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Perhaps we should define our terms more precisely. Joel Send a noteboard - 15/02/2010 11:28:09 AM
You are entitled to your mistaken opinion. Freedom of speech can be guaranteed without any property rights. So can freedom of assembly. So can suffrage. So can security of person. You might want to think about what you say before you say it. If you murder me in cold blood you haven't "stolen" my life, you've just killed me, a real infringement on my rights, but not on my property rights.

The day anyone starts calling life a civil right is the day we need to have a true revolution and drown that noxious idea in blood! Life is a natural right, and like property, is inherent and NOT granted by society. The notion that it IS granted by society or a government leads inevitably to the notion that either can take it away at will.

Civil rights aren't GRANTED by society, they are RECOGNIZED by society. Outside of a social framework the concept of "rights" is meaningless, because it's only when someone with the power to infringe on your rights is present that "rights" become relevant. Where do we see rights discussed except in the political arena where they are subject to threats? A man apart from society doesn't have the "right" to hold property or do anything else, he has the unrestrained ability; it's only when someone comes along to contest that possession that his rights come into play.
You have to recognize people AS people before you recognize any inherent rights they possess.
And what does that entail? That is sheer nonsense. What else does recognition consist of, aside from acknowledging their rights?

That's the meat of it, IMHO.
I used to regard that as so implicitly obvious most people don't consciously think about it, so might need an explicit reminder. Evidently a few people actually DO need to be told, however. Very sad.
Empty moral posturing, stating nothing more than your personal preferences, and no more germane than quoting Bible verses. Except Bible verses actually have some authority and recognized influence, as opposed to your delusions that people want to quote you.

It's not moral posturing at all, it's basic logic. Until/unless there are competing interests, ability and not right is the sole relevant concept. That I can't flap my arms and fly to the moon isn't God infringing on my rights, it's basic physics. Alone, nothing else limits my actions; I may not have the "right" to molest wildlife, but unless there's someone around to stop me, I can. It's only within a social construct that things like "slavery is wrong" become relevant.
It's not "obvious" at all; slavery was common practice throughout the world for millennia and no one thought it especially odd. In fact, from the Servile Wars to the Civil War millions thought ABOLITION was the oddness; it was an afront to their property rights and they didn't see something else took precedence. Something called "civil rights. " No, rights were not respected equally, you're correct in that, but I notice in saying so you don't mention property rights at all. Probably because they don't apply.
They DO! It is simply not a case of them being property. Life & liberty are equal natural rights to property.

That alone is (finally) an admission property rights are not foundational. Now we're down to discussing, not whether civil rights or property rights are basic (since we've both stated the latter is not) but whether civil rights or natural rights are. I submit that the term "natural rights" is oxymoronic, because God or nature only inherently endow ability, and that these are elevated to the status of rights when the ability of multiple individuals create conflicting interests. The conflict between acknowledged rights to liberty and property is a fine example, and the resolution lies, once again, in the realization that the rights society recognizes for all human beings preempt any one human beings right to property or liberty. Thus it is acceptable to revoke the liberty of a convicted murderer for the sake of others' lives.
That's awesome, except if it were true the Civil War on the basis of "ending slavery" (which wasn't the motive of those in control, but that's another thread) would be ILLEGAL because "property is the highest of civil rights" and thus anything done to a person you own is OK.
It WAS illegal, and it WAS wrong. Slavery and warfare are two evils that do not justify each other. Going to war to end slavery was not a valid reason for the Civil War, it was a romantic excuse to induce people to fight it. Eradicating state sovereignty is not nearly so appealing a battle cry.

