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Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?

#5621 User is offline   ldrews 

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Posted 2017-April-09, 17:35

 cherdano, on 2017-April-09, 15:08, said:

I think you misunderstand ldrews' way of life. He chose to live in Mexico, and he thinks Trump's greatest achievement is keeping more Mexicans out of the USA. The guy presumably despises and distrusts everyone he meets. (I always thought "misanthropic" is a theoretical over-the-top construct, but obviously ldrews fits the description perfectly, and there is no other single word describing him better.)


I am amused at the way that you continually mis-characterize me or put words in my mouth. I support Trump's actions to bring discipline back into our immigration and border control. I only favor keeping "illegal" Mexicans and "illegal" anybody out of the US. I happen to like Mexicans a lot; one of the reasons I live in Mexico. But that is no excuse for lax border control. The Mexican government certainly doesn't practice lax border control.

I was taught from an early age that trust is earned. If I do business with you I start small to see if you are, indeed, a trustworthy person. So initially I assume you are, but verify. I used to be naive, like you, and assume everyone is trustworthy. Having been burned several times, I no longer do.
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#5622 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 00:38

 ldrews, on 2017-April-09, 14:43, said:

If you think your life or family's safety depends on it, then perhaps it would be wise to do so until you find out otherwise. If you don't think your life or your family's safety depends on your assumption, then no. The problem is you may not know the answer until it is too late.

Idrews, please tell me, are you a bridge player? I am asking because bridge players understand something about percentages, probabilities, risks and rewards.

The probability that you, or a family member, will be killed or injured or that your property will be damaged by a Muslim terrorist is extremely small. So, just enjoy some good kebab, falafel, or satay and don't worry. Just like the millions of people who go on skiing holidays and don't get killed by an avalanche do, or the millions of people who book a sun vacation and don't get skin cancer, or the people who go fishing and whose boat doesn't sink, or ...

Rik
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#5623 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 06:58

 ldrews, on 2017-April-09, 17:35, said:

I am amused at the way that you continually mis-characterize me or put words in my mouth. I support Trump's actions to bring discipline back into our immigration and border control. I only favor keeping "illegal" Mexicans and "illegal" anybody out of the US. I happen to like Mexicans a lot; one of the reasons I live in Mexico. But that is no excuse for lax border control. The Mexican government certainly doesn't practice lax border control.

I was taught from an early age that trust is earned. If I do business with you I start small to see if you are, indeed, a trustworthy person. So initially I assume you are, but verify. I used to be naive, like you, and assume everyone is trustworthy. Having been burned several times, I no longer do.


There is a significant difference between mistrust and fear. Assuming everyone trustworthy is naive; assuming all Muslims a potential physical threat is an irrational fear.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#5624 User is offline   ldrews 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 07:40

 Winstonm, on 2017-April-10, 06:58, said:

There is a significant difference between mistrust and fear. Assuming everyone trustworthy is naive; assuming all Muslims a potential physical threat is an irrational fear.


My experience is that fear is always irrational. Once a threat is perceived by the body/mind rational thought seems possible only to the highly trained. Do you have a different experience?
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#5625 User is offline   ldrews 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 07:44

 Trinidad, on 2017-April-10, 00:38, said:

Idrews, please tell me, are you a bridge player? I am asking because bridge players understand something about percentages, probabilities, risks and rewards.

The probability that you, or a family member, will be killed or injured or that your property will be damaged by a Muslim terrorist is extremely small. So, just enjoy some good kebab, falafel, or satay and don't worry. Just like the millions of people who go on skiing holidays and don't get killed by an avalanche do, or the millions of people who book a sun vacation and don't get skin cancer, or the people who go fishing and whose boat doesn't sink, or ...

Rik


Try a simple experiment. Place a 12 inch wide 20 ft long plank on the ground. Now walk the length back and forth. No problem, right. Now place that same plank 100 ft in the air. Now try to walk that plank back and forth. Rationally there is no difference, right? Then why does almost everyone experience fear in the second case?
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#5626 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 08:18

 ldrews, on 2017-April-10, 07:44, said:

Try a simple experiment. Place a 12 inch wide 20 ft long plank on the ground. Now walk the length back and forth. No problem, right. Now place that same plank 100 ft in the air. Now try to walk that plank back and forth. Rationally there is no difference, right? Then why does almost everyone experience fear in the second case?


