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RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/13/2006 11:03:43 PM   
Lordandmaster


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Not exactly, Firmhand, because I've never criticized you for being facile and condescending.

For other shit, sure, but not for that.

(in reply to FirmhandKY)
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RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/13/2006 11:41:52 PM   
popeye1250


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Oh, and did you ever see some of those liberal women?
Talk about depressing!

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Profile   Post #: 142
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/13/2006 11:46:34 PM   
Lordandmaster


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They give good head, you know.

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Profile   Post #: 143
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 12:02:42 AM   
Bluebird


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quote:

They give good head, you know.

No, dahling - it's the CONSERVATIVES who will swallow anything! 

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Profile   Post #: 144
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 12:35:42 AM   
Noah


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quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY

Incorrect.

First, the "public figure" issue that you do not understand:

Public figure: a term erm applied in the context of defamation actions (libel and slander) as well as invasion of privacy. A public figure (such as a politician, celebrity, or business leader) cannot base a lawsuit on incorrect harmful statements unless there is proof that the writer or publisher intentionally defamed the person with malice. The burden of proof is higher in the case of a public figure.

What this means is that you can get away with calling a public figure all kinds of names, making all kinds of accusations.  A private citizen, not in the public's eye and attention, has a much higher level of protection.

I am not a public figure.  Call Bush and your favorite (or unfavorite) politican  whatever you wish.  Do not call me gratitious names, please.



So if the current laws regarding defamation were different, the rightness or wrongness of statements made against you would be different too?

I guess that's a difference between us. When I evaluate the rightness or wrongness of an action the analysis begins and ends with no reference to what some particular set of laws may say. Once I've determined whether an action is right or wrong I'm interested in the law for prudential reasons. The law itself does not determine morality for me. Laws at the best can reflect rightness. They can not establish it.

... unless you're down with a certain retrograde theological ethic common to the most radical of Islamists as well as religious fundamentalists of several other stripes. See Hourani's book on the ethics of 'Abd Al-Jabbar if you'd like a more in depth explanation.

A non-fundamentalist who still lets the law decide for him what is morally right and wrong would do well to get some counselling on locus of control issues, in my view.

quote:

Second, your understanding of ad hominem:

quote:

Ad hominem: An ad hominem argument, also known as argumentum ad hominem (Latin, literally argument against the person), personal attack or you-too argument, involves replying to an argument or assertion by attacking the person presenting the argument or assertion rather than the argument itself. It is a logical fallacy.


Congratulations on finding such an authoritative source.

And please re-read your snip which despite being a cobbled-up, muddy definition probbaly contributed by some tyro manages to include the key fact. An ad hominem is a (informal)logical fallacy.

Insulting you is not a logical fallacy.





quote:

I think what philosophy did quite well fits this category.  To recap:

1. philosophy insinuated in his post 60 that my pointing out that LaM original post was "facile and patronizing" was, in itself "facile and patronizing".

2.  I replied to him in my post 67 and asked him:
Back to the original reason I posted to LaM in the first place ... do you not think his original comment was both facile and patronizing?
3.  In philosophy's post 94, he replies:

...irrelevant, the point i was making is that you are a hypocrite......quite happy to accuse others of sins you have no trouble committing. 

It seems quite clear that philosophy not only did not answer my question (address my argument), he is attempting to discount my declaration that LaM's post was "facile and patronizing" by saying it was immaterial, because I'm a "hypocrite".

This is a classic example of an ad hominem logical fallacy, which IS a personal attack to avoid the argument i.e. my logic is incorrect or immaterial because I'm a "hypocrite".


"...classic example..."! You kill me.

"... which IS a personal attack to avoid the argument..."
It is crucially NOT a personal attack to AVOID the argument. It employs a personal attack to DISQUALIFY the argument. You STILL don't know what ad hominem means! This is getting funny.

Dear God in heaven, man, you couldn't have documented your error better if you tried. Thank you.

The chain of reasoning you ascribe to philosophy is shown by your snips not to be a chain of reasoning at all, much less one Philosophy was trying to establish. Please do notice that he said: "irrelevant." That is to say that the straw man case you were trying to hold up in place of the issue he was raising ... was not the issue he was raising.

Philosophy at no point took any stance pro or con whether LAM's work was "facile and patronizing." He simply declined to ever enter that disputation. That same disputation which you accuse him not only of entering but of entering and speaking fallaciously in. He was staying out of that to continue to address the prior issue of your hypocrisy.

I actually believe that until reading this post you may have had no idea what Philosophy was actually getting at, except insofar you note that he quite properly declined to address your beside-the-point argument.

