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Kaitlyn

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Posted in:
Let's actually do something
He should be banned for gross inhumanity. I can't find the CoC now, but that shouldn't be so controversial. 
'He should be banned because feelings were hurt'.

How the hell are people saying badger isn't an SJW libtard? He doesn't even care what the CoC says. He just wants people banned because he doesn't like them, due to hurt feelings.

Badger is a turbo libtard.
[Dropped by badger]
This is yet another argument badger runs away from.

Why do they call them the fighting Irish? All I see is the fleeing Irish.

Looks to me like every sensible person on here thinks you're obnoxious/insane.
Literally nobody but you has said this about me. That includes all the Progressives on this site, of which are as politically diametrically opposed to me as is geometrically possible.

It's such a shame that a degenerate wastrel, no doubt reeking urine and alcohol from his 7th consecutive night face down in an Irish pub urinal, is leading what might have otherwise been a respectable thread.
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Antinatalism is theoretically correct
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@Critical-Tim
Being that it is not certain that one can say a child's life could be overall positive or negative, it is not definitely a right or wrong choice for any parent to have or not have a child. 
Would you be okay with someone taking your money (without your permission) and gambling with it in a casino?
It would depend if the alternative was having no money ever by never existing. If I had the chance to exist with the money or not exist at all I would say go ahead and do it.

Even now you are asking my consent to be brought into existence. Therefore, the best thing we can do is make the assumption of what the individual would want.
Okay, let's assume that you did have the chance to exist, and that this money was placed in a trust fund for you to eventually use (i.e. it's effectively yours). Once you're born and 18 years old, is there any question as to whether you'd be okay with someone taking and using this money to gamble in a casino?

Obviously, the potential human wouldn't be okay (once they exist) with you using their money to gamble in a casino (you're more than likely going to lose and you didn't get their consent). So, it's obvious that a potential human, once they're born, wouldn't be okay with you gambling with their quality of existence (if life is, overall, a net negative in terms of instances of negative affect *and* the total value of those instances. You also didn't get their consent).
This is a different example as it uses an individual who is already born, and you are gambling with the money so I'm not sure whether my example or your example correlates to the example of bringing someone's life into existence. However, if the money was given to me, I suppose I would not want the money to be gambled but I would also keep in mind that this was not rightfully my money to begin with rather it was a gift. It's wrong to take a gift back once you have given it, But I still don't see a clear relation between your example and bringing someone into existence.

Nonetheless we are still basing it upon the child's consent and by never bringing that child into existence they don't have much to say against being brought into existence. Therefore, the child can say nothing until it has existed about its will to be non-existent.
It is a different example, but it's about a person yet to be born (who we can guess will be born), and that's the reason I changed it (it's more similar than my original example because it talks about someone yet to be born, rather than someone already born).

The analogy here is that, without the future person's permission, you're gambling with his/her money (analogous to his/her quality of life).

Money gifted to you is your money, otherwise it's a loan. There's no expectation for the money to be paid back. Analogously, your quality of life is your own, and in both scenarios this analogy sets up, both are gambled with without consent.

We know that the child can't currently say anything, but are we assuming that any future person would be okay with having their money gambled with like that, all without their permission? Similarly, if life is overall a negative experience, are we assuming that any future person would be okay with having their quality of life gambled with like that, all without their permission?

I suppose it all comes down to whether life is more negative than positive.
I still think the unconsented imposition of life is still an issue, unless life is guaranteed to be enjoyable for everyone.

There's always a risk that you condemn someone to a truly horrible experience, totally without any consent.

Of course, whether life is more negative than positive will severely affect the impact of the lack-of-consent argument, but it's still a moral dilemma that has some inherent weight. 
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Antinatalism is theoretically correct
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@Critical-Tim
Moreover, it is possible for a person to meet progression often, and even if not often, still occasionally, and even if occasionally, it means that negativity is not always a predecessor of positivity. Your claim is that negativity is always a predecessor of positivity and above you say what if a person makes no progression that is a form of negativity. I would agree it is a form of negativity to make no progression, but I would also say what if they do make progression and therefore negativity is not always a predecessor of positivity. Therefore, I can prove that negativity is not always a predecessor of positivity.
We agree that "it is a form of negativity to make no progression". Having not achieved any progress always comes before achieving progress. Achieving progress is not guaranteed, but entering a state of having yet achieved progress is. Therefore, negativity is always a predecessor of positivity.
This would be true; however, you make one mistake. Making no progression is only a negative if you put effort into it. An individual who puts no effort into something will make no progress and so no progress is always a predecessor of progress but it's not negative if you didn't put effort into nothing. On the contrary if an individual puts effort into progress there is quite a chance that they will make progress. Therefore, it is possible to experience positivity without the predecessor of negativity.
I don't think it's possible to put absolutely no effort into progression towards goals. Even momentarily thinking about the goal is a tiny slither of effort. Even if it were possible for progress to be made without any effort, you're not going to make it through life without putting any effort in. Keep in mind that this is different from the colloquial 'I put no effort in', of which actually means very little effort.

