The last sentence is always the best "What will they do next, TAX AIR?!?!?!?!??!?!"
We have local ads thankfully, which I don't watch.
We have local ads thankfully, which I don't watch.
Fuck Israel
We had kids in the mid ages playing swords with sticks. Firearms have replaced swords as the weapon of a soldier, I see no issue with toy guns for kids.SuperJail Warden wrote:
We shouldn't link fundamental aspects of male childhood to tools of violence. Nothing good will come of it. I am saying this as someone whose reddit.com/saved is a horror show of gun violence.
By that logic, we shouldn't have violent videogames.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
It's arguable that chopping each other up wholesale wasn't a psychologically healthy activity either. Living in an environment where you're considered old at 30, no thank you. I'm partly with mac on this one, and as a shooter besides. Guns and gun-like objects shouldn't be considered children's toys, something a number (but not 100%) of vets I've talked to, ranging from WW2 on, seem to agree with.
Ever see a kid go to pump a shotgun like Doom guy? Harrowing.
Last edited by War Man (2021-05-17 19:59:26)
this is a huge misconception about the middle ages. people were not considered 'old' at 30. infant mortality and dying due to disease or accident were relatively very high, which skews the average life expectancy. you can find any number of medieval graveyards or burial sites in europe of people who are 'old'. the sense that life was 'nasty, brutish and short' is more apposite for pre-hobbesian societies without an organised state, not medieval kingdoms and the era of knight gallantry.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
It's arguable that chopping each other up wholesale wasn't a psychologically healthy activity either. Living in an environment where you're considered old at 30, no thank you. I'm partly with mac on this one, and as a shooter besides. Guns and gun-like objects shouldn't be considered children's toys, something a number (but not 100%) of vets I've talked to, ranging from WW2 on, seem to agree with.
Ever see a kid go to pump a shotgun like Doom guy? Harrowing.
Last edited by uziq (2021-05-17 22:31:38)
In the middle ages, there were often laws that prohibited the ownership of swords to non-nobility. In Japan specifically for instance, it was a death sentence.War Man wrote:
We had kids in the mid ages playing swords with sticks. Firearms have replaced swords as the weapon of a soldier, I see no issue with toy guns for kids.SuperJail Warden wrote:
We shouldn't link fundamental aspects of male childhood to tools of violence. Nothing good will come of it. I am saying this as someone whose reddit.com/saved is a horror show of gun violence.
I am well aware of the swords rarity to a spear, pike, or axe for a common militia. I just said sword to simplify things with one weapon and not mention several at once.SuperJail Warden wrote:
In the middle ages, there were often laws that prohibited the ownership of swords to non-nobility. In Japan specifically for instance, it was a death sentence.War Man wrote:
We had kids in the mid ages playing swords with sticks. Firearms have replaced swords as the weapon of a soldier, I see no issue with toy guns for kids.SuperJail Warden wrote:
We shouldn't link fundamental aspects of male childhood to tools of violence. Nothing good will come of it. I am saying this as someone whose reddit.com/saved is a horror show of gun violence.
I too have watched movies where in the middle ages kids played with sticks as swords in fields. I think that might be a Hollywood invention. Aside from the fact that children had little time to play back then since subsistence farming requires child labor, swords were not as ubiquitous as people think. Spears were the most common military weapon. And warfare back then was nothing like Hollywood shows it where people with swords fight 1 v 1 in fields surrounded by other people doing the same. How would a rural farm boy even know what a medieval battle looked like considering photography didn't exist?
Off the beaten track for a moment, I'd sort of like to comment that phrases like this are a great way for adults to shirk responsibility as guardians. Ex: "oh, well. Boys will be boys!" Kicking someone's shit in or getting your shit kicked in should not be some inviolable rite of passage, and crap like that has probably contributed to the creation of a number of psychopaths. Also in some cases, small town attitudes about fisticuffs don't generally play well when your family moves to a community where kids are carrying knives.War Man wrote:
Kids are kids.
So he "didn't mean it like that," but he was ready to sue over holiday decorations, and I guess the airport didn't feel like dealing with any of it that year. Damage was already done, anyway. More fodder for the War on Christmas.All nine Christmas trees have been removed from the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport instead of adding a giant Jewish menorah to the holiday display as a rabbi had requested.
Maintenance workers boxed up the trees during the graveyard shift early Saturday, when airport bosses believed few people would notice.
"We decided to take the trees down because we didn't want to be exclusive," said airport spokeswoman Terri-Ann Betancourt. "We're trying to be thoughtful and respectful, and will review policies after the first of the year."
Rabbi Elazar Bogomilsky, who made his request weeks ago, said he was appalled by the decision. He had hired a lawyer and threatened to sue if the Port of Seattle didn't add the menorah next to the trees, which had been festooned with red ribbons and bows.
"Everyone should have their spirit of the holiday. For many people the trees are the spirit of the holidays, and adding a menorah adds light to the season," said Bogomilsky, who works in Seattle at the regional headquarters for Chabad Lubavitch, a Jewish education foundation.
After consulting with lawyers, port staff believed that adding the menorah would have required adding symbols for other religions and cultures in the Northwest. The holidays are the busiest season at the airport, Betancourt said, and staff didn't have time to play cultural anthropologists.
Fast forward years later to 2021,"They've darkened the hall instead of turning the lights up," said Bogomilsky's lawyer, Harvey Grad. "There is a concern here that the Jewish community will be portrayed as the Grinch."
Craig Watson, the port's chief lawyer, said Bogomilsky had threatened to file the lawsuit if the port didn't make a decision by the end of last week.
"It just wasn't going to get done before the threatened lawsuit was filed. They said they were on their way to the courthouse," Watson said. "We're not in the business of offending anyone, and we're not eager to get into a federal lawsuit with anyone."
Port commissioner John Creighton said he'd hoped the trees would come down "quietly." Instead, airline employees called Seattle television stations. Creighton said he's received several irate e-mails.