NAACP: Vick Shouldn't Be Banned

[quote name='camoor']You're making the critical flaw of assuming that all lawyers base their arguements on "fact" and "scientific evidence".

From the sophists onward through history, there have been lawyers who ignore objective reality and instead construct their arguements based around "truthiness".[/quote]

QFT!!! Show me some facts that support your assertion, instead of the "truthiness" you extrapolated from recidivism. :applause: You STILL have yet to provide any probative stats or data and havent supplied anything from "objective reality", I on the other hand, based my assertion (that deterrence exists) almost solely on reality, both my subjective reality and commonly accepted objective reality. Also it is worth repeating that you also proved my point for me earlier: Harsher penalties (your data) + decreased crime (your data) = deterrence. Again for your future reference, take a tip from the professionally trained: Don't give your opponent his ammunition.

Hilarious Camoor!
 
[quote name='guinaevere']Yup. And you know what? I'd pay double for season tickets to see a team that wasn't manned by thugs and reprobates.[/quote]
I don't know about double, but I sure talked alotta trash when I lived in Portland and the Trailblazers had their "all-felon" starting lineup. I agree.

Having said that, without a rule like that in place it becomes an arbitrary decision by the league. If they want to pass and enforce that rule, I'm all for it, but there's isn't one now and Vick isn't special in that regard. That's all I'm sayin.

[quote name='guinaevere']Simply put, Vick screwed up. Read the indictments and tell me where his race has anything to do with the crime.[/quote]
Um, that's my point too. Race was brought up by a host of others first.
 
[quote name='pittpizza']QFT!!! Show me some facts that support your assertion, instead of the "truthiness" you extrapolated from recidivism. :applause: You STILL have yet to provide any probative stats or data and havent supplied anything from "objective reality", I on the other hand, based my assertion (that deterrence exists) almost solely on reality, both my subjective reality and commonly accepted objective reality. Also it is worth repeating that you also proved my point for me earlier: Harsher penalties (your data) + decreased crime (your data) = deterrence. Again for your future reference, take a tip from the professionally trained: Don't give your opponent his ammunition.

Hilarious Camoor![/quote]

I think you are getting people confused. I am not the guy who is painstakingly researching and digging up hard evidence in response to your claims based on personal experience and what makes sense to you.

I was just commenting on the flawed nature of your arguementative style. I wouldn't have minded if you were simply a member of the debate club, but you also assert that you are a philosopher and that I cannot abide.

You are nothing more then an simple empiricist. Any Joe Sixpack can sit around and talk about what things look like from his viewpoint and how he feels the country should work - this does not involve thought, research, or any form of logic, it is not philosophy.
 
[quote name='speedracer']Having said that, without a rule like that in place it becomes an arbitrary decision by the league. If they want to pass and enforce that rule, I'm all for it, but there's isn't one now and Vick isn't special in that regard. That's all I'm sayin.[/quote]With you on that.

And to the thug line-up issue... when I used to go see my ex play it would rile me no end for the blood thirst of the crowd all dying o see a fight break out. Yeah, it was hockey and there's a definate stigma to that particular career, but to me the games should have been stick and puck skills.

Same with all pro sports today. You feed to the lower common denominator and it should be no surprize to anyone what the results are.


Um, that's my point too.
Rock on.
 
fuck any type of Racism in all. I dont even see color, I really dont see what the big deal is.

You kill fucking animals, you shouldnt have some dumbass skin color protection cult backing your ass up. The NAACP is a joke, slavery has been dead for over a 100 years and racism at this point is really just rediculous. Get over it people.
 
[quote name='Mookyjooky']

You kill fucking animals, you shouldnt have some dumbass skin color protection cult backing your ass up. Get over it people.[/QUOTE]

Thats sig worthy Mooky.
 
I know you weren't referring to me Cam, I was just conclusively demonstrating that Myke relied on "truthiness" more than I have. See my support numbered 1-5 supra.

And are you saying that empiricism isnt philosophy? I think Bacon, Locke, Hume, Berkeley, and Mill would disagree with you, but what do I know I've only studied it for four years.

I do love the Daily Show and the Colbert Report, namely because (you could probably tell) I enjoy sarcasm and am kind of a sarcastic guy. So I got a kick out of that truthiness rant.

Back on topic, and to join the current discussion, I don't think for a second that Vick was prosecuted because of his race. I do think that racism is prevalent in America and is wrong, but this has nothing to do with stupid ass Michael Vick's situation.
 
[quote name='pittpizza']I know you weren't referring to me Cam, I was just conclusively demonstrating that Myke relied on "truthiness" more than I have. See my support numbered 1-5 supra.

