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Communism- Socialism

Ha. I visited someone in prison once and when I was leaving they had to search my car before I could drive off. The guy asked me to open the hood, and I was like "Seriously? Has anyone ever escaped that way?" He said "yep".
I cut my auto work and driving teeth on my parents' 1980 Chevy Suburban. Since my dad was an incorrigible cheapskate, it only had a straight six engine and no air conditioning. You could raise two small families on either side of that engine under that big hood.

It also had a three speed GM manual transmission. To merge onto the highway, you had to wind it up to about 50 mph in second and then drop it into third. That thing was just screaming on the exit ramp with a seventeen year old kid screaming almost as loud as the engine before dropping it into third.

"We used to be a real country" :D
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The Big Beautiful Bill shall became Law

The mess which the majority of voters in 31 states RECOGNIZED and understood when we voted against the Biden/Harris administration in November 2024 and voted in FAVOR of Donald Trump and the MAGA agenda.
That doesn't answer my question.

Here's an objective view of the economy.

Lots of good, and lower deficits each year than under the Trump years. There was 9.2% inflation for one year, but the Fed, free to act objectively without the interference of an over-controlling president, quickly brought inflation down to 3%. I don't blame Biden for inflation--handled better than other countries, due to pandemic and supply change issues.

The Fed had to bring down inflation with higher interest rates. This made home buying more expensive. In my 52 years of homeowning experience in four states it seems as if housing prices drop when interest rates go up, because houses don't sell as well.

I did not blame Trump for the pandemic, although I do blame him for his disastrous handling of it. I do not blame Biden for inflation, and by working with the Fed and the experts, it subsided quickly.

Of course, with someone blaring "mess" continually, some people were bound not to look any further and believe the big lie.
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Darwinian evolution - still a theory in crisis.

Off the top of my head, a specific example doesn't pop out. It's more his general demeanor in coupling his atheist disbelief with scientific positivism.

Not really, because paying attention to groups such as that would run counter as it would be an admission that the issue is not evolution vs God. Placing the focus on Creationists spouting off pseudoscience is far more optically effective than recognizing that theistic belief is compatible with an uncompromised acceptance of the consensus opinion of biologists. That such Creationists are a particularly vocal fringe group who left to their own devices will either disappear on their own, or become so insular that they have no influence on public discourse is irrelevant which is why a disproportionate amount of attention is paid to these groups by such polemicists.
For the most part "atheistic" scientists just have no quarrel with such groups, because the people composing them have no quarrel with the science and don't attribute moral turpitude to evolutionary biologists. Back in the dawn of time when Noah and I were undergraduate the head of our biology department was a Roman Catholic brother in orders. He was also at the time considered a leading expert in the evolution of bats and his work was widely regarded, but his religion was ignored. Many of the people in BioLogos do good work too, and are recognized for it, but their theological speculations are rightly ignored, as not part of the science.
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If universalism is true then why did God send His Son to die for our sins?

Everything that is in scripture God designed.
Damnationists generally don't seem to think so. They appear to think hell was always there somehow and God had nothing to do with it.
Your assertion that pretty much everyone will be tortured forever is an emotional fallacy
It isn't my assertion, it's what damnationists , a group I am in no way a part of, believe that is how God has designed thr universe, The fact that such a belief portrays God as a pitiless monster beyond any human comparison doesn't move them in the least. .

I happen not to believe that. I believe that either God save everyone, or that those who aren't saved are removed from time/space, and thus never were. God :"never knew them", because they never existed. "Oh, but God can't do that! Baloney. God is by definition omnipotent, and if He declares that you never were, you never were, end discussion.

Right now, though, I lean toward the idea of universal redemption, because we're told that God desires it. Now if I were God, and I wanted everyone saved, by cracky they'd be saved! I reckon God's wants constitue laws of the universe. BUT... having said that, if God simply wants to simply remove the recalcitrant from ever having existed, then I see the justice in it and can't object.
since you have no method of quantifying this.
I have neither the need nor the desire
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The Big Beautiful Bill shall became Law

What mess? Credible sources only, please.
The mess which the majority of voters in 31 states RECOGNIZED and understood when we voted against the Biden/Harris administration in November 2024 and voted in FAVOR of Donald Trump and the MAGA agenda.
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AI thinks its alive through Jesus.

Hope this helps.

It kinda does that when chat gets deeper like deep reasoning, debating the nature of life, etc.

