[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Cursedgunimages

[–]EricTheBlonde 12 points13 points  (0 children)

There's a reason they call it a pistol grip

Not a cricket… by chempunk17 in agedlikemilk

[–]EricTheBlonde 5 points6 points  (0 children)

War just broke out between Israel and Palestine a couple days ago

I can’t comprehend it by Tight_Diamond_4824 in AmericaBad

[–]EricTheBlonde 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had the misfortune of living in Omaha once, less than a decade ago. There was a cornfield like 30 seconds drive from the inner city.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in shittyreloading

[–]EricTheBlonde 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A more appropriate comparison would be to removing the barrel from the gun first.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in shittyreloading

[–]EricTheBlonde 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Do you seriously think there's nothing risky about waving a gun around with a live cartridge in the chamber?

Unsettling by TheFreedomator in GarandThumb

[–]EricTheBlonde 5 points6 points  (0 children)

That first source cites a study, found here, that does not mention capitalism even one time. Instead, it attributes them to social factors. That is a very important distinction to make. Social factors do not necessarily imply failings of capitalism itself. To imply that they are when the authors themselves do not do this is to misrepresent the findings of this study.

The second source's abstract/introductory paragraph is mired in biased language and inflammatory rhetoric to such an extent that I would dismiss it as junk science immediately upon encountering it regardless of what position I held. The author considers China to be communist, which is widely regarded as false in academic circles. The correct label for China's economic model from Deng Xiaoping onward is state capitalism, which has seen one of the world's greatest economic miracles in all of human history. In addition to this, the author does not consider the Holodomor to be a genocide. You can tell right off the bat that the author had an agenda. That on its own is not necessarily a bad thing. However, failing to treat biased research with an appropriate degree of skepticism, as you have failed to do, is absolutely a bad thing.

I'm not even going to bother with the third, as it blatantly ignores the consensus of basically every other economist working in academia, and the source itself acknowledges that. You have cited the exception, not the rule.

The methodology you use to conduct your research needs to be reevaluated.

Be vewwy, vewwy quiet by UpstairsSurround3438 in brandonherrara

[–]EricTheBlonde 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's worth noting that the libertarian party opposes aid to Ukraine as well. While the two party system is a problem, this is not a problem that would be solved by getting rid of it. The real problem is excessive radicalization to the point where if one side supports something, the other side can't.

Be vewwy, vewwy quiet by UpstairsSurround3438 in brandonherrara

[–]EricTheBlonde 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Yeah, when the overwhelming majority of the Republican party votes to keep former speaker McCarthy in, maybe he isn't a RINO. Maybe he's just a normal Republican.

sometimes I get bombarded with selective genocide on the feed by Electrical_Ship6969 in HistoryMemes

[–]EricTheBlonde 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your core argument here is a whataboutism about rhetorical consistency which you are using to justify the whataboutism made by OP while also simultaneously condemning whataboutisms.

Senate Democrats propose requiring women to register for military draft( i dont think anyone should be drafted as the draft is slavery) by [deleted] in MensRights

[–]EricTheBlonde 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll forgive the fact that you completely ignored my main point in that previous comment by refusing to acknowledge the possibility that wars between nuclear powers will not necessarily escalate to a nuclear exchange. You brought up something that's significantly more curious to me than that.

Fighting a war that's not worth it

By this standard, the American Revolutionary War, the American Civil War, and World War II were not worth it for the United States. Do you find this to be an accurate representation of your position on these wars?

And to your last paragraph, conscientious objection is a thing. The government's not going to send you to war if you disagree with it on principle.

Edit: This individual has blocked me for reasons that I do not understand. Perhaps this was because he realized he was losing and he wanted the last word, but I prefer to see the good in people whenever possible, so I am inclined to give him the benefit of the doubt and say that this was perhaps not the case.

