Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - AATW

Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 218  Next >
1
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: US Presidential Election 2024
« on: August 23, 2024, 09:04:38 PM »
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cwy5ekxlwzgo

Interesting. RFK was splitting the "mental" vote which will now all be behind Trump. Could have some impact.

2
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: US Presidential Election 2024
« on: August 23, 2024, 06:14:38 AM »
Biden had a younger woman of color as his VP.
He had a younger Indian woman as his VP. She only became black recently, remember? ;)

3
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: US Presidential Election 2024
« on: August 23, 2024, 06:12:39 AM »
Those people are authorities in their field.
I didn’t think you liked listening to authorities?
And your definition of an authority does tend to be whoever tells you what you want to hear or believe.

Biden vs Trump was a foregone concussion.
Harris vs Trump is harder to call. It does feel that the momentum is with Harris - as honk said Trump’s main attack vector is now his weakness. Now he is the rambling old dude.

But there’s a long way to go, a lot can happen.
Obviously if Trump loses bigly again he’ll claim without evidence it was all rigged against him again.

4
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 19, 2024, 07:57:49 AM »
I don't think how we behaved as a nation a century ago is that relevant to how we behave today.
I'm not arguing that it is. This is a response to your claim that:
Neither the US or UK has ever had a particularly oppressive government
Well fair enough then. I would agree we have historically been fairly oppressive to other countries which we ruled - as we've established many have had to go to war or rebel to get rid of us. But in general the government has let us get on with our lives without undue interference. I'm always interested that people with a mindset say "you can't say anything these days..." while basically saying what they like.

5
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 18, 2024, 08:21:56 PM »
I don’t think that’s quite the same issue as the day to day freedoms British citizens enjoy though.
We are literally talking about literal British citizens living in the literal UK who started a literal war to escape. I'm not sure how much clearer I can make it.
You are also talking about events of a century ago. Scotland didn't have to go to war to get independence, they just had a vote - turns out the majority of them didn't want it anyway. I don't think how we behaved as a nation a century ago is that relevant to how we behave today.

6
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 18, 2024, 05:18:18 PM »
Code: [Select]
Right. Not entirely sure how that’s connected to what I’m saying. We have behaved poorly historically towards other countries, no dispute there.
Ireland was not another country until after the Irish War of Independence. That's what "Independence" in "War of Independence" means.
I don’t think that’s necessarily true. Exactly what is considered a country is not well defined. I raised an eyebrow at Hong Kong having a separate Olympic team, that definitely isn’t a country. Scotland had a referendum on independence relatively recently, they are not truly independent of England but they are a separate country.
Lots of countries celebrate their independence from the UK, I was in India one year during their Independence day which as a Brit was somewhat embarrassing.

I think we can all agree that we have a somewhat patchy record when it comes to ruling other countries and somewhat reluctantly giving them back - often being forced to as the result of a war. I don’t think that’s quite the same issue as the day to day freedoms British citizens enjoy though.

7
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 18, 2024, 01:22:59 PM »
His charges were dismissed because the police didn't want to fight a first amendment suit.
Do you know what “in exchange” means?
They came to a deal, but he was initially arrested and jailed for “things he said online”. What an oppressive nightmare you lot live in.

8
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 18, 2024, 01:19:50 PM »
Which war are you referring to?
The Irish War of Independence.
Right. Not entirely sure how that’s connected to what I’m saying. We have behaved poorly historically towards other countries, no dispute there. But in general our government hasn’t been overly authoritarian - certainly not in modern times. They don’t in general interfere with people’s day to day lives. The claim that in the US you can say and do what you like and the UK is an oppressive dystopia just isn’t the reality.

9
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 18, 2024, 12:45:50 PM »
Neither the US or UK has ever had a particularly oppressive government
Are you aware that a large part of the UK fought a war of independence against their oppressors barely a century ago?
Which war are you referring to?

10
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 18, 2024, 08:05:58 AM »
What I especially object to about speech restrictions in Britain is that expressing certain opinions is punished
No it isn't.

