about a "being"?

    Ummm...

    But if you still stubbornly resist that, let's ask Bard again...

    "The likelihood that a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of faith and personal belief. There is no scientific evidence to prove or disprove the existence of a higher power, so the answer ultimately comes down to
    individual judgment.

    Likelihood is not about faith.

    True. Not well worded by Bard.

    Some people believe that the complexity and order of the universe are evidence of a creator. They point to the fine-tuning of the universe's physical constants, as well as the existence of complex life, as evidence that the universe was designed by a
    higher intelligence.

    While others debunk that pointing to flawed / nonsensical design.

    They rebut it. That is not the same as debunking.

    Others believe that the universe can be explained by natural processes, such as the Big Bang and evolution. They argue that the complexity and order of the universe can be explained by the laws of physics, and that life arose through natural
    selection.

    Yes

    There is no right or wrong answer to the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it. It is a matter of personal belief.

    No

    I think Bard's heart was in the right place here. There may in fact be a right or wrong answer, but it is beyond our current capabilities and may remain so.

    According to a 2019 Pew Research Center survey, 63% of Americans believe in God or a higher power. However, there is a great deal of variation in beliefs about the nature of God and the role of religion in people's lives.

    Uh-huh

    Some people believe in a personal God who intervenes in the world, while others believe in a more impersonal force or energy. Some people believe that religion is essential to their lives, while others believe that it is a private matter.

    Song for Gracchus:
    https://youtu.be/cNd4eocq2K0?si=8WueYAopBRQVi-_r

    Ultimately, the question of whether or not a higher power created the universe and life as we know it is a matter of personal faith."

    No

    Right.

    Pretty good answer, Bard.....

    A bit woke... or perhaps more accurately put "politically correct"
    answer. Like something you'd find on a US website...

    Yes, I see some of that too. Bard is trying a little too hard not to hurt anyone's feelings on any side of the issue. Maybe too many Gen-Z involved in its design.

    Now, what does Claude have to say about it....?

    "I do not have a strong opinion on the origins of the universe or life. There are differing perspectives on this philosophical question that reasonable people can debate."

    I kinda like this better.
    Claude sounds like a honest frenchman.

    :)

    What a cop-out.

    Ummm-uh...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Fri Oct 20 12:52:20 2023
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 11:29:38 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    bmoore <bmo...@nyx.net> writes:


    It is both essential and private.
    Yet it's neither essential nor private. If it were essential I'd be
    dead or doing very poorly in life.

    OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.

    If it were private, we wouldn't see
    thousands of years of wars, death, destruction and poverty in its wake.

    That's not religion. It's the tragedy of humanity.

    Religion is a mental illness and should be treated as such.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to bmoore on Fri Oct 20 13:20:39 2023
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 11:29:38 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    bmoore <bmo...@nyx.net> writes:


    It is both essential and private.
    Yet it's neither essential nor private. If it were essential I'd be
    dead or doing very poorly in life.
    OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.

    But also, I am not a judgemental Christian, because I don't know what you believe in your heart. Dunno if that makes sense to you, but it's all about private spirituality. Thus I have little else to say here.

    If it were private, we wouldn't see
    thousands of years of wars, death, destruction and poverty in its wake.
    That's not religion. It's the tragedy of humanity.
    Religion is a mental illness and should be treated as such.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to bmoore on Fri Oct 20 13:18:20 2023
    On 10/20/23 12:52 PM, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 11:29:38 AM UTC-7, jdeluise wrote:
    bmoore <bmo...@nyx.net> writes:

    It is both essential and private.
    Yet it's neither essential nor private. If it were essential I'd be
    dead or doing very poorly in life.
    OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.

    If it were private, we wouldn't see
    thousands of years of wars, death, destruction and poverty in its wake.
    That's not religion. It's the tragedy of humanity.
    ...or, alternatively, it's just the animal we call "human" chopping its
    way thru its environment, in an evolutionary sense.

    Religion is a mental illness and should be treated as such.

    It's a belief system. To the degree that it does not get you
    disadvantaged in the short/intermediate term, if you're happy with it,
    it seems fine.

