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Everything posted by Blackhawk
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I seriously feel uncomfortable to see someone believe in so many delusions.. Unless you are trolling.
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Blackhawk replied to Flowerfaeiry's topic in Society, Politics, Government, Environment, Current Events
How about this: The child never chose to get born. You chose to create it. So because of that, logically, you should also be allowed to not give birth to it (abortion), since it's not even conscious yet for a long time inside the vomb, so it doesn't have any free will. So it doesn't matter whether you end it's life or not while it's still unconscious inside the vomb. It would be like crushing a stone or whatever dead object, because the child was never conscious anyway. What is the difference? (From its point of view. It doesn't have any point of view.) The point where it's wrong to kill it would be when it becomes conscious and experiences (possibly the illusion) of free will. -
Blackhawk replied to Psychedelic seeker's topic in Spirituality, Consciousness, Awakening, Mysticism, Meditation, God
Consciousness. -
Wasted time and energy in this case. Just see it as that Trump lost and he's a liar. And if somehow that changes later, then you are free to change your opinion in favor for Trump. Choose to be mentally healthy.
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Why don't you just get your head straight, stop being on the fence, and realize that Trump lost and he's a liar.
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Oh my fucking God.
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Blackhawk replied to Natasha's topic in Spirituality, Consciousness, Awakening, Mysticism, Meditation, God
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I think many will get mental breakdown at the point where he say that there are no others If not, they didn't get it. The ultimate loneliness, where you also kill Buddha (Leo in this case) on the road. It's like.. "Oh fuck. Oh fuck. Not even Leo himself exists. And not even the teaching. Not even I. I've made a mistake. Abort mission abort mission. I don't want enlightenment anymore." I managed to not get a mental breakdown this time. "No teaching, no teacher, no student. - Papaji
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Blackhawk replied to SQAAD's topic in Spirituality, Consciousness, Awakening, Mysticism, Meditation, God
I don't know. -
Blackhawk replied to SQAAD's topic in Spirituality, Consciousness, Awakening, Mysticism, Meditation, God
Because you can interpret a experience in different ways. For example: Interpretation 1: brain hallucination. Interpretation 2: truth, reality. I think both interpretations are a belief and requires faith. -
@peachboy This is another example of a uncooperative idiot who thinks she has special rights against the law just because she is a woman. Women and men are equal to the law.
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Like I said. The video doesn't show what caused them to deploy the taser. And she is violent in the video.
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Dude. The video doesn't show how it started. The taser was already deployed when the video started. She was probably resisting and God knows what she did. And also, she is clearly resisting even while being tased. She's even kicking with her feet. Assault on officer right there. So, judging by that, it seems like it was justified. If you are a stupid idiot and are resisting police officers and not doing what they say, then police have the full right to use force. I've seen so many videos of stupid idiots who haven't been cooperating. I don't know what's wrong with such people. And on that video it looks like that woman is such a person. All you need to do is cooperate, it shouldn't be that hard. And the reason for the incident is irrelevant. For example even if you are just taking your mom to the psychologist's appointment you must do what the police say and not resist. If you don't do that, then the police will use force, which is the right thing to do with uncooperative people.
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I see. Well, I think your hypothesis is wrong.
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Do you have a reliable source for that or is it your own hypothesis?
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Outrageous.
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Blackhawk replied to Alexandru's topic in Society, Politics, Government, Environment, Current Events
Stupid mistake. "According to one study, the referendum result had pushed up UK inflation by 1.7 percentage points in 2017, leading to an annual cost of £404 for the average British household.[8] Studies published in 2018 estimated that the economic costs of the Brexit vote were 2% of GDP,[9][10][11] or 2.5% of GDP.[12] According to a December 2017 Financial Times analysis, the Brexit referendum results had reduced national British income by 0.6% and 1.3%.[13] A 2018 analysis by Stanford University and Nottingham University economists estimated that uncertainty around Brexit reduced investment by businesses by approximately 6 percentage points and caused an employment reduction by 1.5 percentage points.[14] A number of studies found that Brexit-induced uncertainty about the UK's future trade policy reduced British international trade from June 2016 onwards.[15][16][17][18][19] A 2019 analysis found that British firms substantially increased offshoring to the European Union after the Brexit referendum, whereas European firms reduced new investments in the UK.[20][21] There is overwhelming or near-unanimous agreement among economists that leaving the European Union will adversely affect the British economy in the medium- and long-term.[a][39] Surveys of economists in 2016 showed overwhelming agreement that Brexit would likely reduce the UK's real per-capita income level.[40][30][31] 2019 and 2017 surveys of existing academic research found that the credible estimates ranged between GDP losses of 1.2–4.5% for the UK,[39] and a cost of between 1–10% of the UK's income per capita.[25] These estimates differ depending on whether the UK does a Hard or Soft Brexit.[25] In January 2018, the UK government's own Brexit analysis was leaked; it showed that UK economic growth would be stunted by 2–8% for at least 15 years following Brexit, depending on the leave scenario.[41][42] According to most economists, EU membership has a strong positive effect on trade and, as a result, the UK's trade would be worse off if it left the EU.[43][44][45][46] According to a study by University of Cambridge economists, under a hard Brexit, whereby the UK reverts to WTO rules, one-third of UK exports to the EU would be tariff-free, one-quarter would face high trade barriers and other exports risk tariffs in the range of 1–10%.[47] A 2017 study found that "almost all UK regions are systematically more vulnerable to Brexit than regions in any other country."[48] A 2017 study examining the economic impact of Brexit-induced reductions in migration" found that there would likely be "a significant negative impact on UK GDP per capita (and GDP). Following the Brexit referendum, many companies shifted assets, offices, or businesses operations out of Britain and to continental Europe.[51] By the beginning of April 2019, banks had transferred more than US$1 trillion out of Britain, and asset management and insurance companies transferred US$130 billion out of Britain.[51] A March 2019 report from the independent research institute New Financial identified 269 companies in the banking or financial services sector that had relocated portions of their businesses or staff following Brexit; of these moves, 239 were confirmed as Brexit-related.[52] The greatest number of moves were to Dublin (30%), followed by Luxembourg (18%), Frankfurt (12%), Paris (12%), and Amsterdam (10%). Research by the 'Centre for European Reform'[clarification needed] suggests the UK economy is 2.5% smaller than it would have been if Remain had won the referendum. Public finances fell by £26bn a year. This amounts to £500m a week and is growing. An estimate suggested Britain's economy is 2.1% smaller than it would have been after the first quarter of 2018.[94] According to economist Paul Krugman, Brexiteers' assertions that leaving the single market and customs union might increase UK exports to the rest of the world are wrong. He considers the costs of Brexit might be around 2 per cent of GDP.[55] The Institute for Fiscal Studies have said that the majority of forecasts of the impact of Brexit on the UK economy indicated that the government would have less money to spend even if it no longer had to pay into the EU.[54]" https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_effects_of_Brexit