Quote
which is a thing that never happens in America
Did you miss
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/may/18/facebook-comments-arrest-prosecution

Quote
This guy is being punished for expressing his opinion.
Bullshit. It's not just a shitty opinion, it's dangerous incitement in the context of stabbings in which a 17 year old stabbed a bunch of kids, killing 2, following which a load of disinformation was spread online that the 17 year old was a refugee and/or a Muslim. Neither are true. That sparked a load of riots in which hotels housing refugees were sent on fire and people's lives were endangered. I have no issue with people involved in that either directly or indirectly being punished. To characterise those tweets as "just expressing an opinion" is a massive stretch.

Quote
But what happens in the future if your opinion is the one the government says isn't permissible? What happens if many years in the future, corrupt elements in the government are cracking down on political and social opposition to their policies by declaring those opinions impermissible?
That could potentially happen in any society. Neither the US or UK has ever had a particularly oppressive government and I don't expect them ever to have. The issue I have in this thread is some people trying to paint the US as a shining beacon of liberty and freedom and the UK as as cesspit of oppression and control. Obvious bullshit. The truth is both are fairly free societies and we both have freedom of expression which has certain caveats in both countries as it should.

11
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 17, 2024, 06:26:20 AM »
. To get back to the topic: the UK is not okay.
If that is true then it’s certainly also true of the US, no matter how loudly they pretend otherwise.

12
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 16, 2024, 09:58:02 PM »
I already explained what freedom of speech is.
No you haven't. You went on some weird ramble on page 2 where you tried to define it in terms of itself.

Quote
Pete didn't reference laws in the UK at all.
He said "The European Convention on Human Rights clearly defines both the right to freedom of expression and its limitations"
These are adopted into UK law in the Human Rights Act of 1998.

Quote
This just in: Freedom index produced by horrid authoritarians
Who are the "horrid authoritarians"? Are you just doing what you did when I showed you that US Citizens have been jailed for Tweets and just going "well that doesn't fit very well with my argument so it doesn't count. So there!"

Quote
A legal system is defined by its exceptions, not its rules.
Those certainly are all words. I'm not sure they make any sense in that order.

Quote
We are, actually. We literally invented freedom.
Maybe if you wave that little Stars and Stripes hard enough and shout U-S-A loudly enough then that will become true. Back in the real world, nah. If you did invent freedom then you're doing it wrong:

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/may/18/facebook-comments-arrest-prosecution
https://www.amnesty.org.uk/guantanamo-bay-human-rights

Locking people up for FB posts, locking people up without fair trial.
We were codifying things like right to a fair trial in the Magna Carta centuries before we even invented your country.

13
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 16, 2024, 12:29:26 PM »
So, am I to assume you've given up on debating about freedom of speech and you've moved on to... whatever this is?...
Freedom of speech is just one aspect of living in a free society. Your argument seems to be that we don’t have freedom of speech in the UK because people can be jailed for things they say online. Which is both true and rare. And when I provided an example of that exact same thing in the US your response was along the lines of “well that doesn’t count”. So…

Freedom of speech doesn’t mean you can literally say anything you like. Both the US and the UK have protections for free speech and limits to that too. Your claim is:

Quote
The laws in the UK that restrict what you can say and what you can do are far more vague, far more oppressive, and far more, dare I say, silly than the ones in the US.
Far more vague is incorrect - Pete has gone in to some detail about how they are defined.
Far more oppressive is incorrect too according to the freedom indexes I have linked to.
Far more silly - I disagree. There have been occasional silly cases (look up the heil Hitler dog thing). But those are very much the exception not the rule.
In general we do have a pretty high level of freedom of speech over here. The trouble with you lot thinking you are “THE land of the free” is it implies you’re the only one. You aren’t.

