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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 11:32:38 AM   
kdsub


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quote:

I see revenge as a seperate entity entirely.


I would be interested in you describing a situation where revenge would not be considered justice by a third party. Even a revenge drive by shooting would be considered justice by one group or another.

I suppose I am nit picking on definitions but I truly cannot see a separation of the two words when viewed by opposing parties.

Nuf said however.

Butch

< Message edited by kdsub -- 1/5/2013 11:33:13 AM >


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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 11:42:23 AM   
hlen5


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quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

quote:

I see revenge as a seperate entity entirely.


I would be interested in you describing a situation where revenge would not be considered justice by a third party. Even a revenge drive by shooting would be considered justice by one group or another.

I suppose I am nit picking on definitions but I truly cannot see a separation of the two words when viewed by opposing parties.

Nuf said however.

Butch


It would be justice to pay the family for the lost wages of the parent that got run over by a car (and it still wouldn't be adequate compensation, of course). It would be revenge to run over the driver.

< Message edited by hlen5 -- 1/5/2013 11:43:15 AM >

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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 11:42:51 AM   
Aswad


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quote:

ORIGINAL: hlen5

I find that sad.


The glass is half full: it's still out there, and many still appreciate it when they encounter it.

quote:

I don't think people have changed in some inherent way since the beginning.


People haven't changed much. Circumstances have. But you're right that it's not a major change. In fact, the dual use of the word honor exists because the common man has never had a concept of honor, save for the extrinsic sense that is closer to face in its meaning. As such, it has always been rare, like most positive traits we can identify (indeed, it's the contrast that allows us to identify them and form meaningful ideas about what these traits are).

quote:

Do you believe honor is the aberration rather than the norm?


I believe the trait is normal distributed, and that the average falls far short of what I would consider "having it".

Kind of like any other trait; consider the saying that common sense is uncommon, for instance.

Nothing doom and gloom about it, just recognizing another area where we can grow.

IWYW,
— Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 11:46:06 AM   
hlen5


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Do you look at honor like pregnancy? You either are or you are not? Doesn't that set up honor as only an ideal? Who could be perfectly honorable?

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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 11:58:33 AM   
Aswad


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quote:

ORIGINAL: kdsub

I would be interested in you describing a situation where revenge would not be considered justice by a third party.


Quite true, revenge will always be seen as justice by someone.

Most people wouldn't know Justice if it bit them on the ass, even if it did have some consistent definition over time.

Once upon a time, justice was exact parity, the balancing of the scales, a part of MaɁat, the cosmic order of things. Under that idea of it, if you built a house for Alice, and loose stone fell down and killed a random passerby, then justice was Alice killing a random passerby at your house, balancing out the scales. Killing you, on the other hand, would not be considered Justice in that culture at that time, even though they had a concept of revenge, because you hadn't killed Alice herself, so it would be wrong for her to kill you yourself.

Going by some of the posts after Sandy Hook, some people have no concept of justice as seperate from vengeance at all.

Neither, apparently, did Lanza... to the detriment of a lot of people.

IWYW,
— Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 12:06:45 PM   
Aswad


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quote:

ORIGINAL: hlen5

Do you look at honor like pregnancy? You either are or you are not? Doesn't that set up honor as only an ideal? Who could be perfectly honorable?


No, it's not like being pregnant; rather, it's like being tall (or short). Height itself is distributed. Some people you'll call short, usually those in the leftmost tail of the distribution. Some people you'll call tall, again usually those in the rightmost tail of the distribution. Most will be in the center of the distribution, and you probably wouldn't call them either spontaneously. You would either call someone tall or not, and same thing with short or not, but that's a subjective sense of where you'd draw the line, not a rejection of the distribution of the scale.

ETA: I would also note that I object to the implication in the phrase "only an ideal"; none could be perfectly good, but "good" is still a valuable ideal, wouldn't you say?

IWYW,
— Aswad.


< Message edited by Aswad -- 1/5/2013 12:08:37 PM >


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 12:13:42 PM   
hlen5


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I said "only an ideal" in the context of unattainable. I do believe in honor being something very worthy.

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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 12:46:37 PM   
PeonForHer


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Aswad

quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer

The desire for revenge is involved in both, isn't it? If it isn't, what is the motivation for 'proportionate retribution'? What is the point of it?


The motivation for porportionate retribution is to impose a cost without escalating a conflict.


It's difficult for me to see that. In any other circumstance, a 'cost' implies a benefit to someone else/other people. If I take the life of someone who's killed my wife, my benefit is . . . what, exactly, other than the 'reward' of seeing him dead? 'Proportionate retribution' looks like a weird term indeed, to me.


quote:

The motivation for disporportionate retribution is vengeance.