And are you saying that empiricism isnt philosophy? I think Bacon, Locke, Hume, Berkeley, and Mill would disagree with you, but what do I know I've only studied it for four years.

I do love the Daily Show and the Colbert Report, namely because (you could probably tell) I enjoy sarcasm and am kind of a sarcastic guy. So I got a kick out of that truthiness rant.

Back on topic, and to join the current discussion, I don't think for a second that Vick was prosecuted because of his race. I do think that racism is prevalent in America and is wrong, but this has nothing to do with stupid ass Michael Vick's situation.[/quote]

In some sense we are all empiricists (can't help it...). It's all a matter of degrees. I labelled you as a simple empiricist, because you haven't sought any data on the issue beyond your own myopic viewpoint, you haven't engaged your frontal cortex and challenged your first impressions of the situation, and the arguements you have raised have relied more on emotion then reason.

You're like a medieval astronomer refusing to accept Copernicus's theory that the earth revolves around the sun, because it's obvious that everything must revolve around you and your viewpoint.
 
[quote name='camoor'] we are all empiricists .[/quote]

There ya go, way to make an admission.

You also stated that in my "arguements you have raised have relied more on emotion then reason." I am not emotionally attached to the issue of deterrence. I have nothing vested in it, nor is it really an emotionally charged topic of debate. All of my arguments have been based in reason, go back and look at them and you will see. They are based on my experience, subjective and objective reasoning, the USSC, Myke's data (harsher punishment resulted in lower crime rates), my education (both undergraduate and law school) in coursework dealing with the law and crime, and various other sources, non of which have anything to do with emotion.

As to your medevil analogy, you have the parties switched. My view (the one generally accepted by the legal community, our elected legislatures, the US Supreme Court, and incidentally the three Pa. Superior Court justices which I happen to be clerking for) would be akin to that of Copernicus'; the one challenging it would be the myopic astronomer. And welcome to the party!
 
[quote name='pittpizza']There ya go, way to make an admission.

You also stated that in my "arguements you have raised have relied more on emotion then reason." I am not emotionally attached to the issue of deterrence. I have nothing vested in it, nor is it really an emotionally charged topic of debate. All of my arguments have been based in reason, go back and look at them and you will see. They are based on my experience, subjective and objective reasoning, the USSC, Myke's data (harsher punishment resulted in lower crime rates), my education (both undergraduate and law school) in coursework dealing with the law and crime, and various other sources, non of which have anything to do with emotion.[/quote]

Let's deal with the "it makes sense" analogy. Although I still insist (and you've agreed) that you're seeing a social pattern of behavior and imposed an explanation on it that you have not proven (logical fallacy of affirming the consequent), you start with a naive generalization that you have not proven. You made a claim, early on, that you yourself are proof deterrence works because there are *TONS* of crimes you would commit if you could get away with them. You're right about yourself, at the very least (god help you if you aren't), but you're incorrect in assuming that the majority of Americans would do the same thing. You're making an unproven claim by suggesting that most Americans would commit crimes, given the opportunity.

Now, this all falls into your "it makes sense, so it must be true and I don't need no stinkin' evidence" claim that deterrence works (that ol' Beccarian chestnut). As I pointed out earlier, there are a number of claims that can be made that "make sense." The defiance response "makes sense" (harsher punishments lead to greater crime because people rebel against what they perceive as an unfair state). What about religiosity? Americans are, on the whole, rather religious folk - so who's to say that Americans are repressed would-be criminals (your deterrence claim), and that they aren't good, religious, do-unto-others types who would not succumb to the temptation to commit a crime? That "makes sense" too.

Ultimately, as for deterrence, it's a *theory* of crime. And theories are never proven - the ones that last the longest are the ones that have the most difficult time being disproven. If I have a theory that crime occurs because people don't watch enough "Jeopardy!", and find no correlation between criminality and Jeopardy watching, my theory won't last long. Deterrence is lucky that, it's somehow lasted this long, not as a result of supporting evidence, but because it's such a romantic framework for politicians to use (see my Pee-Wee analogy again).

Now, as for the "harsher punishments resulted in lower crime rates," I said nothing of the sort. That's deterrence. Bruce Western's phenomenal book, "Punishment and Inequality in America," is a well-written and thoroughly researched statistically book that reports findings attributing increased punishment rates and prison spending ($52Billion) account for 1.5% of the crime drop in the 1990's (so, about 13-15% of the overall 10-12% decline). Other factors accounted for the remainder (that is, the majority) of the decline.

