Things people need to just SHUT UP about.

Recommended Videos

BGH122

New member
Jun 11, 2008
1,307
0
0
Eclectic Dreck said:
There are plenty of ways space can kill us all, and it may even be true that it will do so in the near future. What gets to me is that people spend a great deal of energy worrying about something that is ultimately so far outside their sphere of control that it doesn't even warrent a moments consideration.
Well, were it a certainty that some cosmic phenomenon were to cause us imminent threat then people should certainly divert all their energies into attempting to prevent said catastrophe. If it were actually the case that Nibiru were definitely hiding behind Jupiter on a crash course for Earth then there'd be no greater thing about which one should worry, nor should one, in such a situation, devote energies to anything except preventing the imminent extinction event.

However, that which is most certainly ridiculous is to spend time that could be devoted to making improvements upon the real, current problems, such as medical enigmas, worrying about something that's insanely unlikely to actually occur. I guess people like to worry about things which are tangible and concrete. All of the paradigmatic evils which mainstream society has clamoured against over the years have been a singular, clear entity. The Devil, Nibiru, various organisations/regimes all share in common the fact that, at least at face value, they possess a clear facade and method of defeat; we know why they're evil and how to stop them. We defeat Satan by turning to Jesus, 'evil' nations through war and Nibiru through getting everyone to mistrust the government and scientists so that some bizarre theory with which we'll destroy Nibiru will just emerge from the 'freed' public in the post-governmental utopia (in the original Nibiru theory posed many years prior to this recent 2012 fixation, which everyone has conveniently forgotten, aliens gave us the idea of Nibiru and were we to overthrow the government then we could contact the aliens and they, like some deus ex machina, would just solve the problem). The real problems of this world, medical, epistemological, political etc are just too nebulous and seemingly indefeasible to make good nemeses.

Sigel said:
So ninja'd but I love it, and you stated it more eloquently than I would have.
Thank you!
 

MasterMongoose0

New member
Nov 3, 2009
195
0
0
My friend is always insisting to me how much the PS3 sucks when I own all three current gen consoles (the Wii is the least played but still certainly enjoyed).

He tells me that Xbox Live is much better than PSN and that the PS3 has no games. I started out with only a 360 for 2.5 years, and now have more exclusives on the PS3 than 360. Of course, I still buy all multiplats on the 360 though...
 

Eclectic Dreck

New member
Sep 3, 2008
6,662
0
0
BGH122 said:
Well, were it a certainty that some cosmic phenomenon were to cause us imminent threat then people should certainly divert all their energies into attempting to prevent said catastrophe. If it were actually the case that Nibiru were definitely hiding behind Jupiter on a crash course for Earth then there'd be no greater thing about which one should worry, nor should one, in such a situation, devote energies to anything except preventing the imminent extinction event.
While I agree with the overall point you make, this bit required a response. The reason I say space killing us all is not something to be worried about is because, by and large, only the most insignificant threats from above are even within the capacity of mankind as a whole to impact. The contribution of a single worried entity in the event of a comet coming to extinguish all advanced life on the planet is utterly meaningless, unless of course you have a particular set of skills that will help resolve the problem. In the event of any of the other ways the universe might try to stamp us out of existance, the importance even of the most brilliant and skilled people rapidly drops to zero. What precisely would you have us do if a planet were hurtling towards us on a collision course? We don't have the firepower to destroy it, and diverting it would require decades if not centuries of forewarning. Of course, planetoids lurking in the black aren't the only thing we have to contend with and at least a few of the ways space may ultimately kill us won't give us any warning at all.

My point therefore is simply this: there are plenty of things that will impact ones life and death that they can actually affect - death by space event doesn't fall into that list. As such, one doesn't actually gain anything by worrying about it and as such there are better uses of one's time.
 