"Getting even" is a misunderstanding.

quote:

But a big and powerful - perhaps the biggest and most powerful - message of the Bible, arguably, was that God is always right and God is always good.


Seems more like a message of the church, doesn't it?


I don't know. If the Bible indicates that God isn't all-powerful and omniscient, then yes, we could put that down to the Church.
quote:


quote:

He's a vengeful god; therefore it's right for humans to be vengeful too.


Trust us to bungle such things. We ascribe a quality we don't understand to a being we don't even claim to understand, and then try to emulate an example we don't know in the least, despite repeated warnings not to do so. That's about the size and shape of it. Doesn't strike me as a well carried message.


I think you got it in the first and the last sentences, there. Yes, it should have been known that 'we'd bungle it'. But that calls into question the wisdom of the writers of the Bible.

quote:

quote:

Eh? Where?


Before the consolidation, for instance, you mentioned it in one of the Newtown threads.


Since neither of us feels it important enough to go and find it, I don't suppose it matters here.


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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 12:54:48 PM   
PeonForHer


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri

quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer
'Eye for an eye' was superseded by 'turn the other cheek'. But a big and powerful - perhaps the biggest and most powerful - message of the Bible, arguably, was that God is always right and God is always good. He's a vengeful god; therefore it's right for humans to be vengeful too. We want to be 'godlike' and here's the example set for us.


That is the wrong interpretation of being made in His image. "God" is a 3-part being, spirit, flesh and soul. We were made in that image, a 3-part being. We have flesh, soul and spirit selves. With the Garden of Eden events, we lost the connection, the spiritual connection to God. When Jesus says that we must be "born again," he wasn't talking about a physical re-birth. The Pharisee's even asked him if we were to climb back into the womb (I would be very, very scared to see the woman whose womb I could crawl back into... just sayin'). His point was that we needed to be born again in God's image. We needed a rebirth of the spirit, and without that, we could not see the Kingdom of God.

<ends homily>




I wasn't interpreting the idea of 'our being made in God's image'. For me, it's about the intuition that if anyone once sets out to write about a God, then people will try to emulate that God. Everyone wants to feel powerful; it's a recurring fantasy and desire to be the most powerful of all. 'God gets to kill people. If I kill people, I'm therefore God-like'.

Maybe God would have made a better job of steering us all in the right direction if he'd practised what he'd preached.

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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 1:29:07 PM   
kdsub


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quote:

It would be revenge to run over the driver


But some parents would call it justice...but really I don't care that much about the point..it is just made for consideration and done.

Butch

_____________________________

Mark Twain:

I don't see any use in having a uniform and arbitrary way of spelling words. We might as well make all clothes alike and cook all dishes alike. Sameness is tiresome; variety is pleasing

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Profile   Post #: 50
RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 3:14:42 PM   
DesideriScuri


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quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer
'Eye for an eye' was superseded by 'turn the other cheek'. But a big and powerful - perhaps the biggest and most powerful - message of the Bible, arguably, was that God is always right and God is always good. He's a vengeful god; therefore it's right for humans to be vengeful too. We want to be 'godlike' and here's the example set for us.

That is the wrong interpretation of being made in His image. "God" is a 3-part being, spirit, flesh and soul. We were made in that image, a 3-part being. We have flesh, soul and spirit selves. With the Garden of Eden events, we lost the connection, the spiritual connection to God. When Jesus says that we must be "born again," he wasn't talking about a physical re-birth. The Pharisee's even asked him if we were to climb back into the womb (I would be very, very scared to see the woman whose womb I could crawl back into... just sayin'). His point was that we needed to be born again in God's image. We needed a rebirth of the spirit, and without that, we could not see the Kingdom of God.
<ends homily>

I wasn't interpreting the idea of 'our being made in God's image'. For me, it's about the intuition that if anyone once sets out to write about a God, then people will try to emulate that God. Everyone wants to feel powerful; it's a recurring fantasy and desire to be the most powerful of all. 'God gets to kill people. If I kill people, I'm therefore God-like'.
Maybe God would have made a better job of steering us all in the right direction if he'd practised what he'd preached.


When you let Him know, make sure I'm not anywhere near. God didn't kill people for shits and giggles. He did it as a punishment and to protect His people. Anyone who is attempting to be God-like, has some sort of mental issue.

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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 3:23:11 PM   
DesideriScuri


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quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer
quote:

ORIGINAL: Aswad
quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer
The desire for revenge is involved in both, isn't it? If it isn't, what is the motivation for 'proportionate retribution'? What is the point of it?

The motivation for porportionate retribution is to impose a cost without escalating a conflict.

