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-   -   OT: The Passion of the Christ movie (http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/showthread.php?t=12109)

narf poit chez BOOM May 25th, 2004 10:27 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
It sounds possible to me he was saying >racist, sexist< muslims should be taken action against. While I think this is counter-productive and wrong, perhaps he should be given the benifit of the doubt and the opportunity to explain.

[Quote edited by Moderator]

[ May 25, 2004, 11:30: Message edited by: Mephisto ]

EvilGenius4ABetterTomorro May 25th, 2004 07:00 PM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Strange, the Dutch are usually the most tolerant people on earth. Still how do you respond to tolerant people letting intolerant people in your own country who despise you and want to kill you. You Europeans must have the patience of a saint. Letting in people who don't respect you and who don't want to integrate into your society.
Don't know what happened but history shows that the Muslims were very tolerant of other religions in the middle ages. It was our sword wielding Christian ancestors that were brutally nuts!

Simeron May 25th, 2004 08:44 PM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Seems a really wierd place to discuss this but, its been that kind of week....

Personally, and let me say that again....

Personally....I see religion as a tool that can be used for good or evil. Religion always seems to end up doing more harm then good though to me.

Faith on the other hand is the exact opposite. Faith is a matter of belief and normally seems to end up helping out more then harming.

A persons faith is a matter of personal belief.

Religion is more the motions of the faith, the "Motius Operandi" more or less.

As long as the religion does not seek to impose its view/tenants/MO on people through force but by choice, then its fine. I may think its wrong but, that is my choice.

But when you get to the point of saying "if you don't follow our religion you will be punished" THEN I have a problem with it. Because you are now moving from the tenants of FAITH to a political system based on a belief.

You might cloak your politics in religious vestments but, its still POLITICAL and has NOTHING to do with faith.

How can I say that? Because faith has nothing to do with the machanics of religion, it is a personal belief and therefore, can not be forced, imposed or directed from outside in any way. Faith ALWAYS comes from within to the without.

Religion ALWAYS comes from without to the within.

So when you begin discussing religion, understand what you are actually doing is discussing politics and as the ancient saying goes...

"One sure way to end up in an arguement is discuss religion or politics."

No religion is perfect just as no political system is. But, the best you can do is find one that fits YOUR Faith/Belief and then try to stick with it.

When this makes it where you begin to try to impose your ways on others, then you have crossed the line from faith to religion. At that point, you have become the enemy of everyone including those of the faith you profess because you have now become a threat to others whereas before, you were no threat to others at all.

It is when people become a threat that action MUST be taken to remove that threat.

The question at that point is not IF you are going to do something, but What and When you are going to.

My PERSONAL belief is quite simple on this.

If they are not a threat...leave them to thier own ways and means. Keep an open dialog but, don't become the threat yourself.

If they ARE a threat...do whatever it takes to remove that threat so that it doesn't increase in size. Regardless of all other factors, first contain, then remove the threat.

An example of this from recent news, the killing of an innocent young man because criminals were not released.

Problem, the people that murdered this man will continue to do so in hopes these criminals are released.

Solution, you march 100 of these criminals out and execute them summarily with the message.

"We have freed 100 of those you wanted free...from thier lives. For each innocent you kill, 100 more of your comrades will be freed in a similar fashion until we run out of them. But we will be hunting you also so you too may one day be freed in similar fashion. To avoid further deaths of your comrades is quite simple. Do NOT kill innocents in an attempt to free them. Their lives are in YOUR hands."

Yes, that lowers us to thier level but, I assure you, being at thier level will make it where they fully understand that taking hostages and then killing them will not achieve thier goals. Once they know for sure that not only will they not achieve thier goals but in fact, it will have the exact OPPOSITE effect, they will seek other ways to achieve thier goals. Now, this may be a bad or a good thing...time will tell.

But to arbitrarily say "all" of any faith or religion is bad makes the person saying it far worse then the people they are talking about to me.

