At least I'm consistentHey, now you're goin' overboard there, lady.![]()

At least I'm consistentHey, now you're goin' overboard there, lady.![]()
How does America produce young men like that?
I'm not assuming the premise "everything is functional in this sense."
I believe rather violating these types of rules are motivated out of greed, laziness, and general selfishness, and then people try rationalizing them with silly scenarios. I feel it is morally and ethically wrong to say "I don't agree with how our society has agreed to do this, so I'm just going to do whatever I want for myself."
Obviously there are going to be extreme circumstances where the law really is wrong: slavery, oppression, etc. But this conversation didn't come up because of those. It came up about deciding you don't want to pay for something but want it anyway, so is it okay for you to just take it? I feel it's very dishonest to say something like "Because slavery is wrong, anything goes!"
What I want to know from bringing up those cases is how you, personally, decide when a law is too unjust or too silly to be followed. For example, you said you were offended that I even suggested you would turn in people to ICE, but how did you decide that US immigration law was so unjust it should not be followed?
I dunno. Exorcisms, loafers, and other things of that natureName something that isn't functional in that sense, then.
Yeah, Tim, but I put most of the tax dodgers that don't look like they could use a hand with the formula in with the Enron crowd. They still need the latter hand.
So she does not have to arrive at "US Immigration law is so unjust it should not be followed" in order to say that she wouldn't turn someone else in for not following it, because she can follow it and still not turn them in. She can follow every law governing intellectual property and not turn you in. She can follow the US tax code right to the very last letter and not turn me in.
Lexicus, you're doing that thing again where you're taking Mary's point about general belief and translating it to an attack on your person. We have enough like that already, don't join them!
I dunno. Exorcisms, loafers, and other things of that nature
I believe each case is individual,
Sarcasm? Exorcisms are like... agent detection + crap knowledge of mental illness gone haywire. Loafers are even worse.Exorcisms seem to me to clearly fulfill a social function in the same sense that building the pyramids does...
As a society yes, but not every individual doing whatever you want.This is exactly what I'm trying to argue. Laws need to be evaluated on their merits.
There are absolutely circumstances under which someone could be required by the law to cooperate with ICE and in effect turn undocumented people in.
What else is getting is going down as pointless because it didn't advance workers rights? The Sistine Chapel? The Apollo Program?
Federal law actually prohibits ICE from asking you to assist them.
Yeah, I'm not saying the pyramids were a corporate team-building exercise that went off the rails. I'm saying kooky ideologies create coordination and that's what makes things like the pyramids possibleUm...what?? I'm not trying to argue that the Pyramids were "pointless." I'm saying that the "point" of the Pyramids was not to "build group solidarity" or whatever else modern academics project onto it, but quite literally to house the Pharaohs in the afterlife. My point is that there is a large degree of truth in the idea that cultures need to be understood on their own terms, and that trying to interpret them on terms comprehensible to modern Westerners is often a mistake.
Can you cite that?
Yeah, I'm not saying the pyramids were a corporate team-building exercise that went off the rails. I'm saying kooky ideologies create coordination and that's what makes things like the pyramids possible
Relevant: Most of what you read on the internet is written by insane people (I think all of us are included)Everything great in the world comes from neurotics. They alone have founded our religions and composed our masterpieces.
Marcel Proust, 1920.