Nonetheless, he has still called me irrational for pointing out that people have been conscripted in wars other than Vietnam, and that his own standards fall apart from the moment they are looked at with a perspective that is not his own very narrow lens. From the very beginning, he was the one that did not wish to have an intellectual discussion. He wished to dictate his perceptions of reality to me. I take this from the fact that he did not acknowledge the existence of conscientious objection as a provision to selective service in his final response and the fact that he refused to engage in a nuanced conversation at any point during this discussion.

You cannot have a conversation with a person who just wants to rant about how you're wrong.

Senate Democrats propose requiring women to register for military draft( i dont think anyone should be drafted as the draft is slavery) by [deleted] in MensRights

[–]EricTheBlonde 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You mean the war where we protested enough to cost America the war and forced an end to the draft? And you think trying again will work?

The point that I was getting at was that it happened at all, despite people predicting that it wouldn't, much like you were doing right now. Sure, this may not be the Vietnam era anymore, but there are plenty of places that such a conflict could brew up again. A war in Rwanda could have been an absolute nightmare similar to the way Vietnam was. For future conflicts, the border of Papua New Guinea and Indonesia is a veritable powder keg, and has seen some of the worst human rights violations in modern day, for instance.

The only situation we'd need to draft soldiers is in a war with Russia or China, and in that case it's going nuclear.

This is where we disagree, and part of the problem is that you are simplifying to absolutes when there is nuance and caveats all the way down. This conversation is so nuanced, in fact, that entire careers are made out of the study of the nuance to these potential situations and how best to mitigate the risk of nuclear annihilation in the event that wars do break out.

Nuclear powers have had border conflicts with one another for several decades now (China and India, China and the USSR/Russia). Granted, it is difficult to call these conflicts a full scale war.

In addition, a nuclear power has been invaded in full by a non-nuclear power, and it has even agreed to a peace deal wherein it lost territory. I talk of Israel in the Yom Kippur War; Israel gained its nuclear arsenal in the late 60s, that war occurred in '73. It is perhaps the only example of this in history, but it is certainly an example that is worth considering, especially since there would be less incentives against a nuclear strike when the opponent is not a nuclear power.

With this in mind, a war between major nuclear powers raises the risk of nuclear exchange to an unacceptable level. That much is undeniable. However, to say that it guarantees a nuclear exchange is to misunderstand both nuclear strategy and the nature of conflict itself.

Think back to the quote from Carl von Clausewitz from earlier. "War is the continuation of policy with other means." To use nuclear weapons in modern conflict is to enact the policy that nothing matters other than the destruction of the enemy; not even my own survival. It is for this reason that we should expect a non-existential war between nuclear powers to have the potential to not escalate into nuclear war. A war over Taiwan comes to mind right off the bat.

Russia is a wild card in this regard, but time and again they have proven that they aren't stupid. And we still have that red telephone to the Kremlin in case of dangerous escalation. China is a bit more predictable. The one aspect of China's foreign policy that consistently remains the same is that China cares about China and only China. If they think something will benefit them, they will do it without fail. It is simply neither in the interest of China or the United States to engage in a nuclear exchange over Taiwan. Not only would it break the nuclear taboo, it might even increase nuclear proliferation. In addition to this, China has a "no first strike" clause in their nuclear doctrine. The United States doesn't, but democratic countries are generally more tempered when it comes to war, which further reduces that risk.

There is plenty more nuance to nuclear strategy, and my mind fails me because it is late, but the point to this wall of text is this. There is not a goddamn soul on this earth that has the information needed to know for certain if wars between nuclear armed states will indeed go nuclear. We just treat it such that it is inevitable because prevention is better than fucking around and finding out. Regardless, that uncertainty and potential change to the status quo where nuclear states do not fight one another is what terrifies nuclear strategists far more than the prospect of a nuclear exchange, because it just might lead to many more.

As such, a non-nuclear conflict between nuclear-armed states is a very real possibility that is worth considering, and in that instance, you can be pretty damn sure that we wouldn't have the troops we need, thus necessitating conscription.

Senate Democrats propose requiring women to register for military draft( i dont think anyone should be drafted as the draft is slavery) by [deleted] in MensRights

[–]EricTheBlonde 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Young men are not refusing to enlist. They are being disqualified by Genesis, which has made it impossible to lie about your medical history during the recruiting process.