No argument on that last bit. The Constitution, however, and indeed the whole theory of government as a social contract, legitimizes state defense by force of recognized civil rights. Again, that's why we can legally incarcerate criminals. In 1861 Americans knew this, which is why Lincoln had to result to the charade of saying US troops were attacked on US soil to legitimize the war (ironic, since prior to that date his greatest claim to fame was disputing the same claim regarding the Mexican-American War. ) Had the Civil War been sincerely fought for the freedom of men unjustly denied their right to liberty I'd have no objection, but on the grounds of revoking individual property or states rights by force, or the contradictory "liberty and union!" it doesn't work.
Again, that was the problem with justifying the war as attempted: Slavery needed to be abolished not because the majority wanted it (which didn't happen to be true in 1865) and therefore the federal prerogative preempted personal rights, it needed to be abolished because slaves were people, too, with all the pursuant rights the federal government is OBLIGATED to protect.
And it has nothing to do with the war! Read some history beyond grade school pap. The given reason was ending "rebellion" and the legal justification was the mythical indissolubility of the Union. As it was, the government attempted to amend the Constitution to prevent any abolition laws, in an attempt to placate the slave states. Ironically, THAT was almost the thirteenth amendment. But such an amendment would be just as wrong as federal abolition laws, as it is interfering with the prerogatives of the states. Since laws about slavery are not one of the enumerated powers of the federal government, they WERE the rights of the states.

The prerogative of the states is not to deny its citizens civil rights on the basis of bias. You're falling into the same trap as Southerners did, the one that allowed the 10th Amendment to be made a dead letter in fact if not name: States rights are supreme so the states can do as they please unless the Constitution specifically reserves a given power to the feds. That's not what the Constitution says though:

"The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people. "

"The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. "

Note the usage of the words "the people" which also happen to be two of the first three words in the Constitution. States rights trump federal powers, but for the same reason the peoples rights (which is what I mean when I say, "civil rights" ) trump states rights. These are not "natural" rights because the only right gauranteed by God or nature is the right to, eventually, die. In a vacuum, everything else is a function not of what you have the right to do but of what you have the ability to do. Civil rights are those collectives recognize as universally held, and it is to protect and advance them that we form governments.
We're not dealing with men in the wilderness, as much as many libertarians think they wish we were. A man in the wilderness is free to be eaten by a bear or die from shock or exposure if he falls off a cliff and breaks his leg, too. He can "claim" as much land as he wants, or claim to fly or anything else, but it doesn't make it so,
If he's alone, who is to gainsay his claim? It IS so. He does own the land. Enforcing that claim if another were to come around might be an issue, but the same goes for life or liberty.

If he's alone no one can tell him he can't fly, but the ground may frequently and forcefully imply it. If he's alone, who is to gainsay his claim? Even so; that's why I speak of civil rather than natural rights. Enforcing the claim would almost certainly be an issue if someone else came around, and that often escalates the point rights to life and liberty are called into question, too. Civilization and social contracts are why the guy with the biggest club doesn't just resolve the matter de facto with no consideration of niceties like "rights. "
and in the case of rights it's not even relevant until there's someone else there to argue the point. If a man in the wilderness meets a bigger stronger man his rights against illegal search and seizure extend only so far as his feet can carry him.
Well those would be civil rights, dumbass. They are not natural rights.

You have a keen eye for the obvious; a shame you didn't employ it sooner, smartass.
There are certain tradeoffs we make to live in civilized society, but if you find those objectionable, feel free to leave any time with my blessing.
And the supposed benefit of society is the protection of natural rights, not the ability to freeload off the more productive.

More productive? More successful would be closer to the mark, and then we're back to the strongest arm deciding. Civilization is more than just translating that into "he who has the gold makes the rules. " I don't think a trust fund baby is any "more productive" than a fry cook working 60 hours a week to feed his family (or try) but there's no argument who's more successful. Again, if you find the "supposed" benefits of society so objectionable, feel free to relocate to some place like Angola where you won't have all the burdensome American infringements on your rights. I feel it only "right" to warn you though: The average male life expectancy is about 34 (but you'll be FREE to be forced into the army at gunpoint!) This is what frustrates me about arguing with Libertarians: All the state powers from which we benefit directly are good, and the rest are tyrannical infringements on our liberty.
Whether the things I mentioned are civil rights is open to debate, yes (though I think it difficult to maintain the negative position on that) but I think a strong argument can be made.
I disagree.

