Comment author:BlueAjah
12 January 2013 03:47:35PM
-6 points
[-]
"On September 11th, 2001, nineteen Muslim males hijacked four jet airliners in a deliberately suicidal effort to hurt the United States of America. Now why do you suppose they might have done that? Because they saw the USA as a beacon of freedom to the world, but were born with a mutant disposition that made them hate freedom?"
YES! That's exactly what I think. Because I've looked at the evidence, and that's what the evidence says. The United States is renowned as a beacon of freedom. Some people think that's a good thing, some people think that's a bad thing, but they mostly agree it's a beacon of freedom. And a lot of people don't like freedom. And those people clearly have different genes than we do (including personality genes). And people's desire or dislike of freedom tends to relate to personality differences (such as self-control, accepting responsibility for one's own actions, etc).
You must have noticed genetic personality differences between Muslim countries and non-Muslim countries. And those differences were originally caused by mutations.
As I've previously discussed in my comment on your last page, I think your accusations of "correspondence bias" are mistaken and in reality the opposite bias is more of a problem.
Comment author:aeder
16 March 2013 04:43:19PM
1 point
[-]
How do you define freedom?
Is it freedom for everyone to have guns in home?
Is it freedom is guaranted employement?
Is it freedom is the right for the government medical care?
Is it freedom the right to die on the street in case of lost job?
Is it freedom the right to say anything - except that is censored?
What is freedom?
P.S. It's sometimes a fun to hear the speaches of "The United States is renowned as a beacon of freedom" from the country which more or less put racism under control less then 50 years ago.
Does the USA was the "beacon of freedom" in the 1950's then "white only" tables still appear in public?
"On September 11th, 2001, nineteen Muslim males hijacked four jet airliners in a deliberately suicidal effort to hurt the United States of America. Now why do you suppose they might have done that? Because they saw the USA as a beacon of freedom to the world, but were born with a mutant disposition that made them hate freedom?"
YES! That's exactly what I think. Because I've looked at the evidence, and that's what the evidence says. The United States is renowned as a beacon of freedom. Some people think that's a good thing, some people think that's a bad thing, but they mostly agree it's a beacon of freedom. And a lot of people don't like freedom. And those people clearly have different genes than we do (including personality genes). And people's desire or dislike of freedom tends to relate to personality differences (such as self-control, accepting responsibility for one's own actions, etc).
You must have noticed genetic personality differences between Muslim countries and non-Muslim countries. And those differences were originally caused by mutations.
As I've previously discussed in my comment on your last page, I think your accusations of "correspondence bias" are mistaken and in reality the opposite bias is more of a problem.
How do you define freedom?
Is it freedom for everyone to have guns in home? Is it freedom is guaranted employement? Is it freedom is the right for the government medical care? Is it freedom the right to die on the street in case of lost job? Is it freedom the right to say anything - except that is censored?
What is freedom?
P.S. It's sometimes a fun to hear the speaches of "The United States is renowned as a beacon of freedom" from the country which more or less put racism under control less then 50 years ago.
Does the USA was the "beacon of freedom" in the 1950's then "white only" tables still appear in public?