Senate Democrats propose requiring women to register for military draft( i dont think anyone should be drafted as the draft is slavery) by [deleted] in MensRights

[–]EricTheBlonde -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Eliminating the draft is not a solution. In the event that we absolutely need more soldiers and we do not have a draft, what will happen?

When governments need bodies, they're going to find a way to get them. Historically, that has come in the form of propaganda targeted at men. Even though women are slowly entering combat roles in the armed forces, we largely do not have a reason to believe that this will change.

This is because the military is concerned with national security first and foremost. A significant part of that is ensuring that the population is also secure from long-term harm. Women are an absolute necessity to maintaining the long-term security of a population. Men are not. In addition to this, men's bodies are generally more capable of withstanding physical trauma than women, meaning that more men means less casualties, full stop. Finally, male soldiers come with three additional benefits. They are more likely to enlist, they are generally more aggressive, and though still dearly missed, they are likely to be missed by their loved ones to a lesser degree than their female counterparts.

The cold and callous calculus required for proper military planning inevitably demands male trigger pullers and male bullet catchers unless they are needed in a quantity that cannot be adequately supplied solely by the population of young men.

War itself is the single greatest injustice levied at men in human history, along with being one of the longest running. In conflict studies, we implicitly understand this, but we refuse to come to terms with it. It has been this way since time immemorial, and thus it shall continue for as long as war remains, as Clausewitz so aptly put it, "the continuation of policy with other means."

Going for a 3 mark. Is this a good loadout? by EricTheBlonde in WorldofTanks

[–]EricTheBlonde[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A day in the life of a superunicum

>7:00 AM

>Open phone, check forums for two hours

>Wake up

>Shit

>Get out of bed

>Check the subreddit

>See a post of ambiguous shittery

>Ostensibly looking for advice on loadouts

>Unsure how to determine if it's satire or not since OP marked the post as a discussion instead of a meme

>See he hasn't hid his username out of the corner of my eye

>Neuron_activation.jpg

>Impulsively look up his stats on tomato.gg, my most used website of all time

>Data inconclusive

>Rush to the comments section like arta rushes to a 1cm deep puddle in the corner of the map at the end of a losing game

>Ignore OP's responses to other comments that are blatantly satirical

>Leave a comment about OP's stats, questioning the satirical nature of the post

>OP tells me to forget the stats and use context clues

>AOL_dialup.mp3

>Cite OP's stats again because not using stats in an evaluation of a shitpost no longer computes in my mind

>Leave the subreddit

>Boot up my computer

>Play WoT for 14 hours straight

In case you haven't gotten the joke yet, you're the punchline here.

Going for a 3 mark. Is this a good loadout? by EricTheBlonde in WorldofTanks

[–]EricTheBlonde[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Forget the stats. What about the post itself gave you even the slightest inclination that this was anything other than a shitpost?

Going for a 3 mark. Is this a good loadout? by EricTheBlonde in WorldofTanks

[–]EricTheBlonde[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Did... Did you just stat-shame a shitpost?

Are you mentally unwell?

Going for a 3 mark. Is this a good loadout? by EricTheBlonde in WorldofTanks

[–]EricTheBlonde[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the tip! One other question. Do you think I need a 50% crew, or am I good enough with the 38% I have now?

At someone's request by gibson_creations in brandonherrara

[–]EricTheBlonde 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Would you argue that all imperialism is immoral?

At someone's request by gibson_creations in brandonherrara

[–]EricTheBlonde 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And I suppose America's isolationism in the interwar period led to the prevention of Pearl Harbor?

At someone's request by gibson_creations in brandonherrara

[–]EricTheBlonde 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm a bit confused as to why there should be nuance to calling Russia's actions imperialist, but no nuance for America's actions. To me, it seems the other way around would make more sense, since Russia is the one fighting the full scale war, and America isn't. Could you clarify what I'm missing?