14
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 15, 2024, 07:52:07 PM »
There are so many laws that grant freedoms that it felt silly listing a few.
Your continued inability to list one is noted.
But you are trying to avoid the point - even if it's not true of all laws, you have many laws which restrict your freedoms. So do we. So does any functioning society. Overall I would say the US is a fairly free country but so is the UK. According this attempt to quantify things we actually do a bit better than you in that regard:

https://freedomhouse.org/country/united-states/freedom-world/2024
https://freedomhouse.org/country/united-kingdom/freedom-world/2024

Your mistake is that while you're waving your little flags, chanting "U-S-A" and celebrating your freedom you believe yourself to be somehow exceptional in this regard. You are not. You're not the most free country in the world, you're not even in the top 10

https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/freedom-index-by-country

15
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 15, 2024, 04:27:08 PM »
Laws pretty much by definition restrict your freedom. They dictate what you must or must not do.

No, many laws grant freedoms
So many that you couldn’t name one.
Even if you are right, many laws say what you must or must not do. They restrict your freedom. But if you’re so free then sure, you just drive how you like and see how that goes.

16
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 15, 2024, 05:22:04 AM »

17
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 14, 2024, 06:01:03 PM »
When it was pointed out to you that the jaywalking argument was outdated and no longer applicable you brought up speeding as an alternative and went into a long ramble about that. Do you really think speeding is a "silly law"?
I don’t think it’s a silly law.
But I do think it’s a law. Laws pretty much by definition restrict your freedom. They dictate what you must or must not do. There are laws in the UK which restrict what you can say and do, there are laws in the US which do the same. As there has to be in any functioning society. Freedom doesn’t mean you can literally do anything you like. Freedom of speech doesn’t mean you can literally say anything you like. The US is, by and large, a free society but so is the UK. If you want to keep pretending that you lot are free and we aren’t then go nuts. But it isn’t true. If your argument is “someone was jailed for some tweets” then I’ve provided an example where that happened in the US. An old boss of mine used to talk about “freedom within a framework” which I’d say sums up both the US and UK pretty well.

Anyway, I must go. It’s nearly past curfew. The patrols will start soon shooting anyone they see outside ;)

18
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 14, 2024, 12:50:12 PM »
Y'all, the Brits don't even know what freedom is.
Yeah. You just keep on standing on the side of the road waiting till a little man tells you that you can cross, lest you get fined, while congratulating yourselves on how free you are.

Tell me you’ve never been to America without telling me you’ve never been to America.
Been there a bunch of times.
I was being a bit facetious. As I said, it was an example. There are better ones. If you want to keep pointing and laughing at the UK and all the silly laws we have which restrict our freedoms while following all your silly laws which restrict your freedoms and telling yourself how free you all are then you crack on, fellas.

19
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 13, 2024, 08:25:28 PM »
I would go to jail in the UK for having a bike wheel in my personal inventory or, god help me, a poster.
Go on then, I'm intrigued. What the utter fuck are you talking about here?

20
Philosophy, Religion & Society / Re: Is the UK okay?
« on: August 13, 2024, 08:22:31 PM »
If this is the crowning jewel of your argument (this is at least the second time you've brought it up) you should think about finding something else. NOBODY in this country gets fined for jaywalking anymore, I believe it's not even technically a crime in most places anymore.
It was an example. I also mentioned speeding. Can we agree that you're not free to go whatever speed you like on your roads? We aren't here either. These are examples intended to make you consider that "the land of the free" doesn't give its citizens absolute freedom to do whatever they like. Nor does any other country. Freedom isn't a binary thing, it's a sliding scale. In any society there are laws which constrain freedoms. There has to be because in a society our actions affect each other - we have speed limits because there are idiots who would go way too fast and kill people. Part of the societal contract is you give up some freedoms in the interest of keeping the society functioning.

Some attempts at quantifying how free our respective countries are:

https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/freedom-index-by-country
https://freedomhouse.org/countries/freedom-world/scores

Both of these actually claim the UK is marginally more free than the US
Overall the US is a free country but so is the UK. Freedom doesn't mean you can literally do whatever you like and free speech doesn't mean you can literally say whatever you like - the first amendment has caveats and exceptions, Pete has mentioned some of them. So yes, people have been jailed for their online activity in the UK and they have in the US too.

If you want to pretend to yourself that you live in a free country and I don't then go nuts, but it isn't true.

Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 218  Next >