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SkyTrooper

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Posts posted by SkyTrooper

  1. edit: I skimmed the Unabomber's manifesto a few years ago ago and dont remember thinking it was particularly crazy, there's reasonable points in there among the mistakes, like in most political texts. Its not a million miles away from crtical theory/situationism/Freud/Nietzsche/etc even if less nuanced. Lots of people have thought theres something fundamentally wrong with modern life, they just didnt go out and blow up buildilngs afterwards.

    I read it too. My assessment was that he was a crazy enviornmentalist. His ideas wern't any different than the ones I was learning in my Environmental Engineering class or from "an inconvenient truth", but I guess he just had more integrity (if you can call it that) in implementing his credo.

  2. I guess one can argue that his neo-luddite fanbase would view his actions as a catalyst for social solidarity.

    I'm always skeptical of any "needs" explanation of behavior since needs theory is a huge part of why modern psychology is such a trainwreck. Saying someone joined a group because of a herding instinct or something like that ignores the fact that people are motivated by ideas.

    I think the only common denominator amongst terrorists is murderous ideologies. Islamism, Enviornmentalism, etc. The terrorist organizations are the natural result of people wanting to be around others that share their values. Look at any individual terrorist in an organization, and I would bet that you will see the ideology came before he joined the group. For example, Islamic terrorists have years of indoctrination in mosques before going all-out and joining a terrorist organization.

  3. The thing is -- it's our system. There is no Galt's Gulch to kick back in while the rest of the world falls to pieces. Make no mistake -- if the US continues down this path to catastrophe it'll be our necks too.

    Ha that brings to mind Hank Rearden: “I regret that I shall be obliged to save your goddamned necks along with mine.”

  4. Now, you say you want what is 'most practical in a fight'. I can assure you MMA (and I suspect, though I don't know enough about it, Ju-Jitsu too) will not give you this. The fighting you see in the UFC is about as realistic as our economy is Capitalist - yeah, you can still fight on inspite of those restrictions, but compared to a real, unregulated street fighting, it isn't all that helpful (that said, you train half-assedly in any martial art, even Capoeira, you'll come out of 70% of fights better off).

    I have to disagree with anyone who says that Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu isn't one the most effective if not the most effective martial arts "in a real fight". For example, consider an effective jiu-jitsu move you can practice at 100% power with an opponent millions of times before having to use it in real life vs. some high-speed instant kill ninja move that you can only put to the test when you actually need it to survive (all jiu-jitsu moves can be practiced at 100% power), and remember that the vast majority of fights go to the ground (even without the help of a jiu-jitsu practitioner who is intentionally trying to get the fight to the ground where he will dominate). Some fighters will say they won't take the fight to the ground, but if you are taken by surprise, or if you are fighting an MMA or jiu-jitsu practitioner who has even a remote idea of what they are doing, you won't have a choice in this anyway. You might as well pick a technique where you can be comfortable on the ground. The US Army adopted a modified form of Gracie Jiu-Jitsu for combatives btw which is how I got in to it.. one of my first experiences was watching a 130 lb asian kid arm-bar a 250 lb guy and leave him moaning on the floor at the end of the fight. Of course "who has the best martial art" is an ongoing debate throughout the martial arts community which is in no way settled and you will need to make a first-handed assessment of this.

    Gracie Jiu-Jitsu

  5. I've met quite a few Objectivists lately who have or have had very successful relationships both with other Objectivists and with non-Objectivists. I'm curious to know how you met and how things progressed.

    Although I am interested in this for several reasons, my immediate purpose is that I am considering writing a response to the "Pickup Artists" and would like more concretes to draw from. The more detailed the better (i.e. where were you when you met? what was your initial conversation about? what did you find attractive in the person and what did they find attractive in you?) I'm aware that this topic is somewhat personal in nature, but I would definitely appreciate any help.

    (btw. I have already read Piekoff's "Love, Sex, and Romance" etc, so I'm not looking for theory, just your personal experiences.)

  6. Unless you are friends with the guy, you don't really have any kind of obligation to tell him. If you made it your mission to inform everyone who has been cheated on and not told about it you would have to close down shop for any other business. You should be more concerned with the character of your friend. Have you seen a pattern of dishonesty from her? If so, why would you want to be friends with a dishonest person?

    You have to understand the full context of the act, of course. Some situations, like Hank Rearden cheating on Lillian, strike me as entirely acceptable. If she see's it as a mistake, which you indicated, the proper response would be for her to condemn the improper behavior, make reparations (if possible), and work to understand the underlying psychological evasions that led her to engage in it... resolving never to make the same mistake again. Telling the guy that she betrayed his trust sounds like a step in the right direction.