Not that Philosophy didn't make himself more than adequately clear.


quote:

Again:  a personal attack ... involves replying to an argument or assertion by attacking the person presenting the argument or assertion rather than the argument itself



Can your thinking really be this muddled? I stand here agog. Don't you see the circular definition which you have... well I won't even say "smuggled in" to the discussion since it was such a baldly hamfisted failure to establish anything logically.

You mine from the web some relatively unclear statement of the definition of Ad hominem, and present it. Good enough. Then, several lines later you present it again but this time as a definition of "Personal Attack".

The substitution would be illicit and dishonest even if it weren't made absurd by the circular definition which results.

Do you think we're all blind or drunk? Or can you actually not see what you're doing? This post of yours hardly even rises to the level of argumentation at all. It is slather-assed irresponsible rhetoric disguised as argumentation

As I carefully outlined previously, an ad hominem argument can employ an insult instrumentally in its attack on the reliability of an argument. But we bring in the term ad hominem not to name the insult, but to name a particular logical fallacy in which insults can be instrumental. The insult is the knife. The stabbing is the ad hominem.

If you can't appreciate the import of this sort of distinction you shouldn't be arguing at the grownups' table.

But even if you hadn't gotten that all exactly wrong, please attend to this: Philosophy--contrary to your bolluxed-up analysis, never said anything which cashes out as: "Your claim should be seen as false because you are a hypocrite (eliptical for "... and hypocrites can't be trusted.")

... as you duplicitously (or dimly?) credit him.

He in effect called you a hypocrite once. You missed his point or tried to obfuscate it with a tangential, mixed-up rejoinder. Then he calmly said, in effect: "That is all irrelevant to whether you are a hypocrite, which you are."

You asked for evidence. He chose not to provide it. Those are both fair moves.

K Y, nothing is more familiar on these boards the your propensity, shared with missdeathbyhairspray, to take some careless stab at someone or something which, when push comes to shove, you can't back up. Sometimes you are called on it by someone who does a decent job at the calling. In those cases you typically back and fill and hem and haw and more or less disclaim your original intent, scrambling to present some revisionist version of a meaning which was plain as day to start with. This, one might say, can be seen as the unifying element in your posting style.

Given that this is so I don't blame Philosophy for not enumerating instances of hypocrisy. Will you ask for cases in which birds flew?

quote:

Therefore it was both a "personal attack" and further a personal attack as part of an "ad hominem" logical fallacy.

Seems pretty plain to me.


And here we see the signature "Squirm und Weasal" move for which you are so well known. The one which in particular cements your place in the popular consciousness here as a hypocrite. You began by calling the attack on you an ad hominem. I taught you that an ad hominem is a logical fallacy which involves what could be called a personal attack but involves it only instrumentally.

Now in this last snippet of yours, without admitting how fucked up your thinking was to start with, and indeed in the context of an attempt to defend the fucked-up thinking, you back away from your original position and try to inhabit the one which was used to demonstrate your error, and to claim it as your own.

That is to say that now you are suddenly claiming that what you meant all along was that that the attack on you was part of an ad hominem rather than saying that it was an ad hominem. We are back to the difference between a knife and a stabbing. It is not a trivial difference. It is a crucial difference.

Before, you were saying one thing. Now, you are saying something mutually exclusive of that thing. Furthermore you are (fatuously) using the mutually exclusive second claim in the context of a defense of the first claim.

Your reasoning manages to be both blatantly and intricately, fatally flawed.

The result? As so often happens, your weaselly backing and filling leaves you no better situated than you were before this latest bout of intellectual legerdemain. But then you seem to do it all almost reflexively anyway. Do you not care? I just don't know what to think.

Maybe there are people who read your pretty talk, replete with citations, and sort of guess that you might be right 'cause you say you're right so good. Is that the pinnacle of your ambition in a discussion here?

Yeah you talk pretty. Sometimes this indicates a bright person. I just don't know what to conclude in your case. Are you really that dull-witted but somehow able to talk pretty? If so your crap argumentation is one sort of failing.

If you are indeed as bright as your grammar and syntax (I would have included "vocabulary" until you botched ad hominem) would suggest, on the other hand, one is tempted toward the conclusion that you are a kind of bright person with few or no intellectual scruples.



(in reply to FirmhandKY)
Profile   Post #: 145
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 12:44:33 AM   
Noah


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quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY

Noah,

You are misunderstanding.  In that case, I'm not making any assertion at all.  I simply changed his assertion to place his beliefs under attack.


(And so once again, having been shown to be standing in an untenable position you attempt to describe it as something else altogether.)