(Shrugs) But, I am a "war mongering" person I am told. I'm an old warrior and soldier true enough but, any old vet like me will tell you, we hope to never use our training and prefer nothing more then to fade away into the mists of time unused. I don't love war but, war will show you the best and worst in people like nothing else. It will end all discussions and debates like nothing else and it will come to an end eventually.

I have a simple philosophy about things like this. If it works, don't fix it.

War works. Fear works. Mankind is barbaric by nature but, we simply have to say, we won't be barbaric...today.

When people choose to be barbaric and wage war, answer them with all the savage barbarism and brutal warfare you can muster to strike fear into them and destroy thier ability to war. Try to limit your fury to those that deserve it but, if there are innocent casualties, sad as it is, accept them as the price of removing the threat. Fact is that while it is sad that innocents died in the fighting, if you didn't fight and end the ability of those that started the war in the first place, many more innocents would end up dead anyway.

People that don't deserve to die...die in war. Just like people that DO deserve to die do. This is why war should be the LAST resort and not the first. But when the time comes to go to war...go to war fully and with all the power you can muster so that when its over, you won't have to fight another one anytime soon.

If that makes me a warmonger...then so be it. I don't seek to impose my beliefs or views or even way of life on others. I don't seek to hunt down and kill people that just want to live thier lives in peace. But, for those that would force others to bow to them, I will seek them out and do my best to make it where they can't.

I figure that is the best thing I can do for the average person, give them a chance to make it or not on thier own.

Its all you can really ask in this life. A chance to live free and without shackles save those you choose to wear yourself.

Atrocities May 25th, 2004 08:59 PM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Discussion and debate are healthy ways of communicating. It becomes unhealthy when we stop talking and start shooting one another.

I don't know about many of you, but for me it is the occational angry and heated debates that spice up the forum and keep me interested.

Honestly if we did not all share our own thoughts on a subject, thoughts from around the world, then how informed are we in the end?

I like to think that I am a better person in some respects because I know that I can come here and read poeples Posts who are from other parts of the world and share a differant view of world topics than I.

I count my self damn lucky to be a member in this forum with you people.

Jack Simth May 25th, 2004 11:15 PM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:
As long as the religion does not seek to impose its view/tenants/MO on people through force but by choice, then its fine. I may think its wrong but, that is my choice.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Slight problem ... civilization is based upon some group imposing and enforcing some portion of their beliefs on others - else, on what basis can you hunt down a murderer? Sure, he's a murder by YOUR views (and perhaps the views of a very large number of people/large percentage of the population) but it is quite possible that in his views, it is quite reasonable to kill someone over what the rest of us would consider something minor. But if you hunt him down for it, you are effectively forcing your set of rules on him, no?
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:
But when you get to the point of saying "if you don't follow our religion you will be punished" THEN I have a problem with it. Because you are now moving from the tenants of FAITH to a political system based on a belief.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">All political systems are based on a belief of some sort - not necessarily in a diety of any kind, but in some belief - Capitalism is based on the belief that greed can be harnessed for the good of most; Socialism is based on the belief that people are responsible enough to work towards the common good without a "large" rewards system; Democracy is based on the belief that the masses can, on average, make good policy decisions; Despotism is based on the belief that one strong leader will run things best (although "best" is subject to interpertation - in many instances, that becomes "best ... for the despot").
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:

You might cloak your politics in religious vestments but, its still POLITICAL and has NOTHING to do with faith.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">That's true of many portions of politics, such as recource allocations, contract-enforcement strategies, road routes, economic planning, et cetera; I can't agree with it on such things as the definition of person for use in determining whether a given action is murder or not.
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:

How can I say that? Because faith has nothing to do with the machanics of religion, it is a personal belief and therefore, can not be forced, imposed or directed from outside in any way. Faith ALWAYS comes from within to the without.

Religion ALWAYS comes from without to the within.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">In which Category would you put ethics (e.g., the commandments "Thou Shalt Not Murder" and "Thou Shalt Not Steal")?
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:
When this makes it where you begin to try to impose your ways on others, then you have crossed the line from faith to religion. At that point, you have become the enemy of everyone including those of the faith you profess because you have now become a threat to others whereas before, you were no threat to others at all.