  7. That's a pretty big change. If I'm not mistaken, ESTP is the "I am charming, witty, popular, and want to experience all things!" type. I can see changing one letter or two, but if people can go almost completely the opposite direction this may not be a "type" at all but rather a chosen form of expression which can be changed fairly easily with a level of self-awareness.

    Personality stikes me as a complex psychological question, but I think it's safe to say your personality type will depend heavily on your ideas and experiences. At the time I last took the test I was in what I think of as my "Machiavellian Period" where I generally considered most people to be irrational suckers provided by the universe for my amusement. I retained a lot of respect for reason, i.e. working hard in my engineering classes, but had a kind of Gail Wynard understanding of people. My readings at the time tended towards Machiavelli, Robert Greene, Nietzsche, et. al.

    Since that time I took philosophy classes, witnessed "new left" rallies, went through several relationships, completed college, attended a lot of military training, and watched peoples' ideas in action in the real world. Most importantly I read "The Fountainhead", re-read "Atlas Shrugged", and read basically the rest of Rand's fiction and non-fiction. This along with Piekoff's "Ominous Parallels" and "OPAR" had a huge impact on me. In short, my ideas evolved significantly.

    Not that I think that myers-briggs is the most accurate of tests, but saying I went from an ESTP "Promoter Artisan" with an adept ability to manipulate others to an INTJ "Mastermind Rational" adept at achieving clearly envisioned goals is a pretty fair assessment.

  8. Just to clarify, since banging my head against a wall doesn't add much, the Libertarian party has little to nothing in common with Objectivists. Ayn Rand liked Communists more than Libertarians. Basically all you have to do to call yourself a Libertarian is mutter "I like liberty" (without having to define liberty) and you're in. That's why there are anti-abortion libertarians, "anarcho-capitalist" libertarians, etc. As such, the Libertarian party is a serious threat to liberty.

    Also, I'm sure this has been mentioned several other times in this thread.

  9. I really appreciated the cityscapes too...beautiful, both Gotham and Hong Kong.

    I don't know if you realized this, but Gotham=Chicago. In Batman Begins there was some attempt to cover it up with CGI but this time it was almost all Chicago. The underground chase scenes were on Lower Wacker Drive, the boat scenes were on Lake Michigan, etc.

    To put in my $0.02, trivial film editing bs aside, the Dark Knight rocked.

  10. My boss gave me the following scenario on Friday and asked what I would do. I'm curious what your thoughts are.

    You're locked in a room with another person. That person has their back to you, claims he is assembling a gun, and when finished, he will kill you with it. From what you can see and hear, they seem to be telling the truth. You have a gun to defend yourself. Do you shoot them?

    My answer was, I'd shoot him first before he could even turn around, but then I followed with, that's a highly unlikely scenario. My boss corrected me by pointing out that this is the same situation Israel is in with Iran. Iran says it is building nuclear weapons, there is evidence that they are and they have flat out stated that they plan to destroy Israel. Do you think it's moral for Israel to initiate force in this situation, or has Iran already initiated force just by the threat that appears to be true?

    If it was me, he'd have two in the chest and one in the head before he got done putting the bolt together. Likewise with Ahmadinejad et. al.

  11. I think the criteria for armed resistance is best summed up here.

    We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.

    Striking is a different matter, and I think justification for a strike is when you decide that you are in a position where you can't work without supporting your own destroyers.

  12. The state tells me how to dress. :P

    Me too :D With clothing form follows function... which is why pilots look cool in Flight Suits, Soldiers look cool in ACUs and battle gear, bankers look cool in suits, and doctors look cool in scrubs. I disagree with others who say you should wear whatever. There is a whole science to fashion (e.g. if you're tall and thin you should wear light shirts), the ultimate goal of which is to look cool. Imagine Hank Rearden in a lame t-shirt or wearing a pink polo.. yeah right!

  13. If you can't justify that a human should live (based on objective facts), then how can you proceed past that question? You're assuming it's true based on your desires.

    You can choose not to live. If you want to live, you need morality. If you don't want to live, you can make your choices in any arbitrary way you feel like and you will die.

    The choice to live is not within the realm of ethics, but ethics is the science that will help you achieve that goal. Just like how you can't use math to decide whether to do a math problem but math will help you solve the problem. If you don't want to play the game then no one forces you to. Clearly you consider life worth living or you would have killed yourself by now.

  14. Why should humans choose to live? How do you know life should be the standard of morality and not death?

    Humans can choose to die. Examples of people working towards their own self-destruction are too numerous to need to list here. To choose life is the primary choice, and everything else in Objectivist ethics follows from that.

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