    From my POV, it's not even that constrained: if it disadvantages the
    believer but I'm unaffected, it seems tenable.

    I sure don't see it as any kind of clinical pathology, though. Not
    without a bunch of sophistry to "support" that conclusion.


    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Those whom the gods wish to destroy, they first make Woke."

    --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Shakes@21:1/5 to bmoore on Fri Oct 20 17:40:24 2023
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 1:20:41 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:

    OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.
    But also, I am not a judgemental Christian, because I don't know what you believe in your heart. Dunno if that makes sense to you, but it's all about private spirituality. Thus I have little else to say here.

    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Whisper@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Sat Oct 21 19:44:35 2023
    On 21/10/2023 4:42 am, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/20/23 10:00 AM, bmoore wrote:

    According to a 2019 Pew Research Center survey, 63% of Americans
    believe in God or a higher power. However, there is a great deal of
    variation in beliefs about the nature of God and the role of religion
    in people's lives.
    Polls may matter in politics, but not in the nature of existence.

    The main problem with polls is that people lie all the time, and
    especially to themselves.



    Yes, when I voted in the recent Indigenous recognition referendum I took
    the instruction sheet for the Yes campaign so I wouldn't come across as
    a racist, and voted no in the booth.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to jdeluise on Sat Oct 21 05:09:43 2023
    On Friday, 20 October 2023 at 19:29:38 UTC+1, jdeluise wrote:
    bmoore <bmo...@nyx.net> writes:


    It is both essential and private.
    Yet it's neither essential nor private. If it were essential I'd be
    dead or doing very poorly in life. If it were private, we wouldn't see thousands of years of wars, death, destruction and poverty in its wake.

    Religion is a mental illness and should be treated as such.

    yet you say having 155 different genders and a biological man who "thinks" he's a woman isn't a mental illness? you also seem very angry all the time and you follow/adhere like glue to whatever you're told by the leftist media, surely this proves
    religion is essential?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Shakes on Sat Oct 21 05:55:24 2023
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 5:40:26 PM UTC-7, Shakes wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 1:20:41 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:

    OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.
    But also, I am not a judgemental Christian, because I don't know what you believe in your heart. Dunno if that makes sense to you, but it's all about private spirituality. Thus I have little else to say here.
    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?

    What tenets are you referring to?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to bmoore on Sat Oct 21 08:06:02 2023
    On 10/21/23 5:55 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 5:40:26 PM UTC-7, Shakes wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 1:20:41 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.
    But also, I am not a judgemental Christian, because I don't know what you believe in your heart. Dunno if that makes sense to you, but it's all about private spirituality. Thus I have little else to say here.
    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?
    What tenets are you referring to?

    Shakes can answer for himself, but what came to mind is the urge to
    evangelize.

    I'm open to any explanation or interpretation.

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Those whom the gods wish to destroy, they first make Woke."

    --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to Whisper on Sat Oct 21 08:04:47 2023
    On 10/21/23 1:44 AM, Whisper wrote:
    On 21/10/2023 4:42 am, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/20/23 10:00 AM, bmoore wrote:

    According to a 2019 Pew Research Center survey, 63% of Americans
    believe in God or a higher power. However, there is a great deal of
    variation in beliefs about the nature of God and the role of
    religion in people's lives.
    Polls may matter in politics, but not in the nature of existence.

    The main problem with polls is that people lie all the time, and
    especially to themselves.



    Yes, when I voted in the recent Indigenous recognition referendum I
    took the instruction sheet for the Yes campaign so I wouldn't come
    across as a racist, and voted no in the booth.






    There you go, Whisp!

    In this day and age, that's the winning ticket, sickening though it is.

    ...but there's no doubt that I'll do what I think needs to be done to
    come out all right. Just another smelly task.

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    "I want to die peacefully in my sleep like my Grandpa, not screaming in terror like the passengers in his car."

    --Sawfish ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Sat Oct 21 08:32:30 2023
    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 8:06:06 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/21/23 5:55 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 5:40:26 PM UTC-7, Shakes wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 1:20:41 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.
    But also, I am not a judgemental Christian, because I don't know what you believe in your heart. Dunno if that makes sense to you, but it's all about private spirituality. Thus I have little else to say here.
    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?
    What tenets are you referring to?
    Shakes can answer for himself, but what came to mind is the urge to evangelize.

