RedPiggy
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And it's not just oil. I've been kind of on an American History documentary kick, and we reached the Depression, including a massive dust storm that would make The Mummy's Imhotep cower in fear, LOL. This is all due to our "shoot first, ask questions later" mentality: we do something for short-term benefits and never think of the consequences, and when those consequences show up, it's never our own dang fault. Whether it's using oil (this was not always the case, as our country began with the use of whale oil, which naturally had an even shorter supply and I'm willing to bet the country heard the same whining about how our way of life NEEDED to kill a handful of God's biggest creatures so we can light a dang lamp), or not using windbreaks on farms, or plowing through a swamp (watch out, Kermit!) ... it NEVER occurs to a lot of this country such ideas could have a downside, and anyone who mentions there COULD be one is voted off the island for being a delusional naysayer (coughglobalwarmingcough).DrTooth said:What do the Conservatives that were just elected by angry old people want to cut most from the budget (besides Medicare)? Researching new alternative sources. We've been warned about oil since the 70's, and no one did a darn thing. We keep getting into deals with terrorists then fighting them to get the junk... It's not worth it! I don't see why they still deserve the tax cut AND a bug fat check bonus for NOT doing anything.
Yeah. I actually wouldn't mind a conservative plan. I know it's possible. It's just frustrating no "conservative" is actually conservative ....I'd love nothing MORE than an actual factual isolationist to come out, but we're not going to get one.
Well, I've been both pro-life and pro-choice. I can see both sides. I just don't feel the former position is based on anything but their own quirks. I don't mind people being against something because they think it's icky. I just wish, like gay marriage and other hot topics, they'd just leave alone topics that don't really affect them at all (and this is not to be a male dig ... if women don't want abortions, then just simply don't have them ... DON'T drag the rest of the female population into your desires).frogboy4 said:I hate the abortion issue because it's a double edged sword where no one really listens to the other side and none of it will ever be solved in our lifetime.
Well, it's like Adam and Eve ... "I gave you a rule" doesn't do much if hormones are talking louder. Once conception occurs ... it's a little late to bemoan the situation, IMHO. All you can do is deal with the present situation, not whine endlessly about how Johnny and Jane "shoulda known better". They're basically KIDS ... they're NOT going to know better. Yes, they might be able to rattle off all the facts about sex, but memorizing trivia and living the experience are two different things and a lot of people can't cope with what biology tells them.Teenagers have a way of breaking the rules and will continue to do so no matter how watchful parents are. An after-the-fact "I told you so" just doesn't remedy anything.
I've been a staunch supporter of transforming our culture AWAY from focuses on sex, so that we aren't priming poorly controlled hormonal drives. However, there's also the historical fact that the modern world has infantilized an age group that in ancient cultures would've been adults with all the rights therein. Perhaps by altering our perceptions of what makes an adult, we have forced our views to ignore realities and thus created this monster ourselves. We claim teenagers have no sense ... but let's face it ... we don't let them express any. Yes, child psychology says its thing, but if it's one thing psychology has been historically good at, it's ignoring cultural influences on the "facts". We don't really prep teens for adult life at all. Knowing what year Columbus sailed the ocean blue doesn't exactly help a teenager know how to run a living space of some sort. I'm not saying they SHOULDN'T know those things ... but equal time should be spent providing basic life skills. You can argue the implications of western cultural influence in college. For me, it's more important a child grow up and not be completely helpless when the washer breaks.
Indeed. As pro-lifers and pro-choicers aren't likely to agree on the nature of the pre-born, the best I think we can hope for is that both sides work together to prevent all but the medically necessary ones. No amount of philosophy is going to change the fact that occasionally, the biology of the mother (or the child) just doesn't lend well to continuing the pregnancy.heralde said:Abstinence isn't the only thing proving ineffective. Kids are taught about safe sex, but then just throw the condoms away. So saying, "We'll educate them" is good in theory, but not always in practice.