Sunday, 16 March 2014

Nor will there be an end...All i can say is that

Nor will there be an end...All i can say is that 2014-03-16 02:39:22The universe had a cause.... How else could it have come into existence? But younhave already abandoned free willl..... 2014-03-16 02:35:31You just dont yet know it. The notion of free will is even caused by pre-events, it serves a purpose in its own right. It provides comfort. It helps you somehow to believe that you have free choice. So even that notion is subject to cause and effect, as most illusions are. I shluld say ALL illusions. For thats what it is. Illusion. Illusions serve a protective, defendive, perhaps evolutionary purpose. We dont choose them freely. Fight or flight reaction is not a choice. I freely choose to go to bed now WeekendWorrier2014-03-16 02:34:08but only because Commie Bastard is giving me a headache. I had no choice but to get a headache, except all the other times before when I freely chose to let him rant while I did something else.you argue that because there is a timeline WeekendWorrier2014-03-16 02:32:53to life that it is pre-destined. I disagree. I might just as well decide to take your side of the debate and prove you wrong about mine. I recognize your handle and I never meant to get this deep into your new religion, that there is no free will. When you argue that something else happened before everything, how do you describe the beginning of the universe?Again you insist everything that happens WeekendWorrier2014-03-16 02:29:28proves you were right all along, therefore you are right and I must abandon my free will in order to agree with you that nobody ever thought for themselves in the history of man until you came up with this idiot idea that some force in nature guides your every move, DICTATES your every move, no less. And as I pointed out earlier, this is my favorite part of atheists, when they claim they are powerless against nature. So comfort yourself, you are a molecule in the universe, it would be different if you weren't here making decisions, and you have no invisible friend in the sky who makes all your decisions for you.Because I know it to be untrue WeekendWorrier2014-03-16 02:26:11provably untrue.I didnt ask if anyone forced you. I asked if commie__bastard2014-03-16 02:21:04Anything caused you to. I freely choose to not care. WeekendWorrier2014-03-16 02:20:29It's a perfect analogy if you're talking physics.I had no choice but to reject it § commie__bastard2014-03-16 02:19:21if i jump real hard I can touch the ceiling WeekendWorrier2014-03-16 02:16:48not every time...let's get a pool going WeekendWorrier2014-03-16 02:15:44how long will commie bastard continue to attack me in the thread below, without realizing I am exercising my free will by ignoring him?I love that he want to be the popular girl like goracon2014-03-16 02:13:07me. lolFrom 'I don't want any part of Obamacare' to 'It lie______detector2014-03-16 02:12:05From 'I don't want any part of Obamacare' to 'It's a godsend' Last year, TIME published a massive special report, "Bitter Pill: Why Medical Bills Are Killing Us," detailing just about everything that is wrong with the nation's health care system. Central to that story were Stephanie and Sean Recchi, an Ohio couple with two kids who had just started up a new business, and who had just been struck by Sean's aggressive and expensive cancer. Here's Stephanie Ricci last October: I don't think Obamacare will help us. I don't want anything to do with it," Stephanie Recchi told me a week after the launch of HealthCare.gov on Oct. 1. "I hear a lot of bad things about it—that it doesn't cover pre-existing conditions and it's too expensive," she added, referring to what she said were "television ads and some politicians talking on the news. Just a lot of talk that this is a bad law." Did I mention she's an Obama hater? Nonetheless, she tried and tried again to navigate HealthCare.gov, to no avail. That made her hate the whole idea of Obamacare even more, but she needed health insurance, and so went to her insurance agent. "When they came to my office, Stephanie told me right up front, 'I don't want any part of Obamacare,' " recalls health-insurance agent Barry Cohen. "These were clearly people who don't like the President. So I kind of let that slide and just asked them for basic information and told them we would go on the Ohio exchange"—which is actually the Ohio section of the federal Obamacare exchange—"and show them what's available." What Stephanie soon discovered, she told me in mid-November, "was a godsend." "Here I get full