shickingbrits wrote:My position: God is everything, and what holds everything together.
If God is everything, and since "atheistic morality" is part of everything, then you partly hate God.
Why do you partly hate God?
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shickingbrits wrote:My position: God is everything, and what holds everything together.
shickingbrits wrote:Everything exists within the abyss. Atheism fills the abyss with all the meanings it wants. They are still built on nothing and will come to nothing.
shickingbrits wrote:Very true,
shickingbrits wrote:How about we don't simplify it. Fluoride has no proven dental uses. It has proven dangers. It is proven to weaken the immune, block the thyroid receptors and attack the organs, while simultaneously lowering the IQ and altering the state of the person ingesting it.
So let's not change it to "It guarantees perfect health and immunity from disease for 90% of the population, but the remaining 10% will die immediately."
You said that you are looking for real world dilemmas and invent one that requires a natural disaster, lack of aid, two amazingly comatose victims and a flooding hospital. Here is one that exists. So please refer to it as it is not as you'd like it to be.
shickingbrits wrote:
mrswdk wrote:'Secular schools can never be tolerated because such schools have no religious instruction, and a general moral instruction without a religious foundation is built on air. Consequently, all character training and religion must be derived from faith.' - Hitler
Discuss.
shickingbrits wrote:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2001050/
"In 1999, the Department of Health in England commissioned the centre for reviews and dissemination at the University of York to systematically review the evidence on the effects of water fluoridation on dental health and to look for evidence of harm.9 The review was developed with input from an advisory committee, which included members who supported and opposed fluoridation, or who had no strong views on the matter. Exceptional steps were taken to avoid bias and ensure transparency throughout.
Given the certainty with which water fluoridation has been promoted and opposed, and the large number (around 3200) of research papers identified,9 the reviewers were surprised by the poor quality of the evidence and the uncertainty surrounding the beneficial and adverse effects of fluoridation."
The review estimated the prevalence of fluorosis (mottled teeth) and fluorosis of aesthetic concern at around 48% and 12.5% when the fluoride concentration was 1.0 part per million,9 although the quality of the studies was low. The evidence was of insufficient quality to allow confident statements about other potential harms (such as cancer and bone fracture). The amount and quality of the available data on side effects were insufficient to rule out all but the biggest effects.
Small relative increases in risk are difficult to estimate reliably by epidemiological studies, even though lifetime exposure of the whole population may have large population effects. For example, an ecological study from Taiwan found a high incidence of bladder cancer in women in areas where natural fluoride content in water is high. The authors attributed the finding to chance because multiple comparisons were made.11 Testing the hypothesis that drinking fluoridated water increases the risk of bladder cancer would need to take account of errors in estimating total fluoride exposures; potential lack of variation in exposure; the probable long latency between exposure and outcome; the presence of strong confounders such as smoking and occupational exposures; and changes in diagnostic classification of bladder tumours. Therefore, a modest association between fluoridation and bladder cancer would be difficult to detect, both in communities and in individuals. This is of concern because a modest (for example, 20%) increase in risk of bladder cancer would mean about 2000 extra new cases a year if the entire UK population was exposed.
The methodological challenges of detecting harms of long term exposure to fluoridation are further illustrated by a case-control study on hip fracture in England.12 It reported āno increaseā in risk associated with average lifetime exposure of ā„0.9 part per million fluoride in drinking water. Although exemplary in many other aspects, the study had less than 70% power to identify an odds ratio of 1.5 associated with exposure. If the odds ratio was only 1.2āwhich would mean more than 10 000 excess hip fractures a year in England if the population was so exposedāthe study would have a less than one in five chance of detecting it.
Thus, evidence on the potential benefits and harms of adding fluoride to water is relatively poor. This is reflected in the recommendations of the Medical Research Council (MRC)13 and the Scottish Intercollegiate Guideline14 on preventing and managing dental decay in preschool children (box 3). We know of no subsequent evidence that reduces the uncertainty.
shickingbrits wrote:BBS
Information is a product of the free market. They use a "know better" approach. If you don't know better, then you deserve to be stupid.
I would add that education is used to create a stupid unquestioning population.
You can say that about individual policies, that I and the few are wrong. Unfortunately, such policies are repeated with a common theme, they strengthen the gov and their friends and weaken the population. The preponderance of evidence disqualifies the conclusion that self-interest is in societies benefit.
shickingbrits wrote:Do you drink tap water?
We could do a survey. I think the results would be rather self-evident.
shickingbrits wrote:Do you drink tap water?
We could do a survey. I think the results would be rather self-evident.
Thorium is a good example. Classified as a waste byproduct of rare earths mining, it is used as an example of the destruction caused by mining. Nuclear engineers hear nothing of it in school. We hear that solar panels, windmills and hybrid cars require rare earths and they are insufficient to meet the markets demand and therefore not a readable solution. And they only mention thorium in a negative context. India has been engaged in thorium research for a brief period and yet are building a plant. We are taught about the non-solutions and the actual solutions aren't mentioned.
Regardless of anything else, being a hazardous waste byproduct should alert people to the potential dangers of putting fluoride in drinking water. And yet, where one useful waste byproduct is ignored, another is put in the water.
There are many such examples. The climate scientists say we need to get away from carbon emissions, and yet not only offer no solutions, but dismiss possible ones. The energy sector says that all energy is based on limited and quickly vanishing resources and yet they won't mention thorium. Nuclear activist campaign against the dangers of uranium and won't mention thorium. The defense sector worries each time a developing nation tries to build a reactor, and yet they won't thorium.
The elephant is in the room.
There are a wide variety of examples that can be used and no doubt if you are interested, I will bring them up. But the idea is quite simple in the end. They don't intend to solve a problem. They build a service around it, create a dependency and further alienate the populace from independence.
If the US had spread thorium energy to the Middle East, to Africa, Asia, the world would be a much different place. But being the leader of the free, and not free, world, the US had and has no intention of having it be a different place.
When the populace can fend for themselves, the gov is done. They work towards their self-interest, which directly conflicts with this. Very few people share this interest and so it's easy to determine who is involved.
I'm sure you are a very good source yourself on such examples, why not give it a go.
BigBallinStalin wrote:I'm still wondering how allegedly "free markets" caused the seemingly nonexistent fluoride crisis.
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