homelessjunkeon wrote:Me, Grimlock! wrote:How can you say that?
Quite easily, he's running around putting words in other people's mouths (stupidity should be lethal- ad infinitum), and acting like he's demolishing these straw-men with the lance of moral superiority, and trying to throw up arbitrary and nonsensical barriers to participation in a discussion of who is fit to survive.
None of what he has said has any basis in fact or logic, and when his faulty reasoning is pointed out he accuses people of missing the point.
My examples aren't faulty reasoning, they are tirades that I use to illustrate further my point, which I
do have.
And straw man??? Please. What's the straw man? People who say "Stupidity should be lethal"? It's right here in the thread. I don't see how it's a straw man when the very thread title and original post is so celebratory in nature.
homelessjunkeon wrote:Dark Zarak wrote:What doesn't make sense now? You can't use natural selection as a reason to defend laughing at this kid because you are not the fittest animal either. It doesn't get any simpler than that. Get off your ass, go outside, go into the real world and survive all manner of different scenarios, dangerous or not dangerous, wilderness and urban, and then come back and start acting like the "fittest".
Again, not laughing at the kid, laughing at the stupidity of what he did. We've been over this.
Wrong. The thread title, and the original post was definitely laughing at the kid.
And even if it's not, just like Me Grimlock said, laughing at the death itself then? I can see an "Oh my God can you believe this?" with the sheer ridiculousness bringing laughter out as a base emotional response only, but underneath that, the human mind is still able to think, "ultimately it's pretty tragic and disgusting, so why celebrate it?"
homelessjunkeon wrote:You have no point. Not one.
For the millionth f'ing time:
People should not laugh at this kid, or how he died, on the basis of him being stupid, because they also do stupid things.
That is my point. Right there. It may even be in even plainer English than the last time I posted it, which was in bold.
homelessjunkeon wrote:You have no examples, you're putting words in people's mouths and telling them to shut up because you've decided that there is some arbitrary pre-requisite for being able to discuss natural selection.
I'm sick of you saying I have no examples, and no point.
What do you call my driving story? It's an example of how something seemingly stupid might not be, and therefore we should not judge people based on stupidity.
The "stupidity should be lethal" slogan I've seen in sigs, and bumper stickers, being an example of how people do truly agree with the idea.
homelessjunkeon wrote:The reason I say you seem to be reading a different thread is because somewhere between the website and your conscious mind this thread seems to be getting substituted with some kind of supremacist tirade against the underman.
Because that's exactly what I'm seeing in this thread. Some kid died from doing an action he should have known better against, and now he's the butt of jokes. How is that not supremacist?
DesalationReborn wrote:There's no such thing as 'inherently just'-- justice is a concept built on personal contemplation and social interaction, and is thus subjective.
Well, if the criteria is longevity of survival, he's already 'better' than the subject we're discussing. You forget 'fit' is merely what keeps you alive, and one can be considered 'fit' as long as they continue to live in a way more benefited than others, but that in itself is as well determined by an ever-changing environment. 'Fit' is not so much a manner of 'best,' but more so who lasts longer and is there to thrive at the end of the day. A hippo is great in the Nile, but put it in the middle of the Sahara, and there's a problem. Same for a lion in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. As long as one exists, or dare even excels, in it's own field of influence, it's considered 'fit.'
All right fine. You got me. I was wrong to use the surviving in different environments as a example of how nobody is fit enough to use natural selection as a reason to laugh at death.
I guess all of us, including myself, are in fact qualified to say he was weeded out of the gene pool, though I don't know what genes there are for stupidity.
Which shows that my original point still stands:
People should not laugh at this kid, or how he died, on the basis of him being stupid, because they also do stupid things.
Stupidity is relative, as I illustrated in the example of my driving story, so now I put forth the idea that it's not even about natural selection at all.* If stupidity is relative, then this kid did something stupid not because he had the genetic tendency toward stupidity, but because he was simply ignorant, misinformed, and very badly supervised.
None of which is good reason to laugh at his death, rather than just thinking "damn that sucks for him. Should've been smarter", and then going on with our lives instead of needing to have something over the kid.
* No, I'm not inventing a new argument here. I am actually able to admit when I'm wrong with a point, and now I have been able to refine my larger point in light of my new realization.