TY e-baker
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Antifag leaders begin to get arrested.
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Details about 3 or so leaders and their arrest hit 8kun.
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Puzzle post from Q.
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Antifag missing from protests.
If I were Q and I knew how good you guys were, I would not want you
accidentally revealing my ops. I think I would distract you for a short while.
Mankind has a pedo problem
We need to understand this and deal with it.
It's fucking WW across all demographics.
Most want to kill them, that is pure emotion
and that blinds us. Jailing or killing does not stop it. Just like gun laws.
We need an understanding so we can develop a solution!
Everybody bitches about it,
but they have no idea how to properly solve it.
This requires thought and analysis.
Let's hope.
We need people to understand this:
In religion and ethics, the inviolability or sanctity of life is a principle of implied protection regarding aspects of sentient life that are said to be holy, sacred, or otherwise of such value that they are not to be violated as a violation.
Democrats
Consequentialism is the class of normative ethical theories holding that the consequences of one's conduct are the ultimate basis for any judgment about the rightness or wrongness of that conduct. Thus, from a consequentialist standpoint, a morally right act (or omission from acting) is one that will produce a good outcome, or consequence.
Consequentialism is primarily non-prescriptive, meaning the moral worth of an action is determined by its potential consequence, not by whether it follows a set of written edicts or laws.[1] One example would entail lying under the threat of government punishment to save an innocent person's life, even though it is illegal to lie under oath.
(this cannot be refined by appeal and law changes)
(me)
In moral philosophy, deontological ethics or deontology (from the Greek words δέον, 'obligation, duty', and λόγος, 'study') is the normative ethical theory that the morality of an action should be based on whether that action itself is right or wrong under a series of rules, rather than based on the consequences of the action. It is sometimes described as duty, obligation- or rule-based ethics.
Deontological ethics is commonly contrasted to consequentialism
(this can be refined by appeal and law changes)
same number two different posts
with the same i.d.