Hell, go grab a copy of Levitt and Dubner's piece of shit attempt at sociology, "Freakonomics." The first chapter makes an ultimately poorly proven, but more plausible than the pap you're trying to pass off as proof, claim that the passage of Roe v. Wade in 1973 accounted for the crime decline in the early 1990's (hypothesizing that poor and minority children (i.e., those most crime prone) were disproprtionately aborted, leading to a smaller pool of would-be criminals at age 18 (which they would have been starting in 1991).

Now, as for your claims about the USSC, give me the citation. You couldn't even retain, properly, the 4 guiding theories of corrections, and you have a limited notion of what "data" and "proof" are, so I'm very curious why you're still hiding behind court opinion (particularly given the internal contentiousness of that court). I'm curious where they said deterrence works, and how they use it for proof.

As this regards Vick, this is ultimately based on some sort of magna carta nonsense that there is a deterrent effect of celebrity punishment. Which is absurd, because deterrence is, at a theoretical level, premised upon the collective populace agreeing that a punishment is so severe so as to make even thinking about committing that crime unpleasant. Now, tell me *ONE SINGLE CELEBRITY* who has been publicly punished that they public *perceived* to have received a deserving and/or harsh sentence? Did the public think Paris Hilton was treated harshly? Those in the Bush Administration responsible for leaking Valerie Wilson's name and identity to Bob Novak? Those responsible for violating FISA? OJ Simpson? Robert Blake? Lindsay Lohan? Nicole Ritchie? Name me a single celebrity who has received a sentence that the public thought was either just or too harsh. Mel Gibson?

Your whole theory is premised on the fallacy that the public *can* view celebrity punishments as too harsh or just right. The public *fumed* that Paris Hilton got off easy, despite the LA Times' own research discovering that she served more jail time than 85% of people who had committed the same sequence of crimes she had.

As to your medevil analogy, you have the parties switched. My view (the one generally accepted by the legal community, our elected legislatures, the US Supreme Court, and incidentally the three Pa. Superior Court justices which I happen to be clerking for) would be akin to that of Copernicus'; the one challenging it would be the myopic astronomer. And welcome to the party!

Yeah. Sure. Nobody supports punitiveness anymore; all the politicians are getting elected on trying to be nicer and nicer to criminals and prisoners. :rofl: Cut me the "I'm the marginalized one" crap. You're just as misinformed as the majority of the public.
 
[quote name='mykevermin']Deterrence is lucky that, it's somehow lasted this long[/QUOTE]

Oh now you want to admit it exists!? I guess I dont need to make a response since you just defeated yourself. Next time you choose to bout with the big boys son, choose your words more carefully!

Owned!
 
As a *theory* of corrections it exists, unlike, say, the ol' demonic perspective (which existed in such measures as "BURN THE WITCH!!!!!"). Learn to read, for fuck's sake; if you failed the bar exam, I'll know why.

EDIT: Adding pitt's last post in case he decides to edit it, so as to avoid looking like any more of a nitwit:

[quote name='pittpizza']Oh now you want to admit it exists!? I guess I dont need to make a response since you just defeated yourself. Next time you choose to bout with the big boys son, choose your words more carefully!

Owned![/QUOTE]
 
Not only as a theory of deterrence. Some people may be deterred when they see the length of time Vick spends in jail and what it does to his life.

Maybe not those already dogfighting, but at least those who may in teh future.

Everytime I am speeding and pass a cop, I slow down, not just me, everybody! I dont have any data from that other than COMMON SENSE and EXPERIENCE! IS that not deterrence? We slow down because we dont want to get a ticket. We are deterred from speeding because we dont want to get a ticket.

You made me break my own rule about not researching these message board debates! I hope your're happy I am researching supreme court precedent for fucking FUN!!!

EDIT: Hey look at that, I figured out how to insert the fucking fuck button.
 
every dog in the world should get to bite his nuts once. but only dogs with dark fur.
 
[quote name='pittpizza']Not only as a theory of deterrence. Some people may be deterred when they see the length of time Vick spends in jail and what it does to his life.

Maybe not those already dogfighting, but at least those who may in teh future.

Everytime I am speeding and pass a cop, I slow down, not just me, everybody! I dont have any data from that other than COMMON SENSE and EXPERIENCE! IS that not deterrence? We slow down because we dont want to get a ticket. We are deterred from speeding because we dont want to get a ticket.[/QUOTE]

Isn't that kind of a poor example? You only slowed down when you were in immediate danger of being pulled over and ticketed. You were still speeding. The example other people set by getting pulled over didn't actually deter you from the crime whatsoever; you just tried harder not to be caught.
 