It is when people become a threat that action MUST be taken to remove that threat.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">And yet, you would impose a portion of your own views on others, which could be paraphrased as: "Don't impose your own views on others." That seems a little contradictory. But maybe that's just me.

Atrocities May 26th, 2004 12:55 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
So is this movie worth seeing or should we just wait until its on DVD and rent it?

trooper May 26th, 2004 01:02 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
That doesn't make much difference. This vocabulary is inappropriate here.

Renegade 13 May 26th, 2004 01:51 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Mephisto:
We at the SEIV forum have traveld the OT road before and with much more heat. All the people that went on this road are still here and still talking to one another so I see no need to cut this one road short.
<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">"With much more heat" ?? That's possible??

And I have one request: I've noticed a couple of Posts have been edited by a moderator. Now, I didn't see them before they were edited, and I probably wouldn't have been offended even if I had read them. But I'd just like this to be a civilized conversation, so please don't post stuff that might be taken in an unintended way, or offensive subject matter. Like I said, it doesn't bother me, but it might bother some people.

As some other's would say, just my $0.02

TerranC May 26th, 2004 01:53 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Renegade 13:
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Originally posted by Mephisto:
We at the SEIV forum have traveld the OT road before and with much more heat. All the people that went on this road are still here and still talking to one another so I see no need to cut this one road short.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">"With much more heat" ?? That's possible??
</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Do a search on Iraq. You'll see what he's talking about then.

Gandalf Parker May 26th, 2004 02:23 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by TerranC:
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Originally posted by Renegade 13:
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Originally posted by Mephisto:
We at the SEIV forum have traveld the OT road before and with much more heat. All the people that went on this road are still here and still talking to one another so I see no need to cut this one road short.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">"With much more heat" ?? That's possible??
</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Do a search on Iraq. You'll see what he's talking about then.
</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">What has gone on in the past is up for change. Shrapnel is beginning to take an interest in the Boards. Everything has its pros and cons, including shrapnels interest.

solops May 26th, 2004 04:40 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Atrocities:
So is this movie worth seeing or should we just wait until its on DVD and rent it?
<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">If you are not a Christian then don't bother. It would likely have little meaning or virtue.

If you are a Christian then you MIGHT want to see it. My Sunday school class went to see it. 12 people came away with twelve completely different experiences, ranging from "what an aweful bloodbath" to "sublime". I found it well done and deeply moving in many ways...and I never want to see it again.

Mephisto May 26th, 2004 06:29 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Gandalf Parker:
What has gone on in the past is up for change. Shrapnel is beginning to take an interest in the Boards. Everything has its pros and cons, including shrapnels interest.
<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">I had not the impression that in the past when Richard surfed the board Shrapnel had no interest in the Boards.

Fyron May 26th, 2004 06:42 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Mephisto:
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Originally posted by Gandalf Parker:
What has gone on in the past is up for change. Shrapnel is beginning to take an interest in the Boards. Everything has its pros and cons, including shrapnels interest.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">I had not the impression that in the past when Richard surfed the board Shrapnel had no interest in the Boards. </font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">I also did not get any such impression. The impression that I got was that Shrapnel was always perfectly ok with OT discussions.

[ May 26, 2004, 05:44: Message edited by: Imperator Fyron ]

Simeron May 26th, 2004 06:44 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Jack Simth:
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Originally posted by Simeron:
As long as the religion does not seek to impose its view/tenants/MO on people through force but by choice, then its fine. I may think its wrong but, that is my choice.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Slight problem ... civilization is based upon some group imposing and enforcing some portion of their beliefs on others - else, on what basis can you hunt down a murderer? Sure, he's a murder by YOUR views (and perhaps the views of a very large number of people/large percentage of the population) but it is quite possible that in his views, it is quite reasonable to kill someone over what the rest of us would consider something minor. But if you hunt him down for it, you are effectively forcing your set of rules on him, no?
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:
But when you get to the point of saying "if you don't follow our religion you will be punished" THEN I have a problem with it. Because you are now moving from the tenants of FAITH to a political system based on a belief.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">All political systems are based on a belief of some sort - not necessarily in a diety of any kind, but in some belief - Capitalism is based on the belief that greed can be harnessed for the good of most; Socialism is based on the belief that people are responsible enough to work towards the common good without a "large" rewards system; Democracy is based on the belief that the masses can, on average, make good policy decisions; Despotism is based on the belief that one strong leader will run things best (although "best" is subject to interpertation - in many instances, that becomes "best ... for the despot").
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:

