Comments by "Frenchie’s Philosophy" (@tsuich00i) on "VICE News" channel.

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  20. fmlAllthetime This comment is so frawt is vaunted, indignant stupidity, it hardly warrants reference to. But here are a few points for anyone else interested in precisely how maniacal you are.  1. Wars are expensive. Governments rarely make a profit from them. Remind me, how much debt did Iraq rep up for you?... Oh and that's rhetorical.  2. Police, real police, require training, discipline, organization, and most importantly knowledge of the law, ALL things the average citizen lacks in abundance. They also must coordinate between themselves to prevent and end crime in an ever-evolving elicit environment. All of this seems to escape you however.  3. Psychology isn't magic. Many men see and use guns as a way to assert there masculinity, forcing people to pay attention to them, because they failed to develop the social skills necessary to be confidant in who they are in-themselves, which grows into a negative and twisted self-image which casts everyone around them in a poor, and even paranoid light. (your distrust of all public organizations is a good example of this) Which is done to avoid the a self-critical look at how they might be wrong. It is something in their childhood I would gather, leaving them damaged and broken, a danger to the public and therefor useless to the rest of society, which is a source of resentment on their part, and the cause of lashing out and clinging to guns as their only outlet and power they have over the world. That is it's most extreme expression, but those who find it with themselves to act on their fantasies, are symptoms of a larger, more common problem. 
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  39. Soff1859 Exactly. It's fallacious to say that simply because something is done in geographic location X, it ought to remain that way. Apparently, in this quaintly simplistic worldview of they'res, people never change, nor have they the need to change, because the convenience guns afford them matter more than the worthless lives of everyone who doesn't share the same good fortune of being at the right place and at the right time, as gun-nuts seem to posses an almost uncanny ability of finding themselves in- or so they have dreampt up.  The brutal truth is that a mainstream, middle America has accepted the practice of taking it upon themselves to seek their safety, not through any rational or remotely moral methods, but by judging for themselves who should live or die. So far, the only argument made in favor of gun ownership by the posters above has not been guns are good- no one would believe that- but that there isn't anything you can do about them. Essentially, they're fatalistic defeatists.   The lesson we should derive from this, is an almost absurdly amusing conclusion, where it not for the fact it is so abhorrent: That Americans have given up on working toward the "hard solution", as evidenced by what the Japanese and others like them have accomplished, through centuries of cultivating a culture that is intolerant of these gruesome atrocities, and stands firm against indiscretion. They don't want to have to look in the mirror and reflect on the prospect that they have been in the wrong all along: even, and especially by their own standards! Instead, the easy route is opted, with no a care in the world for the dire consequences. They just go about there business pretending like nothing is wrong with this picture. In a phrase, shootings are the new J-walking. Something which makes American culture, a lazy culture and a weak one. For all the talk by neo-cons of self-discipline and hard work, they have all but given up on the prospect of making good on those principles here. What cowardice. 
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  45. fmlAllthetime You don't know how an analogue works at all. "a literary work that shares motifs, characters or events with another, but is not directly derived from it" You want cats to be exactly the same as children. Guess what? if they were, we wouldn't need the analogue! The point is to abstract similar qualities to get a sense for a simple case of a more complex phenomena. "Life is like a river" is also an anlogue: it moves in one direction, it has twists and turns, and it ends. But they aren't exactly the same. But the ideas translated perfectly. You just don't have the education to figure this out, I can't help you.   2. Murder is physical last I checked, and unless your talking about the death penalty or war, I'd happily accept those could be immoral, I have no strong feelings about them anyway. But by your own logic you'd have to concede a war of defense is justified. Otherwise, I don't see the reason to bring this up.   "...provoking force upon adults acting peaceably.." uhm, where did you even get this? Who said or implied this? I'm utterly confused. "unprovoked force" was your term, not my. I asked why you think "force" is never justified, don't put words in my mouth. Secondly, you presume everyone is acting peacefully all the time in this statement. what? Thirdly, you connect the two in the weirdest way possible, as if to suggest the government is "out to get everyone" and "looking for trouble" which is a thought consistent with the rest of your paranoid preconception, but is still bizarre and bewildering beyond belief. 
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  49. fmlAllthetime again, you keep adding qualifiers, I already argued unambigously that not all force is violent under the concept of restraint.  Actually I just took it as granted: If a community raises you you owe them. Period. If you ever drank from there fountains, open a book in their library, or accepted medical services from their hospitals, you owe them. Now, if they asked you for six cents for that book you read, and 13 for the water, and 1450 for the stitches in your head, that wouldn't be very efficient or neighborly. So instead we do it lump-sum at one time. Think about what it costs for you to exist even before you are born. Think of the planning your parents put into beforehand, the advice they took from friends in family around them, the cost of the pediatrician they saw to oversee the health of the embryo, the incubator that may have breathed for you when you couldn't, the opportunity cost of the nurses who delivered you when they could have been out shopping, the amount of research that went into any medication you've been prescribed, vaccine you've had, or antibiotics you've needed over the course of your life. And then theirs the education you've had, the sidewalks you've walked on, the water, food, electricity, and shelter you've consumed, the training of the military that kept harm far from your home, and so much more. So by the time you reach the age of eighteen, you already owe your society a tremendous debt, which is offset and payed for by the previous generation (because babies don't make money) as you will one day pay for the next succeeding batch and so on, cyclically, forever. That is the foundation for the Social Contract and why it works, and it's a very ethical exchange if i've every seen one. 
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