protection for $566, compared to no protection for almost $500," Stephanie says, referring to her old plan that had cost $469 monthly and that MD Anderson had scoffed at. "This is wonderful. [...] No, we don't get MD Anderson, but we do get the Cleveland Clinic and lots of other good care," Stephanie says. "We understand that." Amid the likely attacks from his opponents that he's taking away patients' favorite doctors and hospitals, Obama has to hope that others come to share her attitude. I see anti-lube still hasn't left wopo. jesushasmyback2014-03-16 02:11:12He's lucky us taxpayers are here to pay for his lazy, loser, moocher ways.I weigh less than YOU do now! § Coastie_12014-03-16 02:10:21sfoLooks like I win again. LMAO goracon2014-03-16 02:10:19Nite gentlemen & MY BITCHsfoWell, mental midget, I can jump onto a WeekendWorrier2014-03-16 02:08:40trampoline from anywhere and go in any direction I want on the bounce, so you're trying to convince me I can't do something I know for a fact I can. Just because you've beaten yourself to a mental pulp over making your own decisions ... key bullet points supported by tea party Republ lie______detector2014-03-16 02:07:46 key bullet points supported by tea party Republicans: Conservatism, the irreplaceable hub of our Nation, our Christian Faith, and the highest standards of western culture and technology. America First: America before ANY foreign or alien influence and the removal of the United Nations from our borders. We condemn the U.N. and advocate withdrawal of the United States from membership in the U.N. The Constitution Of The United States: as originally written and intended! The finest system of government ever conceived by man. Free Enterprise: private property and ownership of business. Positive Christianity: the right of the American people to practice the Christian Faith, including prayer in school. Oh and on guns… The fact is to all you government officials considering confiscating guns, what you are considering is TREASON against the Constitution and Citizens of the United States of America. Except—I didn’t write those talking points. I didn’t pull them from a right-wing tea party website. I pulled them from the Traditionalist American Knights—of the Ku Klux Klan. sfoI lost 4 more pounds! I'm down to 312 now! § Coastie_12014-03-16 02:07:38 Pew has released a new survey about the social lie______detector2014-03-16 02:06:29 Pew has released a new survey about the social and political attitudes of various generations, and it makes for interesting reading. The thing that strikes me the most is just how clear the trends are. Each successive generation is more politically independent; more religiously independent; less likely to be married in their 20s; less trusting of others; less likely to self-ID as patriotic; and less opposed to gay rights. There’s virtually no overlap at all. It’s just a smooth, straight progression. The Pew data shows voters under 30 moving sharply to the left in recent years. This isn’t necessarily reflected in partisanship, but it is captured by ideology – the “millennial” generation is the only generation in which self-described liberals outnumber self-described conservatives. I’ve seen some suggestions that the Pew data should be taken with a grain of salt because young people are always going to be more progressive – it’s just part of youth. That’s an easy explanation, which happens to be wrong. For example, Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush were two of the oldest presidents ever elected, but they both won the youth vote in the 1980s. If young people are naturally more liberal, it’s a very modern phenomenon. For that matter, look at the above chart – there’s nothing steady about the trend. If there’s just a natural ebb and flow to young people starting on the left and gradually changing as they get older, we wouldn’t see so much variation as younger Americans move left now. What we’re left with is simply a more liberal younger generation. Among the GOP’s other demographic concerns, this should be high on the list. sfoI'm BACK! The one, the only, Coastie! § Coastie_12014-03-16 02:06:17sfoI wouldn't fuck one with Jeffersons dick § goracon2014-03-16 02:05:32sfo"But I could have done otherwise". No you... commie__bastard2014-03-16 02:04:33Couldn't. And so you didn't. sfoI just posted what he said. Now he wants to hide goracon2014-03-16 02:04:16itRepublicans want to dial back the 'war on women' lie______detector2014-03-16 02:04:15Republicans want to dial back the 'war on women' talk ... by focusing on abortion If Republicans