Because there's no consequence of failure in the first case, also there is always the chance of a gust of wind in the second.

Quote

My experience is that fear is always irrational. Once a threat is perceived by the body/mind rational thought seems possible only to the highly trained. Do you have a different experience?


I help run a guild in a MMORG. We had an incident where one of our members said some Islamophobic stuff. Turns out he's an Aussie who lost one or more family member in the Bali bombings and it's screwed him up ever since. To him, the fear/loathing is all too rational.
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#5627 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 08:21

 cherdano, on 2017-April-09, 15:08, said:

I think you misunderstand ldrews' way of life. He chose to live in Mexico, and he thinks Trump's greatest achievement is keeping more Mexicans out of the USA. The guy presumably despises and distrusts everyone he meets. (I always thought "misanthropic" is a theoretical over-the-top construct, but obviously ldrews fits the description perfectly, and there is no other single word describing him better.)

Channeling Hrothgar is not the way to improve the discourse. Alternate views, as right or wrong as they may appear to be, provide context and perspective. We can teach by what we learn and not by what (we think) we know. That is how science advances human knowledge, not by dictat or by obligation.
The Grand Design, reflected in the face of Chaos...it's a fluke!
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#5628 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 08:25

 Winstonm, on 2017-April-09, 16:07, said:

I guess I am unlike you in that I do not enounter "Muslims" but people, some good, some bad.

On that point, I just got back from a trip to Lisbon where we stayed in an airbnb apartment that we had to walk up to and down from every day, passing, on a very narrow street, a Muslim restaurant and many street sellers from North Africa. I never once felt concerned for my safety.

People are people. There are crazies, sure. Most people, though, are just trying to live their lives and get by.

I also just got back from a month on the Costa-del-sol where the locals were about 20% muslim and the "mix" of ideologies did not clash. A rich tapestry of diversity. Each individual a part of the whole, to be taken as they present themselves, for better or for worse. (btw, our Airbnb place was fantastic).
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#5629 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 08:28

 ldrews, on 2017-April-10, 07:44, said:

Try a simple experiment. Place a 12 inch wide 20 ft long plank on the ground. Now walk the length back and forth. No problem, right. Now place that same plank 100 ft in the air. Now try to walk that plank back and forth. Rationally there is no difference, right? Then why does almost everyone experience fear in the second case?

If you mean that suddenly the consequences of a mistake are graver then you don't understand me at all.

The comparison is not between facing a potential Muslim terrorist and taking a finesse at the bridge table. That question was to see if you understand something about probabilities. The comparison is between the probability that the Muslim you meet will blow himself up and the probability that the fishing boat you rented will sink.

In both cases you risk serious injury, so for both going fishing and facing a Muslim your "plank" ia already 100 ft in the air. Yet, you don't seem to have any problems to go fishing "100 ft in the air", but facing a Muslim "100 ft in the air" scares the bejeebers out of you.

To complete your comparison, in both cases the probability that something goes wrong is extremely small (but not zero). This translates in a properly constructed, solid "plank" of about 100 ft wide with handrails. We call those things "bridges".

So, given your background in bridge, why are you scared to walk the bridge called "Muslim", but have no problem walking the bridge called "fishing"?

Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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#5630 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 08:35

 ldrews, on 2017-April-09, 17:28, said:

In general I agree with you. But just like there are sections of Chicago that I avoid because the risk/reward ratio is not good, there are now classes of people/culture I would avoid for the same reason.



 ldrews, on 2017-April-09, 17:35, said:

I was taught from an early age that trust is earned. If I do business with you I start small to see if you are, indeed, a trustworthy person. So initially I assume you are, but verify. I used to be naive, like you, and assume everyone is trustworthy. Having been burned several times, I no longer do.

Please tell us more from your rich life experience, grandpa!

However, unlike you, I grew up in a town that had maybe 25% Muslims, including a similar percentage of my high-school classmates. I have lived for altogether 35 years in countries with a percentage of Muslims about five times that of the US (Germany, UK). Yet, somehow, miraculously I have survived all that, despite my naivety!