[quote name='Apossum']every dog in the world should get to bite his nuts once. but only dogs with dark fur.[/QUOTE]

I have two black and white Boston terriers. Do they get half a bite each or one good bite from one representative? Or is this a case where any percentage of black makes the entire dog black for statistical purposes? I'm in need of clarification here.
 
[quote name='trq']Isn't that kind of a poor example? You only slowed down when you were in immediate danger of being pulled over and ticketed. You were still speeding. The example other people set by getting pulled over didn't actually deter you from the crime whatsoever; you just tried harder not to be caught.[/quote]

Yeah this is true. It isn't a great example, but it does show that I was deterred from speeding, if only momentarily, by the visible threat of enforcement. It shows deterrence works.
The counterargument to this point is that deterrence doesn't work because I will just continue right on speeding a few minutes past the visible threat of enforcement. WHile this may be and is very likely true, that does not mean that I was not at least momentarily deterred from speeding.

My original assertion was only that Vick's prosecution will act as this visible threat of enforcement, and that this may cause people to think twice about dogfighting, or more likely, prevent those that have never done it from starting.
 
[quote name='MrBadExample']I have two black and white Boston terriers. Do they get half a bite each or one good bite from one representative? Or is this a case where any percentage of black makes the entire dog black for statistical purposes? I'm in need of clarification here.[/QUOTE]

If your dogs are 3/5 black, they get to bite his nuts. If they're more than 2/5 white, no biting for them.

Who saw whut I did thar?

Alas, out of my three dogs, only one is more than 3/5ths black and she's an adopted Miniature Pincher. At under 8 lbs, I don't know how much damage she could do.

EDIT - Almost forgot. Should Vick be permanently banned from applying for jobs for the rest of his life? No. Is playing in the NFL someone's right just because they happen to be good at football? Also no.
 
[quote name='Halo05']EDIT - Almost forgot. Should Vick be permanently banned from applying for jobs for the rest of his life? No. Is playing in the NFL someone's right just because they happen to be good at football? Also no.[/quote]

Precisely.
 
[quote name='MrBadExample']I have two black and white Boston terriers. Do they get half a bite each or one good bite from one representative? Or is this a case where any percentage of black makes the entire dog black for statistical purposes? I'm in need of clarification here.[/QUOTE]

I have one, but he's 40lbs (and proportionate, too). He will get to join in, right?
 
I had a 160 lbs Neopolitan Mastiff. He was grey so where does he fit in on the doggy race scale?

Glad to see we could get off of this deterrence bullshit and onto more serious matters. :lol:
 
Vick shouldn't get any jail time. Dogs are fucking dogs. Yes it's reprehensible to mistreat and/or kill dogs, but THEY'RE fuckING DOGS, not people. Animal cruelty laws are bullshit and should be abolished.

We buy dogs, sell dogs, own dogs - they're property. We should be able to do whatever we want with our own property. That's something that's too scary for all you so-called "liberals" who supposedly believe in freedom, or liber-ty.
 
[quote name='bmulligan']Vick shouldn't get any jail time. Dogs are fucking dogs. Yes it's reprehensible to mistreat and/or kill dogs, but THEY'RE fuckING DOGS, not people. Animal cruelty laws are bullshit and should be abolished.

We buy dogs, sell dogs, own dogs - they're property. We should be able to do whatever we want with our own property. That's something that's too scary for all you so-called "liberals" who supposedly believe in freedom, or liber-ty.[/quote]

People buy babies too (if you don't believe me, just look up how much an adoption costs)

If you want to buy a PS3 and then smash it with a hammer, then that's your right. But a dog is a living creature, you can't treat it like you would an inanimate object.

That having been said, I don't see that we should have special laws for horses and dogs that don't apply to other vertebrae. For example, people should not be legally prohibited to humanely raise and then eat these animals.
 
[quote name='bmulligan']Vick shouldn't get any jail time. Dogs are fucking dogs. Yes it's reprehensible to mistreat and/or kill dogs, but THEY'RE fuckING DOGS, not people. Animal cruelty laws are bullshit and should be abolished.

We buy dogs, sell dogs, own dogs - they're property. We should be able to do whatever we want with our own property. That's something that's too scary for all you so-called "liberals" who supposedly believe in freedom, or liber-ty.[/quote]

It seems inconsistent to me to say that mistreating/killing dogs is reprehensible and yet people who do so shouldnt be punished. I guess your point is that it ought to be only morally wrong and not legally wrong.