It's difficult for me to see that. In any other circumstance, a 'cost' implies a benefit to someone else/other people. If I take the life of someone who's killed my wife, my benefit is . . . what, exactly, other than the 'reward' of seeing him dead? 'Proportionate retribution' looks like a weird term indeed, to me.


Why would you take the life of someone who killed your wife? What would be your motivation? There lies your "benefit." The "cost" is he no longer gets the benefit of living.

"Proportionate retribution" can also thought of as "the penalty being commensurate with the infraction," or not using " excessive force."


_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to PeonForHer)
Profile   Post #: 52
RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 4:09:23 PM   
Aswad


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quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer

In any other circumstance, a 'cost' implies a benefit to someone else/other people.


When I'm buying something at the store, I don't necessarily think in terms of the jobs I will be paying into by buying the item. I think in terms of the cost to me of having what I want, first and foremost. A price paid toward an ends. Usually, I go for the things that are worth the price to be paid for having them, rather than those that cost more than they're worth.

If some bugger kills someone I love, in Norway, the cost is up to 21 years to avenge that. If I don't have anything to lose, that cost may well be worth it. If I do have something to lose, then that's an added cost, in practice. One that may not be worth it. If I'm warlord over a village in wherever, the cost of attacking ISAF forces in the area for whatever reason may or may not be worth the cost. Even if I feel it's justified to attack, it may be better to just write off past losses and tend to my remaining people. Assuming that's an option.

Once you get bogged down in vengeance, all that goes out the window, and you lose sight of the goal, which should probably be a good life for you and yours. And when you get into disporportionate retribution, you end up creating more aggravation than you're addressing, and you violate any possible sense of parity on the part of those hit by what you do, setting up more opposition, accelerating the cycle (or, perhaps more aptly, the frequently-downward spiral), which is worse than just perpetuating the cycle.

Part of what let us get anywhere in the West was setting aside our conflicts to work toward a common good.

A theme that's been strong with the Abrahamic traditions for a while.

quote:

I don't know. If the Bible indicates that God isn't all-powerful and omniscient, then yes, we could put that down to the Church.


Indicates is a matter of interpretation. It's the words of people whose idea of powerful was rulers with less influence than a modest gang these days, and to whom access to Google might well be deemed omniscience. We've been to the moon since then, and what we think of as omnipotence now is something that encompasses things they couldn't even imagine, for the most part, indeed probably didn't realize there was to imagine. I think we have to consider their words within the context they were spoken (and later written down).

«A mother is god in the eyes of her child,» as the phrase from Silent Hill goes.

Should illustrate the problem of perspective here.

quote:

I think you got it in the first and the last sentences, there. Yes, it should have been known that 'we'd bungle it'. But that calls into question the wisdom of the writers of the Bible.


I routinely call into question their wisdom. Crucially, I call it into question. I don't dismiss it out of hand, and I don't take it as scripture, if you'll pardon the pun.

quote:

Since neither of us feels it important enough to go and find it, I don't suppose it matters here.


I'm not even sure it's still around. You were on about how American media are saturated with guns and violence and glorify both, and how that would be a negative influence, something you also touched on in a thread where you (and I'm still grateful) reminded me that there's a purpose behind killings most of the time, that guns and bombs are chosen for reasons other than efficiency, etc. So, yes, it's something you've mentioned in the past, more than once, and no, I don't see it as necessary to go hunting for it.

Violence has dropped off with the increase in consumption of violent media, which is one of those persistent problems in the argument that violent media are to blame for the nonexistent increase in violence itself. The only correlation we've found around these parts is, a number of people with difficulties seek refuge in games and other media, effectively self neutralizing for a while, strongly suggesting a causal order where we can't really pin anything on violence in media, but might potentially ascribe to violent media a curbing effect.

This is sort of amusingly apropos the bit where Japan experienced an increase in sex offences when temporarily outlawing materials that depict minors (e.g. certain genres of anime). Media can apparently serve as an outlet for things that would be harmful without the outlet. I'm inclined to think there's quite a few people that take their frustrations out on pixels on a screen, rather than real people, and that this is probably beneficial. A bit of opium for the masses, if you will. The data I've seen tend to support that.

Vengeance in the culture, and in the media, however, seems plausible as a cause of some harm.

One of the problems with vengeance being that it's not very well targetted. When you get angry enough to go killing people out of a personal idea of vengeance, you usually aren't in a frame of mind to be very discriminate about who deserves what and why. If you have a look at vincentML's thread about the rehab vs punishment side of things after Sandy Hook, or even now in the football rapists' thread, the sentiment isn't exactly governed by logic; when emotion carries the day, outcomes tend to go the wrong way (kind of like the whole "road to hell is paved with good intentions" thing, which is a positive emote leading- predictably- to a negative outcome).