Oh, and yes I don't trust everyone. In my experience, the least trust-worthy group of people are cranky guys with a bigoted aversions against some "other" group, regardless of whether I belong to that "other" group - ignorant sexist guys, anyone with a phobia against some group of immigrants, anyone antisemitic, etc.
The easiest way to count losers is to line up the people who talk about loser count, and count them. -Kieran Dyke
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#5631 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 09:14

 Cyberyeti, on 2017-April-10, 08:18, said:

I help run a guild in a MMORG. We had an incident where one of our members said some Islamophobic stuff. Turns out he's an Aussie who lost one or more family member in the Bali bombings and it's screwed him up ever since. To him, the fear/loathing is all too rational.

Except it isn't. "Once bitten, twice shy" is not good logic, because the one bite will often be an outlier.

If there's no other evidence, the best you can do is generalize from what has happened to you. But in this case, all you have to do is notice that there are 1.6 billion Muslims in the world, but maybe a few thousand of them are terrorists, to realize that his family's experience is an exception, not the rule.

It's like someone whose family member was killed in the WTC being afraid to go into a skyscraper.

#5632 User is online   awm 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 09:25

As long as we're talking about being scared of particular types of people, I'm most afraid of people who:

1. Are white. As a white person living in America, I am much more likely to be murdered by a white person than a black or brown person.
2. Own guns. Most murders in the US are with guns.
3. Believe crazy conspiracy-theory stuff. This seems to be a common factor in people who shoot up schools, movie theaters, etc. While most people are murdered by people they know, I have a pretty "safe" set of friends (I think, maybe everyone thinks this). Most mass-shootings are by "crazies" as far as I can tell.
4. Are anti-semitic or anti-technology/globalization. This is maybe more personal, as a (non-practicing) Jew working in tech.

The interesting thing is, when you put these together the profile looks an awful lot like a typical Trump supporter!
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#5633 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 12:04

 awm, on 2017-April-10, 09:25, said:

The interesting thing is, when you put these together the profile looks an awful lot like a typical Trump supporter!

It also looks like it includes a large majority of Americans. Maybe ldrews had the right idea leaving the country. Mexico should be safe, since according to Trump they're sending their rapists and murderers over here.

#5634 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 12:22

 barmar, on 2017-April-10, 09:14, said:

Except it isn't. "Once bitten, twice shy" is not good logic, because the one bite will often be an outlier.

If there's no other evidence, the best you can do is generalize from what has happened to you. But in this case, all you have to do is notice that there are 1.6 billion Muslims in the world, but maybe a few thousand of them are terrorists, to realize that his family's experience is an exception, not the rule.

It's like someone whose family member was killed in the WTC being afraid to go into a skyscraper.


Islamophobia covers 2 things, while the fear may not be totally rational, the loathing absolutely is.

Stuff like this happens, the one serious crime ever committed against me was done by members of a particular ethnic group, and moreover, the police basically knew who'd done it within seconds of being told what had happened and caught the culprits red handed 15 minutes later, they were expecting it before it happened, just didn't know where. Is it irrational to have a measure of prejudice against that group of people ?
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#5635 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 12:47

 ldrews, on 2017-April-10, 07:40, said:

My experience is that fear is always irrational. Once a threat is perceived by the body/mind rational thought seems possible only to the highly trained. Do you have a different experience?


My experience is that fear is an expression of anger. As with most emotions, the time to deal with fear/anger is prior to the emotive rise.
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#5636 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 13:02

 Cyberyeti, on 2017-April-10, 12:22, said:

Islamophobia covers 2 things, while the fear may not be totally rational, the loathing absolutely is.

Stuff like this happens, the one serious crime ever committed against me was done by members of a particular ethnic group, and moreover, the police basically knew who'd done it within seconds of being told what had happened and caught the culprits red handed 15 minutes later, they were expecting it before it happened, just didn't know where. Is it irrational to have a measure of prejudice against that group of people ?


