Forum
A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
Page 998 of 1419
FirstPreviousNextLast
FlemGem (1297 D)
07 Dec 12 UTC
So I have this huge addition to my family coming in.....
Actually she was born a week ago, but in the spirit of the meme of the day I'd like to announce the birth of my daughter Keilah Rose. 9lbs 13.5oz, 20.25 inches long, cutest thing I've seen since, well, the last time we had a baby. I'm one seriously happy dad.
15 replies
Open
Tolstoy (1962 D)
08 Dec 12 UTC
Replacement needed for high quality World game
Frozen-Antarctica is in a decent position: http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=103915
Express your interest and if you pass the smell test you will be PMed the password.
6 replies
Open
Yonni (136 D(S))
21 Nov 12 UTC
Triathlon Round 3
28 replies
Open
rosaville (2507 D)
08 Dec 12 UTC
Don't Want to be Falsely Accusing of Multi-ing
My brother is joining and it may look like I am multi accounting ...
3 replies
Open
krellin (80 DX)
07 Dec 12 UTC
Lest We Forget...
December 7, 1941 - Pearl Harbor was attacked...

65 replies
Open
krellin (80 DX)
04 Dec 12 UTC
The Evil Rich
If it is so evil to be "rich" and we must punish them and take a higher % of their salary away from them because the "have too much"...and we love illegal aliens and want to give them amnesty, and they really have nothing...then shouldn't we *all* be giving up our wealth. Compared to *global* standards, we are *all* repulsively rich. Such Hypocrisy! DISCUSS.
176 replies
Open
bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
05 Dec 12 UTC
Oldest Person Dies
http://www.cnn.com/2012/12/04/us/georgia-oldest-person-dies/index.html?hpt=hp_c1

It's worth pointing out the oldest people because they have their tips and tricks, but they also have some genetic distinction about them that makes them live for what seems like forever. I'd hate to have the title of oldest person. RIP nonetheless...
Page 2 of 2
FirstPreviousNextLast
 
Celticfox (100 D(B))
06 Dec 12 UTC
@Thucy that and something like Alzheimer's disease. Where your mind just isn't there anymore. At that point I don't think I'd want to live, especially if I was brain dead.
Thucydides (864 D(B))
06 Dec 12 UTC
Alzheimer's isn't being brain dead. I don't think Alzheimer's and happiness are necessarily mutually exclusive.

To the extent that I am capable of happiness, I should not die, if it can be helped. That's how I feel anyway.
Octavious (2701 D)
06 Dec 12 UTC
I have nothing against those who would wish to live despite Alzheimer's, and I'm sure what remains of them can indeed be happy (at least some of the time). But it seems only fair that those of us who would much rather die than suffer such a fate have our wishes respected too.
Thucydides (864 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
I don't feel like getting into an assisted suicide debate during finals time, so I will just state my reasoning to oppose it and be done with it:

The right to life and the right to die are incompatible. Having one corrodes the other.

I will explain: we try to posit that no one has the right to take away my life. All society is built on this norm, if you ask me. On this basis, not even *you* have a right to take away your life. This is because, when you create a society where you have a right to life, if you want it to be taken seriously, the society as a whole has to act to prevent death, including suicide.

That's the argument against suicide in general.

Now to assisted suicide more specifically. It's called a fallacy, but slippery slopes are not always fallacious if you ask me. In this case if assisted suicide is legalized you will see a galvanization of support over time for the idea of a right to die. Just as with, say, medicinal pot leading to recreational pot legalization, legal assisted suicide in cases of terminal illness with certified doctors agreeing etc. etc. could very conceivably lead one day to a movement pushing for the right to kill oneself legally anytime they please. Because of a "right to die."

This however would, as I am saying, corrode the right to life. With such a right (to die), it would be difficult to defend the right to life. For, in a society that allows human-induced, purposeful death, how can one prohibit death (which is what a right to life is - a prohibition of intentional death)?

You are almost certainly unmoved by this argument, but for me it is real. I am usually quite liberal about social freedoms, but this is an area I am not so liberal on. I sympathize with the plight of someone who is in grave pain. I don't mean to be callous to those people. Their plight is an issue I really haven't decided on. Because though their case to peacefully end their lives is compelling, the implications of doing so are extremely troubling. Pulling the plug on a brain dead patient is one thing. Imbibing barbituates after my chemo for pancreatic fails is another, because I am actually still alive in the interim. In pain perhaps, disabled perhaps, but alive all the same.

