Lancecastor
Lit's Most Beloved Poster
- Joined
- May 14, 2002
- Posts
- 54,670
The legal doctrine of ferae naturae conflicts with what you are saying.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
The legal doctrine of ferae naturae conflicts with what you are saying.
[Threats of physical harm against other users are prohibited per our forum guidelines] and are cause for permanent banning.
same admin message as hashtag received - and yet lace's still posting
You should report that
Not really - as a common law doctrine it actually protects your natural right to liberty (not being sanctioned for something you didn't have any control over) or property (the person who actually "takes" the wild animal gets to keep it).
same admin message as hashtag received - and yet lace's still posting
One of the WTF threads here recently hosted a batch of images of creatures devouring other creatures. There's a worried-looking mouse peering from the mouth of a satisfied-looking bullfrog. I guess their right to life is conditional: you've a right to live until you are eaten. Everything eventually is eaten. Therefore the right to life must be fought for, to delay lunchtimeAll creatures have a right to life (indeed, if we stick to the pure evolutionary model, ala Darwin et. al.) "life" is the driving force behind all behavior and that nature itself rewards the expression of the right, survival of fittest, where the fittest in Darwinian terms is that entity which is most able to breed successfully and so continue their genes.
Ants herd enslaved honeydew aphids. Also,The right to liberty is expressed even more eloquently in nature, since almost no known animal imprisons or enslaves other animals.
And,The Polyergus Lucidus is a slave-making ant only found in the eastern United States. It is incapable of feeding itself or looking after its offspring without assistance and must parasitize members of its own species or close relatives in order to survive. It will raid other nests and carry the pupae away to be reared and eventually grow to become workers or, in this case, slaves in their own colony.
One organism benefits as a result of the work of another, and the working one receives no benefit and may be harmed.
For example, a parasite may infect a fish. The fish provides shelter, food, and a place to reproduce for the parasite. The parasite gives nothing to the fish. The fish is slave to the parasite.
This is just one example of a parasitic relationship in nature. Many others exist, and all are a form of slavery.
and so is hash.
moo!
Back to natural rights. If they follow the "right to life" model, then all rights exist only when they're fought for. Our right to free speech dies when we're gagged, as does our right to peaceably assemble when thugs in or out of uniform inflict violence. And my right to arm rubber duckies... we'll skip that.
threats of physical violence
go for it
i no longer care. just don't expect me to read or respond before you're banned again. seems a little unfair that you get banned and lance remains, having received the same warning as you for threats of physical violence
?????
You made a comment about "raping a certain member". Rape is violence, tough guy.
Nonsense, I would never threaten to rape a member.
There must have been some misunderstanding.
Must have been some kind of mistake.
Must have been, you'd never joke about rape.
go for it
i no longer care. just don't expect me to read or respond before you're banned again. seems a little unfair that you get banned and lance remains, having received the same warning as you for threats of physical violence
Again, the idea of "natural rights," like a 'soul', cannot be verified. They leave no markers.False. A right, natural or otherwise, doesn't cease to exist just because someone is infringing upon it. It's still there.
Not even shin-kicking? Or nougies, or injun burns, or earlobe pinching? Really?But threaten violence? Never.