want to make Todd Akin their poster boy on abortion, they should go right ahead. Here's something to watch for at the Republican National Committee meetings: A group of RNC members is introducing a "Resolution on Republican Pro-Life Strategy." In essence, it says the Republican Party should encourage candidates to talk more, not less or more sensitively, about their extreme anti-abortion positions: "The Republican National Committee urges all Republican pro-life candidates, consultants, and other national Republican Political Action Committees to reject a strategy of silence on the abortion issue when candidates are attacked with 'war on women' rhetoric," the resolution reads. Somewhere, Todd Akin and Richard Mourdock are probably pumping their fists and cheering. Then again, so are their 2012 opponents, Sens. Claire McCaskill and Joe Donnelly. According to the RNC resolution's sponsor: "Not talking about it has not worked well for us," Barrosse told CNN in an interview. "Not responding has not worked well for us. It's a conversation the party has to have." She considers the past several years of Republican campaigning and lawmaking to have been "not talking about it"? Akin and Mourdock, forced-ultrasound and clinic-closing laws from Texas to Wisconsin to North Carolina? The No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act in the House, which could lead to the IRS auditing rape victims? That's "not talking about it"? Dear heaven, what are these people hoping for? Republican candidates who campaign exclusively outside women's clinics, harassing everyone who goes in? But please! Bring it. Be honest—tell us how you feel about exclusions for rape, incest, or the life of the mother. Take it the next step and talk about contraception. Keeping showing voters just where the Republican Party stands on this one. I don't think Democrats will have any problem with that at all. then they insist on telling me WeekendWorrier2014-03-16 02:01:11I have an invisible friend in the sky so they can force the agenda into the cubbyhole that lets them use slogans about how everybody but them is just stupidRNC Hispanic Outreach Chief Quits, Registers as lie______detector2014-03-16 02:00:40RNC Hispanic Outreach Chief Quits, Registers as Democrat Republicans say he quit a month ago, but it's all over the place today. Moral: Wingnut Republicans are wingnut Republicans, and normal people are normal people, and never the twain shall meet. This guy turned his back on a high-paid, high-profile job and burned his bridges. That's how bad these people are: When Republicans appointed Pablo Pantoja to State Director of Florida Hispanic Outreach for the Republican National Committee, they hoped he would be able to bridge the sizable gap that only expanded during the 2012 elections, when the state’s 4.7 million Hispanic voters supported Barack Obama over Mitt Romney by a 20 percent margin. But after months of inaction by Congressional Republicans on comprehensive immigration reform and stiff resistance by Republican-leaning groups like the Heritage Foundation, Pantoja has had enough; on Monday, he announced via email that he was leaving the party and registering as a Democrat: Friend,
Yes, I have changed my political affiliation to the Democratic Party. It doesn’t take much to see the culture of intolerance surrounding the Republican Party today. I have wondered before about the seemingly harsh undertones about immigrants and others. Look no further; a well-known organization recently confirms the intolerance of that which seems different or strange to them. Pantoja goes on to specifically cite last week’s revelation — that an author of Heritage’s false report on the cost of the Gang of Eight’s immigration bill wrote a dissertation in which he suggested that Hispanics are at a permanent disadvantage because they have lower IQs — as the final straw in his political evolution. Prior to assuming the role of state director, Pantoja served in the National Guard, doing multiple tours abroad in Kuwait and Iraq before returning to the states and getting involved in Republican politics. In 2010 he served as a field director in Florida during the midterm elections. I try to see both sides goracon2014-03-16 02:00:24he sounds jaded, I'm surprised we all aren'tYeah I saw that. They spend a lot of time WeekendWorrier2014-03-16 02:00:14apologizing.sfoI am compelled to. Not a matter of force commie__bastard2014-03-16 01:59:50Every action has a pre-cause. It must. To choose freely would negate the laws of physics.



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