You raise an interesting point--that is--why do we afford some species protections when not others? Because we eat the other species? Because the other species are not cute and cuddly? Because the other species are not "mans best friend"? Perhaps its because the other species never saved Timmy? Or maybe the other species are not as fun to have sex with? \\:D/ Its an interesting question considering why humans have such affection for some species and indifference towards others? Why are some animals pets and others only treated as food or worse?

Either way, disregarding the "ought"; the "is" is that it is illegal and violates state and federal laws because the people of this democracty through proxy have decided that it should be criminal. Its fair to say that the majority of Americans find this conduct morally wrong and the law reflects that view.

Replace the word "dogs" in your last paragraph with "slaves" and you sound like a plantation owner. This may be an unfair comparison because one is dealign with humans and the other with animals but, at the time, slaves were thought of as animals.

I don't think leftists have drowning K9s in mind when they argue for liberty; just my opinion.
 
[quote name='bmulligan']Vick shouldn't get any jail time. Dogs are fucking dogs. Yes it's reprehensible to mistreat and/or kill dogs, but THEY'RE fuckING DOGS, not people. Animal cruelty laws are bullshit and should be abolished.

We buy dogs, sell dogs, own dogs - they're property. We should be able to do whatever we want with our own property. That's something that's too scary for all you so-called "liberals" who supposedly believe in freedom, or liber-ty.[/QUOTE]

Just wait for the hammer to drop, hombre. After all, Rick Santorum surely was right when he predicted that homosexual marriage would lead to legalized bestiality.

It won't be long before you can fuck or gut your lil' pretty pets right in public. And that, of course, is GOD'S America, where you're free to do what you want.

HistoryoftheFlag.jpg
 
[quote name='camoor']Did you somehow miss the last three pages?[/QUOTE]

That's what I was referring to. That's also why I unsubscribed.
 
[quote name='camoor']People buy babies too (if you don't believe me, just look up how much an adoption costs)[/quote]

You don't buy a title to a baby, they are human beings and have rights. Adoption payments are for services, not the baby itself. Dogs do not and should not have rights like human beings do. The fact that you equate an adoption with the purchase of any other inanimate object or animal shows you are unqualified to be a moral compass on this issue.

If you want to buy a PS3 and then smash it with a hammer, then that's your right. But a dog is a living creature, you can't treat it like you would an inanimate object.

Then you need to extend protection of rights to dogs and other cute creatures you decide are worthy of salvation. Good luck getting chicken and cow rights amended to the constitution. Cute baby kittens have a good chance, though.

That having been said, I don't see that we should have special laws for horses and dogs that don't apply to other vertebrae. For example, people should not be legally prohibited to humanely raise and then eat these animals.

An inherent contradiction of your position is usually expected from you, camoor. I just didn't expect it so soon, or in the same post. You can't have your cake and eat it too. Either you believe all animals have life rights or none of them do - which is it ? It's okay to eat dogs if the butcher is a nice person? Emotional attachment and sentimentality as rational justification makes a derisory argument.
 
[quote name='bmulligan']Good luck getting chicken and cow rights amended to the constitution.[/QUOTE]

Cockfighting is only legal in three states (NM, LA, OK). As for cowfighting, well...;)

Moreover, your "cute animals only" argument is a red herring fueled by your misinformation, and driven by your absurdist "freedom" absolutism, which leads one to think you're either (1) a fool, (2) a hypocrite who can't identify an objective, tangible point at which government is necessary, (3) an anarchist in denial (or disguise as a "small gov't republican), or (4) some combination of the three.

All states (and Puerto Rico) have animal cruelty laws, the VAST majority of which spell out that it applies to all animals. The most lenient state, by far, is North Dakota, for which convicted acts of cruelty are Class A misdemeanors.

In other words: stuff it. You're wrong. (here comes the obligatory "well, it's not in the constituuuuuuuuu-shun!, so it's not really important, valid, or enforceable" absurdity in the form of a reasoned response).
 
[quote name='bmulligan']You don't buy a title to a baby, they are human beings and have rights. Adoption payments are for services, not the baby itself. Dogs do not and should not have rights like human beings do. The fact that you equate an adoption with the purchase of any other inanimate object or animal shows you are unqualified to be a moral compass on this issue.



Then you need to extend protection of rights to dogs and other cute creatures you decide are worthy of salvation. Good luck getting chicken and cow rights amended to the constitution. Cute baby kittens have a good chance, though.