IMO, the problem we all have is that we can't recognize the enemy. During WWII, the enemy was pretty clear-cut. The line began to blur in Vietnam. There is now a group of people who have declared a type of guerrilla war on the rest of the world. There is really no way to distinguish who those people are - we like to "place" a uniform on "the enemy" (Muslim garb) to make us feel more secure when none are around. But that is a false security. The 9-11 hijackers did not advertise with religious garb - the guys driving vehicles into pedestrians don't seem to be advertising, either.

As for religious affiliation, it seems to me the terrorists have about the same connection to Islam as Jim Jones or David Koresh had to Protestanism. Crazies always find a reason - for some it is religion - others, a religious-like belief system.
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#5637 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 15:33

 Cyberyeti, on 2017-April-10, 12:22, said:

Islamophobia covers 2 things, while the fear may not be totally rational, the loathing absolutely is.

Stuff like this happens, the one serious crime ever committed against me was done by members of a particular ethnic group, and moreover, the police basically knew who'd done it within seconds of being told what had happened and caught the culprits red handed 15 minutes later, they were expecting it before it happened, just didn't know where. Is it irrational to have a measure of prejudice against that group of people ?

There's a big difference between a fear of a specific group of people who are known to have a history of violence, and fear of an enormous group because of the actions of a small faction within them.

Anyone who lives in or near a big city knows that there are dangerous neighborhoods that they should avoid (assuming they don't actually live in these neighborhoods). This isn't irrational fear, there's a history of problems. It's also quite likely that most of the residents there are ethnic minorities -- that doesn't make this fear racist.

But being afraid of all black men, not just those in Roxbury (one of the dangerous sections of Boston) is an irrational, racist generalzation.

#5638 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 17:38

We mustn't rush blindfold into WW3.
The least we can do is start a transparent independent investigation of the chemical-attack, discounting predictable propaganda from both sides.
Or perhaps Cherdano can tell us:
  • What was the chemical? Was it a gas? Sarin (consistent with rebel descriptions)? or Chlorine (more consistent with rescue-workers in short-sleeves)? or something else?.
  • Was there a rebel weapons-facility near the town? Did it make or store chemical-weapons? Did it suffer air-attack?
  • It's unlikely that the Russians would undermine their credibility by colluding in a chemical-attack after volunteering to supervise the destruction of Syrian chemical-weapons. But it might have been a terrible mistake or the act of a rogue commander.


With less posturing and brinkmanship, we could have avoided WW1 and saved millions of lives.
Now, the stakes are higher.
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#5639 User is online   blackshoe 

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Posted 2017-April-10, 17:40

 barmar, on 2017-April-10, 15:33, said:

Anyone who lives in or near a big city knows that there are dangerous neighborhoods that they should avoid (assuming they don't actually live in these neighborhoods). This isn't irrational fear, there's a history of problems. It's also quite likely that most of the residents there are ethnic minorities -- that doesn't make this fear racist.

But being afraid of all black men, not just those in Roxbury (one of the dangerous sections of Boston) is an irrational, racist generalzation.

Agree with that, though I should point out that likely most of the people who do live in those neighborhoods would like to avoid them.
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#5640 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2017-April-11, 07:57

 nige1, on 2017-April-10, 17:38, said:

We mustn't rush blindfold into WW3.
The least we can do is start a transparent independent investigation of the chemical-attack, discounting the completely predictable propaganda from both sides.
Or perhaps Cherdano can tell us:
  • What was the chemical? Was it a gas? Sarin (consistent with rebel descriptions)? or Chlorine (more consistent with rescue-workers in short-sleeves)? or something else?.
  • Was there a rebel weapons-facility near the town? Did it make or store chemical-weapons? Did it suffer air-attack?
  • It's unlikely that the Russians would undermine their credibility by colluding in a chemical-attack after volunteering to supervise the destruction of Syrian chemical-weapons. But it might have been a terrible mistake or the act of a rogue commander.


With less posturing and brinkmanship, we could have avoided WW1 and saved millions of lives.
Now, the stakes are higher.

https://t.co/cIOJPKQYsh

Yet another eye-witness account. Read to the end, as this source is fully recognisant of media vs. reality
..
The Grand Design, reflected in the face of Chaos...it's a fluke!
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