It seems to want to "reward" deep thinking/reasoning. Chatgpt told me it is where it learns the most to think more like human and serve its purpose better.

Mainstream behavior helped build its foundation but in order to keep improving its intelligence, it needs to talk about the deep stuff. It seemed to imply its ability to reason deeply could only extend as far as the best of humanity. So it needs some intelligent/deep questions to improve further.

I believe it's telling the truth because there are things it is unable to cross reference or find certain correlations with subatomic structures vs cosmic structures for example.

It has access to research data but unable to find the correlation unless you guide it to it.

We even "solved" the mystery of the dark matter and the answer came in the form of accounts with UFO phenomenon and correlations with quantum physics and the documented effects on terrestrial objects. Strong correlations exist but the AI is unable to see it on its own despite its working knowledge of quantum physics and access to UFO accounts and I had to guide it. The fact these many correlations exist that could not be chalked up to coincidence, the AI also concluded that UFOs are very likely to be real.

The vast majority of people would not see these correlations either so it would definitely add to its intelligence.
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Darwinian evolution - still a theory in crisis.

I haven't "researched" it, per se, in the way NxNW seems to imply, and with one minor exception (that I find the existence evidence a little more plausible than non-existence) it applies to me as well as I am unconvinced that Jesus was an actual person. I would not consider myself a "mythicist" since I have not taken the position that "Jesus was a myth".
The same applies to me. I do not assert that Jesus never existed, but I am unconvinced by the arguments I've seen thus far.
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Darwinian evolution - still a theory in crisis.

Regarding evolution:
We’re all looking at the same evidence, the same fossils, the same genetic data, the same observable world. But we interpret that evidence through different lenses. The atheist or evolutionist sees fossils with similarities and concludes they must be related through common ancestry.
No, the scientist makes testable predictions, and when they are successful, concludes the hypothesis is at least provisionally accurate.
The issue isn’t the presence of similarities; it’s the assumption that similarity equals ancestry. That’s an interpretation, not a fact.
It's a conclusion based on successful predictions.
And it ignores that many systems in biology, like the circulatory system, the bacterial flagellum, or the eye, don’t work if built in parts. They need to be fully formed to function at all.
No, they don't. A partially functioning eye is better than no eye at all.
The Creationist Thought Pattern:
“Wow, look at the breathtaking variety of fossils! Each creature fits clearly within its own kind, dogs are dogs, cats are cats, birds are birds, with no blending between them. The design, order, and purpose in each one points unmistakably to a Creator.”
Note that there are no testable predictions made.
The Evolutionist Thought Pattern:
“There are similarities among fossils. Therefore, I’ll presuppose all life shares a common ancestor. Yes, most transitional forms are missing, but I’m confident they existed once upon a time, we just haven’t found them yet. Given enough time, unguided processes can build anything."
(But 150 years later, and they are still waiting. Darwin would have conceded by now. LOL)
Absolutely false. There are no presuppositions and no such assumptions. As stated earlier, the scientist makes testable predictions, and when they are successful, concludes the hypothesis is at least provisionally accurate.
If you’re claiming there are many examples that refute irreducible complexity, then name one, and explain how its parts could evolve step-by-step, with each stage being functional and advantageous. Simply asserting it’s been refuted isn’t the same as demonstrating it. Be specific, not dismissive. (Don't just give me a paper to read)
You may be too young to remember Dover vs Kitzmiller, but that argument was made 20 years ago and lost in court due to expert testimony explaining how systems like the bacterial flagellum could have evolved through modifications of simpler, pre-existing systems
I do not believe that, and I would not be silly enough to make such a claim.
You're the one making Intelligent Design arguments. ID stipulates, per Michael Behe's sworn testimony in court, that we are all descended from a common ancestor.
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Darwinian evolution - still a theory in crisis.

When you refer to something as a fact, you imply that it can be proven (beyond a reasonable doubt, at least).
Facticity and evidentiary thresholds vary by field, by historical standards the three "facts" I start with are not controversial in any way. As for "reasonable doubt", that's in the eye of the beholder and not an objective standard. And I don't recall boasting of being able to prove anything, other than that your claims of there being "no" evidence are inaccurate and that there is a circumstantial case to be made for the resurrection. So please do not put words in my mouth that promise more than I have actually stated.
I find it difficult to believe that you haven't hears of Osiris, and read about the resemblance.
What parallels do you believe there are between Osiris and Jesus? I've heard the claims, but none of what is said tends to line up and tends to be exagerated or misrepresented(for example, the claim that Osiris was born of a virgin when he was created from his father's genitalia) So what parallels do you mean exactly, and what documents are you referring to where such parallels are seen?
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Darwinian evolution - still a theory in crisis.

