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David » Fri Jul 19, 2013 11:52 pm wrote:seemslikeadream » Fri Jul 19, 2013 11:42 pm wrote:it's in the link click on A police surveillance video
shitty video
so who broke his nose?
who cut the back of his head?
the loominati?
seemslikeadream » Fri Jul 19, 2013 11:57 pm wrote:David » Fri Jul 19, 2013 11:52 pm wrote:seemslikeadream » Fri Jul 19, 2013 11:42 pm wrote:it's in the link click on A police surveillance video
shitty video
so who broke his nose?
who cut the back of his head?
the loominati?
please pay attention....georgie the child killing liar did
Freitag » Fri Jul 19, 2013 8:37 pm wrote:C2W, I was going to reply with multiple quotes but it was a headache to properly nest all the quote tags.
You're right, there's no evidence TM attacked GZ. Neither is there any evidence of the reverse. Nobody knows who threw the first punch, who attacked who.
My point was, the evidence is consistent with GZ being attacked. He didn't have to change any part of his initial story because the evidence contradicted it. It all "supported" what he said (by not contradicting it - I think it was my laymanesque use of this word that you took such umbrage to.)
Murphy discusses in illuminating detail whether there is an "honorable emotional basis for retribution", taking up Nietzsche's warning that one should "mistrust all in whom the impulse to punish is powerful". For Nietzsche that impulse is driven, not by the requirements of justice and desert, but by base, hateful, and irrational passions. Murphy also rejects Michael Moore's claim that proper retributive judgments are based on guilt rather than the dark emotions exposed by Nietzsche. Murphy believes that our attributions of guilt are often misplaced and irrational, and might mislead us to demand severe punishment for conduct that is objectively trivial, or even unobjectionable. He rejects Moore's version of retributivism, which he calls "character retributivism", the view that wrongdoers are to be punished in proportion to their inner wickedness. He believes that once we think that we are competent to make negative judgments about a person's deep character, then we are psychologically inclined to treat him contemptuously and cruelly. He expresses skepticism about our capacity to make reliable judgments about the deep character of criminals. He also raises the objection that some who make confident judgments about the deep character of wrongdoers have the potential for evil within themselves, and have been lucky because of favorable social circumstances to avoid legal and moral wrongdoing.
seemslikeadream » 20 Jul 2013 15:49 wrote:OK then at least it is acknowledged that David said a very unsavory thing to me...I've deleted my "big" picture so not to offend anyone here ...in the future I will only post little ones with lots of words....lots of words posts seem to go over big here even when they are pretty repetitious and don't convey a damn thing
Did you even see page 33? Talk about making things difficult a la 4chan![]()
I just see that whole page as a parade of black and white photos...a word salad with lots of dressing.... Babushka Semenov dolls..... but beauty is in the eye of the beholder
I'd take 2 pics over that whole page anytime but whatever
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