You might cloak your politics in religious vestments but, its still POLITICAL and has NOTHING to do with faith.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">That's true of many portions of politics, such as recource allocations, contract-enforcement strategies, road routes, economic planning, et cetera; I can't agree with it on such things as the definition of person for use in determining whether a given action is murder or not.
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:

How can I say that? Because faith has nothing to do with the machanics of religion, it is a personal belief and therefore, can not be forced, imposed or directed from outside in any way. Faith ALWAYS comes from within to the without.

Religion ALWAYS comes from without to the within.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">In which Category would you put ethics (e.g., the commandments "Thou Shalt Not Murder" and "Thou Shalt Not Steal")?
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:
When this makes it where you begin to try to impose your ways on others, then you have crossed the line from faith to religion. At that point, you have become the enemy of everyone including those of the faith you profess because you have now become a threat to others whereas before, you were no threat to others at all.

It is when people become a threat that action MUST be taken to remove that threat.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">And yet, you would impose a portion of your own views on others, which could be paraphrased as: "Don't impose your own views on others." That seems a little contradictory. But maybe that's just me.
</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Perhaps but you will see that while I am using my own views I am not imposing them on others but in fact am reacting to an outside force. That is the major difference.

Being reactive is not the same as being proactive. Proactive is the place where you have the problems, not the reactive.

So in the case of the murderer, the murderer already took it upon themselves to impose THIER views on the victim so, by hunting them down you are being reactive to thier crossing the line first. If they never killed in the first place then you would not be doing anything to them hence, you would not be imposing your views at all.

Murder is something that is very easy to determine in many cases as the victim simply did not deserve to die due to not doing anything to anyone. When the victim has actually done something is where the case could be made that the killer was reacting to the victim. But again, you must put it back to the test of who is being proactive and who is being reactive.

Did the "murderer" react to a threat or did they proactively kill to enforce thier own code of ethics?

Ethics is a political choice whereas Morals is a faith based one. A simple proof is Morals are more or less from within but Ethics come from without. Most children know it is not good to hurt another child but, taking thier toy on the other hand has to be taught to them.

So, while the case can be made that by reacting to someone is "imposing" my views on them it still leaves the imputus on the other side as it is thier actions that trigger my actions to stop them. The proactive side is the one that starts the movement.

Simeron May 26th, 2004 06:53 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
As for the movie, I personally found it okay. Nothing super spiritual but also nothing shockingly horrorful. Of course, being a medival and ancient history buff I understood the principle of Roman torture/punishment rather well and being a devote Christian, I understood exactly how horrid the price Jesus paid for me was, at least as much as a man can I suppose.

One thing I thought was very well done was the scenes where Satan was there, whispering. I do think the movie was very well done, well acted and well written and did exactly what Mel Gibson intented for it to do which, personally, I think was to awaken people to the story of Jesus as it pertained to His death and resurrection.

If you are a Christian, I highly recommend you go and see it if for no other reason than to be able to discuss it with knowledge when it inevitably comes up in discussion.

If you are NOT a Christian, I say it would still be a good movie to watch if you wanted to see a well done movie able the death of Jesus as it pertains to the Christian faith.

If you don't really care about Jesus's trial and death as it pertains to the Christian faith then no, I wouldn't recommend going to see it as you will not enjoy it at all as that is the gist of the movie and the crux of the material contained within it.

