Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (No Skin)
  • No Skin
Collapse

The New Coffee Room

  1. TNCR
  2. General Discussion
  3. The Killing Tree

The Killing Tree

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion
43 Posts 8 Posters 680 Views
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • R Renauda
    17 Mar 2023, 19:03

    @Horace

    I am deeply ashamed to admit that I don't know much about Cambodia. I do work with a Cambodian guy whose family was mostly killed by the KR. That probably gives me relative authority in this discussion. Disagree with anything I say at your own peril of being defined as wrong.

    Yesterday you posted the following in the Israel thread:

    Nobody actually holds to a principle of deferring to natives regarding cultural issues. They only pretend to defer when they know a priori they will agree with a given native.

    I don’t believe you are the least bit ashamed.

    However to your point that you don’t know much about Cambodia, I am not surprised. That would probably require you to crack open a history text. Too much for your pop culture obsessed technocrat brain to handle

    H Offline
    H Offline
    Horace
    wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 20:45 last edited by
    #24

    @Renauda said in The Killing Tree:

    @Horace

    I am deeply ashamed to admit that I don't know much about Cambodia. I do work with a Cambodian guy whose family was mostly killed by the KR. That probably gives me relative authority in this discussion. Disagree with anything I say at your own peril of being defined as wrong.

    Yesterday you posted the following in the Israel thread:

    Nobody actually holds to a principle of deferring to natives regarding cultural issues. They only pretend to defer when they know a priori they will agree with a given native.

    I don’t believe you are the least bit ashamed.

    However to your point that you don’t know much about Cambodia, I am not surprised. That would probably require you to crack open a history text. Too much for your pop culture obsessed technocrat brain to handle

    It was a good point that I posted, about people pretending to defer to natives on cultural issues. This happens in one of two scenarios:

    1. The person claiming to defer, has no dog in the hunt regarding that issue.
    2. The person claiming to defer, knows a priori that the native will agree with them on an issue they do in fact care about.

    This rhetorical trick often comes into play here in America in a slightly different way. White liberals will claim to defer to black Americans about all things race, and by extension nearly all things political. But they only defer when they know a particular black person will agree with them.

    Education is extremely important.

    R 1 Reply Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 21:48
    • H Horace
      17 Mar 2023, 20:45

      @Renauda said in The Killing Tree:

      @Horace

      I am deeply ashamed to admit that I don't know much about Cambodia. I do work with a Cambodian guy whose family was mostly killed by the KR. That probably gives me relative authority in this discussion. Disagree with anything I say at your own peril of being defined as wrong.

      Yesterday you posted the following in the Israel thread:

      Nobody actually holds to a principle of deferring to natives regarding cultural issues. They only pretend to defer when they know a priori they will agree with a given native.

      I don’t believe you are the least bit ashamed.

      However to your point that you don’t know much about Cambodia, I am not surprised. That would probably require you to crack open a history text. Too much for your pop culture obsessed technocrat brain to handle

      It was a good point that I posted, about people pretending to defer to natives on cultural issues. This happens in one of two scenarios:

      1. The person claiming to defer, has no dog in the hunt regarding that issue.
      2. The person claiming to defer, knows a priori that the native will agree with them on an issue they do in fact care about.

      This rhetorical trick often comes into play here in America in a slightly different way. White liberals will claim to defer to black Americans about all things race, and by extension nearly all things political. But they only defer when they know a particular black person will agree with them.

      R Offline
      R Offline
      Renauda
      wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 21:48 last edited by Renauda
      #25

      @Horace

      It was a good point that I posted, about people pretending to defer to natives on cultural issues.

      You’re probably right despite the fact it was irrelevant to the demonstrations in Israel, which was, in fact the topic of thread. Unless of course you posted under the illusion that no one was interested in what bach, a resident of Israel, had say about the question affecting his country. If that is the case and I suspect it could very well be so, your post is really little other than passive aggressive snipe at the fact that some here honestly do, want to hear what an Israeli citizen and regular poster to this forum, has to say about the crisis in their country.

      Elbows up!

      H 1 Reply Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 21:56
      • R Renauda
        17 Mar 2023, 21:48

        @Horace

        It was a good point that I posted, about people pretending to defer to natives on cultural issues.