The change you applied to his assertion, K Y, included the dichotomization of liberals and capitalists. The attack you put his beliefs under was predicated on a false dichotomy.

If you want to say you were just making a careless joke and don't want to be held to any ethical standard in regard to it. Make that case.
But spare us this mealy-mouthed bullshit.

quote:

On the first page, I believe, I used a similar "Alternate" methodolgy to show LaM that the way he was stating things was offensive.

I never accused you of inconsistency.

quote:

My personal beliefs are a little more complex than a simple "liberal/capitalist/conservative" label can describe.


I take this to be an accusation on your part that you have unfairly oversimplified your position.

quote:

But ... thanks for calling me both a "dickhead" and "intellectually dishonest".  I've always admired your posts and the mind behind it. 

Until now.


Well sport, the implication that anyone should be concerned with your opinion, given the way you conduct yourself around here, is a hoot.

(in reply to FirmhandKY)
Profile   Post #: 146
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 12:53:33 AM   
Zensee


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Gawd! This thread is turning into the "Clash of the TOSsers".

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Profile   Post #: 147
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 1:56:51 AM   
FirmhandKY


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Noah,

Most of the time, your posts are erudite, humorous and to the point.

This, on the other hand, has become pedantic, tedious and boring.

You are the one who is making distinctions without a difference, and ignoring the plain sense of words, and what I have posted before.

I've seen you twist many people up with your cutting remarks, but the tricks you are attempting to use on me are worthy of a high school debating club.  Please take them elsewhere.

Normally, I'd assume you were doing these things simply in honest error, but with your continuing insults, along with your demonstrated intellectual abilities, I can only assume you are being dense intentionally.

Just two examples:

1.  You cite my second definition of "a personal attack" as somehow being circular reasoning.  A closer reading on your part would make it clear that I was making no distinction between a "personal attack" and an "ad hominen" attack, but rather simply quoting a portion of the definition of "ad hominen" attack for the second time (hence, the "again"), highlighting the portion that makes it plain that a personal attack is an inherent part of that definition.  And I did this only because of your specious reasoning earlier, making some sort of distinction between the two.

You choose instead to ignore this and have it "prove" my faulty reasoning.  In fact, it's nothing more than a rather transparent excuse on your part to launch your own personal attacks.

2.   You attempt to ascribe beliefs to me that plainly are not, and then you attack those "beliefs" and insult me for holding them (straw man, anyone?)

Your entire post 146 is this attack against this straw man.  It originated when I posted in response to sissifytoserve in post 104 in a format that I have used before in this thread, where I specifically said it wasn't my position.  In post 16 I said:
Let's look at your words from a possible alternative viewpoint (Note: I'm not necessarily condoning the alternate view, just showing you how "conservatives" may feel and react to your comments):
When you first asked me about my comments to sissifytoserve (in post 123), I specifically told you in post 126 what I was doing:
You are misunderstanding.  In that case, I'm not making any assertion at all.  I simply changed his assertion to place his beliefs under attack.

On the first page, I believe, I used a similar "Alternate" methodolgy to show LaM that the way he was stating things was offensive.
Yet, even after I clarified this point to you, you continue to act and argue as if not only is the "Alternate" viewpoint something I ascribe to, you attack me for it again.

***

If you wish to talk about intellectual dishonesty, I'll certainly grant you that you know what you are talking about.  However, I think you have taken it one step further.  Unlike kids in the playground, where there is always at least one who likes to physically intimidate others, you are trying to use intellectual intimidation.  I find this reprehensible. 

Sorry, I'm not buying it. 

FirmKY

_____________________________

Some people are just idiots.

(in reply to Noah)
Profile   Post #: 148
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 2:45:48 AM   
meatcleaver


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The answer is easy. Conservatives don't give a shit about the state of the world and are happy with their heads in the sand while liberals nurse their angst and do nothing.

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Profile   Post #: 149
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 3:23:12 AM   
Level


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quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver

The answer is easy. Conservatives don't give a shit about the state of the world and are happy with their heads in the sand while liberals nurse their angst and do nothing.




_____________________________

Fake the heat and scratch the itch
Skinned up knees and salty lips
Let go it's harder holding on
One more trip and I'll be gone

~~ Stone Temple Pilots

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Profile   Post #: 150
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 3:42:30 AM   
FirmhandKY


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quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver

The answer is easy. Conservatives don't give a shit about the state of the world and are happy with their heads in the sand while liberals nurse their angst and do nothing.




