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Robert Ewing

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I can't grasp Kanji. What do those moon runes mean?

And that terrible human trait that's sort of like... Well, let me give you a scenario.

-- You are charged with protecting a town. A deadly zombie virus breaks out in the town. There are 200 people in the town. 75 of them are infected. You have a chance to kill all the 75 zombies almost instantly, ending the zombie infection, and saving the town and the world. The villagers won't let you, because it's their friends and family. And human rights and shit.

Why don't people overcome their 'bawwwww Disney movie ethics' and think of the greater good? 75 UNDEAD people, or 7 billion UNDEAD people? DAMN YOU DEMOCRACYYYY
 

Vkmies

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Buchholz101 said:
People who dye their hair.

I can handle nose rings, nipple piercings, earrings, belly-button rings, and tattoos, but dying your hair, or altering any aspect of your body that you were born with just doesn't feel right.

Same with any cosmetic surgery.
Not trying to create conflict, but completely out of interest: Why is eternal pictures on your skin (tattoos) less altering your body than putting colour in your hair, since that wont be there for too long? Why draw the line in the hair?

Does sex-changes fall into that cosmetic surgery? It's pretty much the most extreme alteration of body that you can do.
 
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I don't get why people drink beer....It tastes like crap, IMO. I don't see why anyone would want more than one glass of the stuff.

And while we're on the subject, why the hell do some people WANT to get drunk? I mean, how can you enjoy yourself if you lose most of your judgement, and likely can't even remember what the hell you did the night before? I understand the appeal of having a bit to drink, even getting a bit tipsy. But totally PISS DRUNK? Why?
 

Mau95

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Soods said:
Mau95 said:
Soods said:
German grammar...
IT MAKES NO SENSE!!

Edit: So many people saying they can't understand religious people. Here is a slightly logical answer:
If [insert deity here] does exist: you will go to heaven or be reborn as a cow or something.
If it doesn't exist: doesn't matter now that you're dead, does it?
German grammar makes total sense, although it depends on where you're from.
Ok, it does make sense, but the endless lists of exceptions make it hard to grasp.
If only it were more like English, which has no exceptions at all.
 

Togs

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aegix drakan said:
I don't get why people drink beer....It tastes like crap, IMO. I don't see why anyone would want more than one glass of the stuff.
Its an acquired taste, and one that just keeps on giving when you have.

aegix drakan said:
And while we're on the subject, why the hell do some people WANT to get drunk? I mean, how can you enjoy yourself if you lose most of your judgement, and likely can't even remember what the hell you did the night before? I understand the appeal of having a bit to drink, even getting a bit tipsy. But totally PISS DRUNK? Why?
Oops almost went off on rant at this one, but on reread it was alot less confrontational then I thought.
Being drunk is fun, as it gives us an excuse to let our more animal natures run free and give our battered egos a break from trying to balance the demands of id and superego.
After a heavy night (apart from all the cringing and horrible flashbacks) I feel like Ive had some kind of cartharsis- its emotionally refreshing.
 

Nalbis

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As already said, religion and crime. I can't understand how in this day and age people can still believe in religions, but each to their own. Crime baffles me, I mean real crime... I'll purchase some drugs, or hop a train barrier or something if I don't have the money for a train, but I think most people do that (maybe not the drugs part).
 

Mau95

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Whit said:
Sinclair Solutions said:
I think you guys tend to generalize religion and portray it in more of a bad light than it deserves. There are many things about religion that have benefits. Yes, there are negatives to religion, but there are negatives to everything. Yes, the more zealous religious folk can do some very immature and very mean things, but so can a very zealous atheist.
I know that zealous atheists can be assholes sometimes, but you're ignoring scale when you say that. I mean when's the last time a zealous Atheist went around killing people they had philosophical disagreements with? I can't think of a single example of an Atheist killing for the sole reason of being over-zealous about their Atheism. Meanwhile this is a disturbingly common practice among more zealous Christians, in some parts of the the U.S. abortionists are frequently murdered and their clinics bombed, and homosexuals are still lynched/dragged through the streets/beaten/shot etc. My fellow Atheists do kill people sometimes, but when they do it, it's for individual reasons, not zeal.
First of all: people really still do that in the U.S.?
Point for me: there are less Atheists. Larger groups do more damage then small ones.
 

Denamic

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Dunno if this has been posted before, but this is a superb video about open-mindedness.
 

AquaAscension

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Macgyvercas said:
Arkvoodle said:
The Ponies.
You might want to expand on that so you don't get hit with a low content warning.

OT: For me, it's rap and hip hop. I can't get how people can honestly like that stuff.
I used to think that way, then I took an ar... sorry, no, no I didn't. But, seriously, I used to think how you think then I listened to some pretty good hip hop.

Granted, this doesn't mean I've become a hip-hop fanboy because sometimes I can't listen to it anymore (I start craving more melody and chords, less fast rhyming with words).

OT: I don't get people who don't like poetry. Okay, I actually understand it, because more often than not, it just means they're poorly versed in "good" poetry, but give it a chance man. It's as old as humans are and it was the original way to convey a story - it was the method of immortality for our ancients, they... never died so long as the story was alive.
 