Jack Simth May 26th, 2004 08:01 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:
Perhaps but you will see that while I am using my own views I am not imposing them on others but in fact am reacting to an outside force. That is the major difference.

Being reactive is not the same as being proactive. Proactive is the place where you have the problems, not the reactive.

So in the case of the murderer, the murderer already took it upon themselves to impose THIER views on the victim so, by hunting them down you are being reactive to thier crossing the line first. If they never killed in the first place then you would not be doing anything to them hence, you would not be imposing your views at all.

Murder is something that is very easy to determine in many cases as the victim simply did not deserve to die due to not doing anything to anyone. When the victim has actually done something is where the case could be made that the killer was reacting to the victim. But again, you must put it back to the test of who is being proactive and who is being reactive.

Did the "murderer" react to a threat or did they proactively kill to enforce thier own code of ethics?

Ethics is a political choice whereas Morals is a faith based one. A simple proof is Morals are more or less from within but Ethics come from without. Most children know it is not good to hurt another child but, taking thier toy on the other hand has to be taught to them.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Those aren't quite the standard definitions of ethics and morality - the standard definition would be more along the lines of "ethics are rules to live by, moraility is how well they are followed". Your definitions will work well enough for this discussion, however.
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:

So, while the case can be made that by reacting to someone is "imposing" my views on them it still leaves the imputus on the other side as it is thier actions that trigger my actions to stop them. The proactive side is the one that starts the movement.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">*shrug* the murderer is being reactive if he's, say, avenging an insult to his family's honor, or if the victim was was going to get a law passed that would make the murderer's current livelyhood illegal (to pull a situation out of history: whale hunting), or if the victim was tresspassing, and such. In such cases, the victim was forcing a small portion of his/her ethics on the murderer: In the case of the insult, from the victim's POV, that wasn't a deadly insult, it was a jape; such things should be limited to verbal sparring only - he should have just taken the insult or insulted right back. In the case of making whaling illeagal, the victim's ethics say courtroom battles should stay courtroom battles, while the murderer is responding to a threat to his livelyhood that he doesn't know how to fight in the originating arena (the field of law), and so brings the fight to an arena he knows (guns and brute force). In the case of the tresspassing, perhaps the victim believed that the ground doesn't belong to us, we belong to "mother earth", thus there are no property rights, and the victim believs he should be able to go where he pleases, regardless of the five foot chain-link fence with the "no tresspassing" signs. Sure, FOR US, none of those would be sufficient cause to kill someone - but those are our ethics, our morality - not necessarily the murderer's. For him (or her, I suppose, but most convicted murderers are male), the victim was forcing a portion of the victim's ethics onto the murderer, causing the victim to be a threat, and thus someone to take action against.

Remember also, however, in the case of accomplished murder, that the murderer is not forcing his ethics on those who hunt down the murderer (after all, the murderer has already applied all the force, and the person forced is no longer in a position to be reactive) - so those hunting down the murderer are being proactive, not reactive.

Few people kill others without some provocation (it happens a lot for many forms of money-related killings such as muggings, and it happens with certain kinds of insanity (sadisim, sociopaths, psychopaths, et cetera), but with most murders (most solved murders, anyway) there is some form of provocation, even if the only one who views the "provocation" as such is the murderer) - who is reactive and who is proactive is often (if not always) a matter of perspective. Whose perspective gets enforced? Who choses which perspective? Why that perspective? Why that person? Any possible answer to such questions is very likely to ultimately end up being a case of one person/group of people imposing a portion of their ethics onto others - which you stated you are against.

That, and there are other issues: what do you do about a factory owner whose factory is putting out waste products that are slowly poisoning the ground water that people's wells draw on? He isn't forcing his ethics on anyone - he's not forcing anyone else to pollute; he's not preventing anyone else from containing the waste products of their factories - and yet his actions are potentially fatal to many other people.

I just have the odd habit of finding bizzare angles to look at things from, usually for purposes of analyzing the self-consistancy of a viewpoint.