    I'm open to any explanation or interpretation.

    Not all Christians are meant to be evangelists via preaching words. I think the best way to spread the word is via actions, such as how you treat others.That's why hypocritical Christians are so offensive.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Sawfish@21:1/5 to bmoore on Sat Oct 21 10:04:08 2023
    On 10/21/23 8:32 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 8:06:06 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/21/23 5:55 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 5:40:26 PM UTC-7, Shakes wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 1:20:41 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.
    But also, I am not a judgemental Christian, because I don't know what you believe in your heart. Dunno if that makes sense to you, but it's all about private spirituality. Thus I have little else to say here.
    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?
    What tenets are you referring to?
    Shakes can answer for himself, but what came to mind is the urge to
    evangelize.

    I'm open to any explanation or interpretation.
    Not all Christians are meant to be evangelists via preaching words. I think the best way to spread the word is via actions, such as how you treat others.That's why hypocritical Christians are so offensive.

    I don't know if you have kids, but there are two main ways to raise a
    kid to absorb what you see as worthy values. One way is by telling them directly, either as a statement or folded into a story, or at the other
    pole, you basically model the behaviors and values you think are
    positive for them in life. In short, for the latter, you live the values
    rather than state the values.

    In actual practice you use both methods, but in my opinion consistent
    modeling is the most effective,  and also the "deepest".

    So evangelizing is basically the former method, and living a decent life
    in public is the latter method.

    Does this conclusion seem to make any sense to you?

    --
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Give me Dadaism, or give me nothing!"
    --Sawfish

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Sat Oct 21 10:28:24 2023
    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 10:04:13 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/21/23 8:32 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 8:06:06 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/21/23 5:55 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 5:40:26 PM UTC-7, Shakes wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 1:20:41 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote: >>>>>> OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.
    But also, I am not a judgemental Christian, because I don't know what you believe in your heart. Dunno if that makes sense to you, but it's all about private spirituality. Thus I have little else to say here.
    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?
    What tenets are you referring to?
    Shakes can answer for himself, but what came to mind is the urge to
    evangelize.

    I'm open to any explanation or interpretation.
    Not all Christians are meant to be evangelists via preaching words. I think the best way to spread the word is via actions, such as how you treat others.That's why hypocritical Christians are so offensive.
    I don't know if you have kids, but there are two main ways to raise a
    kid to absorb what you see as worthy values. One way is by telling them directly, either as a statement or folded into a story, or at the other pole, you basically model the behaviors and values you think are
    positive for them in life. In short, for the latter, you live the values rather than state the values.

    In actual practice you use both methods, but in my opinion consistent modeling is the most effective, and also the "deepest".

    So evangelizing is basically the former method, and living a decent life
    in public is the latter method.

    Does this conclusion seem to make any sense to you?

    Yes. In public, and at home with your kids.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to Shakes on Sat Oct 21 10:32:38 2023
    On Saturday, 21 October 2023 at 01:40:26 UTC+1, Shakes wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 1:20:41 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:

    OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.
    But also, I am not a judgemental Christian, because I don't know what you believe in your heart. Dunno if that makes sense to you, but it's all about private spirituality. Thus I have little else to say here.
    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?

    yes, very much, but he's a Marxist, he want to pick and choose parts of the Bible that challenge modern day Marxist culture and bend over backwards for everyone else bending what the Bible says for that sadly, as you say his idea of "private" totally
    and tragically disregards Jesus' Great Commission in Matthew 28. Hope his "preacher" will point that out one day.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From bmoore@21:1/5 to The Iceberg on Sat Oct 21 10:55:31 2023
    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 10:38:13 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Saturday, 21 October 2023 at 18:04:13 UTC+1, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/21/23 8:32 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 8:06:06 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/21/23 5:55 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 5:40:26 PM UTC-7, Shakes wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 1:20:41 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote: >>>>> On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote: >>>>>> OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.
    But also, I am not a judgemental Christian, because I don't know what you believe in your heart. Dunno if that makes sense to you, but it's all about private spirituality. Thus I have little else to say here.
    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?
    What tenets are you referring to?
    Shakes can answer for himself, but what came to mind is the urge to
    evangelize.