BGH122

New member
Jun 11, 2008
1,307
0
0
Eclectic Dreck said:
BGH122 said:
Well, were it a certainty that some cosmic phenomenon were to cause us imminent threat then people should certainly divert all their energies into attempting to prevent said catastrophe. If it were actually the case that Nibiru were definitely hiding behind Jupiter on a crash course for Earth then there'd be no greater thing about which one should worry, nor should one, in such a situation, devote energies to anything except preventing the imminent extinction event.
While I agree with the overall point you make, this bit required a response. The reason I say space killing us all is not something to be worried about is because, by and large, only the most insignificant threats from above are even within the capacity of mankind as a whole to impact. The contribution of a single worried entity in the event of a comet coming to extinguish all advanced life on the planet is utterly meaningless, unless of course you have a particular set of skills that will help resolve the problem. In the event of any of the other ways the universe might try to stamp us out of existance, the importance even of the most brilliant and skilled people rapidly drops to zero. What precisely would you have us do if a planet were hurtling towards us on a collision course? We don't have the firepower to destroy it, and diverting it would require decades if not centuries of forewarning. Of course, planetoids lurking in the black aren't the only thing we have to contend with and at least a few of the ways space may ultimately kill us won't give us any warning at all.
This is inductive logic, you're saying that "because, up until now, no-one has suggested an incredible revolutionary theory that would enable us to avert an extinction event no-one could do so", but this is untrue. Of course I am not suggesting that the average human will be capable of doing anything in such an event other than cowering and crying, but that doesn't mean that there is zero chance that under such pressure one of the 6 billion people out there wouldn't come up with a way of averting even a planetary collision.

It is for this reason that making it publicly clear that an extinction event is imminent and all of the details would be of paramount importance to our survival. Even though it's a long shot that anyone could avert it, there's no logical justification for assuming that no-one ever could.
 

Keepitclean

New member
Sep 16, 2009
1,564
0
0
4242564 said:
I think the whole Michael Jackson thing just needs to stop. I mean, you know everyone was making fun of him and calling him a pedophile up until the day he died, and then suddenly everyone says he was an outstanding individual.
I didn't. My friends started to ***** at me for giving him shit after he died.
 

Dys

New member
Sep 10, 2008
2,343
0
0
Not a fan of people reporting trivial happenings as news. The tiger woods "news" is a popular one.

We have an internet filter being introduced yet it's barely been mentioned in the major newspapers (maybe I'm unique, but the loss of the only free form of media seems rather significant). That's ok though because within the first few pages of both major newspapers (I'm talking before page 3 on both the Herald Sun and The Age) I was able to read about the important happenings of the world, things like how a cricket players girlfriends Aston Martin was stolen then retrieved undamaged, or how the inventor of the quarter pounder died. WHAT THE FUCK!
 
Nov 28, 2007
10,686
0
0
Somehow, I know this will draw flames...

People complaining about Matt Smith as the next Doctor on Doctor Who. Yes, I get it, he is not handsome. No one really is compared to David Tennant, but even by normal standards, Matt Smith is not handsome.

But who cares? Really, does the ability of someone being good in a role directly correlate to their handsomeness? Now, I'm not saying that Matt Smith will be the best Doctor ever. What I am saying is that people need to give him a chance, rather than look at pictures of him and declare that the series is turning emo.

Also, if people would bother WATCHING the first episode he comes in at, the first thing he says is making fun of his hair. So you can't sit there and act like the producers are trying to get in with the "hip" and "emo" crowd, using his hairstyle as evidence, when the first thing they do is make fun of it.

Basically, I'm sick of people deciding Matt Smith is the death of Doctor Who before he even gets a full episode, because he's ugly.
 

soilent

New member
Jan 2, 2010
790
0
0
BGH122 said:
grimsprice said:
2012.

Seriously, like, half a dozen of my friends are going nuts over this shit. My high school english teacher is stocking her garage with canned food and bottled water for the end of the world.

I can't wait to barge into her classroom on jan 4th or whenever school starts again. Point my finger at her and yell...

[HEADING=1]HA![/HEADING]
A-freakin'-men. The 2012 hype is really beginning to annoy me. I've got this one insanely annoying girl in my class who refuses to believe the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (because she knows so much more than an ass-tonne of PhD holding scientists) and maintains that Nibiru (a fictional planet this 2012 bullshittery has latched onto) is hiding behind Jupiter and will fly past us.

At first she maintained that, as is the current craze with this ridiculous hype, the incoming planet's gravitational pull would flip our planet's geomagnetic field. When I pointed out to her that geomagnetic reversals are a steady occurrence and have been so since the formation of our magnetic field with no proven effect upon the biosphere she changed the trajectory of her fictional planet and starting claiming it'd hit earth. When I showed her the long, long list of facepalm-worthy, whiny, plebeian fears that the poor (probably pill-popping by now) astronomers at the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry have answered (one of which outright stated that there was no such thing as this Nibiru/Planet X bull claims and that any large masses such as this approaching our solar system would be spotted tens of thousands of years before they came close, even with our current technology) she started claiming they were working for the government. Can't win with conspiracy theorists.