Michael Hirst

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Money, more specifically what people will do to each other for the sake of money. It's sickening to see how people will kill each other for what at the end of the day is bits of paper with imaginary value attached. When you die all the money in the world is useless and looking at things from that logic makes religious people seem a lot more sensible really.
 

iLikeHippos

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I don't understand Atheism. I mean, if you're going to be disobedient to the church and think 'freely' as if the term did not apply to religious people to begin with, why not take the better option from the motto of 'not giving a fuck' towards 'I'll improve the world from now on'?

I am talking about conversion towards other non-religious groups such as Zen-Buddhism and the many other varieties of non-religious beliefs with actual benefits and education.
EDIT; And to clarify, I am meaning not in the means of remaining in open thoughts to the world and never let your thirst for knowledge be snuffed, MERELY, but rather in real knowledge you can take to heart and use as a way of life.
For instance, I read a book named "Yasuragi" meaning calmness and peace in Japanese, which had its roots in Zen-Buddhism and Japanese traditions and such. It taught me ways to keep at heart, as in remaining non-violent, practice meditation and many other useful tricks, which I have observed we do so lack in the Western World, and it indeed did empower me. When I attempted Nihilism for example, which is a cousin of Atheism, I was given no such things, only but a dark gloomy vision on life with no further improvement. Real knowledge, which you can use and live by, not just as a matter of perspective. Live without a God, or Live without a God and improve your very well being and the world alike.


As it stands, I feel we just have one big boring group with little personality here. And I'm not just saying this because I am grumpy in some sort of way; it just seems like a far more logical conclusion, and as Atheists often describe themselves as highly logical I'd very much assume this theory would hit home, no?
But than again, logic sometimes comes down to ones own personal preferences, experiences and ideals, so it might just be me.

So what's stopping you people? What's your excuse?
(It might also be interesting to know people convert daily in the West towards these values)

Edit; It might be difficult to phrase, but I only have good intentions; it's not in means to flame.
 

JoJo

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Robert Ewing said:
And that terrible human trait that's sort of like... Well, let me give you a scenario.

-- You are charged with protecting a town. A deadly zombie virus breaks out in the town. There are 200 people in the town. 75 of them are infected. You have a chance to kill all the 75 zombies almost instantly, ending the zombie infection, and saving the town and the world. The villagers won't let you, because it's their friends and family. And human rights and shit.

Why don't people overcome their 'bawwwww Disney movie ethics' and think of the greater good? 75 UNDEAD people, or 7 billion UNDEAD people? DAMN YOU DEMOCRACYYYY
Okay, I know this probably isn't the purpose of the thread but you've aroused my curiosity now, could you give some real life examples of this trait? People can be surprisingly hard-nosed and unempathetic when life is on the line.
 

TheDooD

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AstylahAthrys said:
I don't understand why people want to be miserable. I'm baffled by the idea of someone being spoon fed help for their problems and shoving it away like a child not wanting to eat his vegetables. Why would anyone want to dwell in their misery? I understand mourning and being upset and depressed over short periods of time, or mild extended periods, but why do people just want to be miserable? Is it so they can always get attention for their problems? Are they really not upset and just being dramatic? Why would anyone not at least try to be happy? Even when I was super depressed, I fought every day for joy and putting myself in a place where I could be happy (which I am at now.) If people care about you and are trying to help you feel better, why would you turn that away? It makes my head hurt!
It pretty much the fact that you don't want deal with other people's opinions. Sometimes people just don't want to be spoon fed help because the help they're trying to give might not be the help they really need as well. The problems are normally deep seeded and in no real way have a one trick pony to try to fix it.

Of-the-Lion said:
The belief that good deeds are pointless without exclusive personal profit.

and

The belief that human beings in their natural state are not violent selfish animals. I cannot accept the humanist belief that humans will preserve each other simply because it's morally correct. The only reason that one homo erctus would save another homo erectus is if he knew that the dying erectus may be of future use, or that the social exclusion brought upon him by not saving him would prove to much. Every human action boils down to the desire to mate. Any action can be unraveled to a point at which it is revealed as nothing more than an attempt to ensure or improve reproductive success.
I'm like this only because people abused my kindness and willingness to help. Yet when I need their help in turn there's always a catch or they just aren't up to it. Which really pissed me off to the point where I don't help anybody unless there's money or goods involved and I take my payments before I do the good deed.
 

Mau95

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Balodal said:
Mau95 said:
Balodal said:
Mau95 said:
Soods said:
German grammar...
IT MAKES NO SENSE!!

Edit: So many people saying they can't understand religious people. Here is a slightly logical answer:
If [insert deity here] does exist: you will go to heaven or be reborn as a cow or something.
If it doesn't exist: doesn't matter now that you're dead, does it?
German grammar makes total sense, although it depends on where you're from.

The people that dont get religious people: where are you from? Most religious people I know are alright, rly.

