@jalf awesome find. perhaps mention it in the comments section at ... oh well, nevermind, of course they don't have one (or they moderate the hell heaven out of it)
@Zoidberg'-- Well? Neither are muslim women. They choose how (and how rigorously) to interpret their holy book, exactly like Christians do. The Bible is quite expressive about how women are considered property too. Is that better? There are also quite a few bits about how you should treat your slaves (whom, implicitly, you obviously should have)
let's face it, every big religion is goddamn insane, offensive, bigoted and flat-out wrong, if you read their rules literally. Most of their followers are sane enough to ignore most of the crazy parts, but some don't
@jalf Well, if the people of Pakistan did have a problem with it, they'd consider, y'know, firing him, or prosecuting him, or just holding a rally in the street to protest, or something.
I mean, I'm talking about the religions, the rules and holy books and commandments, rather than the people. And I'll happily supply facts to back up my claims. Is that bigotry?
@DeadMG Just like you fire your ministers every time they do something you disagree with? Really, the UK would've been a constant street protest if you held your own country to the same stadnards
@jalf definition of bigoted: Expressing or characterized by prejudice and intolerance. Now, that statement comes across to me as quite intolerant and prejudiced.
@DeadMG well then, were the populace well informed of the issue? It was widely reported here because OMGISLAM, but how about the people you want to express their protest, what did they know of it?
@Zoidberg'-- who are "they"? Some are, many are not. For those who are, I fail to see how their choice of religion is at all relevant. For those who are not forced, well, what's the problem?
user142019
And if they refuse, they simply get humiliated, raped and killed.
@DeadMG if you knew about it, sure. If it was accurately reported to you. How about the politicians in the US who called for Assange to be assasinated? They didn't go to jail
@DeadMG Would you? Their democracy isn't all that well-functioning. Neither are their media coverage. Assuming they knew about this, and blaming them for not rioting in the streets seems disingenious
@TonyTheLion I don't follow how. What exactly am I intolerant of, and how is it prejudice?
@DeadMG And yet you're calling out Islam as the problem? Not the political systems of Pakiastan and the USA, and not Christianity, but Islam specificially?
@jalf intolerant of Religion perhaps? You called it "every big religion is goddamn insane, offensive, bigoted". I don't know, but if that is a statement of tolerance to you, then I guess we'll just have to disagree on what tolerance means.
@jalf No. The idiotic Islamism in Pakistan is just more universal than the idiotic nationalism in the US, but they're just as idiotic, and in some ways the US is much worse because they wield a lot more power and influence over the rest of the world.
@LucDanton wut? I copy & pasted the damn thing. I specifically didn't include the bit about being wrong, because that's subjective and everyone can have their views on that.
@DeadMG And on what do you base this claim? As far as I know, most people in Pakistan are just, well, people, concerned with their own wellbeing, raising their children and all that. Do you have evidence to the contrary? And if the US is "in some ways much worse", why are you calling out Islam as being the problem?
@TonyTheLion The missing parts are as important as the parts that you did copy and and paste. A more complete quote: "let's face it, every big religion is goddamn insane, offensive, bigoted and flat-out wrong, if you read their rules literally." That final conditional affects the whole meaning.
jalf did not unconditionally describe every big religion as goddamn insane, offensive, bigoted and flat-out wrong.
@jalf I'm not calling out Islam as a problem. It's mostly the people who are Islamic who are suffering at the hands of Islam. I think that the US could easily be said to be an equally large, if not larger, problem for most Western people. All I ever said is that I've got a rather distinct lack of respect for it.
@TonyTheLion To the best of my knowledge, my statement is true. I know it is true for Christianity and Islam. Which religion do you have in mind which does not contain insane rules if you read it literally?
So either have the balls to say "Ok, I didn't mean that, I exaggerated, I was wrong", or stand by your own words and don't try to fucking wiggle out of it
You said that muslims deserve no respect. So what is it? Did you said what you meant, or were you just trying to be cool by bashing on a billion people who just so happen to be the official "bad guys" at the moment
I know quite a few muslims. None of them go around saying that Christians or Atheists deserve no respect. And, for the record, none of them are forced to wear anything on their head either.