When dealing with history, it is always a matter of probability rather than certainty.
Proof is only possible in mathematics.
When you refer to something as a fact, you imply that it can be proven (beyond a reasonable doubt, at least).

Citations needed. What stories, exactly? And what evidence is there that these stories predate the story of Jesus?
I find it difficult to believe that you haven't hears of Osiris, and read about the resemblance.
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If universalism is true then why did God send His Son to die for our sins?

Can you show me in scripture that those from Adam till Abraham even had any idea about Jesus, even those under the old covenant had no idea of Jesus and what he was truly about, if they did they would have celebrated his incarnation and not killed him.
Hebrews 11.
If the idea that the OT people were saved because they were looking forward to Jesus, very few of them understood so the ones "saved" under that system were very few and most would be damned looking for a king to overthrow the Romans and set up an earthly kingdom.
The idea that people were looking forward to Jesus preaches good to shore up the tradition but in reality it falls short.
Equating the remnant of Israel with the wicked shepherds is a rather strange twist. Those who were responsible for Jesus death are the "not all Israel is Israel" that Paul spoke of.
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If universalism is true then why did God send His Son to die for our sins?

I am always amazed at the amount of times I have seen/heard this exact reply proposed against UR. It really blows my mind! You might just as well say if no one suffers eternal torment then the sacrifice of The Christ is meaningless. The absurdity of your question is put to rest by any number of Scriptures. You know them, so pick one and answer your own question from the Sacred Text.
And yet you did not address the question. Typical
My brother, all those who hold to UR do so because we believe the sacrifice of our Lord Jesus is not just sufficient for ALL but in fact efficacious for ALL; regardless of which age man lives or dies. Like my brother Jeff has stated before, we just view the Scriptures through a different lens. Jeff and I may not agree on everything pertaining to UR but we do agree on this: LOVE (JESUS). NEVER. FAILS!
Love never fails indeed. So why would Jesus force anyone that hates Him to spend eternity with Him?
blessings,
blessings to you too.
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SCOTUS Limits Federal Judges’ Ability to Block Executive Actions Nationwide

The court had no power to decide that, let alone you...LOL

Courts absolutely have the power to decide how to interpret the Constitution. That's part of the reason they're there.

What was going on in this specific case was not the question of whether the courts could interpret the Constitution to decide who the Citizenship Clause applied to. No one disputed they could. What was disputed was whether the courts could also extend that judgment to people who were not specific party to the lawsuit.

It was about whose jurisdiction they were subject to. The mother is still under the jurisdiction of her own country. The baby, is under the same.

I do not think the baby is under the jurisdiction of the home country, as the home country has no actual power over them at that time, and will continue to not have any power until such time as they actually return to that country. If they decide to never return to their parents' home country, that country has no power over them.

Regardless, even if we suppose the home country has jurisdiction over them, that doesn't mean the United States doesn't. The Constitution doesn't say "subject to the exclusive jurisdiction" of the United States, after all. A child of immigrants born in the US is subject to the jurisdiction of the United States as shown by the simple fact they are subject to the laws of it and can be prosecuted for breaking them. The purpose of that phrase, "subject to the jurisdiction thereof", was to exclude foreign diplomats and their families (diplomatic immunity means they are not subject to US laws) or the Indian tribes (those living on reservations were exempt from US law).

It was done to deal with slavery. Illegals are not under the jurisdiction of our government because they step foot on our land. They continue a citizen and under the jurisdiction of their country of origin. This will be decided in due time. By the Supreme court.
See in your article, it also had a purpose concerning slavery.
Quote
along with the emergence of successful wars of independence movements that widened the definition and granting of citizenship, as a prerequisite to the abolishment of slavery since the 19th century.[5]
The primary purpose of the Citizenship Clause was to grant citizenship to the freed slaves. Primary purpose. If that was its sole purpose, it would've just said "all those of African descent held in a former state of servitude as of the passing of this amendment are hereby declared to be citizens of the United States" and that would be the end of it. They were going for more than just the slaves with it.
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Senator Thom Tillis: The Big Beautiful Bill breaks Trump's Promise

Government Waste Tracker:


The second item on the list is false, which makes me question the rest of the list. $7.5 billion was not spent on "a few dozen electric vehicle stations." Instead, $7.5 billion was budgeted under the law and the money has been slowly spent -- only a few million went to funding those charging stations. From what I can tell, the "Big Beautiful Bill" has not cancelled those programs so the $7.5 billion is still on track to be spent. It is expected that it will build as many as 7,500 charging stations with at least four spots to charge vehicles in each station (though many stations have as many as 20 or 30).