Fair enough; this is still America (sort of, for now.... )
Morality is not the primary consideration here any more than in paying taxes to support a defensive military, a municipal fire department or any other basic government service. Much as with violent, property and other crimes the moral dimension is not why we have laws against them, the social dimension is: Society cannot function if such things are allowed.
Society functions just fine without providing food, education and the like. Society only allows people to seek those things on their own.

I believe if you look around the world the "societies" (and I use the term loosely) that don't have widespread education and do have widespread hunger barely function at all. Somalias primary means of functioning seems to be piracy, for example, but who's to gainsay their right to seek food or the means to purchase it on their own?
Again, if you want to live by the law of the jungle, say hi to the lions and tigers and bears for me. And btw, if you're going to trot out the standard response of why those things are different even though they're identical, that invariably reduces to "because I directly benefit" save us both some time and trouble. I don't have time to waste with that.
Once again, you reduce it to your personal preference! YOU reject the argument and that is all there is to it, while ironically decrying the right of people to do this with their own lives and property! And you are offering a false argument, claiming that the only possible choices are a welfare state or living in the wild.

Sure, I recognize there's a world in between, that compromises are not only possible but may be more effective. Indeed, part of the appeal of socialism to me is that consciously avoids the worst excesses of both total communism and laissez-faire capitalism. In a very real sense it RELIES on human nature; knowing that both big government and big business are untrustworthy and, ultimately, unaccountable, it sets them on each other and lets the public tilt the scale. If government becomes too autocratic the public in conjunction with corporate interests will beat it back for the sake of mutual interests, as the government and public will do with an unresponsive government. But when you start arguing in terms of what a mans rights are by himself, alone, you framed it in those terms and if you don't like where it leads that's not my fault or responsibility.
Cite an instance of someone else saying the same thing in virtually the same words but applying it to a different topic and I'll do what you should've done whether you were quoting me or anyone else: Attribute it to its author rather than passing it off as my own thought.
IT WAS MY OWN THOUGHT. Hey, why don't YOU provide proof those were your words, anyway?

No prior statements to that effect have been cited; if you are aware of one perhaps I'll feel the obligation to provide a previous one by me. To my knowledge, Ben hasn't done the wotmania archive yet, so I can't show you any of the many cases where I used the phrase there (and by the last such I had refined it to something much more closely paralleling what you said) but here's the first instance I can find where I used it online:

http://www.commongroundcommonsense.org/forums/lofiversion/index.php/t26940.html

That should bring up a search page with one hit, and if you click the link, toward the bottom is an exchange between me and tombstoned where I say, "Civil Rights as just that, rights for everyone. A right not universally shared is no right, but a privilege which the elite that grant it will rescind whenever convenient. " Date is April '05, toward the end of my posting career on the only purely political site where I've ever contributed. Not that, once again, I'm aware of any prior claim to the phrase, but if you provide one I'm happy to attribute it in future.
It's less about who I am than how often I used the phrase. Anyone who's been around long enough to have read many of my CMB posts will have certainly read it whether or not they recall it, and I even used it a few times when I still posted on the WoTMB regularly. It's not beyond the realm of possibility that you remember (most of) the phrase without recalling who said it or even that someone else did, but: I did say it long before this, many times, and feel within my right correcting a misquotation made in ignorance or otherwise.
It is not a quotation, mis- or otherwise. If you even did say that, it is a coincidental combination of words. Why don't you post a list of your trademark phrases so everyone knows not to claim them? Unlike you, I DO have a phrase that I did not even know was mine, but people attribute it to me anyway, "Cannoli's PoV trap." I certainly don't go around in a snit when people make a reference to that concept, whether or not they attribute it to me, even if they DO seem to think it is mine.

Oddly enough I DID post a list of my stock phrases near the end of wotmania, mainly because few people were posting much of anything and I thought it might generate a little discussion. Unfortunately the only limited discussion was the consensus that too much of it was about God (as Shakespeare would say, "the fault, dear Brutus.... " ) It took me a while to get that particular phrase exactly as I wanted it, to make it concise while preserving meaning, so it didn't make the list, but if it will help you out I'll add it and repost the list for remedial reasons. :P
Only one "variable" was changed (though its usage is closer to a constant here, since it's appealed to as an absolute. ) To say that all x stems from y because otherwise z can and will revoke x when they please isn't terribly common at all.
Expand your circles beyond your self-congratulatory socialist blogs. Classical liberals and their contemporary admirers and students routinely reference the notion as a given that what the government grants the government can take away.