        You’re probably right despite the fact it was irrelevant to the demonstrations in Israel, which was, in fact the topic of thread. Unless of course you posted under the illusion that no one was interested in what bach, a resident of Israel, had say about the question affecting his country. If that is the case and I suspect it could very well be so, your post is really little other than passive aggressive snipe at the fact that some here honestly do, want to hear what an Israeli citizen and regular poster to this forum, has to say about the crisis in their country.

        H Offline
        H Offline
        Horace
        wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 21:56 last edited by Horace
        #26

        @Renauda said in The Killing Tree:

        @Horace

        It was a good point that I posted, about people pretending to defer to natives on cultural issues.

        You’re probably right despite the fact it was irrelevant to the demonstrations in Israel, which was, in fact the topic of thread. Unless of course you posted under the illusion that no one was interested in what bach, a resident of Israel, had say about the question affecting his country. If that is the case and I suspect it could very well be so, your post is really little other than passive aggressive snipe at the fact that some here honestly do, want to hear what an Israeli citizen and regular poster to this forum, has to say about the crisis in their country.

        I'm sure it's interesting to hear perspectives from people who live there.

        As for deferring to natives regarding conclusive opinions, obviously nobody on this board has such a principle. And obviously no such principle even exists coherently, when a culture is itself divided. But it's a principle that pops up often, and always disingenuously, by people who want to crib some credibility for their own opinion, by attaching it to someone who would know, and others should shut up.

        Education is extremely important.

        R D 2 Replies Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 22:15
        • H Horace
          17 Mar 2023, 21:56

          @Renauda said in The Killing Tree:

          @Horace

          It was a good point that I posted, about people pretending to defer to natives on cultural issues.

          You’re probably right despite the fact it was irrelevant to the demonstrations in Israel, which was, in fact the topic of thread. Unless of course you posted under the illusion that no one was interested in what bach, a resident of Israel, had say about the question affecting his country. If that is the case and I suspect it could very well be so, your post is really little other than passive aggressive snipe at the fact that some here honestly do, want to hear what an Israeli citizen and regular poster to this forum, has to say about the crisis in their country.

          I'm sure it's interesting to hear perspectives from people who live there.

          As for deferring to natives regarding conclusive opinions, obviously nobody on this board has such a principle. And obviously no such principle even exists coherently, when a culture is itself divided. But it's a principle that pops up often, and always disingenuously, by people who want to crib some credibility for their own opinion, by attaching it to someone who would know, and others should shut up.

          R Offline
          R Offline
          Renauda
          wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 22:15 last edited by Renauda
          #27

          @Horace

          But it's a principle that pops up often, and always disingenuously, by people who want to crib some credibility for their own opinion, by attaching it to someone who would know, and others should shut up.

          I would have never thought there were so many dishonest people wanting to hear what others with direct experience, have to say about a given topic or issue.

          Perhaps you can give us some insight into the dialectics of how pop culture and progressive liberalism affect one trick ponies?

          Elbows up!

          H 1 Reply Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 22:25
          • M Away
            M Away
            Mik
            wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 22:25 last edited by
            #28

            Not sure about natives, which Bach isn’t, but I normally respect the views of people who I am sure know more than I about a given subject. I may or may not completely agree, but I certainly give their opinions more weight.

            “I am fond of pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.” ~Winston S. Churchill

            H 1 Reply Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 22:27
            • R Renauda
              17 Mar 2023, 22:15

              @Horace

              But it's a principle that pops up often, and always disingenuously, by people who want to crib some credibility for their own opinion, by attaching it to someone who would know, and others should shut up.

              I would have never thought there were so many dishonest people wanting to hear what others with direct experience, have to say about a given topic or issue.

              Perhaps you can give us some insight into the dialectics of how pop culture and progressive liberalism affect one trick ponies?

              H Offline
              H Offline
              Horace
              wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 22:25 last edited by
              #29

              @Renauda said in The Killing Tree:

              @Horace

              But it's a principle that pops up often, and always disingenuously, by people who want to crib some credibility for their own opinion, by attaching it to someone who would know, and others should shut up.

              It's all well and good to solicit perspectives from natives, I never claimed otherwise. The amount of respect you have for the opinions of natives regarding their country's politics, is clear.

