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Joe Hillshoist » Mon May 08, 2023 9:34 pm wrote:I agree. We should burn the homeless and mentally ill. The poor should be next.
Frankly if you fall thru the cracks you don't deserve to live anyway and maybe should be hunted on tv for sport and the entertainment of the laptop classes.
We could charge people to take part in the hunts and a small fee like pay er view sport for spectators and that way people who fail to serve the economy properly won't be a drag on economic growth anymore.
Belligerent Savant » Tue May 09, 2023 12:37 am wrote:.
The fact you consistently employ this oftentimes weak and lazy "the messenger is corrupt, therefore the message is corrupt" form of argumentation displays only your lack of intellectual/investigative rigor.
stickdog99 » Tue May 09, 2023 3:43 pm wrote:Swaths of San Francisco have become fentanyl addict hellholes.
Any potential solutions to this issue?
Belligerent Savant » Tue May 09, 2023 3:58 pm wrote:Joe Hillshoist » Mon May 08, 2023 9:34 pm wrote:I agree. We should burn the homeless and mentally ill. The poor should be next.
Frankly if you fall thru the cracks you don't deserve to live anyway and maybe should be hunted on tv for sport and the entertainment of the laptop classes.
We could charge people to take part in the hunts and a small fee like pay er view sport for spectators and that way people who fail to serve the economy properly won't be a drag on economic growth anymore.
No idea where you got the above absurdist commentary from anything I typed in my prior comments.
Until I reached my 30s, I lived my entire life in the NYC area, in a middle class neighborhood. I'm first generation American; my parents moved to the U.S. with less than $500 in their pockets after they got married. As I got older, I took the NYC subway regularly to get to high school; throughout my teen years and into early adulthood, I rode the subways routinely to get to work (or to visit the city for a variety of reasons).
I was mugged in the subways numerous times, starting in my teens. I've had to defend myself, physically, numerous times (in the subways and elsewhere). I have a few friends and associates that were, in turns, quite poor -- even homeless for periods of times.
No one here is going to put words in my mouth on topics like this without me having something to say about it.
Very few of you (other than JackRiddler, of those that still visit this forum) have ever lived in NYC (or a similar city like SanFran [e.g., stickdog]), do I have that right?
While anyone can opine on any given topic for any given reason, without the lived experience your perspective will be limited.
Belligerent Savant » 09 May 2023 23:58 wrote:Joe Hillshoist » Mon May 08, 2023 9:34 pm wrote:I agree. We should burn the homeless and mentally ill. The poor should be next.
Frankly if you fall thru the cracks you don't deserve to live anyway and maybe should be hunted on tv for sport and the entertainment of the laptop classes.
We could charge people to take part in the hunts and a small fee like pay er view sport for spectators and that way people who fail to serve the economy properly won't be a drag on economic growth anymore.
No idea where you got the above absurdist commentary from anything I typed in my prior comments.
Until I reached my 30s, I lived my entire life in the NYC area, in a middle class neighborhood. I'm first generation American; my parents moved to the U.S. with less than $500 in their pockets after they got married. As I got older, I took the NYC subway regularly to get to high school; throughout my teen years and into early adulthood, I rode the subways routinely to get to work (or to visit the city for a variety of reasons).
I was mugged in the subways numerous times, starting in my teens. I've had to defend myself, physically, numerous times (in the subways and elsewhere). I have a few friends and associates that were, in turns, quite poor -- even homeless for periods of times.
No one here is going to put words in my mouth on topics like this without me having something to say about it.
Very few of you (other than JackRiddler, of those that still visit this forum) have ever lived in NYC (or a similar city like SanFran [e.g., stickdog]), do I have that right?
While anyone can opine on any given topic for any given reason, without the lived experience your perspective will be limited.
stickdog99 » Tue May 09, 2023 9:43 am wrote:Swaths of San Francisco have become fentanyl addict hellholes.
Any potential solutions to this issue?
Belligerent Savant » Wed May 10, 2023 7:27 pm wrote:ok -- noted, Re: the clarification.
The article that suggests "killing the crazies" -- can you or Evil cite where it suggests this, specifically? I may well have missed it or otherwise misread it.
I think we all agree that sentiment* is being 'nudged' and at least to a degree, manipulated, to (once again) garner perpetual division among the commoners.
*while not applicable in this scenario, there are also indicators that certain events are largely manufactured by certain intel entities to sow discord/acts of violence, etc. (in addition to acts of astroturfing and/or infiltrating non-profit/protest orgs to poison wells, etc... variations of COINTELPRO, all discussed at length here in the RI archives).
Belligerent Savant » 11 May 2023 06:22 wrote:.
Liminal touched on some great observations above, but I believe there are multiple points of failure* in play leading to current circumstances (as alluded by Liminal).
* "failure" is way too generous a descriptor, as it implies attempt to do good.
Lack of compassion/empathy for others was actively, overtly and brazenly incentivized/advocated by govts/health orgs worldwide — some entities were more egregious than others — over the last few years. Treating humans as burdens/disease vectors/objects to be discarded (or euthanized: see Canada) is now becoming more openly endorsed by authorities/bureaucrats. Unfortunately more than a fair amount of those that self-identify as ‘leftists’/‘progressives’ actively participated in sentiment/rhetoric like this, so very few on either end of establishment Left/Right have the moral high ground anymore.
More policing in and of itself is not an issue, but the directives, procedures and M.O. of police forces, as handed down by those high up the chains, often exacerbate problems.
Mass redistribution of wealth and the incremental added hurdles/difficulties in ‘upward mobility’ for the average citizen all compound these problems. There was a time when a middle-class worker was able to afford living in NYC (up until the mid 80s or so). Now the middle classes are struggling to get by even outside expensive urban centers.
Barely scratching the surface with these examples, of course.
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