Actually THAT phrase used THAT way is, I believe, a Reaganism, and I doubt he nor Nancy would appreciate him being styled a "classical" or any other kind of liberal. However, saying a government big enough to give you everything is big enough to take everything isn't at all the same as saying that a non-universal right is just a privilege from an elite who'll rescind it at will. Again, and for the record, I've only ever posted on one political forum, and it did happen to be liberal (theoretically; it began as the Kerry/Edwards campaign forum and I only joined because they were missing OBVIOUS campaign opportunities and I felt even my scant help could benefit them. ) I was active for about a year, and that was five years ago.
In fact, I've only seen it two places: Many of my posts, and one of yours (in that order. ) Not in Chesterton, to date. Link...?
Chesteron was the actual phrase in quotation marks, and everything else was pure me.

I did ultimately find the Chesterton quote within the piece and then understood that was the one you meant, but thanks for the clarification.
I won't speculate on your motives or anything else, but trying to defend claiming someone elses statement as your own on the basis that you don't respect them enough to quote is pathetically weak.
But true. Is your assertion that you are the inventor of a phrasing any less so? I still don't even know what your words are that I supposedly "quoted." In addition, if I WAS using your quote, I would have been mocking the idea, since, as you point out, it is different in meaning. If I was mocking it, I would have either had to assume the idea was so widespread as to be in the public domain, and thus no citation was needed or I would have had to specify who it was in order to mock him properly, otherwise there would be no point. In any event, you are not significant enough to cite as an authority OR mock.

You clearly DO know what words I'm referencing, since you just said others have used similar phrasing for similar meaning, though you still haven't managed to precisely articulate a thought you NEARLY struck at the start of all this. It's entirely possible to mock a notion without identifying its source, but clearly that was not the intent here since you used the phrase in a positive context. It seems far more likely that you encountered the phrase (whether or not you recall doing so) and subsequently misapplied the meaning, hence the change of one very important word.
Right, and that's a valid position, but on recognizing that you liked the way someone better stated a position at which you both arrived you quoted them and identified it as a quote. That's what you're supposed to do. Consistently. If only so that people can go directly to your source and verify you haven't misquoted them. Misquoting them in a way that turns their statement on its head and not bothering to cite them is... a mistake... at best....
I assumed it was more recognizable.

News to me, but I don't read a lot of Chesterton; I believe the two of you have more in common than he and I do. ;)
There has never nor will there ever be a perfect democracy, in part because conflicting rights must be resolved and in part because humans are fallen beings. "Natural rights" is a non-starter because nature itself endows little more than the "right" to die, and appeals to a higher authority run afoul of the problem that not everyone recognizes the same authority, so not everyone would respect rights granted by any particular one.
Did you forget the part about fallen beings one sentence later? The failure of people to respect someone's inherent rights to life, liberty and property does not invalidate the rights. That is what makes them "natural" - they do not require a human authority to authorize them, and a society which does not recognize them is immoral and unjust.

I'm inclined to agree with at least the last statement but, as I say, there has not been and will never be a perfect democracy because we are fallen beings. As much as I admire Jefferson though I'm dubious that life or much of anything else is a God given RIGHT; a bear can come along and eat you in the wilderness without any consideration of a right to life, just as disease can deny you the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. As I said elsewhere, the chief value of governments and societies lies in recognizing human beings have such rights, but the principle of "rights" really only applies where there exists an entity that respects such concepts. Apart from that there are only things for which you have or lack the ability.
Though if we go there I must ask: If natural rights aren't synonymous with civil rights does that mean lower animals possess them? Asserting the "rights" of a man alone is absurd because rights don't become a relevant concept until threatened (i.e. multiple humans arguing whose rights take precedence. ) Try railing at God about infringed rights next time you're struck by lightning (which I suspect is imminent.... :P) Note, btw, that not only are you asserting natural rights to preempt property rights (which you say in the disputed statement are preeminent) but essentially equating them with civil rights (unless we accept them as granted by a Creator, which is fine, as soon as we agree on WHICH Creator, and until then irrelevant for social contracts. ) Calling civil rights natural rights because you don't want to concede the primacy of the former is semantics that should be beneath us both.

