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Previous comments... You are currently on page 4.
the L in ISIL, from Turkey to Egypt, they will be here
for us.
in the meantime, they just capture and behead our people
when we get in range. -- j
.
by getting out of my way! . and I agree about the Navy. -- j
.
a fine knowledge of history, we have fewer conservatives
around us than we think. . mis-labeling could be rampant. -- j
.
when some external force wants our land. . right now, of course,
we have this "war" being waged against us by ISIS, a new
state of sorts, which warrants some concern. -- j
.
cadre of folks in here, and I really appreciate the variety. . students
of Rand may be the best term for many of us, and we make
mistakes, discoveries, new analogies every day -- it's great! -- j
.
While the Constitution does not directly address a standing army, the government can only do those things specifically allowed and it does not state that federal government can have a standing army and having an army when it is not needed is also inconsistent with the Constitution
.
with acceptance for values from others who bring value from many
corners of the world. . this includes conservatives, Christians,
Buddhists, agnostics, atheists, pilots, artists, even short-order cooks.
there is no contradiction in the allegation that conservatives may
operate exclusively by rational means. . I know several. -- j
p.s. it seems that you are checking my premises, not your own.
and nothing much disturbs me, anymore;;; the government already
disturbed me for 37 of my 67 years.
.
I would dare to bet that there are several who still persist
here in the gulch. . and reverence is just a word which
does not necessarily carry theological connotations,
as you seem to infer. . I use it for secular purposes like
reverence for rights and nature, as I mentioned. . it's sad that
I should censor my language here -- just for you? -- j
.
this seems strange to me, since the first requirement of
the government is national defense. -- j
.
You begin with a reply to dbhailing:
"If it has anything to do with appreciating the constitution
and its creators, then reverence for work done in the past
might be appropriate, don't you think? -- j"
then when he disagrees with you:
"But that is the rub, it is not. The founders were not conservatives. How can you honor the founders, by ignoring what they stood for?"
You respond with:
"understood. . I agree totally. -- j"
Then you respond to a comment by me in the same thread at a later time:
" I thought that we should be talking about
current conservatives who want smaller government,
less -- or NO -- corruption, a military designed for defense
rather than nation-building, the elimination of punitive taxes,
and the like. . That is Pertinent to Today, IMHO. -- j"
My interest in these and other comments to you is not to persecute you, but to try to understand and discover your real philosophy, particularly resulting from the numbers of headline posts from WND and the contradictions I find in your various involvements on the site. What I'm doing is checking my premises against the statements you make, their connotations, and contexts.
I trust that none of that disturbs you. I think that I make my philosophy totally apparent in my posts and comments on the site as do most of us.
As to 'reverence is just a word', words have meanings and connotations and in this case expresses something that causes me to have antipathy to it.
reverence:
noun
1. a feeling or attitude of deep respect tinged with awe; veneration.
2. the outward manifestation of this feeling:
to pay reverence.
3. a gesture indicative of deep respect; an obeisance, bow, or curtsy.
4. the state of being revered, or treated with respect tinged with awe.
5. (initial capital letter) a title used in addressing or mentioning a member of the clergy (usually preceded by your or his).
In order to discuss your current conservatives, I would have to accept a gov't that still insists on being involved with and intruding into my everyday life, allbeit more efficiently, and a standing army which is not allowed per the Constitution nor Objectivist thought and principles.
faking anything are not exclusively the property of objectivists.
a person who calls him/herself a conservative may use
that term to describe the same views as an objectivist
and may need only a little nudge to see that the old arcane
meaning of conservative doesn't fit. . they might then choose
to call themselves something else. . okay? . the sledgehammer
approach might be less persuasive than a friendlier way.
you might want to consider that welcoming people to the
gulch who are exploring ideas from a conservative or a
Christian or an agnostic background could yield more
objectivists downstream than if you rail at anything which
even remotely smells of an impure thought. . let them
explore and learn rather than driving them away, OK? -- j
.
The latter you may think of as a box of popcorn with a canon ball in charge on a boat with a pitching deck.
The former is the same box of popcorn with five or six big size steelies.
For the popcorn the day is much the same.
The rest of it is precisely the same for each of the two forms of socialism.
voluntarily, I swore allegiance to the constitution and did not
swear allegiance to subsequent political perversion of it. -- j
.
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