I dont get some weird fetishes.
German grammar makes sense, but it's pretty damn complicated compared to other languages
Ever tried to learn Dutch? My first language, and German is rather similar.
German is my first languague. I know how it works, but you have to admit it's way more complicated than some other languagues. :D
I repeat: Dutch? It depends on what you're used too, really. Maybe I just have an aptitude for languages.
 

Fiskmasen

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Americans. How can an entire country be so completely and utterly ignorant towards the rest of the world? I have no idea, but it rubs me the wrong way.
 

dfphetteplace

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Necron_warrior said:
I don't understand people who do things 'out of the goodness of their heart'. There's no profit for the doer, unless the doer has the ideas of favours in mind, it just seems illogical to me.
Why is it illogical? You do things that are nice to others because it is the right thing to do and it may help make the world a better place. There is no mystery to it unless you are a sociopath.
 

hazabaza1

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Oh god, this thread stinks so much of hate and stupidity, it hurts.
 

Scrythe

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That being an atheist ceased to be "I simply don't follow relegion/God/whatever" and became this [http://mlkshk.com/r/CEK] attention-seeking douchebaggery.

That if you fall under an American political party, you absolutely must follow EVERYTHING that party believes.

That "guilty pleasure" is now "irony".
 

ImperialSunlight

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cgaWolf said:
If you assert the existence of something, the burden of proof is on you, not on the sceptic.
At this point, the discussion usually diverges, as the faithful argue on the philosophical level for the existence of a god, while being unable to prove his existence on a physical level - whereas the materialist (that many atheists are) requires to accept the proposition that a god exists.
The problem with this argument is that atheists also make an assertion, the assertion that no god/goddess/etc. could exist. They give no proof other than that there is no proof. The belief in spiritual beings has existed for thousands of years, it is a paradigm that atheists wish to diverge from, yet they have no evidence against it. The faithful argue on a philosophical level because, by definition, God etc. cannot be known or observed physically. Thus the lack of physical evidence is meaningless.

cgaWolf said:
The problem here is that one posits the existence of an (omnipotent, omniscient & omnibenevolent) being that is clearly outside the realm of nature, whereas the other requires a natural proof as he refuses that things outside his physical reality have or should have an impact on him.
For one, not all religions hold that their spiritual being is omnipotent, omniscient and benevolent. There are also religions (Ancient Greek, for example) that claim that their gods are represented in nature. Regardless, the requirement of a natural proof in order to consider the possibility of a divine being that cannot be observed in nature is simply contradictory. I do not claim that they should believe in a divine being because it is possible but I don't understand the logic in denying it based on a lack of evidence that should not exist.

cgaWolf said:
The discussion can't even agree on the same topic, which makes science & faith not be direct opposites, but very compatible, provided faith takes a step back when science proves something in the natural world. The refusal to accept logic as it pertains to natural facts or the models we build to explain them is ununderstandable for someone firmly rooted in the scientific method; thus the statament that faithful are illogical.
I don't think I was discussing something like this in my original post but what do you mean by "The discussion can't even agree on the same topic"? Also, The denial of scientific discovery usually comes from a dogmatic, literal reading of sacred texts, for example, assuming that the story of Adam and Eve should be seen as historical fact rather than as an allegory. Without looking at the texts in such a literal way, one can better reconcile religion and modern science. Also, the idea that science can find any kind of fact, that can be proven without any doubt is dogmatic in itself. While future developments may prove a "natural fact" to be incorrect, science holds it as absolute fact that cannot be disputed.

cgaWolf said:
All that said, i refuse your implication that the lack of an immortal moral law means atheists are morally bankrupt. We see intrinsic value in good deeds, and there are humanist and social-evolutionary reasons why "doing good" is worth doing. In contrast, the refusal of an immortal moral law absolves me of having to push it unto someone else who may not share those laws or beliefs, and that is A Good Thing!
I never really said that atheists are without morals. All I meant to say was that atheists have no reason to be think morally, considering that they believe that we just rot in a hole when we die, regardless of what we do in life. While pushing ones beliefs on others is indeed wrong, there are some times when you have to. Cannibals, serial killers, etc. often believe that what they are doing is right. I suppose it's pushing our moral beliefs on others if we arrest criminals?

cgaWolf said:
That evangelical behaviour of religious people is the root of many evils committed by faithful. The opinion that my, and only my, belief is the One Truth, is one of the most damaging ideas ever known to mankind - regardless of whether it's rooted in faith, though it usually is.
Many religions do not believe that their religion is the "One Truth" (Hinduism, among others). Those that do such things are usually either not going by the actual religious teachings ("thou shalt not kill", for example) or extremists who should not represent the rest of the community. That some of the religious people believe that they are right has no bearing on the argument of whether divinity exists.

cgaWolf said:
Most churches have their own version of extra ecclesiam nulla salus - that dogma that my faith is The One True Faith is the cause and justification for all evil done by good men of faith; and that is the true crime of religions against humanity: It makes good people do bad things.
As I said previously, many religions do not believe this and with those that do, most do not act on it, besides extremists and the ignorant and, as I said, it has no meaning in the argument atheists are posing.