    I'm open to any explanation or interpretation.
    Not all Christians are meant to be evangelists via preaching words. I think the best way to spread the word is via actions, such as how you treat others.That's why hypocritical Christians are so offensive.
    I don't know if you have kids, but there are two main ways to raise a
    kid to absorb what you see as worthy values. One way is by telling them directly, either as a statement or folded into a story, or at the other pole, you basically model the behaviors and values you think are
    positive for them in life. In short, for the latter, you live the values rather than state the values.

    In actual practice you use both methods, but in my opinion consistent modeling is the most effective, and also the "deepest".

    So evangelizing is basically the former method, and living a decent life in public is the latter method.

    Does this conclusion seem to make any sense to you?
    yes agree this is the case for kids, but this definitely isn't the case with Christianity, nobody says I became a Christian cos that bloke was such a good citizen to others. The reason is you have to accept Jesus Christ, it's not just about being a
    good citizen, anyone can do that.

    But if you're "not a good bloke to others", your commitment to your fellow man is in question.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Sat Oct 21 10:38:11 2023
    On Saturday, 21 October 2023 at 18:04:13 UTC+1, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/21/23 8:32 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 8:06:06 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/21/23 5:55 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 5:40:26 PM UTC-7, Shakes wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 1:20:41 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote: >>>>>> OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.
    But also, I am not a judgemental Christian, because I don't know what you believe in your heart. Dunno if that makes sense to you, but it's all about private spirituality. Thus I have little else to say here.
    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?
    What tenets are you referring to?
    Shakes can answer for himself, but what came to mind is the urge to
    evangelize.

    I'm open to any explanation or interpretation.
    Not all Christians are meant to be evangelists via preaching words. I think the best way to spread the word is via actions, such as how you treat others.That's why hypocritical Christians are so offensive.
    I don't know if you have kids, but there are two main ways to raise a
    kid to absorb what you see as worthy values. One way is by telling them directly, either as a statement or folded into a story, or at the other pole, you basically model the behaviors and values you think are
    positive for them in life. In short, for the latter, you live the values rather than state the values.

    In actual practice you use both methods, but in my opinion consistent modeling is the most effective, and also the "deepest".

    So evangelizing is basically the former method, and living a decent life
    in public is the latter method.

    Does this conclusion seem to make any sense to you?

    yes agree this is the case for kids, but this definitely isn't the case with Christianity, nobody says I became a Christian cos that bloke was such a good citizen to others. The reason is you have to accept Jesus Christ, it's not just about being a good
    citizen, anyone can do that.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Shakes@21:1/5 to bmoore on Sat Oct 21 13:30:10 2023
    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 5:55:26 AM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 5:40:26 PM UTC-7, Shakes wrote:

    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?
    What tenets are you referring to?

    I meant pretty much what Iceberg said in his reply to my post - that religion being a private/individual thing is not what a true Christian who adheres to the letter of the Bible believes. The effect or offshoot of that is Proselytization and Evangelism
    that Saw has referred to.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From jdeluise@21:1/5 to Shakes on Sat Oct 21 13:23:20 2023
    Shakes <kvcshake@gmail.com> writes:

    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 5:55:26 AM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 5:40:26 PM UTC-7, Shakes wrote:

    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?
    What tenets are you referring to?

    I meant pretty much what Iceberg said in his reply to my post - that
    religion being a private/individual thing is not what a true Christian
    who adheres to the letter of the Bible believes. The effect or
    offshoot of that is Proselytization and Evangelism that Saw has
    referred to.

