So.....did your insurance premium go up?
- American Politics
- 20 Replies
Yup. Foolish things like food and housingIt seems kind of pointless to say its unaffordable when the money was just spent elsewhere.
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Yup. Foolish things like food and housingIt seems kind of pointless to say its unaffordable when the money was just spent elsewhere.
Respectfully, I cannot accept an assertion without an argument. If you can provide an exegetical argument from Scripture demonstrating your view, I will gladly consider it.I have made my post if you do not believe what is written, then look somewhere else.
Israel is God's chosen people and they are a different set of people than the church.
It sounds like you found the right teacher. I agree and I think we can reason our way to God and the foot of the cross.A story:
I was taking a logic curriculum in college that required an early survey of philosophy course that was taught by the dean of the philosophy department. I signed up for the course and quickly learned that I was the only student enrolled. That would mean the offer would be withdrawn, but it best fit my intended schedule to take it that semester so I went to the professor, Dr Goldstein, to see if I could take it by independent study and testing,
"No," Goldstein said firmly, it was a course that must be taught by lecture. So, I said something about being disappointed that it would not be taught that semester. "Oh, I'm teaching it," he said. Even if to only one student, he was going to teach it. By lecture. We held the first couple of sessions in a classroom, just him and me. Then we mutually agreed that was dumb, so I just went to his office.
In that private setting, we learned we were both Christian, which rather surprised me, given his name. As it turned out, he had been born and raised Jewish. But he'd become disillusioned by Judaism and turned to atheism. But he had found atheism philosophically unsatisfying and had spent more than a decade traveling the world and investigation all sorts of religions.
Eventually, he looked into Christianity, which he'd previously avoided because he'd "heard enough" about Christianity just being in the US. But it hadn't taken him very much study into the New Testament to realize...there it was. There it had been all along.
So, that "survey of philosophy" course actually turned into "the ways all the other philosophies get it wrong."
If you’d bothered to read his post (#126) you wouldn’t be asking that question.
As for the second, I’ve posted numerous examples of the policies Trump supports that were proposed by the Heritage Foundation. I didn’t rely on the mandate alone and shared additional items that weren’t included in the document with a summary and link where they can be read in full and screenshots too. Which includes welfare, education, social security, disability, veterans, government employees and more.
To confirm his alliance with the organization I provided recent pieces that include his acknowledgment of their connection. All of which you can find in my history. Unlike most, my position isn’t political and I have no difficulty addressing wrongs from either side. Nor am I a fan.
My position on him remains unchanged and I’ve said all along the main benefactors of his administration are the wealthy and that’s usually the case for both. The only difference is the narrative. They’ll always eat. I don’t have a problem admitting that nor will I ignore it to gain ground on the issues that may concern christians. But everyone gauges wins differently.
If you want to debate right and left I’m not your candidate nor do I care for either.
~bella
I'm sure their executive positions have nothing to do with nepotism. I didn't say the wealthy don't work hard, but there's far more to achievement than hard work.That’s a sweeping generalization which doesn’t hold true for all. Bernaud Arnault is the 8th richest man in the world and all of his children work for the firm and that’s fairly common. Larry Fink is another example. He’s the CEO of BlackRock and has three children and didn’t grow up wealthy. None of them work for him. His eldest founded a company in the sector. The second is a philanthropist who aids creatives and the third is involved with the arts.
Sure, but pretending that wealth is a product of personal merit is absurd. And a death tax is an entirely reasonable way of returning wealth to the general pot rather than it becoming increasingly concentrated by a handful of people who can afford to tilt the game in their favor.Nevertheless, if their parents wanted a different reality for them that’s okay. You can’t impose your standard on other people’s children if their behavior isn’t illegal. You’re welcome to disagree of course but that’s all. The only reason it’s being discussed is because of the money.
Exceptions are not relevant to general trends. And the fact that you immediately jumped to that field appears to be a tacit admission that there have been systemic issues and instead of seeking to make redress you want to excuse the experience of the common black person in favor of focusing on exceptional cases. Nearly every statistic has outliers.How conversant are you on the subject of black wealth? Specifically the sort that isn’t tied to celebrity or entertainment. I’m not dismissing the other. But I want to be sure you’re aware that black wealth existed before and after Jim Crow. It isn’t a topic that’s frequently discussed hence the question.
~bella
But then by the same logic I can quote experts in the field which agree with me and beat your expertise lol. If citing experts is the way to win an arguement.OK, that's fine. I can only speak to the subject of achieving precise work using hand tools based on my own experience. If everybody here disagrees with me I don't care because I can still get paid for actually doing it. I suppose you could get more money than I do because you have your "common sense" which beats training and experience every time, right?
Not in the way your talking. I simply mentioned that the idea of a culture having advanced knowledge and being wiped out in a fairly short time is plausable considering the massive floods that happened around 10,000 years ago. But lost advanced knowledge is not dependent on some flood. Just that they had knowledge and for whatever reason they disappeared.I don't know, but you are the one who brought up pre-flood civilizations.
Then you know we were deep into the science and not some fantasy. Disputing the precision is about the science and we were debating the technical aspect of precision. This was for a major part of the thread. But most of my posts were about the out of place images based on reverse engineering the marks on the stones. Nothing to do with any Atlantis.No, I was here the whole time but early on I was just interested in countering the fatuous nonsense you were peddling about what precision is in a general way and how it is achieved both in the modern day and in the past.
But thats factual not spectulation. Fact we found the vases with the Naqada culture. Fact the are at a level that required some sort of lathing due to their high symmetry and circularity. Fact they did not have lathes or the potters wheel.Nobody says measuring the vases was a "speculation." See, what your sources have shown is that Naqada craftsmen may have produced objects with tools and techniques we don't know about.
You are the one who went on to insist that not only do we not know how it was done but that it was impossible for them to have done it because their society was "too primitive."
That is because the churches have the Holy Spirit.No, the lampstands are the churches - see Rev. 1:20, it's defined clearly.
I've asked her three times to explain what she meant when she said that. She's unable or unwilling to explain herself.You're asking the question, which did you have in mind?
A legitimate question asking you to explain a cryptic thing you said is not an agenda. It's a question.That’s your agenda not mine.
What I fail to understand are the sentences you type.What you fail to understand is my lack of persuasion.
You're asking the question, which did you have in mind?I have no idea. I'm curious to find out, but I don't think she knows what she meant.
I have no idea. I'm curious to find out, but I don't think she knows what she meant.In the name of, or in alignment with?
In the name of, or in alignment with?What do you suppose he's going to do in the name of Christian principles?
This is precisely why systemic prejudices continue on. Those who have benefited from generational growth of wealth pass those privileges on rather than expecting their offspring to show their merit by building their own wealth. Those who were subject to policies like redzoning and other discriminatory policies that prevented them from building wealth have nothing to pass on, and are more likely to fall into a debt trap because of predatory lending practices.This matter was raised in Australia. And it was proposed that when my wife and I shuffle off and leave out house to the kids then the value would be taxed.
Ain't no way. We worked very hard indeed to buy that house and we gave up a lot to pay the mortgage. Which went up to 17% at one point. All the money that went into that property was what was left after we had already paid a sizeable chunck of our wages in tax. Would the government want to tax me twice?
Granted that it's now worth a very large sum of money but the principle stands.