              Education is extremely important.

              1 Reply Last reply
              • M Mik
                17 Mar 2023, 22:25

                Not sure about natives, which Bach isn’t, but I normally respect the views of people who I am sure know more than I about a given subject. I may or may not completely agree, but I certainly give their opinions more weight.

                H Offline
                H Offline
                Horace
                wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 22:27 last edited by
                #30

                @Mik said in The Killing Tree:

                Not sure about natives, which Bach isn’t, but I normally respect the views of people who I am sure know more than I about a given subject. I may or may not completely agree, but I certainly give their opinions more weight.

                Yes, of course. But the rhetorical trick I mentioned, and which Renauda has made a big deal of, is real, and I thought it was worth mentioning. Especially as it relates to American political rhetoric, in which I am a native expert.

                Education is extremely important.

                R 1 Reply Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 22:37
                • H Horace
                  17 Mar 2023, 22:27

                  @Mik said in The Killing Tree:

                  Not sure about natives, which Bach isn’t, but I normally respect the views of people who I am sure know more than I about a given subject. I may or may not completely agree, but I certainly give their opinions more weight.

                  Yes, of course. But the rhetorical trick I mentioned, and which Renauda has made a big deal of, is real, and I thought it was worth mentioning. Especially as it relates to American political rhetoric, in which I am a native expert.

                  R Offline
                  R Offline
                  Renauda
                  wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 22:37 last edited by Renauda
                  #31

                  @Horace

                  So does that explain why when Americans speak of other countries’ delivery of health care and insurance they are in fact only speaking about the delivery of US health care and insurance as they have no idea or any interest about how those services are administered outside the US?

                  Elbows up!

                  H 1 Reply Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 22:41
                  • R Renauda
                    17 Mar 2023, 22:37

                    @Horace

                    So does that explain why when Americans speak of other countries’ delivery of health care and insurance they are in fact only speaking about the delivery of US health care and insurance as they have no idea or any interest about how those services are administered outside the US?

                    H Offline
                    H Offline
                    Horace
                    wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 22:41 last edited by
                    #32

                    @Renauda said in The Killing Tree:

                    @Horace

                    So does that explain why when Americans speak of other countries’ delivery of health care and insurance they are in fact only speaking about the delivery of US health care and insurance as they have no idea or any interest about how those services are administered outside the US?

                    I consider that to be a very interesting question, and I have no fealty whatsoever to the American system.

                    As for any other Americans you may have in mind, I suggest asking them.

                    Education is extremely important.

                    R 1 Reply Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 22:42
                    • H Horace
                      17 Mar 2023, 22:41

                      @Renauda said in The Killing Tree:

                      @Horace

                      So does that explain why when Americans speak of other countries’ delivery of health care and insurance they are in fact only speaking about the delivery of US health care and insurance as they have no idea or any interest about how those services are administered outside the US?

                      I consider that to be a very interesting question, and I have no fealty whatsoever to the American system.

                      As for any other Americans you may have in mind, I suggest asking them.

                      R Offline
                      R Offline
                      Renauda
                      wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 22:42 last edited by Renauda
                      #33

                      @Horace

                      Nice punt and that’s not Irish money I’m talking about, either.

                      Elbows up!

                      H 1 Reply Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 22:43
                      • R Renauda
                        17 Mar 2023, 22:42

                        @Horace

                        Nice punt and that’s not Irish money I’m talking about, either.

                        H Offline
                        H Offline
                        Horace
                        wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 22:43 last edited by
                        #34

                        @Renauda said in The Killing Tree:

                        @Horace

                        Nice punt and that’s not Irish money I’m talking about, either.

                        You change the subject to health care and I'm punting? Run along please.

                        Education is extremely important.

                        R 1 Reply Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 22:45
                        • H Horace
                          17 Mar 2023, 22:43

                          @Renauda said in The Killing Tree:

                          @Horace

                          Nice punt and that’s not Irish money I’m talking about, either.

                          You change the subject to health care and I'm punting? Run along please.

                          R Offline
                          R Offline
                          Renauda
                          wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 22:45 last edited by
                          #35

                          @Horace

                          Piss off yourself, you know damn well what I mean.

                          Elbows up!

