Jump to content

randomc

Senior Members
  • Posts

    182
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by randomc

  1. Do you suppose that the exploiters think they are doing something morally objectionable? Why assume that? I would say sex-positive ideals might influence their thinking in a situation where the harm they inflict isn't immediately obvious to them. The idea that 'it's just sex' provides what they may see as a justification for their actions. Also, if the 'it's just sex' maxim is vaunted by a group of girls, there may be pressure to get involved despite misgivings. Agreed, but we're talking about teenagers and morally incompetent older men. I somehow doubt they are aware of the philosophical foundations of the movement they're caught up in.
  2. http://www.ceop.police.uk/Documents/ceopdocs/CEOPThreatA_2012_190612_web.pdf The inquiry i thought had been published is still underway, but an assessment is given on p.13 of the above link ...scratch that, it's here; http://www.ceop.police.uk/Documents/ceopdocs/ceop_thematic_assessment_executive_summary.pdf There's still another inquiry underway still to be published.
  3. You can question my credibility all you want, but that tere is a problem in the UK is a fact. There was a white paper published fairly recently...
  4. UK is 16, Denmark and Germany 14. They actually have far lower rates of teenage pregnancy... but they're traditionally more open about sex than Brits. 14 would be to young for UK as it is now, just as 16 might be too young for US at the moment. TBH, i think sex education in the UK is pretty good. There's just unusual peer pressure on teenagers right now and weak societal boundaries. As i said, policing such issues is very difficult. Legislation might act as a disincentive, but the underlying problems would still be there.
  5. I think it's reasonable to take issue with the sex-positive movement. My position is that some regulation of sex through societal norms and beyond law is necessary, because the difference between sex and sex crime is a grey area even in principle. In practice, it's impossible for police forces to deal with; it's very often a third rail issue; they can't win whatever they do. The incentive is to brush it under the carpet or look the other way. For example, in my town, there is group of middle aged men who control a group of 16 year old girls for the purposes of sex. It's all entirely legal, the girls are willing participants. What's unusual about it other than the age of the guys is that they are a very loosely formed group. They have little in common but that they fuck these girls. The police keep an eye on it, but don't/can't intervene. As i say, all completely legal, but i have to admit to losing a couple of nights sleep over it. Denying people contraception and sex education is a truly moronic reaction, but so is jumping on the sex-positive bandwagon, as you seem to do.
  6. No. I suppose a legal defintion would be better if consistent with end-of-life issues as well. Afaik, cognitive function is the determinant in terminal illness and since there seems to be consensus that cognitive function is absent in the first 12 weeks of development, that would be a consistent time-frame. I think i'm right to say that the vast majority of abortions occur in that time frame anyway, so it's not impracticle. I suppose my point is that framing it in terms of women's rights rather than more general civil rights is not necessary in making a sound argument for abortion, and therefore to do so is nothing but political manoeuvering. Special rights for particular groups is the essence of privelege and so worth avoiding if possible.
  7. None of the articles make the suggestion that it's all about subjugating women, not even the slate one. Rather, the underlying theme, if any, seems to be an aversion to promiscuity and the promotion of "a culture of life". So the inference remains unjustified, and without justification, there is reason to suspect an agenda from those who assert it. Whether the decision is pragmatic is the concern of the individual making it - the point remains that the definition of personhood should be the deciding factor in law. If dependency reduces the legal and moral status of someone's life, it follows that the elderly, disabled, or just temporarily ill have lesser value. I don't think self-ownership can exist on a spectrum, rather, it's a dichotomy.
  8. What are YOU talking about? I thought that Imatfaal (post 105) was making the point that religion doesn't seem to be the underlying cause of the link between the bills and statutes concerned and therefore must be some other casuse.
  9. So it's impossible to talk meaningfully about abortion without talking about women's rights? Why so specific? A basic ethical principle is that individuals are full and rightful owners of themselves, so the pro-choice position can be arrived at without special consideration of the particular group it affects. In fact, the pro-life position is best supported by the same argument; at the point at which a foetus can be defined as a person, it has full and rightful ownership of itself, no less than does the women carrying it. It's on the definition of personhood that the entire issue depends, the specific issue of women's rights is peripheral. Maybe they see a link maybe they don't. What you are implying is they don't see a link and that if they did they would change their minds. I don't think the data we're using allows that conclusion. All