What's new

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (democratic socialist) wins NY primary

  • Thread starter Thread starter Deleted member 848
  • Start date Start date
I was talking about the origin of the Israelites. There is no evidence to support the story, and nobody would've ever suggested it had it not appeared in the Bible.

The part of god not being real is just my opinion.
Ok. You haven't seen evidence to support it doesn't bother me at all. I haven't researched it to be able to point to possible sources to support it using methods or types of evidence you could agree with.

I don't claim it's all as it says in the Bible and other scripture exactly, but for me I know there is truth to much of it, but unfortunately a source of validation that works for me is not something you are open to or would use as validation of truth.

It's tough to have a full discussion of something when key points and ways to validate are not agreed upon. I get it, and it's fine, but it does lead to a pretty big separation of what is fact and what is not from the different perspectives.

Because of what I believe/know for myself and what I have seen over the years, I see that as science progresses, what is seen as fact shifts as new things are discovered and as advancements happen. What was once fact gets disproven and a new fact takes it's place. I enjoy the advancements and find many things amazing, I rarely if ever view things as "fact", and I don't reserve that for science, I do the same for many things in my religious beliefs as well.

Thanks for your response, and sorry (sortof) for the tldr response of mine.
 
Ok. You haven't seen evidence to support it doesn't bother me at all. I haven't researched it to be able to point to possible sources to support it using methods or types of evidence you could agree with.

I don't claim it's all as it says in the Bible and other scripture exactly, but for me I know there is truth to much of it, but unfortunately a source of validation that works for me is not something you are open to or would use as validation of truth.

It's tough to have a full discussion of something when key points and ways to validate are not agreed upon. I get it, and it's fine, but it does lead to a pretty big separation of what is fact and what is not from the different perspectives.

Because of what I believe/know for myself and what I have seen over the years, I see that as science progresses, what is seen as fact shifts as new things are discovered and as advancements happen. What was once fact gets disproven and a new fact takes it's place. I enjoy the advancements and find many things amazing, I rarely if ever view things as "fact", and I don't reserve that for science, I do the same for many things in my religious beliefs as well.

Thanks for your response, and sorry (sortof) for the tldr response of mine.

I use the same criteria for evidence and facts as everyone else as long as it doesn't involve their personal religious faith. But ya, if a conversation on empirical evidence will involve discussion of feelings, then it's not for me.
 
Do you know these 3 things about the black/white/hispanic applicants to know it is not in the aggregate?
Is this just assuming that black applicants don't mainly come from the more well off families but are spread out? I would think the bulk of all applicants come from more well off families in general.

Possibly. I have not researched the actual national applicant pool for medical schools. As I said, those were just what came from the top of my head.
 
That read to me as you saying that since America's rich people have more disposable income than those of Western Europe, (and possibly the middle class as well, though you did not say that), this means the American middle class "outperforms" the Western European middle class. I'm not sure what "outperform" means here (not to claim dalamon's "stronger" was more specific).

Americans outperform our counterparts in all 3 segments. Some countries, such as Germany, are doing poorly and have been in decline comparatively. The metric is usually 66-200% of median disposable income (this includes transfer payments) as middle class.

Slamming the US income disparity does nothing to capture the true picture and needs to be called out for the outright ignorance that it usually is. For example, much of our "declining" middle class problem turns out to be upward mobility swelling the ranks of the upper middle and upper class. That's a bad thing why? Attacking success to support shrinking the income gap comes across as overly socialistic, and does a disservice to those who support more redistribution for more philosophical reasons.
 
For example, much of our "declining" middle class problem turns out to be upward mobility swelling the ranks of the upper middle and upper class. That's a bad thing why?

It might be a bad thing. How "much of"?

To over-simplify things, let's use three general categories lower class-middle class-upper class, and list percentage that add up to 100. If we go from 40-30-30 to 42-20-38, I would agree that is on whole a good thing. If it is 48-20-32, while the upper class may have "swelled", it is overall a bad thing. In either case, if income mobility is reduced, it is likely a bad thing.
 
It might be a bad thing. How "much of"?

To over-simplify things, let's use three general categories lower class-middle class-upper class, and list percentage that add up to 100. If we go from 40-30-30 to 42-20-38, I would agree that is on whole a good thing. If it is 48-20-32, while the upper class may have "swelled", it is overall a bad thing. In either case, if income mobility is reduced, it is likely a bad thing.

I wouldn't go that far. I don't know if there is a hypothetically perfect equilibrium point to reach for, and I expect any economy to fluctuate around one anyway. I wouldn't automatically call an undershoot or overshoot bad as long as one is expected to revert to the mean, or we have sufficient justification to establish a new normal baseline.
 
The 'Israelites' were never slaves in Egypt. It's just a fictional story from a fictional book.
Eh, last I seriously looked into it there was some evidence that there were indeed Hebrew slaves in Egypt, although Egypt was never really a heavily slave-based society. However, this is more accurately stated that there has been little archaeological evidence discovered to support that claim that the Hebrews in general were enslaved in Egypt, especially in the numbers claimed in Genesis and Exodus. Doesn't mean there isn't any evidence, or it didn't happen, just that we haven't found the proof one way or the other. (as in, we have not found anything that said "yes, there was a large group of hebrews enslaved in egypt" nor anything that said "no, for the entire history of egypt there were never any Hebrew slaves", absence of one does not prove existence of the other)

My opinion is that there was likely a contingent of Hebrews, or "proto-Hebrews" (perhaps the Habiru people) if you will, enslaved in Egypt and then "freed" in some way by a religious leader that constitutes the basis of the stories in Genesis and Exodus. I tend to think that the biblical accounts, especially in the old testament, are likely exaggerated stories or mis-translations or embellished accounts of actual events. More like "based on a true story" rather than literal happenings.
 
Ben Shapiro challenged her to a debate and offered 10k for her campaign and she didn't accept it. I wouldn't want to debate Shapiro either.



 
That tweet interaction doesn't make Shapiro look great.

I don't know very little about these two but she owned him in those tweets.

With his poor twisted logic response I wouldn't want to debate him either.
 
Back
Top