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Profile   Post #: 151
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 5:00:18 AM   
candystripper


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quote:

ORIGINAL: saskslave

http://pewresearch.org/social/pack.php?PackID=1
quote:

Some 45% of all Republicans report being very happy, compared with just 30% of Democrats and 29% of independents. This finding has also been around a long time; Republicans have been happier than Democrats every year since the General Social Survey began taking its measurements in 1972....

...Also, we should explain here a bit about how our survey questionnaire was constructed. The question about happiness was posed at the very beginning of the interview, while the question about political affiliation was posed at the back end, along with questions about demographic traits. So respondents were not cued to consider their happiness through the frame of partisan politics. This question is about happiness; it is not a question about happiness with partisan outcomes.

Of course, there's a more obvious explanation for the Republicans' happiness edge. Republicans tend to have more money than Democrats, and -- as we've already discovered -- people who have more money tend to be happier.

But even this explanation only goes so far. If one controls for household income, Republicans still hold a significant edge: that is, poor Republicans are happier than poor Democrats; middle-income Republicans are happier than middle-income Democrats, and rich Republicans are happier than rich Democrats.

Might ideology be the key? It's true that conservatives, who are more likely to be Republican, are happier than liberals, who are more likely to be Democrats. But even controlling for this ideological factor, a significant partisan gap remains. Conservative Republicans are happier than conservative Democrats, and moderate/liberal Republicans are happier than liberal Democrats. Hmmm, what other factors might be at play? Well, there's always...


Indeed, the gap widened even further when they broke both into 2 groups.

Very Happy:
Conservative Repubs--47%
Moderate/liberal Repubs--45%

Conserv/moderate Dems--31%
Liberal Dems--28%

34 years straight.  Any suggestions why? 


Crickey!  i have found a use for my Sociology degree!  Lmao. 
 
Before O/one can comment on the findings of a study, O/one must ascertain whether the authors used statistically valid samples and otherwise adhered to the tenets of reliable sociological research.
 
Then there's the premise:  "Republicans are happier than Democrats".  It could just as easily be stated as "happy people tend to vote Republican".
 
Happiness is such a vague, fluid term, encompassing so much, that O/one's party affiliation seems to shrink in contrast.  Depressed P/pl do not get a lift from registering as Republicans; there seems to me to be no cause and effect relationship that can be posited.
 
i think the study was s'what flawed.
 
candystripper

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Profile   Post #: 152
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 6:33:48 AM   
Amaros


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quote:

ORIGINAL: candystripper

quote:

ORIGINAL: saskslave

http://pewresearch.org/social/pack.php?PackID=1
quote:

Some 45% of all Republicans report being very happy, compared with just 30% of Democrats and 29% of independents. This finding has also been around a long time; Republicans have been happier than Democrats every year since the General Social Survey began taking its measurements in 1972....

...Also, we should explain here a bit about how our survey questionnaire was constructed. The question about happiness was posed at the very beginning of the interview, while the question about political affiliation was posed at the back end, along with questions about demographic traits. So respondents were not cued to consider their happiness through the frame of partisan politics. This question is about happiness; it is not a question about happiness with partisan outcomes.

Of course, there's a more obvious explanation for the Republicans' happiness edge. Republicans tend to have more money than Democrats, and -- as we've already discovered -- people who have more money tend to be happier.

But even this explanation only goes so far. If one controls for household income, Republicans still hold a significant edge: that is, poor Republicans are happier than poor Democrats; middle-income Republicans are happier than middle-income Democrats, and rich Republicans are happier than rich Democrats.

Might ideology be the key? It's true that conservatives, who are more likely to be Republican, are happier than liberals, who are more likely to be Democrats. But even controlling for this ideological factor, a significant partisan gap remains. Conservative Republicans are happier than conservative Democrats, and moderate/liberal Republicans are happier than liberal Democrats. Hmmm, what other factors might be at play? Well, there's always...


Indeed, the gap widened even further when they broke both into 2 groups.

Very Happy:
Conservative Repubs--47%
Moderate/liberal Repubs--45%

Conserv/moderate Dems--31%
Liberal Dems--28%

34 years straight.  Any suggestions why? 


Crickey!  i have found a use for my Sociology degree!  Lmao. 
 
Before O/one can comment on the findings of a study, O/one must ascertain whether the authors used statistically valid samples and otherwise adhered to the tenets of reliable sociological research.
 
Then there's the premise:  "Republicans are happier than Democrats".  It could just as easily be stated as "happy people tend to vote Republican".
 