Let's get the semantics out of the way then. Natural rights are those rights all human beings are endowed with in regards to each other, by virtue of their being human beings. They apply only to human conduct towards one another, but are inherent and sacrosanct. They are best summed up as "Life, liberty and property," though there are other rights and practices which extend from them, and they are often expanded upon.

Civil rights are those rights in a society which are granted by society, and protected under law.

You appear to be working under an expanded and invented definition of civil rights. In your parlance, I would not recognize any civil rights beyond the first generation.

On the contrary, it seems to me, rightly or wrongly, you're still attempting semantic games. "Natural rights are those rights all human beings are endowed with in regards to each other, by virtue of their being human beings. They apply only to human conduct towards one another, but are inherent and sacrosanct" but "Civil rights are those rights in a society which are granted by society, and protected under law. " Emphasis mine, btw. When you speak of human endowments "in regards to each other; " you are speaking of civilization, of society, as when you elaborate that "They apply only to human conduct towards one another; " you are no longer speaking of a lone man with his God given rights in a vacuum. The only distinction that seems possible on those grounds is that a civil right is a natural right that has the explicit sanction of law, but I would counter that a "civilization" that grants no such sanction is not so much a civilization as a series of individuals who coincidentally occupy the same vicinity. Further, with respect to America specifically, thanks to the Ninth and Tenth Amendments the distinction between a right "in regards to each other" that applies "only to human conduct towards one another" it is truly a meaningless distinction because "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people" and "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people" so natural as well as civil rights have the explicit if not ennumerated sanction of no less authority than the US Constitution, and are equally protected by law, thus in America they are synonymous by your definition. If you wish to "drown that noxious idea in blood" you may have your work cut out for you. ;)
On that last point we agree. Slavery was, however, an infringement on personal rights, and asserting one of those personal rights (property) in its defense was inane.
I agree, MORALLY speaking. However, as a government principle, it is trickier ground. The GOVERNMENT recognized property rights of slaveowners before and throughout the Civil War (in fact, shortly after the war, the only slave in the South belonged to Ulysses S Grant, since once the Confederacy had surrendered, the Emancipation Proclamation was de facto law, and all the slaves, even those still in practical bondage were now freed by it. However, when Mrs. Grant came to join her husband in the South, she brought her own slave, who was not freed under that noxious document), and their attempts to interfere with what THEY recognized as private property demonstrated a dangerous disregard for a crucial right and freedom. After all, if today they can decide that they have the power to strip property rights that are legally acknowledged, tomorrow they can apply the same precedent to some other, more morally grounded property rights. Fallen beings, remember - the property owners were liable to paranoid fears and the government officials were liable to abuse power.

I actually do agree there; the Civil War was, IMHO, the right war for the wrong reasons, which is why the peace was so awful. It's also, I suspect, why Lincoln was shot days after the war ended; had he lived, his Reconstruction plan was even less onerous than the one that got Johnson an impeachment trial (I believe the line was "with malice toward none, with charity for all" ) and I doubt he would've allowed the mammoth growth of corporate power and impoverishment of the South. In 1850 7/10 of the richest US states were in the South; by 1870 the Southern states were the poorest, and this generally remains the case. Had the war been fought in defense of civil rights (those held by the people and recognized as such by the government sworn to protect them) we would all be much better off, and assertions of states rights would remain the honorable and justified duty envisioned by the Founders rather than raising the specter of treason as it generally does today. I have no problem if someone wants to repeal the Ninth and Tenth Amendments to deny either state or civil rights, but there's a process for doing that, and it isn't "invade Virginia. "
The shameful part is that Northern politicians allowed it to be done, accepted the debate in those terms, in the service of abolishing states rights (of which secession is one) along with slavery. For most states the understanding secession was legitimate was a condition of ratifying the Constitution, and no lesser light than Thomas Jefferson asserted its legitimacy within a generation of the Civil War. Yet to affirm it now is considered tantamount to treason. All because the North let the South make slavery about property rights then bashed their heads in until the Northern view prevailed.
Correct. In addition, they have used the fallacious argument that there was no other way to end slavery as a justification, in an effort to subvert people's moral principles to gain their support for an act of barbaric tyranny. Is the elevation of a million people from slavery to poverty morally equivalent to killing half a million? I find the moral assertions of people's right to certain goods and services to be much in the same vein.