Another thing I wish people would just shut the fuck up about is anthropogenic global warming. Humans contribute 3.6% of carbon emissions (that's not some crazy right-wing lie, that's New Scientist's data). Even if we manage to cut the 19% of worldwide human emissions required by the Copenhagen summit that still amounts to roughly 0.7% of total carbon dioxide emissions. I'm not saying CO2 doesn't have a causal affect upon climate (it's demonstrably proven that it does), nor, for the same reason, am I arguing that cutting CO2 won't change the climate, I'm arguing that it's illogical to claim that our race's piddling little contribution to total CO2 emissions can be solely responsible for global warming (which is occurring) and whilst everyone and their mother is out demonising this single gas as if it is the fifth horseman of the apocalypse we're not looking at what else could be the cause of the warming or any other mitigation strategies than "Oh em gee buy this car because it doesn't produce as much carbon!111"

In the midst of all this hysteria we miss out on simple and interesting solutions to any potentially damaging warming (which, despite the media's overreaction, hasn't yet occurred), such as Myhrvold et al's Nitrogen Dioxide delivery system for artificial cooling.


EDIT: (there's a lot that annoys me, I'll just throw in one more)

Gender. That's another thing I want people to shut the fuck up about. The American media is obsessed with gender. I can't watch a damn television show without seeing men being thrown into one of the following stereotypical roles: competitive, immature, aggressive (this one has some truth to it at least, I'll explain later), sex obsessed, unemotional/emotionally insensitive and so on. Even more irritating (and nonsensical) is the fact that women are always portrayed as the tonic to these masculine gender defects. However, women don't get off scot-free either; women in the media are usually portrayed as one of the following: irrational, innocent/naive (may not sound like a bad thing, but innocence and infantilization go hand in hand and no-one wants to be denigrated to the position of a child), stupid and, more often than not, unpleasant/bitchy.

This is really annoying because a spiffing brilliant 46 study meta-analysis by Hyde et al (2005) of the University of Wisconsin discovered that there were no statistically significant differences between genders in any behavioural or cognitive areas other than aggression (moderate to strong correlation with males, especially when aware of observation (0.58-0.64 correlation on all types of aggression)), sexual attitudes (men don't tend to see masturbation as 'wrong' and don't tend to consider casual sex to be 'wrong' either (interestingly, despite the media portrayal, Hyde et al found that sexual satisfaction (amount and pleasure gained) leaned very slightly more towards women than men)) and lastly motor-skills and complex shape manipulation (being able to mentally rotate and manipulate 3-D shapes, just seems that women aren't usually created in such a way as to be neurologically geared towards this sort of task). A recent study of testosterone has also shined doubts upon its efficacy in causing aggression, as it was found that women in a blind trial were significantly more likely to exhibit aggressive/competitive tendencies when told they'd been given testosterone (when in fact none had been administered) than when they actually received testosterone. Basically, gender has jack shit to do with anything; the way your life has treated you is the most crucial factor in what makes you different from other people in nearly all aspects.
know what I cant stand?
WALLS OF TEXT! :)
 

soilent

New member
Jan 2, 2010
790
0
0
thebobmaster said:
Somehow, I know this will draw flames...

People complaining about Matt Smith as the next Doctor on Doctor Who. Yes, I get it, he is not handsome. No one really is compared to David Tennant, but even by normal standards, Matt Smith is not handsome.

But who cares? Really, does the ability of someone being good in a role directly correlate to their handsomeness? Now, I'm not saying that Matt Smith will be the best Doctor ever. What I am saying is that people need to give him a chance, rather than look at pictures of him and declare that the series is turning emo.

Also, if people would bother WATCHING the first episode he comes in at, the first thing he says is making fun of his hair. So you can't sit there and act like the producers are trying to get in with the "hip" and "emo" crowd, using his hairstyle as evidence, when the first thing they do is make fun of it.

Basically, I'm sick of people deciding Matt Smith is the death of Doctor Who before he even gets a full episode, because he's ugly.
name one popular show on today that does NOT feature an attractive main character..
*anyone saying Ugly Betty will be shot on sight*
 
Nov 28, 2007
10,686
0
0
soilent said:
thebobmaster said:
Somehow, I know this will draw flames...