    I worked very closely and was friends with a devout greek orthodox
    christian for years. They didn't seem to do any proselytizing outside
    the family. They spread the faith by having LOTS of kids instead :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From PeteWasLucky@21:1/5 to Sawfish on Sat Oct 21 14:59:47 2023
    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 1:04:13 PM UTC-4, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/21/23 8:32 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 8:06:06 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/21/23 5:55 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 5:40:26 PM UTC-7, Shakes wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 1:20:41 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote: >>>>>> OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.
    But also, I am not a judgemental Christian, because I don't know what you believe in your heart. Dunno if that makes sense to you, but it's all about private spirituality. Thus I have little else to say here.
    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?
    What tenets are you referring to?
    Shakes can answer for himself, but what came to mind is the urge to
    evangelize.

    I'm open to any explanation or interpretation.
    Not all Christians are meant to be evangelists via preaching words. I think the best way to spread the word is via actions, such as how you treat others.That's why hypocritical Christians are so offensive.
    I don't know if you have kids, but there are two main ways to raise a
    kid to absorb what you see as worthy values. One way is by telling them directly, either as a statement or folded into a story, or at the other pole, you basically model the behaviors and values you think are
    positive for them in life. In short, for the latter, you live the values rather than state the values.

    In actual practice you use both methods, but in my opinion consistent modeling is the most effective, and also the "deepest".

    So evangelizing is basically the former method, and living a decent life
    in public is the latter method.

    Does this conclusion seem to make any sense to you?

    -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Give me Dadaism, or give me nothing!"
    --Sawfish

    I do both but I get fears at times that it's not only about raising children on good values and morals, but it could be about fulfilling the worshipping duty to our creator as we have been told based on every individual learning, exposure, and
    circumstances. I keep my doors of knowledge open, and seek any light that can get me closer to the self peace that we humans lack or pretend to have, but if there is any it will evaporate when the time for death bed approaches.
    In the back of my mind, I know simple people have inner peace being connected to God through their religions, but it's who that call themselves intelligent that work hard to argue their belief that there is no God.
    This is the position I fear to be in, because I know if there is a judgment day we will be judged by our intelligence deciding actions that are in contradiction to what our inner souls were telling us.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Iceberg@21:1/5 to bmoore on Mon Oct 23 03:02:39 2023
    On Saturday, 21 October 2023 at 18:55:33 UTC+1, bmoore wrote:
    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 10:38:13 AM UTC-7, The Iceberg wrote:
    On Saturday, 21 October 2023 at 18:04:13 UTC+1, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/21/23 8:32 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Saturday, October 21, 2023 at 8:06:06 AM UTC-7, Sawfish wrote:
    On 10/21/23 5:55 AM, bmoore wrote:
    On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 5:40:26 PM UTC-7, Shakes wrote: >>>> On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 1:20:41 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote: >>>>> On Friday, October 20, 2023 at 12:52:22 PM UTC-7, bmoore wrote: >>>>>> OK, I'll back off on essential... for this life.
    But also, I am not a judgemental Christian, because I don't know what you believe in your heart. Dunno if that makes sense to you, but it's all about private spirituality. Thus I have little else to say here.
    Isn't that against the tenets of Christianity though ?
    What tenets are you referring to?
    Shakes can answer for himself, but what came to mind is the urge to >> evangelize.

    I'm open to any explanation or interpretation.
    Not all Christians are meant to be evangelists via preaching words. I think the best way to spread the word is via actions, such as how you treat others.That's why hypocritical Christians are so offensive.
    I don't know if you have kids, but there are two main ways to raise a kid to absorb what you see as worthy values. One way is by telling them directly, either as a statement or folded into a story, or at the other pole, you basically model the behaviors and values you think are positive for them in life. In short, for the latter, you live the values rather than state the values.

    In actual practice you use both methods, but in my opinion consistent modeling is the most effective, and also the "deepest".

    So evangelizing is basically the former method, and living a decent life in public is the latter method.

    Does this conclusion seem to make any sense to you?
    yes agree this is the case for kids, but this definitely isn't the case with Christianity, nobody says I became a Christian cos that bloke was such a good citizen to others. The reason is you have to accept Jesus Christ, it's not just about being a
    good citizen, anyone can do that.
    But if you're "not a good bloke to others", your commitment to your fellow man is in question.

    that's just an opinion, sucker!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKC2CPS9AFI

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)