Simeron May 26th, 2004 08:42 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Jack Simth:
<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">*shrug* the murderer is being reactive if he's, say, avenging an insult to his family's honor, or if the victim was was going to get a law passed that would make the murderer's current livelyhood illegal (to pull a situation out of history: whale hunting), or if the victim was tresspassing, and such. In such cases, the victim was forcing a small portion of his/her ethics on the murderer: In the case of the insult, from the victim's POV, that wasn't a deadly insult, it was a jape; such things should be limited to verbal sparring only - he should have just taken the insult or insulted right back. In the case of making whaling illeagal, the victim's ethics say courtroom battles should stay courtroom battles, while the murderer is responding to a threat to his livelyhood that he doesn't know how to fight in the originating arena (the field of law), and so brings the fight to an arena he knows (guns and brute force). In the case of the tresspassing, perhaps the victim believed that the ground doesn't belong to us, we belong to "mother earth", thus there are no property rights, and the victim believs he should be able to go where he pleases, regardless of the five foot chain-link fence with the "no tresspassing" signs. Sure, FOR US, none of those would be sufficient cause to kill someone - but those are our ethics, our morality - not necessarily the murderer's. For him (or her, I suppose, but most convicted murderers are male), the victim was forcing a portion of the victim's ethics onto the murderer, causing the victim to be a threat, and thus someone to take action against.

Remember also, however, in the case of accomplished murder, that the murderer is not forcing his ethics on those who hunt down the murderer (after all, the murderer has already applied all the force, and the person forced is no longer in a position to be reactive) - so those hunting down the murderer are being proactive, not reactive.

Few people kill others without some provocation (it happens a lot for many forms of money-related killings such as muggings, and it happens with certain kinds of insanity (sadisim, sociopaths, psychopaths, et cetera), but with most murders (most solved murders, anyway) there is some form of provocation, even if the only one who views the "provocation" as such is the murderer) - who is reactive and who is proactive is often (if not always) a matter of perspective. Whose perspective gets enforced? Who choses which perspective? Why that perspective? Why that person? Any possible answer to such questions is very likely to ultimately end up being a case of one person/group of people imposing a portion of their ethics onto others - which you stated you are against.

That, and there are other issues: what do you do about a factory owner whose factory is putting out waste products that are slowly poisoning the ground water that people's wells draw on? He isn't forcing his ethics on anyone - he's not forcing anyone else to pollute; he's not preventing anyone else from containing the waste products of their factories - and yet his actions are potentially fatal to many other people.

I just have the odd habit of finding bizzare angles to look at things from, usually for purposes of analyzing the self-consistancy of a viewpoint. [/QB][/quote]


******************************************


Oh, I don't mind at all, in fact I rather like doing the same thing myself *grins evilly*.

Now, back to what you were saying. Actually, in the case of the whale hunting the murder is in fact becoming the proactive part when they force a change in venue from courtroom to violence.

In the case of the tresspasser, they are being proactive by imposing thier view of "mother earth" on the person who owns the property.

In the case of someone that has murdered someone being hunted down for the murder, you are in fact being reactive because you are reacting to the fact they murdered someone though the arguement could be made that you are in fact being proactive in that you're attempting to stop them from murdering again thus imposing that on them.

In the case of the factory owner that is slowly poisoning the wells I have to disagree with the point you made that he is not imposing his ethics, or lack thereof, on the well owners as he is in fact doing just that by poisoning the wells. The method of poisoning does not matter so how he is choosing to do it doesn't matter be it through factory waste or dumping poison directly into the water table, which you could argue he is doing in the first place.

In the case of avenging the family honor, the murderer is being reactive indeed but being proactive in seeking out the one insulting the family honor and murdering them though, again, the arguement could be made they are justified just as someone would be seeking out the murderer in the first place.

But, the original premise was the current situation in the middle east which is clearly where some people are imposing thier personal views of Islam upon others and taking it to the extreme of punishing (including murdering) people in the name of the religion. (not faith of Muslim).