People complaining about Matt Smith as the next Doctor on Doctor Who. Yes, I get it, he is not handsome. No one really is compared to David Tennant, but even by normal standards, Matt Smith is not handsome.

But who cares? Really, does the ability of someone being good in a role directly correlate to their handsomeness? Now, I'm not saying that Matt Smith will be the best Doctor ever. What I am saying is that people need to give him a chance, rather than look at pictures of him and declare that the series is turning emo.

Also, if people would bother WATCHING the first episode he comes in at, the first thing he says is making fun of his hair. So you can't sit there and act like the producers are trying to get in with the "hip" and "emo" crowd, using his hairstyle as evidence, when the first thing they do is make fun of it.

Basically, I'm sick of people deciding Matt Smith is the death of Doctor Who before he even gets a full episode, because he's ugly.
name one popular show on today that does NOT feature an attractive main character..
*anyone saying Ugly Betty will be shot on sight*
Doctor Who, at this point. But that's beside the point. Are you saying that because Doctor Who is popular, they should only cast handsome men?
 

God's Clown

New member
Aug 8, 2008
1,322
0
0
Truly I think people should shut up about just about everything. Just not talk, ever. Largely though those teenage girls that are a fan of something most need to STFU and GTFO. Nobody wants to hear that you want to marry Sparkling Vampire, or live out your bestiality fantasy with werewolf boy.

That is just my opinion though.
 

Bourne Endeavor

New member
May 14, 2008
1,082
0
0
What I cannot fathom with 2012 fanatics such as the previously mentioned teacher stocking canned food is... if logic were to dissipate from existence and this ridiculous theory become a reality. What in the bloody hell are you going to do to save yourself from the WORLD ENDING?! My lord people are foolish these days. The next time some idiot attempt to sell 2012 as a factual probability. I am going to tell them to watch the movie 2012 and inform me outside of the main characters how many people lived.

Tiger Woods, his life and how every company suddenly developed a sense of morality and abandoned him because she cheated on his wife. Idiocy, the moment he returns to his livelihood and amasses millions they will fall down upon their knees and besiege him to agree to a new contract.

And for a personal one. People constantly informing me I must increase my weight. My family is overweight and their incessant jealousy I accomplished something beyond their apparent capability (read: Too lazy) is not my concern. Granted the sheer stupidity is often amusing; having a cousin who is over three hundred pounds at six foot, three, drinks Jack by the gallons and has suffered a heart attack due to excessive indulgence of greasy foods is providing me dieting advice? Ha!
 

soilent

New member
Jan 2, 2010
790
0
0
thebobmaster said:
soilent said:
thebobmaster said:
Somehow, I know this will draw flames...

People complaining about Matt Smith as the next Doctor on Doctor Who. Yes, I get it, he is not handsome. No one really is compared to David Tennant, but even by normal standards, Matt Smith is not handsome.

But who cares? Really, does the ability of someone being good in a role directly correlate to their handsomeness? Now, I'm not saying that Matt Smith will be the best Doctor ever. What I am saying is that people need to give him a chance, rather than look at pictures of him and declare that the series is turning emo.

Also, if people would bother WATCHING the first episode he comes in at, the first thing he says is making fun of his hair. So you can't sit there and act like the producers are trying to get in with the "hip" and "emo" crowd, using his hairstyle as evidence, when the first thing they do is make fun of it.

Basically, I'm sick of people deciding Matt Smith is the death of Doctor Who before he even gets a full episode, because he's ugly.
name one popular show on today that does NOT feature an attractive main character..
*anyone saying Ugly Betty will be shot on sight*
Doctor Who, at this point. But that's beside the point. Are you saying that because Doctor Who is popular, they should only cast handsome men?
quite the opposite, I hate this fact.
 

blankedboy

New member
Feb 7, 2009
5,234
0
0
Undeadundertaker333 said:
Sasquatch99 said:
I'll give you a list.

Twilight extreme hatred, MW2 extreme hatred, Halo 3 extreme hatred, Tiger Woods, that damn cake, "360/PS3/PC/Wii sux!", Kerry Ka-fucking-tona, Big Brother, footballers, how games make everyone one that plays them violent and how Metal music makes them violent.

This is a mixture of stuff on this site and the real world.
I'm pretty sure that there is going to be about 7.8 billion people agreeing with you on that.(including me)
I'm pretty sure there'll be about 30.