An inherent contradiction of your position is usually expected from you, camoor. I just didn't expect it so soon, or in the same post. You can't have your cake and eat it too. Either you believe all animals have life rights or none of them do - which is it ? It's okay to eat dogs if the butcher is a nice person? Emotional attachment and sentimentality as rational justification makes a derisory argument.[/quote]

I feel myself getting sucked back into the vortex of trying to explain utilitarianism to you. :)

Can we agree that a flea is not as sentient as a dolphin? Surely there can be a sliding scale, some area of gray on this issue (or is your world so black-and-white all the time?)

I would agree with you that people are typically proponents of legal protection for animals as a result of emotions (or dogma) instead of reason. But surely there is some rational basis for legally codifying punishment against those who would torture a monkey or a dog that we would not extend to the errant child who pulls the wings off a fly. Regarding poor animal treatment, I think that the amount of damage caused, the amount of suffering and/or torture inflicted, and the animal's ability to percieve such pain should be quantified in the legal system in some manner.
 
This is an interesting topic of discussion.

Bmulls wants to say that if you afford rights to one animal then you need to give the same to all animals. Does that include insects? Coral is technically in the "animal kingdom"/mushrooms/plants?

Camoor suggest a sliding scale. Some animals have rights but others dont. People dont get prosecuted for frying ants with magnifying glasses or pullng the wings off of a fly.

I have to think that Camoor's theory (the one that exists under the current law) is the proper one IMO. Yes, maybe it is because some are cute or cuddly or display humanistic traits like affection. Maybe its because they dont taste good or because of western culture or (very likely) some combination of all these factors.

I do think that animals have SOME rights, the most important of which is to be free from torture.

Additionally, isnt it true that usual path for psychopaths and serial killers begins with animals and then moves on to humans. Maybe killing real live animals "desensitizes" them to killing in the first place.
 
[quote name='pittpizza']This is an interesting topic of discussion.

Bmulls wants to say that if you afford rights to one animal then you need to give the same to all animals. Does that include insects? Coral is technically in the "animal kingdom"/mushrooms/plants?

Camoor suggest a sliding scale. Some animals have rights but others dont. People dont get prosecuted for frying ants with magnifying glasses or pullng the wings off of a fly.

I have to think that Camoor's theory (the one that exists under the current law) is the proper one IMO. Yes, maybe it is because some are cute or cuddly or display humanistic traits like affection. Maybe its because they dont taste good or because of western culture or (very likely) some combination of all these factors.

I do think that animals have SOME rights, the most important of which is to be free from torture.

Additionally, isnt it true that usual path for psychopaths and serial killers begins with animals and then moves on to humans. Maybe killing real live animals "desensitizes" them to killing in the first place.[/quote]

I agree that animals do have some rights. Torturing or killing animals is pretty messsed up and disturbing imo.

I don't think a person killing a dog is as serious as killing a human being, but what kind of person kills animals like that? It probably is part of a bigger problem.
 
[quote name='mykevermin']Cockfighting is only legal in three states (NM, LA, OK). As for cowfighting, well...;)

Moreover, your "cute animals only" argument is a red herring fueled by your misinformation, and driven by your absurdist "freedom" absolutism, which leads one to think you're either (1) a fool, (2) a hypocrite who can't identify an objective, tangible point at which government is necessary, (3) an anarchist in denial (or disguise as a "small gov't republican), or (4) some combination of the three.

All states (and Puerto Rico) have animal cruelty laws, the VAST majority of which spell out that it applies to all animals. The most lenient state, by far, is North Dakota, for which convicted acts of cruelty are Class A misdemeanors.

In other words: stuff it. You're wrong. (here comes the obligatory "well, it's not in the constituuuuuuuuu-shun!, so it's not really important, valid, or enforceable" absurdity in the form of a reasoned response).[/QUOTE]

Ah, yes. I see you haven't had the opportunity for free-form hyperbole in a while. Yes, I must be an anarchist...or at least a hypocrite for demanding moral consistency for an absurd and undefinable bill of animal rights.

That unfocused unalienable projection from the untrained lens, muddling upside down and backwards on the leftists' cranial cavity. Had it passed through actual gray matter, the idea might have been palpable, or determinable. "Only sentients need apply" were the few words decipherable. Unfortunately, for most of the animal kingdom, they aren't fuzzy or evolved enough to warrant inclusion into the meat puppet champagne room. Sorry Charlie, you can't learn deduction or write words worthy of Shakspeare so it would be better if your mother had not borne thee. Go thy ways to a cannery instead. And conscience was spared to breed more sinners.
 
