Right here with you.DoubleJ wrote:guess it's just the Liberterian in me. Where's Kevin to weigh in on this'n? Huh????
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Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Right here with you.DoubleJ wrote:guess it's just the Liberterian in me. Where's Kevin to weigh in on this'n? Huh????
Good thing she didn't say "grease monkey."bdickens wrote:Ooh, someone said a naughty word! BIG DEAL! Some people need to grow thicker skin.
I am well aware of what the standards are on this forum and I try my level best to adhere to them, thank you very much; after all, I realize am a guest of Mr. Cotton's here and I agreed to those restrictions in order to maintain a membership here. If I want to play on his field I have to obey his rules and I respect that.Mr. Cotton and the moderators continually remind us of the standards that exist on this forum and we excuse this example of obnoxious behavior by insisting we develop a thicker skin?
1‘Do not judge, so that you may not be judged. 2 For with the judgment you make you will be judged, and the measure you give will be the measure you get. 3 Why do you see the speck in your neighbor’s* eye, but do not notice the log in your own eye? 4 Or how can you say to your neighbor,* “Let me take the speck out of your eye”, while the log is in your own eye? 5 You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your neighbor’s eye.
Mt 7:1-5, NRSV
That's a mighty big assumption you make. You don't know me from Adam. For all you know, growing up in the trailer court in West Virginia, my mother could have had a mouth on her that would make a sailor blush. Not everyone grew up as sensitive and civilized as you. But when I come to your house for a visit, I will certainly respect your wishes.You wouldn't talk to your mother, wife or daughter that way, it is not acceptable behavior in a civilized society, and I would not tolerate your using it in the presence of my family.
You can apply the same to the second amendment too. In the perfect world we would not need to have laws or courts, would we? I am in total agreement with you and the typical busybody....typically they are the ones who need to put their house in order. I guess if a LEO tickets you then they are a busybody.bdickens wrote:
No such agreement exists on the street. Or in WalMart. With all due respect, neither place is TexasCHLforum.com and the standards here are not applicable there.
I'm not excusing anything. It just really irks me all the busybodiness going around today. Everywhere you go, there's a bunch of do-gooders sticking their noses into other people's private business telling them how to speak, how to raise their children -- it goes on and on.
That is the way it is supposed to be. Standing up and letting someone know when they have overstepped their bounds is not judging someone. Using that logic in the manner you prescribe would result in anarchy.bdickens wrote: I found that my life improved dramatically for the better when I stopped worrying about what other people were supposed to be doing and instead concentrated on what I was supposed to be doing.
I have no idea how you reacted to your mother's speech. My mother still to this day has no qualms about using the "N" word and uses the excuse that she is a product of her environment. My sons have never heard that word from me and I refuse to allow her to speak that way in my house. The excuse "that is the way I was raised." carries no weight in a civilized, educated society.bdickens wrote:That's a mighty big assumption you make. You don't know me from Adam. For all you know, growing up in the trailer court in West Virginia, my mother could have had a mouth on her that would make a sailor blush. Not everyone grew up as sensitive and civilized as you. But when I come to your house for a visit, I will certainly respect your wishes.
I suppose all LEO should just mind their own business.bdickens wrote: This whole incident under discussion boils down to some busybody who had his tender virgin ears assaulted by a stranger's colorful language in a public place and chose to throw his badge and his "authority" around instead of acting like an adult and minding his own business.
I'd include "why." When I dislocated my knee, the two sailors that happened to be near me on the trail learned some new words. I wouldn't use that language to describe how cheap the clearance shirts at Wally World are, though.KBCraig wrote:This is a "time, place, manner" offense. It's well known that certain words, especially racial perjoratives, carry different weight depending on who says them, to whom, and where.