The secondary argument for me is that life is inherently valuable in that all value is derived from and predicated on the existence of life. A world empty of people would be empty of meaning, obviously. And the cares and triumphs of my own existence are finite to the extent that I have a finite life.

This means that even if my life is, in comparison to others' lives, abysmal, I am yet *alive*, which is a thing to celebrate of itself. You are likely to dismiss this idea as cerebral and small comfort for those in agony of terminal illness. Again, I do not mean to belittle their pitiable situation. And no, I have no experience of having a terminal illness.

But to the extent that our (or I guess my) meaning of life is predicated first and foremost and my own existence, existence itself is valuable. People who are born with debilitating illnesses but live on through the years are, to my mind, informal proof of this idea. They are often, I even hazard to say usually, glad they are alive and thankful. It is usually those who were once healthy and then lost their health and failed to cope that are not happy to live. Not that this is not understandable, I just think that it is worth trying to encourage a gratefulness to even be alive.

Now, because insensitivity is a great sin, I would never literally stand in the presence of a dying person and deny their request to die by saying "try to be grateful you are alive at all." This is obviously callous. But in my own self I have for a number of years been attempting to cultivate this mentality - upon the contingency of my own serious disability of terminal illness, I hope to find the strength to live on and through. There are a number of ways that such an existence can be conceived of as meaningful and worthwhile, if not traditionally "happy."

I am all too aware that many do not feel this way. I am not so presumptuous as to say that I or any other can convince them otherwise. Which is why I am not *vehemently* opposed to legal assisted suicide, but rather hesitant and vigilant.

The above is free thought and not intended to be an argument. I know the refutations, so no need to tell me. It is how I currently feel though. No amount of appeal to the ending the suffering of someone has managed so far to rid me of my own commitment to the idea of a right to life.

I was only able to move away from an anti-abortion position once I was convinced enough that a fetus is not conscious and in that sense not "morally" alive. With a conscious person at the end of their life, it is another matter entirely and I am in much the same philosophical position I have always been in.

Anyway. Like I said I can't really continue this discussion though I would love to at some other time.
Celticfox (100 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
Thank you Octavious.

@Thucy See I feel differently. I agree with assisted suicide in certain situations. No ones should have to live in terminal pain for what would be the rest of their life. I don't have the exact guidelines all laid out, but there's a difference in a person who's depressed and needs therapy (I understand not all cases are the same) and a person who knows they'll spend the rest of their lives in horrible immobilizing pain as some MS sufferers will.
Thucydides (864 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
It is precisely that uncertainty that makes me wary of the entire concept, CF. I am not willing to go so far as to say this is my position, but part of me thinks that the pain of the people who must suffer through terminal illnesses without intentional suicide is the price we must pay for buying into the idea of a right to life.
bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
07 Dec 12 UTC
There is nothing that says laws cannot be situational. Some people consider suicide for reasons that are non-permanent, and these can be expelled from consideration. However, if you're discussing permanent issues, such as terminal illness or pain, then the "uncertainty" of the effect really isn't there if you ask me...
Thucydides (864 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
I should also point out that, supposing for a moment that we were all in agreement that assisted suicide should be illegal, this would not stop up from detesting the circumstances that those in the agony of terminal illness experience. Life is more important that happiness only because happiness is only possible if life is first there. But happiness is our mission as well, so I would argue that the one consolation I could give if I was arguing in favor of keeping assisted suicide illegal is that, if that was the regime we pursued, we should be literally pouring resources into urgently researching ending those people's suffering by means other than death, or into curing them or preventing their plight in the first place.

That, if you ask me, is the real travesty. That we aren't giving more resources to an attempt to alleviate suffering without having to end a life.
Celticfox (100 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
See I also see that a person has the right to what they want with their life as well. I wouldn't want someone to impose their beliefs on me so I take great care not to impose mine on anyone else.
Thucydides (864 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
@bo_sox: the non-permanence of the rationale for suicide, in my opinion, is not the reason we should be discouraging suicide. Life, after all, is a terminal illness.

Not to mention that what was once called a terminal illness is today called history. (smallpox etc).

Anyway I really do have to go. Thanks for not being assholes about this. I'm usually reluctant to talk about this because people can get extremely nasty on this subject in particular.
Thucydides (864 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
Ok one last thing, lol. I think that the "no one should be allowed to impose their beliefs on me" liberal argument is actually a total crock (for more, see my post in draug's money thread on taxes).

