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Originally posted by sexysadie
I agree with your assertion that human beings tend to follow mother nature established rules , but I’ve seen meager men lifted from the lowliest places from their packs to great places by merely faith in either good or evil supernatural forces and then effecting moral change as Redge777 explained.
Originally posted by MacSen191
I don't think she was admiring him. I think he is an evil man who had no soul, but he had a brain and knew how to use it. Some of his speeches that you see on tv are so full of passion, that if I was there in that crowd, surronded by people cheering... I really don't know what I'd do. If I'd cheer a long with and then go home and realize he is a socopath who is trying to commit mass murder? Or if I really listened to a thing he said or he worded it just right with the right amount of passion that I would be bought by it?
Originally posted by Throbber
You can gain respect through a number of ways - like agreeing with someone over a discussion with conflicting views (this example is the simplist one).
The worst is that there are those who condone this mentality, and so when children hear about this they feel that it is worthwhile to emphasize the point, at least for personal gratification.
*SNIPS* you if you agree with me; this is my point, either expand on it or disagree.
EDIT: If you can't do either of those - then you'd probably have been better off ignoring this post, wouldn't you?
[edit on 11-10-2007 by Throbber]
Originally posted by sexysadie
I feel there’s a growing number of Americans who are beyond reform.
Originally posted by Nohup
Originally posted by sexysadie
I feel there’s a growing number of Americans who are beyond reform.
Of course, you're sure that the way you think and act is the right way to go. But some people are going to disagree with you.
Yours is not the only way.
Originally posted by Throbber
Mutual victory only goes so far - it would be better if afterwards the competitors could sit it out and figure out where they went wrong, and yet with it still not being about the victory; perhaps Training or Practice (or even sparring) would be a better way of understanding it.
only a unique few(People who can evaluate a situation calmly without bias) can sit back and think through an argument or confrontation and look at the good points in the competitor as well as yourself; especially when maintaining a non-bias approach to the matter.
It depends on the purpose - there are those whom may simply be seeking knowledge on the topic and intend to raise points in order to learn more (by using the counter-arguments as mental guidelines, perhaps).
It's difficult to clear-cut human psychology, we're all so damn unique - What one person does out of spite or lust another person could do out of honour or even pity;
my point here is that there is one example (the one i outlined) where the two potentials are inherently similar, and in realising the link between the two one can see how it would effect a group of people or community over a period of generations without anyone really making a fuss about it.
I suppose the flipside scenario could be that it isn't about winning, but about making the other guy lose - inherently it's the same mentality but approached in a different way.
Perhaps some other posters could share what they think about this.