@NickstandswithUkraine Ugh, tell me about it. I was just complaining last night in the Teachers' Lounge about how the Supreme Court is breaking everything.
@NickstandswithUkraine I don't know the latter name, so... I believe you, but that's concerning.
may I also ask where do you get the "fertility is declining" idea from? If birth rates are going down, it means that people don't think they need to get a baby as soon as possible because they know they will have a long life and also that their end-of-life living will be at least decent regardless of whether they have children to look after themselves
Fertility isn't declining. That would be a medical problem. There is no such problem. People are making the choice to have fewer children, because the world is already overpopulated.
The country's future isn't in jeopardy. Not anywhere close. Any country.
@manro do you know why people used to have more children? It is a natural process of any developed and urbanized country that birth rates decline: people don't need to have children as soon as possible and as many as possible. Children survive long enough to mature, parents don't need to worry that if they don't have them now, they'll die or stop being able to very soon, etc. And also what Cody said - overpopulation is a thing too
there is also a thing called contraception, you know - which also ties to the abovementioned explanations of why people would want not to have children in developed countries [as many as possible, as soon as possible]. It is simply not necessary unless one wants to and understands the responsibility that comes with it.
"the authority to regulate whether people should be allowed to have sex without damning consequences is returned to the people and their elected representatives"
Now, what I find fascinating is, Thomas is an "originalist" and extremely conservative, believing that whatever the Founding Fathers would have wanted is what we must do forever.
Do you think that the Founding Fathers would have been in favor of a black man on the Supreme Court?
What do you think they would have said about interracial marriages? Remember that Thomas is married to a white woman.
In an "originalist" world, would that even be legal?
@CodyGray heh, I had a discussion with a friend a month or so ago as to what the heck "originalism" entails. I am still not sure I understand the position. Shouldn't it also mean that the amendments they all hold so dear to be unconstitutional?
Well... presumably not the amendments that were passed at essentially the same time as the Constitution itself, since the same Founding Fathers proposed and were in favor of those.
But at least the 13th through 26th would be right out.
@CodyGray I have no idea how such a position can even be legal, honestly - what makes it so that the text has to be understood as if ya'll still live in the days of when it was drafted? Have they heard of a thing called history?
I mean, let's imagine (for a thought experiment) for a second that the Founding Fathers were literal Nazis and at the time of the "adoption", they included clauses that explicitly declare some races to be inferior to others. Does it entail that, in the originalist POV, any attempt to amend that is unconstitutional?
heh. I mean, that follows, right? If I understand the originalism position correctly. If it has to be understood in the context of the "time of the adoption", then it means that anything, including hypothetical basic human rights violations [and ban on abortions is at least close to one in my book], should be considered constitutional, right?
@CodyGray which baffles me [although I understand the mechanism] given that the new testament is extremely progressive if one actually reads it [I'd prefer not to mention the old one, though...]
@CodyGray pretty much, with the only difference that I concluded to them being religious (based on other interactions as well, including: capitalization of "God", values that only man-woman sex is "natural", etc)
so... from the above, I concluded they are a believer - specifically, Christian. [btw, @manro, if you stumble upon this, we are not joking - I am genuinely confused]
My vocabulary is weak to participate in the complex conversation. I need to use an e-dictionary to understand some things. And because of this my response time can be extremely long. I decided to retreat.
@manro I've never voted for him anyway, I just said I'd vote for him over the Labour leader, in real life there are more people to vote for
As for "fertility declining" - I can see why manro was confused, what they meant was "Total fertility rate" is declining, and that is true, but as the rest of you say, not a bad thing
@manro There are two main parties for the general (whole of the UK) elections, conservative (run by Boris Johnson) and Labour (run by Keir Starmer). Popular in Scotland are the Scottish National Party (SNP, run by Nicola Sturgeon), and popular in Ireland are the DEUP and Sinn Féin, run by Jeffrey Donaldson and Mary Lou McDonald respectively.
I mean, usually, it's religious people that capitalize the word "God", and secular people usually refer to it as "god". Apparently, I inferred incorrectly?
however, this is clearly a refernce to the Christian god (male pronoun, capitalization, reference to the Biblical story of the creation of man), so... I assumed that means the person I am talking to is a believer, specifically, a Christian.
also true, however, in the absense of explicit pointers to otherwise, I opted to default to the most likely religion of a right-wing European showing signs of believing in a god of one of the Abrahamic religions, which would be Christianity in my book
with the lesson being: even if your assumption is logical, it can still be wrong :) My usual downfall. So, @manro, what exactly are your views on religion?
or, put simply, do you believe in god, and which god is it if so? Feel free not to answer if you don't want to. It's just that the present situation is confusing to me.
I'm going based off the MW definition that appeared: "Belief in God based on reason rather than revelation or the teaching of any specific religion is known as deism."
Sometimes I wish I could believe in a religion where there was some form of afterlife, it would make death a whole lot less depressing, but hey-ho, faith isn't exactly easy to obtain
@manro more like "the existence or non-existence of a supernatural all-powerful entity cannot be logically proven, hence, it is irrational to be sure that such an entity exists, let alone has any known properties [such as gender]. It is also not rational to be sure such an entity does not exist because its existence, by definition, can only be proven via an epiphany" for me.
@CodyGray that's precisely what I am saying: I am secular, so "god" for me is "any god", no one in particular in the context of "God's ideas", for example. Unless the speaker refers to the Abrahamic "God" - but we know now that wasn't the case, so...
I motion forward is that if you end up on a cross, it's pretty terrible :)
@CodyGray I don't, generally, but imagine you are the only one that can live forever. So any connection you make with another living being is eventually wrestled from you, and, provided there isn't a solution to keep forgetting chunks of your life entirely, that's going to keep piling up
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Most of the connections I've made with human beings over the past 30-ish years have not lasted and essentially been wrested from me, so I don't see how it's that much different, really.
> Mhm is a version of mm-hmm, an interjection variously used to express agreement or make an acknowledgment, among other senses. Mhm is especially common in the casual writing of the internet and text-messaging.
What say people in England about the fate of the caught mercenaries? That they will be executed. Is society still interested in this story? Or story with UA has already "overheated"?
You mean the guys that weren't mercenaries? There's not much being said about it at the moment, the last article I saw on it was 3 days ago, but there are other important things going on in the world that need news time as well, and the sentencing was 3 weeks ago now. Their family have hope, not much else to be said on it.
Mercenaries are hired members of a different armed force. For example, if they were in the British Army, and the Ukrainian military paid them to come fight for them (so, British soldiers fighting for Ukraine), then they would be mercenaries. But they are members of the actual Ukrainian military, they're just soldiers, not mercenaries.
citizenship comes with a lot of benefits - it is reasonable for countries to not [in general] to expect significant contributions to their economy before providing one ("living" in a country is not just a procedure - it means you work there and pay taxes)
Indeed, and I wasn't even talking about citizenship, becoming a citizen is even harder than becoming a member of the British Army
(Well, for members of the Commonwealth anyway, for foreign nationals it's about the same difficulty to join the Army, because you have to become a citizen first, but as soon as you're a citizen you can apply)