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          • H Horace
                            17 Mar 2023, 21:56

                            @Renauda said in The Killing Tree:

                            @Horace

                            It was a good point that I posted, about people pretending to defer to natives on cultural issues.

                            You’re probably right despite the fact it was irrelevant to the demonstrations in Israel, which was, in fact the topic of thread. Unless of course you posted under the illusion that no one was interested in what bach, a resident of Israel, had say about the question affecting his country. If that is the case and I suspect it could very well be so, your post is really little other than passive aggressive snipe at the fact that some here honestly do, want to hear what an Israeli citizen and regular poster to this forum, has to say about the crisis in their country.

                            I'm sure it's interesting to hear perspectives from people who live there.

                            As for deferring to natives regarding conclusive opinions, obviously nobody on this board has such a principle. And obviously no such principle even exists coherently, when a culture is itself divided. But it's a principle that pops up often, and always disingenuously, by people who want to crib some credibility for their own opinion, by attaching it to someone who would know, and others should shut up.

                            D Offline
                            D Offline
                            Doctor Phibes
                            wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 22:58 last edited by
                            #36

                            @Horace said in The Killing Tree:

                            @Renauda said in The Killing Tree:

                            @Horace

                            It was a good point that I posted, about people pretending to defer to natives on cultural issues.

                            You’re probably right despite the fact it was irrelevant to the demonstrations in Israel, which was, in fact the topic of thread. Unless of course you posted under the illusion that no one was interested in what bach, a resident of Israel, had say about the question affecting his country. If that is the case and I suspect it could very well be so, your post is really little other than passive aggressive snipe at the fact that some here honestly do, want to hear what an Israeli citizen and regular poster to this forum, has to say about the crisis in their country.

                            I'm sure it's interesting to hear perspectives from people who live there.

                            As for deferring to natives regarding conclusive opinions, obviously nobody on this board has such a principle. And obviously no such principle even exists coherently, when a culture is itself divided. But it's a principle that pops up often, and always disingenuously, by people who want to crib some credibility for their own opinion, by attaching it to someone who would know, and others should shut up.

                            I'll tell you what is absolutely hilarious. Being told what Britain is like by somebody who's never been there except possibly on holiday.

                            And it's happened to me more than once.

                            I was only joking

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            • C Offline
                              C Offline
                              Copper
                              wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 23:05 last edited by
                              #37

                              The colonies used to be part of the kingdom.

                              So anyone who has been here is qualified.

                              Especially if they have been to New England, it's the same as Old England without some old things.

                              G 1 Reply Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 23:34
                              • C Copper
                                17 Mar 2023, 23:05

                                The colonies used to be part of the kingdom.

                                So anyone who has been here is qualified.

                                Especially if they have been to New England, it's the same as Old England without some old things.

                                G Offline
                                G Offline
                                George K
                                wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 23:34 last edited by
                                #38

                                @Copper said in The Killing Tree:

                                New England, it's the same as Old England without some old things.

                                Except for the language. Old England's sounds funnier.

                                "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

                                The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

                                J 1 Reply Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 23:39
                                • G George K
                                  17 Mar 2023, 23:34

                                  @Copper said in The Killing Tree:

                                  New England, it's the same as Old England without some old things.

                                  Except for the language. Old England's sounds funnier.

                                  J Offline
                                  J Offline
                                  Jolly
                                  wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 23:39 last edited by
                                  #39

                                  @George-K said in The Killing Tree:

                                  @Copper said in The Killing Tree:

                                  New England, it's the same as Old England without some old things.

                                  Except for the language. Old England's sounds funnier.

                                  Well....maybe not.

                                  The Southern U.S. accent and much of the older, upper crust British accent is somewhat similar. Phibes has devolved into some hackneyed gibberish, while we South of the Mason-Dixon have held true to our linguistic roots.

                                  “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                                  Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                                  R D 2 Replies Last reply 17 Mar 2023, 23:44
                                  • J Jolly
                                    17 Mar 2023, 23:39

                                    @George-K said in The Killing Tree:

                                    @Copper said in The Killing Tree:

                                    New England, it's the same as Old England without some old things.

                                    Except for the language. Old England's sounds funnier.

                                    Well....maybe not.