@DeadMG Oh, so you are trying to cowardly wiggle out of it
Do you seriously believe that uttering garbage like that has no meaning, makes no difference, does not matter?
@DeadMG Yes. So? Does that make it a good thing? I can also trivially find hundreds, if not thousands of people who suffer under this kind of ignorant preconceptions and condescending bullshit
Respect: you should try it some time
If your idea of "personal amusement" is to say that real breathing human beings deserve no respect, then you are some of the filthiest scum I have ever encountered
And if you think "doing so all the time" makes it better, then I really don't know what to say
@DeadMG Try re-reading the conversation, and note how as soon as one person says something negative about Islam, it's legitimate to do so, and everyone piles in with exaggerations, unfounded claims and accusations and generalizations
@Zoidberg'-- huh? So the ones I know are actually in the Netherlands? I'm impressed at how the ones I went to school with managed to get here in time every day
@DeadMG It has nothing to do with religion or with the internet. It's how human beings work. Spewing the kind of bullshit you did might mean nothing to you, and those you aimed it at might also recognize that "he doesn't mean it, therefore it is funny hahah", but others are going to see it as legitimization of their views, which just so happen to agree
It works for religion, for race, for sexism (and for "harmless" rape jokes), for politics, for pretty much everything
Plus, if it truly meant nothing, what would be funny about it? You said it because it plays into existing stereotypes, and because those stereotypes are obviously relevant enough for the "joke" to make sense. You wouldn't say "carrots deserve no alcohol", because that's just meaningless nonsense. But "muslims deserve no respect" is something everyone can relate to because everyone knows muslims are the bad guys
@DeadMG no, it is not. I am familiar with satire, and with Monty Python (and with that particular video)
I am also familiar with bigotry, ignorance and prejudice, and with how it spreads
And I would love for people to have the balls to admit it when they inadvertently misstep, to just go "oh, in hindsight, I see how people might get the wrong idea. Maybe I should've phrased that differently"
@Zoidberg'-- 100% of the people I know who use the name Zoidberg online are terrible people too. Curiously enough, they are also "arrogant as hell"
@jalf I wasn't thinking of a specific one, it was more that I didn't think that even with your qualifier to your argument it made that argument any more tolerant. But that is my view, and if you disagree, well that is fine.
@DeadMG maybe because they didn't follow it up with evidence that they actually meant what they said... Or maybe because in their case, there genuinely were no hard feelings
@TonyTheLion Well, I'm asking because I'm interested in your view
and because I dislike the whole "let's agree to disagree" thing. That's too often used as a "I might be wrong, but I'm sticking with it anyway" kind of get-out-of-jail-free card. If we disagree, then at least one of us can probably learn something
I didn't say I have not learnt anything. I have at least learned that when you quote something, you should quote correctly, and make sure you've read the entire thing you're quoting part of.
I encountered this picture of the "Russian space pen" from the MIT Museum gift shop
When NASA first started sending astronauts into space, they realized that the ball-point pen would not work at zero gravity.
A million dollar investment and two years of tests resulted in a pen that co...
@TonyTheLion it is kind of cool. It's horifically ugly and painful to work with, but conceptually, it is cool. It's unintentinoally turing-complete, and that's always cool!
@TonyTheLion well, the Bible does say some absurd things (see the aforementioned bits about slavery and about women). The Quran has some similar bits ("Men are in charge of women, because Allah hath made the one of them to excel the other"). So yes, if you read those literally, I think it's fair to call them what I did. perhaps one of the other big religions does not say anything radically disagreeable, in which case I'll gladly admit I was wrong
In function scope using only works for members of namespaces.
namespace foo {
int x;
}
void f() {
using foo::x;
x = 42;
}
However, base<T> is a class, not a namespace. You don't need anything because as a public member it is already in scope:
void print()
{
std::cout <...
Did I get this part wrong about x being in scope in the derived class?
These name visibility rules are a bit messy sometimes.