As a wise person once said, for almost every rule there will be some exception, even this one.

http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon10.gif

[ May 26, 2004, 07:42: Message edited by: Simeron ]

Jack Simth May 26th, 2004 09:46 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:
Oh, I don't mind at all, in fact I rather like doing the same thing myself *grins evilly*.

Now, back to what you were saying. Actually, in the case of the whale hunting the murder is in fact becoming the proactive part when they force a change in venue from courtroom to violence.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">A matter of perspective only; can you honestly expect, say, a 30-year old man, not rich but keeping a roof over his head and food on the table for himself and his family, without other prospects for a job, without the knoweledge to fight things out in court, without the money to hire someone with that knoweledge, to go into "battle" in the courts, completely outmatched, when the stakes are, for him, poverty and likely slow death for himself and his family by starvation? Or does it make more sense for him to kill the one pushing the law in indirect defense of his and his family's lives?
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:

In the case of the tresspasser, they are being proactive by imposing thier view of "mother earth" on the person who owns the property.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">No, the property owner is being proactive by willfully withholding the good and proper use of the land that belongs to no human being / is the collective property of all.

From the property owner's perspective, the property owner is being reactive, and the Earth worshipper is being proactive.

From the tresspasser's perspective, the tresspasser is being reactive and the ground ursurper is being proactive.

And yet, you picked a perspective, and said (paraphrasing here) "this man is in the right, this man is in the wrong, because this man is only preventing his own beliefs from being trampled under another's, while the other is the one trying to do the trampling" (pun recognized, but not intended)
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:

In the case of someone that has murdered someone being hunted down for the murder, you are in fact being reactive because you are reacting to the fact they murdered someone though the arguement could be made that you are in fact being proactive in that you're attempting to stop them from murdering again thus imposing that on them.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Ah, but there is a secondary problem with hunting a murderer: What defines a person and thus a potential target for murder? What constitutes sufficient cause for killing a person? Both of those fall under either ethics or morals. What right have you to force your definitions of the two on another? If an eco-fanatic kills whalers because they are murderers (the "Whales are people too" perspective), should the fanatic be hunted for murder, or not? If a 1800 slave owner kills a slave because the slave tried to escape, should the slave owner be hunted for murder, or not? Does this change if the slave owner does not consider the slave a person, but property?
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:
In the case of the factory owner that is slowly poisoning the wells I have to disagree with the point you made that he is not imposing his ethics, or lack thereof, on the well owners as he is in fact doing just that by poisoning the wells. The method of poisoning does not matter so how he is choosing to do it doesn't matter be it through factory waste or dumping poison directly into the water table, which you could argue he is doing in the first place.
<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">It could be so argued - and yet, it could also be argued that he is only dumping on property he owns - he believes he has the good and proper right to do as he wills with his own property. He is not necessarily aware he is doing any harm to others (as was the case with many of the earliest such cases). Besides, people should always take sensible percautions - you wouldn't blame a construction-site owner for the death of a pedestrian who ignored the "no tresspassing" fence and signs then got hit by falling debris on the construction site - not passing "no tresspassing" signs is a sensible percaution. It's also sensible to purify the water one drinks before drinking it - after all, many sources of water are contaminated by natural actions (e.g., animal wastse encouraging bacteria harmful to people) - would you hold nature accountable for that form of well poisoning? It all depends on the angle one looks at things from - how do you decide whose angle takes precidence? In so doing, you are forcing a portion of your beliefs on others. By what right do you do so?
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:
In the case of avenging the family honor, the murderer is being reactive indeed but being proactive in seeking out the one insulting the family honor and murdering them though, again, the arguement could be made they are justified just as someone would be seeking out the murderer in the first place.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Again, depending on perspective, he's doing either - the insulter is proactively attacking the insultee's honor, from the insultee's perspective, and thus the insultee is being reactive; the insultee is being proactive in searching out and killing the insulter over an "imagined slight" (from the insulter's perspective) and so the insulter is a completely innocent party. By what criteria should the two opposing perspectives be evaluated? By what right can such criteria be dictated?
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:

But, the original premise was the current situation in the middle east which is clearly where some people are imposing thier personal views of Islam upon others and taking it to the extreme of punishing (including murdering) people in the name of the religion. (not faith of Muslim).