Columbine was clearly vengeance. It occured to me, too, at that age. I just happened to be more levelheaded. Enough so to realize going amok would just harm a lot of people that had never hurt me. At minimum, the parents of those that actually had, and the bystanders. In general, though, people don't have that degree of specificity of direction to their emotions. Just look at all the people that wanted to have Lanza tortured to death, without a care for what needless suffering that would inflict on his remaining relatives, for instance. And that was supposedly adult, mature people, whose emotions should be more under control and more well directed than that of children. Blows my mind that we're even considering the notion that these are people capable of consent in a meaningful sense, with such reasoning as that (if we can even call it reasoning when it's probably emotionally driven), but that's a sidebar and straying far OT.

No, forgiveness seems like a more productive route, though more challenging.

It's a route I'm glad I chose, myself, and one I try to stick with.

IWYW,
— Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


(in reply to PeonForHer)
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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 4:21:03 PM   
PeonForHer


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri

Why would you take the life of someone who killed your wife? What would be your motivation? There lies your "benefit." The "cost" is he no longer gets the benefit of living.

"Proportionate retribution" can also thought of as "the penalty being commensurate with the infraction," or not using " excessive force."



I wouldn't take the life of someone who killed my wife. Or at least I'd hope I wouldn't, because I'd like to be better than that. That is, I'd like to think I've left the Christian tradition behind, and now have civilised morals.

Could you give me a *practical example* of 'proportionate retribution', then? It's just that the phrase sounds slightly nauseating to me. I have this somewhat revolting image of a man doing something utterly savage to another man while describing what he's doing as being 'commensurate with the infraction' - or some such sober and ever-so-civilised means of expression.

I've read various bits from Elizabeth I's courts of justice about punishments meted out, and their 'moral basis', you see. They used language just like this to justify the most bestial, vomit-inducing kinds of torture and execution. You can see why I might be suspicious.


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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 4:26:32 PM   
PeonForHer


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FR

Note to Mods:

Could you delete Aswad's last post? It's quite long and he's obviously put some thought into it, so I'm sure he'll understand. We can't have that sort of thing going on at CM.



< Message edited by PeonForHer -- 1/5/2013 4:27:31 PM >


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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 7:32:26 PM   
DesideriScuri


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quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
Why would you take the life of someone who killed your wife? What would be your motivation? There lies your "benefit." The "cost" is he no longer gets the benefit of living.
"Proportionate retribution" can also thought of as "the penalty being commensurate with the infraction," or not using " excessive force."

I wouldn't take the life of someone who killed my wife. Or at least I'd hope I wouldn't, because I'd like to be better than that. That is, I'd like to think I've left the Christian tradition behind, and now have civilised morals.
Could you give me a *practical example* of 'proportionate retribution', then? It's just that the phrase sounds slightly nauseating to me. I have this somewhat revolting image of a man doing something utterly savage to another man while describing what he's doing as being 'commensurate with the infraction' - or some such sober and ever-so-civilised means of expression.
I've read various bits from Elizabeth I's courts of justice about punishments meted out, and their 'moral basis', you see. They used language just like this to justify the most bestial, vomit-inducing kinds of torture and execution. You can see why I might be suspicious.


Not being a sentencing guru, I have little idea what is called for in all circumstances, but I can wholly make up some off the top of my head that are not "commensurate with the infraction."

Serial rapist and 18 year old HS senior sued for feeling someone up (had to make them both adults) getting the same sentence, though the infractions are not equal in any way.

The same sentence for marijuana possession as cocaine possession.


_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
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  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to PeonForHer)
Profile   Post #: 56
RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/5/2013 8:42:21 PM   
Aylee


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quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer

FR

Note to Mods:

Could you delete Aswad's last post? It's quite long and he's obviously put some thought into it, so I'm sure he'll understand. We can't have that sort of thing going on at CM.




What?  I re-read his post.  What was wrong with it?

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RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/6/2013 3:07:43 AM   
PeonForHer


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My idea of a joke. Fell flat - wouldn't be the first time.

Oh dear. Take no notice.

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Profile   Post #: 58
RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/6/2013 5:19:17 AM   
Aswad


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Didn't fall flat. This is my idea of "not very long and not a lot of thought in it".

Seriously, though, I said I'd give it another shot in 2013, which we're now in, so I'm fine with giving you a bit more attention now.

IWYW,
— Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


(in reply to PeonForHer)
Profile   Post #: 59
RE: Sadly, A Central Tenet Of Our Public Morality Is Th... - 1/6/2013 5:28:19 AM   
DesideriScuri


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quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer
My idea of a joke. Fell flat - wouldn't be the first time.
Oh dear. Take no notice.


Some people got it. I laughed at it.

_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to PeonForHer)
Profile   Post #: 60
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