cthia wrote: That emotion and that fact is why I used the analogy in the first place, to head off your initial nonsense way back upstream that the SLN, Mandarins and some of the League's citizens wouldn't see Beowulf's actions as treasonous. Look at it as a nanite tailored to do a specific job.
AND IT WORKED for many posters. . .
tlb wrote:I have always admitted that the Mandarins would present Beowulf's actions as being treasonous and I accept that there are those who would believe that false propaganda. I accept that fact as something the leadership of Beowulf needs to consider as they plan their nation's course. So it could be said that I accept your thesis and admit that your prescriptions might ameliorate the response expected from the League. **
So what you are choosing to argue is my continued resistance to the terms that you use to present your ideas. I find them larded with emotional content that distracts from the ideas that you struggle to convey and I think that much of that struggle is due to the slippery nature of those terms. If you do not like my resistance, that is your bad; because I do not see what you could to force me to change my mind.
Karma automatically weighs the good against the bad intentions of an entity's actions and generates the appropriate response.
** The hitch is that Beowulf has been assisting in the rebuilding and rearming of Manticore, starting before the de facto state of war. When the Mandarins and SLN learn this, then none of the things you suggest will prevent an armed response.
cthia wrote:I am going to consider billing you for all of the extra remedial time you require.
tlb wrote:I have always admitted that the Mandarins would present Beowulf's actions as being treasonous and I accept that there are those who would believe that false propaganda.
cthia wrote:NO. This is where you are still having problems.
1. The crux of your problems stem from the fact that you are still suffering from my arguing the stance that Oscar Saint-Just's proponents would consider Theisman's actions as treasonous, which is the subtle reason for your snipe at the end of your very first post of this thread.
because
2. You still cannot fathom that Beowulf actually was treasonous to the sensibilities made between people and to their unspoken and implied responsibilities to their own founding.
tlb wrote:I accept that fact as something the leadership of Beowulf needs to consider as they plan their nation's course. So it could be said that I accept your thesis and admit that your prescriptions might ameliorate the response expected from the League. **
So what you are choosing to argue is my continued resistance to the terms that you use to present your ideas. I find them larded with emotional content that distracts from the ideas that you struggle to convey and I think that much of that struggle is due to the slippery nature of those terms. If you do not like my resistance, that is your bad; because I do not see what you could to force me to change my mind.
cthia wrote:I don't struggle to convey. You struggle to understand. Even a Gorilla can understand the concepts.
tlb wrote:Karma automatically weighs the good against the bad intentions of an entity's actions and generates the appropriate response.
cthia wrote:No No No! Karma doesn't even own a set of scales to weigh good against bad. Karma does not care about the googol of good you did all year. She only cares about the fact that you have her nostrils flaring now. Even a child can grasp it.
tlb wrote:** The hitch is that Beowulf has been assisting in the rebuilding and rearming of Manticore, starting before the de facto state of war. When the Mandarins and SLN learn this, then none of the things you suggest will prevent an armed response.
cthia wrote:Uh oh! Light at the end of the tunnel?
Will there finally be calm in Gilead?
ldwechsler wrote:Please let's play nice. If you want to debate the nature of karma we probably need a few Hindus in. Payback might be a better word but it doesn't quite convey the same meaning.
Treason is a very tricky concept. Are people who oppose going to war traitors? Can you be a traitor if there is no war?
Right now, the US has disassociated itself from several UN bodies. Does that make us a traitor nation or merely one that has kept a sense of decency?
The Mandarins might feel that Beowulf is treasonous but that is merely their opinion.
And remember the great words of another (ironically) Harrington:
Treason never prospers for if does, none dare call it treason.
I have no knowledge about the state of calm in Gilead, because I have not read The Handmaiden's Tale. From Wikipedia:
Balm of Gilead was a rare perfume used medicinally, that was mentioned in the Bible, and named for the region of Gilead, where it was produced. The expression stems from William Tyndale's language in the King James Bible of 1611, and has come to signify a universal cure in figurative speech.
I state what I have said and Cthia says I did not say it right, because I did not parrot the proper words. This reminds me of Professor Fate, who crosses the finish line first at the end of the move The Great Race. He refuses to accept the result, because he did not win his way. Cthia wants me to agree, not just that his idea might be reasonable, but that every word and analogy used to argue his ideas are also reasonable and proper.
cthia wrote:The crux of your problems stem from the fact that you are still suffering from my arguing the stance that Oscar Saint-Just's proponents would consider Theisman's actions as treasonous, which is the subtle reason for your snipe at the end of your very first post of this thread.
NO, No, No. I can admit the his proponents would consider Theisman's actions treasonous (the same as my admitting that the Mandarins will treat Beowulf as treasonous); the problem is that you argued that Theisman's actions WERE treasonous and should have resulted in a trial under the restored constitution - that is something completely different.