Usdk wrote:
Mayo's point was that Jubbs should kill himself so his medical bills one day dont leave his son broke as shit. Which is also a cunt thing to say. My point was I'd rather have my mom than money, I was comparing the two outcomes jubbs kid would have in mayo's point(dead dad + money or alive dad - money) with the two outcomes I could have had. That's not human shielding, it was a direct comparison.
You are being willfully obtuse. Mayo's remark was rhetorical and you know it.
It's not a direct comparison at all because you were never presented that choice. If you were, and your mom survived and you had nothing in consequence, why should we believe you'd accept that outcome equivocally and not as fundamentally wrong? After all, in the here and now, you always make the argument "well the system worked for me therefore it's fine".
Rather than consider the possibility that what you believe in might NOT work for you, you try to wall that line of thinking off by interposing a taboo.
Usdk wrote:
No wonder boredalt doesn't post here anymore.
Boredalt is upset for the same reason you are now upset which is that he made dishonest and self-serving arguments and tried to fill in the gaps with cheap throws to machismo and passive-aggressive BS and got called on it. Rather than get better he chose to get mad.
Actually, I think what really annoyed him was his trying to talk about secession as if it were a reasonable and informed response to the current situation, then was upset when I linked a BBC article insinuating secession was the racist redneck's knee-jerk response to a black guy in the White House.
Honestly I don't like driving people away, but ultimately, people do it to themselves. The breakdown in political discourse in America today is driven largely by the degree to which political views are driven by personal identity issues. All American political discussions inescapably wind down to how people see themselves and their self-flattering version of reality. As such, challenging views inevitably becomes challenging one's very self.