I noticed, but then, I'm inclined to agree even if my response to the basic question is different. Yes, the freedom of a million is worth half a million dying, especially if a 300,000 of those died trying to DENY that freedom. But of course, that's only the way it went if you accept the victors account of history, the same people who point to Plymouth Rock as the first American colony because it's inconvenient to remember Jamestown was thirteen years earlier (and for that matter there were already French and Spanish colonies in the present day US even in 1607. ) Of one thing you may be certain, however you answer the question: If a mans family is dying of thirst and you tell him he has to kill you to get water from your well, that's exactly what he'll do, and you know darned good and well you'd do the same in his position. Hence Joe Kennedys comment that he'd gladly give up half of all he had to keep the other half in security. That wasn't about empowering the government, it was about keeping the mob off his doorstep.
Meanwhile, I've noted several civil rights regarded near universally as sacrosanct and that have zero to do with property rights.
Name one genuine civil right that has nothing to do with life, liberty or property. Even those amendments dealing with states rights and rights reserved to the people spring from the natural right to liberty.

Yes, I note that you've changed from "property rights are fundamental" to "natural rights are fundamental" but since you've defined "natural rights" in a way that makes them synonymous with "civil rights" obviously I can't define them in a way that doesn't include what they are. Good try changing horses in midstream, but your dismount was sloppy. ;)
Most could be denied without affecting property rights at all, but property rights could be completely denied without affecting any.
Sure, in theory. In practice, the lack of property rights strips people of the means to oppose the government and protect their rights. While PACs and corporate donors have made "campaign contributions" a dirty phrase, the fact is, running for office requires money, which is property. Without the right of people to spend money as they please, how can they participate in the democractic process? Without the ability to choose what to buy and how much to spend, how can market forces ever produce goods. People ARE fallen beings, and ARE motivated by greed and self interest. Including the people in government. As long as "the" people have their rights to own and dispose of their property as they wish protected, corporations and service providers will be forced to kowtow to the will of the people. The surest form of power is money, and the best way to bring power to the people is by allowing them to have the most money they can get or keep.

The surest form of power is power; that's what so many Libertarians forget, that the only thing keeping criminals individually or in groups coming to their homes with guns and TAKING what they want is that same government tyranny they castigate. That prevents corporate monopolies having to kowtow to the people even more than their absolute control over vital necessities like food, shelter and medical care. That people must resort to force either directly or collectively via law is the prime example of why "natural rights" are in practice the same as "civil rights. "
So any "arrogant... limitation[s]" on mental faculty are not mine. Hmmm... can someone really make the longest posts on the site if half of what they say they're just regurgitating without citing...?
It's an argument on an internet site whose number of active users seldom hits three figures, not a dissertion or graduate thesis.