We impose our beliefs on each other all the time, and rightly so. Furthermore, we are not islands unto ourselves. So the personal liberty argument for me holds no water at all. The only thing that keeps me from full support for prohibiting AS is the suffering of the people involved.
Celticfox (100 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
Nope no reason to get nasty. You have your opinions and I have mine. Better to be able to talk about things like this in a rational manner then froth at the mouth argueing. Leads to better understanding and all that.
Octavious (2701 D)
07 Dec 12 UTC
@ Thucy

You define the right to life as a prohibition of intentional death. This strikes me as painfully wrong. The right to life is, more than anything else, the right to think and make choices based upon those thoughts. We think therefore we are, we choose therefore we live. As such the right to choose death is not in opposition to the right to life, but in fact a part of it. By denying one you do not strengthen the other. You weaken it.
Thucydides (864 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
Life is valued in opposition to death. I don't see how you can get around that opposition. If you no longer oppose all death, how can you value life? If you do not hate death, you do not love life.

I doubt you agree, but it seems fairly apparent to me.
Thucydides (864 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
You could broaden it existence is valued in opposition to non-existence but it's far less punch and means the same in this context, I should note.
bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
07 Dec 12 UTC
So for people like me that have seriously contemplated suicide but have moved past that, we are classified as "alien" because we are open to the idea of death yet have also grown to love life. Thanks Thucy.
Octavious (2701 D)
07 Dec 12 UTC
I often find it truly amazing just how varied are the views from which humans perceive the universe. The world as you see it is so far removed from my own that it's near impossible to believe it's the same place. Loving life without hating death is as easy and natural to me as breathing.
Thucydides (864 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
Annnnd it just got ugly, thanks bo_sox. You are not classified as alien. Why do you insist on feeling like I'm attacking you? I was not. I refuse to allow you to anger me. Indeed everything I am saying is based on the idea that I am glad you are still with us. I am glad you moved past it. I have also seriously contemplated suicide. Don't get so caught up with beating me in an online discussion that you become an asshole.

@Octavious:

I feel that my description of things is more what is different, not so much the underlying ideology. You seem to have misunderstood what I meant by hating death. We hate death in that we strive with all our might to avoid it and to prevent it. Not in that we are not at peace with our own mortality or even glad that there is such a thing. I for one believe that it is actually our mortality that gives our lives meaning. If I knew I would never die, life would scarcely be so precious.

A right to life implies hating death in the sense that death is the enemy, not that we don't respect the enemy, just that we understand that, if life is a struggle to survive, death is the adversary.

And if suffering is the opposite of happiness, in the struggle to find happiness, suffering is the enemy, though it too makes happiness more meaningful.

I of course, as I was saying, place life before happiness, because happiness is impossible without life. That's my thinking behind it. The first happiness is existence, the others follow from it.

Lol my friend if you are amazed by the diversity of people's worldviews, I am reluctantly accepting of the total failure of written and spoken language to convey ideas reliably. I often feel no one on this forum understands my views, though I try mightily to express them. Please understand that I am not complaining or bitching here just observing a phenomenon. I wager it's common to us all.
Thucydides (864 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
You guys are lucky I have to wait for my data to download, else I would have run clean out of excuses to keep lurking around this great discussion.
Celticfox (100 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
Out of curiosity Thucy how do you feel about the death penalty?
bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
07 Dec 12 UTC
"I refuse to allow you to anger me."

Yeah, you failed with that sentiment three sentences later.

"Don't get so caught up with beating me in an online discussion that you become an asshole."

I'm only an asshole when I'm asked to be. Provocation, Thucy. I'm not "glad" to still be here - fact of the matter is that I couldn't force my neck into a rope. Obviously means I wasn't going to do it no matter what method I chose. I am not being an asshole, I am simply stating that you isolated a large mass of people, me included, and if you're to do that to me for just about anything, I'm going to point it out. Don't accuse me for standing up for myself because I'm sure I represent someone else here too.

"And if suffering is the opposite of happiness, in the struggle to find happiness, suffering is the enemy, though it too makes happiness more meaningful."

Suffering is the opposite of happiness, but it's not the same in the sense that happiness is only possible in the fullest form of life. That's oversimplified. Life can happen without happiness, but I haven't got a clue what death genuinely brings. None of us do. That's a philosophy I try not to get into because I frankly don't care what happens after life is over. I'm not religious, but maybe there are two separate spheres of energy in which heaven and hell each exist. Who knows? Ask a dead person and report back.