[quote name='bmulligan']Ah, yes. I see you haven't had the opportunity for free-form hyperbole in a while. Yes, I must be an anarchist...or at least a hypocrite for demanding moral consistency for an absurd and undefinable bill of animal rights.

That unfocused unalienable projection from the untrained lens, muddling upside down and backwards on the leftists' cranial cavity. Had it passed through actual gray matter, the idea might have been palpable, or determinable. "Only sentients need apply" were the few words decipherable. Unfortunately, for most of the animal kingdom, they aren't fuzzy or evolved enough to warrant inclusion into the meat puppet champagne room. Sorry Charlie, you can't learn deduction or write words worthy of Shakspeare so it would be better if your mother had not borne thee. Go thy ways to a cannery instead. And conscience was spared to breed more sinners.[/QUOTE]

What the fuck are you talking about?

Just because we can kill things, it's ok? Just because they can't talk back, it's ok?

That's a fucked up line of thinking, if you could even call it that.
 
You claim that animal rights are "absurd and undefinable" but you're wrong. They are written in state laws; some things are legal, other things are illegal. The actual criminal code probably even has a "definitions" section.

Your second paragraph was just an indiscernable jumbled mess of failed metaphors and poor reading comprehension. That is, at least if it was intended as a response to the previous posts.

Yeah Bmulls you may have a big vocabulary but it isnt helping you support your untenable/unpopular position. Are you arguing in favor of the non-fuzzy animals or against the special treatment of the fuzzy ones or are you just pissed off at the inconsistent treatment, and if so, why? I'm not even sure what your position is. Do you think ANY animals ought to have ANY rights at all? How about just to be free from "torture" whatever that is (I do not mean the bush administration's definition; rather any reasonable one).
 
[quote name='pittpizza']You claim that animal rights are "absurd and undefinable" but you're wrong. They are written in state laws; some things are legal, other things are illegal. The actual criminal code probably even has a "definitions" section.
[/QUOTE]

No, you don't get it. You're about as absorbent as a brick. But at least bricks are porous and in comparison, Cocheese has the density of a lead balloon.

You can write anything into a law and define whatever you want to. But my post wasn't about any piece of legislature - it was about the animal rights furburgers here who can't be consistent in their philosophy of who gets killed for food and who warrants a life pass. Even in any state law there's no moral consistency giving rights to certain animals and exempting others.
 
[quote name='bmulligan']No, you don't get it. You're about as absorbent as a brick. But at least bricks are porous and in comparison, Cocheese has the density of a lead balloon.
[/QUOTE]

As far as insults go, you're going to have to do better than that.

And I'm fairly confident you aren't allowed to kill dogs in ANY state for the fun of it.
 
[quote name='bmulligan'] my post wasn't about any piece of legislature - it was about the animal rights furburgers here who can't be consistent in their philosophy of who gets killed for food and who warrants a life pass. Even in any state law there's no moral consistency giving rights to certain animals and exempting others.[/quote]

It sounds like you think killing some animals for food and not others is wrong.
It also seems like you think that Vick was killing dogs for food, (this is, in fact, the original context for our discussion).

If you're looking for consistency in state law or life in general for that matter you are going to be disappointed. I personally think cows, chickens, elk, deer, fish, snails, shellfish, etc. can and should be killed for food; they're delicious. On the other hand, I do not want to eat cats or dogs or hampsters or rats or other things that I have been indoctrinated to dislike by our culture. Culture is culture and alot of it doesnt make sense. This is what makes us human, we do silly ass shit that really has no real purpose in a survival sense just because we want to fit in and be a member of humanity.

Dogs may be delicious but that is not why Vick killed them or made them fight. The fighting and the gambling on the fights was the impetus of the enterprise (sorry to use legalisms again but at least this isnt latin;) ). This is consistently viewed as morally wrong across all states and I would guess across MOST (not all) of the world. This gets back to culture.

So please answer my original questions about what your specific problem is with? Culture? Inconsistency (lifes not fiar!)?

EDIT: Re-posting my original questions.

"Are you arguing in favor of the non-fuzzy animals or against the special treatment of the fuzzy ones or are you just pissed off at the inconsistent treatment, and if so, why? I'm not even sure what your position is. Do you think ANY animals ought to have ANY rights at all? How about just to be free from "torture" whatever that is (I do not mean the bush administration's definition; rather any reasonable one)."
 
[quote name='bmulligan']No, you don't get it. You're about as absorbent as a brick. But at least bricks are porous and in comparison, Cocheese has the density of a lead balloon.