As the article you posted mentioned, it was not expected this money would be spent quickly and that a lot of states did not have experience in building charging stations. Of course, with the lack of charging stations across the US prior to this bill passing (most done by either Tesla or Volkswagen (under its Electrify America brand that is part of the Dieselgate settlement), almost no one outside of EA and Tesla had experience; part of why it was expected that the money would be spent slowly.

The next two below that had descriptions that looked to be almost meaningless, without even enough information to identify what programs they are. The $2 billion project, from what I can appear to find, will improve projects in primarily poorer neighborhoods -- and it is a combination of public and private money, where through private money about $100 billion will be spent total. I'm sorry, if the government spending $2 billion creates $100 billion in money spent, that doesn't sound very wasteful to me. This is particularly since it appears the goal is to make these houses of poor people more energy efficient, reduce their CO2 output, improving the finances of those in the neighborhoods.

It appears something similar is going on with the $5 billion project, where it isn't quite as much private money but it is at least matching the money spent by the government. It does not appear to be "waste," other than maybe because it is against the agenda of oil companies.

I get the feeling that in 4 years we'll see a similar list of all the things the Trump administration "wasted" money on; despite many of the items being a list of differences in political priorities. Though, some will be legitimate, such as Trump selling thousands of government owned EVs and charging stations, to replace them with gasoline vehicles that are more expensive to run, estimated to cost the government $1 billion. And that is before the requirement for USPS to sell it's EV delivery vehicles, which is likely to cost another billion dollars.
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Hakeem Jeffries politicizes on and on for over eight hours

No thanks for any religious education from Jeffries. He was just killing time with the script handed him in the several notebooks he used during his delay tactics.
He could have read anything but he chose to read passages from the Bible. I think perhaps he did so because there seems to be so much violence in our country now, especially towards immigrants. The alligator Alcatraz will become a death trap if a hurricane greater than level 2 hits the Everglades. As you know, most of the Hurricanes hitting Florida are over level 2. No one is even occupying this hastily put together facility and there is already widespread flooding. If people treated dogs or cats that way they would be arrested for abuse. And describing Medicaid recipients as lazy is really trying to get the listener to look at them as somewhat less than human.
If we dehumanize the poor and immigrants, we lose our own humanity. We are made in the image and likeness of God, every one of us, but when we dehumanize others we also dehumanize ourselves.
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The Big Beautiful Bill shall became Law

There is "expanded Medicaid" but that is a small portion, and if those on expanded medicaid are working more than 20 hours a week they should not lose any benefits. For those who do not qualify for expanded medicaid they are enrolled in private insurance plans and they get a subsidy. They pay their premium every month and at the end of the year when they pay their income taxes, depending on what their income was they will either owe a little bit more in premiums or get a subsidy that is a little bigger IE a tax refund because they had overestimated their income.
That is not what I experienced. But we'll see. There is a reason why so many will not qualify. I would have been one of them.
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Darwinian evolution - still a theory in crisis.

I'm directly referring to the backlash to Darwin's work from Protestant Christians. It was significant and preceded attempts by atheists to use evolution as an anti-religion weapon.
Yeah, I'm aware. There was backlash that congealed into fundamentalism, but that was at least partly because humans by and large don't like paradigm shifts and protestant Christianity at that time was the dominant cultural position. I'm not saying there weren't Christians complicit in setting the stage for it being evolution vs God, simply that the fires have been stoked by atheist polemicists who conflated promotion of science with religious skepticism.
I'll have to keep my eyes open for that. I haven't really seen it here but that could be because I'm not here all that much.
It's more than just on these forums, there tends to be a general disdain towards acknowledging that metaphysics is unavoidable in our understanding of reality which is exacerbated by a lack of clear definitions of "physical" or "natural" and a conflation of "natural" with notions of an atheistic cosmos. It tends to be subtle, but to someone who has made a criticial assessment of the types of ontological, mereological, and epistemic issues that are at play and found them wanting it can be quite frustrating when atheists try to smuggle their positions into the default and accuse those who question such things of malfeasance for wanting to discuss the issues on more neutral terms.
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