Brwned
Have you ever been in love before?
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2008
- Messages
- 50,879
No, but think about it this way, that punch may have saved that scrote's life. If he knows his actions are not tolerated, it might make him think twice next time about doing it. The next guy may hold a gun.
Sounds like you're advocating violence as a useful tool, on occasion, for social progress. Is there much evidence of that?
How the hell does this happens in 2017, and in usa of all places.
It was entirely predictable in the US for all sorts of reasons, sadly.
Fritz Stern said:To have witnessed even as a child the descent in Germany from decency to Nazi barbarism gave the question, how was it possible? an existential immediacy. Along with others of my generation, I wrestled with that question, trying to reconstruct some parts of the past and perhaps intuit some lessons.
Today, I worry about the immediate future of the United States, the country that gave haven to German-speaking refugees in the 1930s. (In 1938, at the age of 12, I came with my family to New York.) We refugees are grateful to the United States for saving us and for giving us a chance for a new start, if often under harsh circumstances. We loved and admired this country that, when we arrived, was still digging itself out from an unprecedented depression, under a leader whose motto was "the only thing we have to fear is fear itself," while his German contemporary preached fear in order to exploit it.
The United States was the best functioning democracy of the 1930s -- that "low, dishonest decade" -- and under President Franklin Roosevelt it was committed to pragmatic reform and maintained inimitable high spirits. I have not forgotten the unpleasant elements of those days -- the injustices, the right-wing radicals, the anti-Semites -- but the dominant note of Roosevelt's era was ebullient affirmation.