Happiness is such a vague, fluid term, encompassing so much, that O/one's party affiliation seems to shrink in contrast.  Depressed P/pl do not get a lift from registering as Republicans; there seems to me to be no cause and effect relationship that can be posited.
 
i think the study was s'what flawed.
 
candystripper


True, it's most likely putting the cart before the horse: if they are wealthier, i.e., less subject to the vagaries of economic up's and downs, cahnces are they are happier, and the "ignorance is bliss" theory also applies: republicans rely heavily on identity politics, and calling yourself a conservative comes with instant approval, i.e., conservatives have a reputation for being "sensible", and in the last few years, being a conservaitive apparently made you infallable by definition - nobody like to be wrong I guess.

'Course, if you never admit you're wrong, you never learn anything - but social aproval alone can account for a certain amount of stress reduction, and the study might just as easily indicate that conservatives are more prone to be social conformists.

I question the idea that they are really happier though, there seem to be a lot of conservatives that are pathologically hate sick sons of bitches - but then since my experience is mostly conversations with online conservatives, my sample might be skewed - it's more difficult to be that dismissively dergotory in public, face to face, although I encounter that too from time to time.

i.e., it merely indicates repression and denial - depression is mental illness, and illness is weakness - seems to me a liberal would be more likely to admit being depressed, maybe even claim to be depressed when they're not, since mental illness is a positive thing for liberals, it implies suffering, and keeps psychologists in business.

Boils down to worldview, basically, i.e., what identity one adopts in order to "fit in", regardless of how or what one actually feels or thinks.

(in reply to candystripper)
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RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 6:39:35 AM   
mnottertail


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Looks to me like everybodies pissed off here, political affiliation notwithstanding.
C'mon, let's put on mr happyface
Ron

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Profile   Post #: 154
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 6:42:17 AM   
Lordandmaster


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I'm not pissed off, I'm getting good head from a liberal chick.

I guess that contradicts the findings in the OP's study.

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Profile   Post #: 155
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 6:44:30 AM   
Nikolette


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quote:

ORIGINAL: mnottertail

Looks to me like everybodies pissed off here, political affiliation notwithstanding.
C'mon, let's put on mr happyface
Ron


Wtf, Ronnie (can I call you Ronnie? ) Aren't you offering any Ms Happyfaces to put on? This Mr Happy Face has a 5 o'clock shadow and its NOT flattering.



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Profile   Post #: 156
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 6:45:17 AM   
mnottertail


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LOLOLOL...................



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(in reply to Lordandmaster)
Profile   Post #: 157
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 6:52:26 AM   
Nikolette


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Level,

I LOVE LOVE LOVE your quote.


*le sigh*

What is it from?

See this is why I enjoy the difference in a day. I was just talking to my dad the other day about how each day is interestingly beautiful in that I get a few experiences older. This was upon learning that a car battery had water, how to check it and why! Oh. It doesn't need to be poetic lovely words. oh no. I'm evidently promiscuous in respect to knowledge. (blather blather digress digress)

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Profile   Post #: 158
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 7:00:01 AM   
juliaoceania


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quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY

quote:

ORIGINAL: juliaoceania

I hate to interject but you cannot sue someone for calling you a name unless you can prove this harmed your reputation in some way, was a false name, and had an impact on your livelihood... just sayin


Who said anything about suing?

FirmKY



My point is that a person has to go to CIVIL court to have a libel or slander trial for someone name calling them, they then have to prove that this name calling incident had some sort of substantial negative impact on them... random name calling is not against the law...

example of breaking this civil law:
Joe goes to Mark's boss and tells him Joe is a thief. Joe is innocent of this so he goes to court and sues Mark for slander for causing him to lose his job. If Joe had not been fired it is doubtful he could get damages.

You see several elements have to be in place for calling you a hypocrite, or juvenile and immature, for this to be against the law...

1) You have to show you are not a hypocrite, which is somewhat subjective,and since we are all hypocrites at some point, not very likely

2) you have to show that calling you a hypocrite somehow damaged you economically or by losing your community standing. Not likely to happen either in a court of law.

My whole position is that an ad hominem is not de facto against any law, there have to be certain criteria in place.

< Message edited by juliaoceania -- 11/14/2006 7:01:07 AM >


_____________________________

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Reality has a well known Liberal Bias ~ Stephen Colbert

Great minds discuss ideas; Average minds discuss events; Small minds discuss people. Eleanor Roosevelt

(in reply to FirmhandKY)
Profile   Post #: 159
RE: Why are conservatives happier than liberals? - 11/14/2006 7:01:42 AM   
KatyLied


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quote:

I'm not pissed off, I'm getting good head from a liberal chick.


That makes me laugh.  Last week, after reading through the "other" thread, I asked my Dom if he'd like a left-of-center bj.




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- Albert Einstein

(in reply to Lordandmaster)
Profile   Post #: 160
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