True enough, but character is who you are in the dark. I'd attribute that if I knew the original source, but I don't; it sounds like Twain.
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It is, I believe, hardest for the intelligent educated man. - 21/01/2010 10:29:39 AM 712 Views
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LOL... *NM* - 18/01/2010 05:21:14 AM 338 Views
You and Adam are being equally unconstructive. - 18/01/2010 06:21:45 AM 535 Views
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*shrug* I never stopped believing in lost causes? - 18/01/2010 07:36:04 AM 523 Views
Re: You can't use logic in an irrational argument. - 18/01/2010 06:28:41 AM 665 Views
Always welcome. - 18/01/2010 07:31:27 AM 761 Views
We finally converted you - 17/01/2010 08:43:25 PM 547 Views
Not much of a friend then. Good ridance to bad friends. *NM* - 17/01/2010 08:51:02 PM 409 Views
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Only because such sentiment is my pet peeve...condemning exclusivity is hypocritical. *NM* - 19/01/2010 12:37:37 AM 297 Views
yeah no kidding - 18/01/2010 06:30:45 AM 536 Views
It forces other people to accept THEIR ideology that same sex unions are legitimate. - 18/01/2010 01:49:20 AM 702 Views
I would assume, then, that you don't support any government-mandated health care? - 18/01/2010 02:07:40 AM 535 Views
Correct - 18/01/2010 04:29:04 AM 620 Views
Although I disagree with the vast majority of your arguments, - 18/01/2010 08:50:09 AM 611 Views
Thank you. - 20/01/2010 01:47:34 AM 761 Views
Please tell me you have a source for that quotation. Other than me. - 21/01/2010 12:31:27 PM 621 Views
It's GK Chesterton! What the hell are you going on about? - 27/01/2010 02:41:00 AM 500 Views
Link? - 27/01/2010 09:28:22 AM 591 Views
I can't find a link to the exact quote - 27/01/2010 12:14:19 PM 709 Views
Re: Link? - 27/01/2010 01:38:36 PM 729 Views
Perhaps we should define our terms more precisely. - 15/02/2010 11:28:09 AM 1090 Views
we do not exist in a free market. - 18/01/2010 04:09:37 AM 542 Views
And that's bad. Since when has the correct response to oppression been "accept further oppression"? *NM* - 18/01/2010 04:30:44 AM 276 Views
I am simply pointing out your arguments do not apply to the present economic environment. - 18/01/2010 04:46:04 AM 498 Views
No I am not. - 19/01/2010 10:44:31 PM 620 Views
That's utter nonsense. - 18/01/2010 04:19:57 AM 572 Views
Re: That's utter nonsense. - 18/01/2010 04:41:27 AM 593 Views
civil marriages DO have a purpose. - 18/01/2010 04:49:12 AM 571 Views
Re: civil marriages DO have a purpose. - 19/01/2010 10:47:18 PM 629 Views
Re: That's utter nonsense. - 18/01/2010 07:13:54 AM 574 Views
Re: That's utter nonsense. - 19/01/2010 10:59:45 PM 544 Views
Re: That's utter nonsense. - 18/01/2010 07:15:50 AM 662 Views
Re: That's utter nonsense. - 20/01/2010 01:38:37 AM 458 Views
Are you at all surprised? - 18/01/2010 07:59:30 AM 567 Views
A truly free country means I don't have the freedom to shoot you - 18/01/2010 05:57:44 AM 652 Views
You really said nothing, right there. - 18/01/2010 08:34:33 AM 606 Views
I presume you are equally against the current set up - 18/01/2010 12:31:33 PM 648 Views
He said as much in his response to me above. *NM* - 18/01/2010 09:37:49 PM 224 Views
That's such an amusing argument - 18/01/2010 08:17:15 PM 536 Views
I'm against people with pasta based nicknames on fantasy forums *NM* - 19/01/2010 03:03:31 PM 234 Views
cannoli is a pastry *NM* - 19/01/2010 07:25:04 PM 213 Views
I have no problem with people with pastry based names, just pasta - 21/01/2010 12:28:44 AM 487 Views
I can't help but find it funny - 18/01/2010 12:51:57 PM 506 Views
So... - 18/01/2010 03:39:33 PM 637 Views
I think you missed who was the one to walk out - 18/01/2010 04:11:05 PM 531 Views
you acept your friends with their warts or you don't - 18/01/2010 06:45:13 PM 645 Views
I think you missed who was the one to walk out *NM* - 18/01/2010 08:01:25 PM 206 Views
I don't think it was that clear - 18/01/2010 10:01:32 PM 557 Views
I don't think it is all that clear yet, either - 18/01/2010 10:27:54 PM 598 Views
I wasn't taking sides - 18/01/2010 10:57:39 PM 473 Views

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