And don't worry, data rarely convinces me on things I already have a clear viewpoint on from my own experiences.
Thucydides (864 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
Totally against it. The only justification that it could have is if it had a demonstrable deterrent effect, and it does not.
Octavious (2701 D)
07 Dec 12 UTC
@ Thucy

I admit your definition of hate is somewhat different to the definition I'm familiar with, but it doesn't change much in all honesty. Life is a journey, and whether you believe death is the final destination or merely a stop along the way makes it no less part of life. It is not the enemy or something to fight against. It is part of the journey.

Sickness is an adversary, something worthy of hate that we must struggle to overcome. In many cases we can defeat it and return to living as we did before we became ill, often a stalemate is reached where the sickness remains but is manageable, but always we can eventually claim victory over sickness with death.

To put it in some kind of metaphor (which is probably not remotely useful, but I do enjoy this sort of thing) imagine death as a night at the opera which you don't really want to go to but your other half has insisted. You're driving along towards it on the open road with the radio on and the window down, and although you're not keen on getting there you're really enjoying the ride. Sadly as you get closer to your destination you hit heavy traffic and your radio breaks. What was once a fun ride has become a nightmare of stop starts and engine noise that, on balance, is a hell of a lot worse than the opera itself. To your delight you notice a small side road ahead that is clear and will get you out of the traffic and to the opera. Yes, it means getting there quicker than you'd like, but for a brief time you'll be on the open road again with the wind in your hair and it'd be a hell of a lot better than being stuck in the damned jam.

Then traffic cop Thucy closes the road ;).

Oh, and in fairness I think I have a good understanding of many of your world views. Unfortunately I seem to hate almost all of them with every fibre of my being :p. That you have clearly come to your views following a path of trying to be a better person and doing the right thing somehow makes it a lot worse ;).
Thucydides (864 D(B))
07 Dec 12 UTC
It is part of the journey, but it's role is as an old adversary. One you respect, because you know it must claim you, but one you fight against in the meantime, because that is your role as a living thing.

"Fighting for your life" is something that your body and you as a person are doing every moment of your life until it's over.

Also no metaphor that takes place in life can adequately represent suicide. Because once you go to the opera, you can still leave afterward and get back to doing things you like.
Octavious (2701 D)
08 Dec 12 UTC
@ Thucy

That depends entirely on how you view life. The vast majority of people in this world believe quite firmly that life continues after the opera in another form. Even if you don't believe in a god it's clear enough that your influence on this world will continue and be obvious long after you've gone, and in less obvious ways until the end of the universe.

The way you seem time also has an impact. Death is merely the absence of yourself from future presents. Suicide is removing yourself from a future present you don't much care for, which in a way we do every day whenever we make a choice. The saturday 8th December morning in which I spent 5 hours writing a report for work never happened and now never can because I chose for it not to happen. My Friday 7th December at the Christmas Goodwill evening has been written in the fabric of the universe and can never be removed. In the same way I would like to chose for the 20xx year in bed in discomfort without knowing the names of those I love not to happen. I see no reason why others should claim the right to dictate the pattern of my existance to suit their belief system.

I exist and I have existed, and I will continue to exist on my terms. Death is an old friend without whom I would not even be here. He walks with you through life to remind you how to live, and will be with you when it is time to leave. I will leave when I am booted out or I choose to go, but force me to stay and you make life my prison and you my prisoner. Which in a way makes you my adversary, not Death.


55 replies
krellin (80 DX)
04 Dec 12 UTC
CoD Black Ops II
I love it...anyone else playing Live? Turns out my 13 year old daughter is a stone cold *killer*. I'm so proud of her!!! :)
39 replies
Open
Zardoz2525 (255 D)
08 Dec 12 UTC
Program bug?
In World Diplomacy game http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=101672 a fleet retreat was allowed from Vos to DdU in Spring 2013. Is this somehow correct? It certainly seems wrong.
1 reply
Open
Draugnar (0 DX)
06 Dec 12 UTC
So I have this huge bonus coming in and am thinking about what to do with it...
Take home will be at least $4500 in bonus plus my usual take home pay for the mid month check...
157 replies
Open
krellin (80 DX)
07 Dec 12 UTC
Breasts - the fine art of staring...
http://guycodeblog.mtv.com/2012/08/13/women-stare-at-cleavage/

This makes me happy. I'm smiling. Are you?
13 replies
Open
Jynx (100 D)
08 Dec 12 UTC
split the difference?
I see there are 5, 7, and 17 player maps here. Is there any chance a map in the 10-13 player range might be added?
6 replies
Open
damian (675 D)
07 Dec 12 UTC
Student Puppy Room
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/story/2012/11/29/ns-dog-therapy-university.html
...
Discuss
26 replies
Open
krellin (80 DX)
07 Dec 12 UTC
Bending Over...
I've got this fungus between my toes, but I can't reach past my ankles any more.