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">The examples are merely tools to illustrate a point where it is easier to illustrate - in many, many cases (possibly all) who is the proactive one is entierly a point of view. Even in the case of the extremeists killing for their faith have a perspective from which what they do is right.

Personally, I'm an absolutist - such extremists are murderers, and should be tried and executed. Of course, such extremeists are absolutists too, and two absolutists who disagree will always do so. No help for it. Neither side is willing to yield. War (of some form - not all wars involve shooting people) is essentially inevitable. Pity. Avenging mere insults with killing is horridly outdated; the insultee is a murderer, and needs to be tried on that basis. The property owner in the tresspassing case is using excessive force - he has a right to his property, but barring national-security level military installations or some such, he has no right to kill to prevent someone from walking there. Whales aren't people - the whalers are. It's possible to learn a new trade. Et cetera. I'm an absolutist - I don't need a debateable reason for my judgements. Everything lies on unproveable assumptions anyway, might as well assume everything. Sometimes this results in war. Sometimes war is necessary. No help for it.
Quote:

Originally posted by Simeron:


As a wise person once said, for almost every rule there will be some exception, even this one.

http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon10.gif

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Yet, in picking which cases need exceptions, you are forcing one set of ethics on one or more parties (in an arbitrary manner, even) - in that manner, the position is self-contradictory. Absolutism is only self-contradictory if there are "rules" in the same set that contradict each other, or themselves - and even that is not an issue if you tack on priorities.

Atrocities May 30th, 2004 01:59 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Mephisto:
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Originally posted by Gandalf Parker:
What has gone on in the past is up for change. Shrapnel is beginning to take an interest in the Boards. Everything has its pros and cons, including shrapnels interest.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">I had not the impression that in the past when Richard surfed the board Shrapnel had no interest in the Boards. </font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Well it now looks like our little planet has finally been noticed by the bigger one. We are now ripe for conquest.

Time to rally the dogs of war!

Member 4148 May 30th, 2004 08:16 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Atrocities:
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Originally posted by Mephisto:
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Originally posted by Gandalf Parker:
What has gone on in the past is up for change. Shrapnel is beginning to take an interest in the Boards. Everything has its pros and cons, including shrapnels interest.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">I had not the impression that in the past when Richard surfed the board Shrapnel had no interest in the Boards. </font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Well it now looks like our little planet has finally been noticed by the bigger one. We are now ripe for conquest.

Time to rally the dogs of war!
</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">relacks teh rumurs were exagerated

rextorres May 30th, 2004 08:50 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
I ignored this thread, but couldn't resist after reading another thread - and it leads me to one question. Am I lazy or does anyone else have trouble getting through a post that's more than 5 or 6 paragraphs long?

[ May 30, 2004, 08:09: Message edited by: rextorres ]

Jack Simth May 30th, 2004 09:23 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Quote:

Originally posted by rextorres:
I ignored this thread, but couldn't resist after reading another thread - and it leads me to one question. Am I lazy or does anyone else have trouble getting through a post that's more than 5 or 6 paragraphs long?
<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Depends on the person; depends on the perspective. Many have trouble with a long post in which they don't have any particular interest. Many have no trouble with a long post in which they do have a particular interest. E.g., I don't really expect you to get all the way through mine and Simeron's debate - I might expect you would hit the highlights (first & Last few paragraphs of each post and/or first & Last few sentences of each paragraph [or some such]), but I don't honestly expect you to read the whole thing, unless you were just dying to contradict / affirm / support a point, and even then, I'd really only expect you to read enough of it to address that particular point - while I have no trouble at all with it, being one of the two involved in the debate (still waiting for Simeron's response).

Atrocities May 30th, 2004 09:27 AM

Re: OT: The Passion of the Christ movie
 
Damn intel was wrong again! I will have to launch a congressional investigation into this! http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon10.gif


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