You can write anything into a law and define whatever you want to. But my post wasn't about any piece of legislature - it was about the animal rights furburgers here who can't be consistent in their philosophy of who gets killed for food and who warrants a life pass. Even in any state law there's no moral consistency giving rights to certain animals and exempting others.[/quote]

I agree there should be moral consistency in the law. I agree with part of what you are saying, as it's true that animals seen as pets are likely to get protections under the law for emotional (rather then rational) reasons.

America also likes to put it's head in the sand when it comes to where their double whopper with cheese comes from

I laughed at the furburger comment. You always like to play a holier-then-thou freedom fighter against the big bad government, but I've seen enough sexism and homophobia in your posts to know that you have more in common with the powers-that-be then you'd care to admit.
 
[quote name='pittpizza']It sounds like you think killing some animals for food and not others is wrong.
It also seems like you think that Vick was killing dogs for food, (this is, in fact, the original context for our discussion). [/quote]

How in the would would you infer I think Vick killed dogs for food? Mykevermin needs look no further for obtuseness.

If you're looking for consistency in state law or life in general for that matter you are going to be disappointed.

Do you people actually READ others' posts? I don't expect consistency in law or life in general (whatever that means). I expect consistency in peoples' philosophies and reasoning. Specifically : here, in this thread.

Demanding jail time for killing fuzzy bunnies but being perfectly content with slaughtered beef cows without explanation does nothing to convince me that one isn't simply a slave to one's emotions and who's judgement of grace has no basis in reality. Leave law and life lessons aside - why is it okay to kill one animal over another, morally ?
 
[quote name='bmulligan']why is it okay to kill one animal over another, morally ?[/QUOTE]

If you can't see past function (food) versus satisfaction (entertainment), then you're either thick as a brick or deliberately obtuse. If you consider those actions the same, then I will have to deny you "grown up" status, and instead, resign you to "petulant middle school girl why-must-we-eat-meat-at-dinnner vegetarian status."
 
Alll I know is that simply throwing someone in jail may feel good, but really doesn't do much to make amends for his deeds. His first gesture when he gets out, if he is truly remorseful, should be a monetary donation as I suggested earlier.

I honestly think people wouldn't have been more tolerant if he was just betting on the dogs fighting. Instead of organizing the whole thing. That's not to say I condone it, but it is a whole other level when you start killing them for no good reason. That is where all the outrage is.

It isn't simply the gambling aspect that is bad, because if it were then Rick Tocchet wouldn't have gotten off essentially scot-free in his situation.
 
[quote name='mykevermin']If you can't see past function (food) versus satisfaction (entertainment), then you're either thick as a brick or deliberately obtuse. If you consider those actions the same, then I will have to deny you "grown up" status, and instead, resign you to "petulant middle school girl why-must-we-eat-meat-at-dinnner vegetarian status."[/QUOTE]

The "how" has quite a bit to do with it, too. If Vick volunteered at a shelter, where he was giving cute kittens and puppies lethal injections to keep the stray population down, nobody would have said boo. Torturing dogs to make sure they're nice and bloodthirsty, then smashing their heads against the ground to kill them when they lose is another thing entirely.
 
I didnt know you wanted to completely remove the IS (law/life lessons) from this conversation and completemove it to OUGHT (the moral context).

So why can one think Vick ought to be punished for dogfighting/killing/torturing dogs when they will eat cows/chickens/whatever? The answer is simple, (and for the sake of consisistency I will go ahead and call you obtuse since you can't see it) DOGS are PETS, at least to us. They provide companionship, entertainment, and many other emotional functions wheras cows and chickens provide...Food. Why?

Maybe its because dogs can learn tricks or chickens taste better with Bar-B-que sauce. Certainly it is a matter of culture because some cultures eat dogs while others worship cows. It is not morally inconsistent to eat meat and love your dog; if you think it is you must be obtuse. Its not inconsistent because this is the status quo in our culture. If you want to find rationale/moral consistency in culture you're going to have to look for a while. There is a lot of silly shit in our culture that I have a hard time with (What the fuck is with a necktie? Who thought that shit up?) but animal rights is not one of them. It basically comes down to a basic sense of humanity for our pets. Why cows and chickens are not pets is a matter of functin as Myke mentioned.

That last point also reminds me that if somebody (billy crystal's character in City Slickers) "adopted" a cow as a pet, they would be pissed if someone tortured it. Hell even a cow farmer would probably be pissed if somebody came in and maliciously tortured a cow just for entertainment or to get their massochistic jollies off.
 
as a 49er fan, i hate the raiders. but man i gave them props for going and getting moss (yes flamers i know hes a pat now). if (when) they get vick, i mite have to switch to the dark side.
 
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