Anyone wanna come over tonight and scrape my feet clean?
2 replies
Open
alberto (100 D)
21 Nov 12 UTC
comunidad de webdiplomacy en español
Aqui teneis la primera comunidad hispana de Diplomacy, donde puedes jugar online con gente de todo el mundo en tu mismo idioma.
<a href="http://www.webdiplomacy.com.es" > Diplomacy Español </a>
12 replies
Open
President Eden (2750 D)
06 Dec 12 UTC
So I have this huge boost to my GPA coming in
I don't usually talk about my academics on here, but I just rocked a grad-level final exam and one of LSU's hardest classes on the same day, with insomnia and sinuses.

So this actually is meaningful, let's hear some things you've been proud of yourself for succeeding at doing!
7 replies
Open
krellin (80 DX)
07 Dec 12 UTC
Confession Time
I must confess...bo_sox and JamieUK are my illegitimate children. I had to unleash that burden from my soul.

Please share your own vile confession. (Yes...I don't even know how to spell my child's fake name. Curses upon me...)
25 replies
Open
bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
07 Dec 12 UTC
Krellin is my daddy!
I'm so happy that I finally learned who my real father is! He obviously loves me because he took the liberty to spell my name correctly.
3 replies
Open
SpeakerToAliens (147 D(S))
05 Dec 12 UTC
Marks out of ten? Eleven!
They got away with it (and they really shouldn't have). Brilliant.

http://order-order.com/2012/12/05/kate-prank-call-from-the-queen/
8 replies
Open
krellin (80 DX)
07 Dec 12 UTC
And The Zombie Plague Begins...
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2244272/Florida-officials-consider-releasing-genetically-modified-non-biting-mosquitoes-battle-dengue-fever.html

It's just a bad idea...
2 replies
Open
Lando Calrissian (100 D(S))
07 Dec 12 UTC
LUSTHOG SQUAD
Lest we forget.
There are rules.
1 reply
Open
dubmdell (556 D)
07 Dec 12 UTC
2WL, I got you a present
http://imgur.com/CbHjY.png
http://i.imgur.com/jAb9p.png
http://i.imgur.com/pbiWl.png
24 replies
Open
President Eden (2750 D)
30 Nov 12 UTC
North Korea discovers ancient unicorn lair, still more legitimate than USA
http://gizmodo.com/5964719/north-korean-archeologist-discover-the-lair-of-king-tongmyongs-unicorn-no-joke
139 replies
Open
NigeeBaby (100 D(G))
06 Dec 12 UTC
The Dutch love The Killers
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-20627393

If you're thinking of killing try the Netherlands, they're very kind to killers....
16 replies
Open
President Eden (2750 D)
01 Dec 12 UTC
Championship Weekend
College football's winding down with some good games this weekend. MAC Championship was crazy, thanks to the Huskies for saving the Orange Bowl. Since the bowl season is fast approaching, who do you think goes BCS bowling, and where's your team going for the bowl season?
36 replies
Open
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
06 Dec 12 UTC
So I have this Obi-rant coming on and i'm thinking about what to do with it...
Suggestions? :p
9 replies
Open
ghug (5068 D(B))
05 Dec 12 UTC
Winners & Drawers EoG
I guess it's not really much of an EoG, as we cancelled in 1901, but I'm curious to see who everyone was and willing to try a rematch if the rest of you are.

I was Russia.
11 replies
Open
2ndWhiteLine (2611 D(B))
06 Dec 12 UTC
So I have this huge boner coming in and am thinking about what to do with it...
Any ideas?
23 replies
Open
The Hanged Man (4160 D(G))
06 Dec 12 UTC
So I have this huge bonus coming in and am thinking about what to do with it...
Take home this week will be at least $450000 in bonus plus my usual take home pay for the mid month check...
7 replies
Open
President Eden (2750 D)
06 Dec 12 UTC
ulytau what does your initials stands four
^^
im curius
12 replies
Open
Page 998 of 1419
FirstPreviousNextLast
Back to top