Boredalt wrote:
1. Is it ridiculous to condone the slaughter and consumption of some animals, but forbid the same practices with other animals? Is there really a difference between raising/slaughtering/consuming cows, sheep, goats, chickens, et al. and doing the same with dogs, cats, horses, et al?
That one is kind of complicated. There really is no difference, morally or ethically, but different animals have different values for different reasons, and I think our cultural norms reflect that. We don't eat dogs and horses because they traditionally served us better in other ways. Horses were our primary transportation for hundreds if not thousands of years, and dogs are/were more valuable because they provided security and helped provide food because they could be trained to assist in hunting. While our cultural mores now may seem odd, they were established over a very long period of time during which they made perfect sense. The only reason you don't see those same values reflected in other places is because the immediacy of the need for food was greater than the utility those animals provided, so that they were viewed more often as food than as useful tools.
Boredalt wrote:
2. Are the pyramids in Egypt and Central America, the Maya Calendar, the Nazca Lines and other unexplained findings evidence of extra-terrestrial intelligence, or remarkable works of human genius?
I don't think they show any evidence of non-human intelligence. When something works, and is simple, like pyramids are, it is not difficult to believe that several different people/cultures discovered the concepts behind such a structure at various points in their development without any sort of intercommunication.
Boredalt wrote:
3. If prisons are successful places of rehabilitation, why is there any need to have sentences that exceed, say, 15-20 years?
I think it is pretty commonly accepted that prisons are basically facilities of higher education for criminals.
Boredalt wrote:
4. True or false: Women who smoke are easier than non-smokers.
I can tell you from personal experience that this is demonstrably true. There are other signs that you can look for in a woman that send the same signal, but they all basically amount to signs of bad decision making. You're just taking advantage by putting yourself forward as yet another bad decision.
Boredalt wrote:
5. Is the greatest power a U. S. president has nominating Supreme Court justices to replace retiring/deceased justices?
Given the number of issues that are now decided in the judiciary instead of the legislature, I'd say that's a pretty big deal.
Boredalt wrote:
6. Will protesters in Egypt regret forcing Mubarak out and turning their government over to the military?
Too many variables to consider there, and I think our own perceptions color the answer. Americans too often view people from other cultures and places through the prism of our own experience. We don't understand that there are people who view our system and way of life as a detriment. I think we'd be surprised how many people in Egypt would be content, if not happy, with a theocratic system like they have in Iran. I think it would also be short-sighted to assume all the protesters share the same views, and are as homogenized and aligned politically as protesters for a certain issue would be here in the US. In the short term, the military is the best solution.
Boredalt wrote:
7. Thirty-four U. S. states recognize a child in utero as a person, if the child is injured or killed during the commission of a crime. Do you see this as a conflict with the Roe v. Wade decision which found that the human fetus is not a "person" under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution?
It is inconsistent, and I could foresee a challenge to those sorts of laws in the future...which I believe is the real purpose of those laws in the first place. However, I believe that delineating the fine lines between a woman choosing to end a pregnancy and a woman having her already much-loved child torn from her womb by forces beyond her control is more than possible.
Boredalt wrote:
8. In your opinion, was Lance Armstrong able to win the Tour de France seven straight times without cheating?
Possible? Yes. Probable? I don't think so.
Your Pal,
Jubber