                                    The Southern U.S. accent and much of the older, upper crust British accent is somewhat similar. Phibes has devolved into some hackneyed gibberish, while we South of the Mason-Dixon have held true to our linguistic roots.

                                    R Offline
                                    R Offline
                                    Renauda
                                    wrote on 17 Mar 2023, 23:44 last edited by Renauda
                                    #40

                                    @Jolly

                                    You Coonasses have nothing on the Newfies as far as traditional grass roots accents go. Likewise with French, according to the linguists and Euro-French, our Quebecois sounds like rural French patois spoken 200 years ago in rural France

                                    Elbows up!

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    • J Jolly
                                      17 Mar 2023, 23:39

                                      @George-K said in The Killing Tree:

                                      @Copper said in The Killing Tree:

                                      New England, it's the same as Old England without some old things.

                                      Except for the language. Old England's sounds funnier.

                                      Well....maybe not.

                                      The Southern U.S. accent and much of the older, upper crust British accent is somewhat similar. Phibes has devolved into some hackneyed gibberish, while we South of the Mason-Dixon have held true to our linguistic roots.

                                      D Offline
                                      D Offline
                                      Doctor Phibes
                                      wrote on 18 Mar 2023, 00:07 last edited by
                                      #41

                                      @Jolly said in The Killing Tree:

                                      @George-K said in The Killing Tree:

                                      @Copper said in The Killing Tree:

                                      New England, it's the same as Old England without some old things.

                                      Except for the language. Old England's sounds funnier.

                                      Well....maybe not.

                                      Phibes has devolved into some hackneyed gibberish

                                      Hackney? That's a suburb of London. I speak with a distinct Lancashire accent, which goes back quite some time. We've got kettles older than your country.

                                      Incidentally, it has been said that Butch Cassidy quite possibly spoke with a Preston accent, which is the town I'm from, as his parents came from there. Stick 'em up, Chuck!

                                      I was only joking

                                      R 1 Reply Last reply 18 Mar 2023, 00:58
                                      • D Doctor Phibes
                                        18 Mar 2023, 00:07

                                        @Jolly said in The Killing Tree:

                                        @George-K said in The Killing Tree:

                                        @Copper said in The Killing Tree:

                                        New England, it's the same as Old England without some old things.

                                        Except for the language. Old England's sounds funnier.

                                        Well....maybe not.

                                        Phibes has devolved into some hackneyed gibberish

                                        Hackney? That's a suburb of London. I speak with a distinct Lancashire accent, which goes back quite some time. We've got kettles older than your country.

                                        Incidentally, it has been said that Butch Cassidy quite possibly spoke with a Preston accent, which is the town I'm from, as his parents came from there. Stick 'em up, Chuck!

                                        R Offline
                                        R Offline
                                        Renauda
                                        wrote on 18 Mar 2023, 00:58 last edited by Renauda
                                        #42

                                        @Doctor-Phibes

                                        I speak with a distinct Lancashire accent, which goes back quite some time.

                                        What would you know about that, eh? You were only born and grew up there.

                                        Elbows up!

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        • taiwan_girlT Offline
                                          taiwan_girlT Offline
                                          taiwan_girl
                                          wrote on 21 Mar 2023, 01:33 last edited by
                                          #43

                                          It is just insane crazy what the Khmer Rouge did. I was able to attend a talk given by Nate Thayer, who was the "Far Eastern Economic Review" magazine reporter who tracked down and "found" Pol Pot in the jungle in 1997 and interviewed him.

                                          Quite an interesting talk on the Khmer Rouge and what they did when they controlled the country from 1975-1979 and how they managed to survive and control part of the country for a few decades after that.

                                          (Nate Thayer just recently died.)

                                          1 Reply Last reply
                                          Reply
                                          • Reply as topic
                                          Log in to reply
                                          • Oldest to Newest
                                          • Newest to Oldest
                                          • Most Votes

                                          33/43

                                          17 Mar 2023, 22:42


                                          • Login

                                          • Don't have an account? Register

                                          • Login or register to search.
                                          33 out of 43
                                          • First post
                                            33/43
                                            Last post
                                          0
                                          • Categories
                                          • Recent
                                          • Tags
                                          • Popular
                                          • Users
                                          • Groups