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#711
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#712
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Still haven't told us which book we should start with. I'm pretty disappointed.
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#714
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Now, let's talk about baseless accusations... Quote:
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I don't feel like going through the seventy pages to find it but one of your posts made it very clear that you are what's known as a "sex-negative feminist" as well. Which is extremely telling considering everything that you aspire to be against on the surface are exactly what you've become. Quote:
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#715
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Oh, please. Pointing out when people are worth ignoring doesn't indicate any kind of double standard on my part or anyone else's.
I could go copy and paste half a dozen explicitly racist, misogynistic, and bigoted remarks that you've made. Do you see now what baseless means? You make things up about other people, while I simply call a spade a spade. Get help. | ||
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#716
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An all time favorite for all ages ^ As far as all the other stuff in this thread... [You must be logged in to view images. Log in or Register.] | |||
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#717
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In any case, here are a couple I've finished recently: [You must be logged in to view images. Log in or Register.] I'd imagine one of the things that makes Jefferson hard to write about, especially in a short form, is that he takes part in the enlightenment moment. In the American presidential election of 1796, the election had its choice between two candidates: one was the president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the other was the founder of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. The candidacy seems to have shriveled a bit since then. Not only that, but under the 1796 rules you could vote for both of them, because the runner-up would be your vice president, and that's what the electorate did. Some might say it was a looted electorate, but it had a rather handsome choice. Not only taking part in this extraordinary moment of the enlightenment, not only rewriting John Locke's words when he came to compose the Declaration of Independence, changing "life, liberty, and property" - Locke's trivium, or triad, or triaca of ideas - into a formulation I know you don't need me to tell you about. Not only after that leading Virginia through a very perilous period of revolutionary war, and then becoming minister to France, but he's almost continuously in power afterwards for 25 years. And that's before he helped provide us with a vaccination for cholera, and before he founded the University of Virginia, and before he takes a razor to the New Testament to produce the Jefferson Bible, cutting out everything mythical or stupid, leaving himself with a very short edition. [You must be logged in to view images. Log in or Register.] A brilliant evocation of a pre-First World War Britain when the old system, which was basically a liberal system, came under tremendous shocks from the movement for women's suffrage, the movement to disengage from Ireland and the rise of organized labor. In the chapter on the rise of women's suffrage he describes beautifully all the morbid symptoms that appear when the long-repressed - especially sexually repressed - group begin to take their own measures. The suffragette movement simply for women's franchise, for the right of women to vote, was attacked by all kinds of people for its weirdness. For the way the women started to dress as men, to neglect their families and to behave promiscuously. Many of these symptoms, up to and including suicide on some occasions, were indeed present but when the air cleared it was obviously the result of the original repression. It was a phase through which the movement had to pass. | |||
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#718
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Holy shit we agree Paul. I am most definitely using a series of straw men. That's only because I have no specific position to refute. You haven't posited anything, you've simply said "read a book" and "white people are oppressive," as if that means something to me. I'm sorry, I've lived in a nonwhite country, and I just don't see it that way. White people are exponentially more tolerant of gays, other races, on down the list, as opposed to pretty much anyone else. Why don't you talk to me about Uganda penalizing homosexuality with death by stoning? Why not have an honest accounting of real or perceived crimes against humanity committed by all races? I'll tell you why, because reality doesn't fit your bull shit narrative. White people are not blameless, not by a long shot, I just don't see what revisionist history accomplishes, especially when white people have the unique dichotomy of simultaneously being imperialist ass holes and purveyors or scientific knowledge and cultural advancement seen in no other society since the beginning of time (that we're aware of).
I'm with Glenzig, why don't you tell me what book to read so that maybe i can see your perspective. Simply saying "white people are shit" doesn't resonate with me. Unlike you, if I am ignorant, I'd like to see another side of the issue, not simply say "I'm tolerant, white people are evil," when, if anything, that proves that you're anything but tolerant.
__________________
God Bless Texas
Free Iran | ||
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#719
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#720
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