than can be said is that women are evenly split on the issue. The figure that 80% don't identify as feminists possibly suggests women's lib may not be the focus of this issue for American women. You are making the positive claim that the conspiracy exists, so the burden of proof is yours, and all you have provided in evidence is an anecdotal blog post. Supposing the link exists between these main actors, inferences to motives such as "making women feel the consequences of sex" and "demonising female sexuality" are extremely tenuous, and i'm no less justified in suggesting that the motive for making such inferences is agenda driven, than the agenda suggested by the inference is itself. If there is no consistent religious argument, as imatfaal argues in the thread he linked, that still doesn't necessitate or justify the inferences made.
  10. The implication being that a meaningful discussion about abortion in the US is not possible if taken as a stand alone issue. It's neccesary to consider wider agendas. Well OK; for some of you the important frame here is a wider plot to subjugate women. I pointed out that according to the GSS women seem split about 50:50 on the issue and Jeskill has pointed out that 80% of American women do not identify as feminist. Given that, and assuming the objective here is a fair and balanced discussion, i think i'm perfectly justified in questioning the massive slant this discussion has taken. American women do not, as the GSS indicates, see a plot to subjugate women as being the right context for this discussion. Yes she makes the argument. It's not very good. It's a rebuttal of an interpretation of a narrative, just some poorly supported handwaving about peoples motives. Could that be because you're cherry-picking what you need to support theory? I wandered off topic there. I was just trying to find a cross-cultural explanation for any link between female subjugation and regulation of sex. I thought it would be interesting to know if female subjugation served some functional purpose other than moral regulation of sex.
  11. Woss goin' on? Anyway, you say "The result of their politics is just that..." I konw this is just a 'makes sense' argument, but i see traditional homosocial culture as a control of male sexual jealosy and mate guarding rather than female sexuality. The problem has been stood on it's head throughout history for convenience; female sexuality is easier to control. And with reliable contraception these male instincts (?) are obsolete.
  12. I do apologise.. you said... ...which immediately followed Imatfaal's... I just assumed you were attaching yourself to this view.
  13. Look, the blog post argues against the pro-life movement very succesfully, my point is merely that to take this as an indication of an agenda to subjugate women is ridiculous. That's an interesting point. How do you measure gender dominance amongst the working classes? Does anybody even bother to do it - i would say not, maybe it's been done. Anyway ,the gender equality discussion seems to me very much focused on the elite. I suppose i did. There again, you demand rebuttal based on evidence, but don't provide actual evidence of a plot to subjugate women (per imatfaal/moontanman). Just an anecdotal blog post.
  14. I think of it as where the value for the slope of the function on the graph is going and also where it's been, i.e, the local trend of the slope (per Timo). The value '8' in your example is an average of where it's been and where it's going. I think it can be useful for predicting or recovering data you can't (or don't feel like) directly looking at.
  15. Is it really feasible to talk about abortion as part of an agenda to subjugate women? A quick perusal of the GSS shows women to be about 50:50 on abortion. ESDS (UK general social survey) unfortunately requires registration from an institution (which says it all about the UK). Anyway, you guys are treating the underclasses as pets, as is usual with social lefties.
  16. I can heartily confirm the author is a VERY sexy man. oh, oh, now that's the stickler because migl said... da da DADAAAAA
  17. absence of evidence can be evidnce of absence. http://blogs.scienceforums.net/yourdadonapogostick/2012/10/28/evidence-and-its-absence/
  18. They should be. Come on ewmon, what is the meaning of religiosity?
  19. Aha, so you're saying exactly that an instrumentalist position is precluded. My understanding of QM is very superficial, i just thought maybe you were arguing a straw man to some extent. But i don't know . This paper might be interesting for anyone else trying to follow the discussion... http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0609163
  20. immortal, what you are arguing for seems to be a roughly instrumentalist philosophy of science, plus some oriental esoterica. Is that right?
  21. I once read that there are more scientists and engineers alive now than all the accumulated scientist/engineer predecessors combined. I wonder if there's anything any individual could come up with that someone else won't figure out within a couple of years. I just find it interesting that people are so motivtaed by the glory of discovery.
  22. So they should be drilled SO THAT they can provide a convincing explanation? Which raises the question what's so important about a creationist's agenda?
  23. OK, fuck you, guy. Now you're just being glib.
  24. I did not! I copy pasted it. and i put it back.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.