"Back when I was a young boy all my aunts and uncles would poke me in the ribs at weddings saying your next! Your next! They stopped doing all that crap when I started doing it to them... at funerals!"
Well that's true. There are various degrees of libertarians. I guess I'm really answering to the Ayn Rand breed of libertarian, like the Pauls.
But yeah, there are some aspects of the more progressive libertarian philosophy that is appealing. But then our country/government is not one thing or another but a blend of philosophies. Pure anything just doesn't work.
Despite what the ultra right/tea party folks are trying to sell, our government doesn't control our every move and in fact gives us lots of leeway, but with a safety net. In this country we have the freedom to succeed spectacularly...and the freedom to fail spectacularly. If you want a business, you can start a business. And if you don't want to work within the regulations (enviromental, labor, etc..) well, then step aside because there are plenty in line behind you who will.
And oh by the way, our government will be sure you have nice, wide, maintained roads to conduct your commerce on, and Internet, and electricity, and an educated workforce to choose from who aren't constantly sick from tainted meat, or breathing filthy air.
And on and on, we have cobbled together this way of life that is the envy of the world. We do fiddle and tweak, but we don't let some band of nut jobs completely overturn it and 'let's try this'. (which is what I meant by our country isn't an experiment.)
I don't think that at all, but I do think its critical to let people make up their own minds. Some people in this world believe that when you die you keep coming back until you finally achieve the state of being a cow. Some picture a dude on a throne dealing out final judgments like playing cards. Some think you better take care of what we have here because its all there is. People come up with all kinds of explanations for all kinds of events that we didn't actually witness.
Evolution makes sense to a lot of people because we can put puzzle pieces together to form a picture. Creationism is accepted by a lot of people because they have faith in the existence of a God that could pull it off. We do not follow any particular religious path at home, but we talked with our kids about both ideas and tried to give them the tools to decide for themselves. That's the track I would like to be on. And you know what? If you remove only the most extreme, literal interpretations the two ideas are not mutually exclusive. Maybe there's a lesson there that could apply in other places.
"Back when I was a young boy all my aunts and uncles would poke me in the ribs at weddings saying your next! Your next! They stopped doing all that crap when I started doing it to them... at funerals!"
Yes you did insinuate that those who vote against bigger/better entitlements are numbskulls. You said:
"I just am not sure if they know what they are talking about when they are rambling on about cutting them."
It's right out of Thomas Frank's What's the Matter with Kansas? book in which the author explains how conservative citizens in Kansas vote against their best interests in economic policies and entitlements because they been swayed by polemics of the right on non-economic issues. Your statement is derisive of conservative voters.
So if you wish to debate entitlements, then do so. And you did do that in your next post.
There is a very significant difference between science and faith, which distinguishes them from each other. Science is testable in the tangible, material world. Faith is belief. Both are important to the human experience; they are not at all equal as theories, however, as they dwell in very different domains.
"Science does include logic—statements that are not logically true cannot be scien- tifically true—but what distinguishes the scientific way of knowing is the requirement of going to nature to verify claims. Statements about the natural world are testedagainst the natural world, which is the final arbiter. Of course, this approach is not perfect: one’s information about the natural world comes from experiencing the natural world through the senses (touch, smell, taste, vision, hearing) and instrumental extensions of these senses (e.g., microscopes, telescopes, telemetry, chemical analy- sis), any of which can be faulty or incomplete. As a result, science, more than any of the other ways of knowing described here, is more tentative in its claims. Ironically, the tentativeness of science ultimately leads to more confidence in scientific under- standing: the willingness to change one’s explanation with more or better data, or a different way of looking at the same data, is one of the great strengths of the scientific method. The anthropologist Ashley Montagu summarized science rather nicely when he wrote, “The scientist believes in proof without certainty, the bigot in certainty without proof” (Montagu 1984: 9).
Thus science requires deciding among alternative explanations of the natural world by going to the natural world itself to test them. There are many ways of testing an explanation, but virtually all of them involve the idea of holding constant some factors that might influence the explanation so that some alternative explanations can be eliminated."
http://ncse.com/files/pub/creationis...hapter%201.pdf
You mean science would tend not to believe in a virgin birth unless they had more proof then it was written in a book and this book was published hundreds of years after the birth.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)