Your "contrary" ignores the state before any progress can be made, wherein no progress is made but progress is wanted (a state with negative affect). It can sometimes be experienced very quickly and not be potent at all, but the negative affect beforehand is still there.
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The transgenderism debate
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@Double_R
It's a combination of me understanding those points that makes me more respectful of transgender people than you.


Transgender people don't have uniquely transgender brains (they're basically homosexual brains with mental disorders). Transgender people don't have their very high suicide rates lower *AFTER* transgender surgery. Most transgender teens simply grow out of their 'transgenderism' by the time they are adults Transgenderism: It's time to state the obvious - Washington Times Clearly, their body isn't the cause of their malaise.

It's objective that transgender people's feelings about being in the wrong body aren't based on reality, much like someone claiming to fly, because he/she did so in a dream, isn't based on reality either (even if he/she feels it was real, which he/she would have). Therefore, we should reject the wishes that extend from transgender people's feelings that are based on non-reality, and thereby label them as objectively wrong.

It's the false conception of reality that needs to be fixed; appeasing feelings, that are the product of a false reality, doesn't fix transgender people.
[Dropped by Double_R]
Again, how do you deal with the fact that most teens outgrow their transgenderism? What happens if they get reassignment surgery and they later regret it? Do you not see the clear harm in this?
I don't. That's for themselves, their parents and their doctors to consider as they diagnose each case individually.
No, no. You don't get away from the consequences of your argument that easily.

You've argued at length that transgender identities should be 'regarded'. 

Are you now suggesting that these transgender teenagers, of which 70-80% will simply grow out of their transgender identities, should have, in some circumstances, their transgender identity not regarded?

Do you 'regard' transgender identities, or do only regard some of them? Which is it, Double_R?

Your response to me suggesting you would enable a suicidal person to kill themselves was that I was repackaging my bigotry as selfless virtue. Hence, you've implied that not enabling people to self-harm is "bigotry".
No, I made the point that the transparent logical absurdities you engaged in to reach that conclusion and subsequent false interpretation of my comments is far more easily explained by bigotry than a a good faith non bigotry inspired error in reason.
You're just lying. People can see the full context here: The transgenderism debate (debateart.com)

I never said or implied it was that easy to transition -- that's a total strawman.
You very clearly argued that trans teens shouldn't be able to make these decisions solely and easily which is clearly not the case and no one is advocating for that.
No. I argued that there is a significant proportion of transgender teenagers (70-80%) who will grow out of their transgenderism. Nowhere in that argument does it refer to the ease.

Out of time, will address the rest later. Maybe. 
Kk.
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The transgenderism debate
It's funny because that person might actually prefer ze/zir, they/them, he/him or any other host of non-binary or binary pronouns, so you could actually be wrong -- you just assumed the persons pronouns(!) The reason it's funny is because this is a result of gender not being underpinned by biological reality, which is EXACTLY the problem I've mentioned several times at length with you before, and now it's coming back to damage your argument quite badly -- you can't assume BECAUSE it's not underpinned by biological reality.

Also, "common sense" is a tautology which you have a terrible habit of engaging in (is this like the 4th time?), and I will call it out every time.
If you assume a person's pronouns and you turn out to be wrong guess what you can do?

Adjust.

No one is arguing that you have to be 100% accurate, we're talking about having regard for others. Why is this so complicated for you?
You argued that it's "common sense": "If you have any common sense within you then you can very easily figure out their preferred pronoun is "she"."

You made it sound so simple but as soon as it's clear people's preferred pronouns are not always that clear, you're immediately forced off your "common sense" pedestal (and of course you don't acknowledge that it happened. 

You didn't even address the fact that they'll be frequently wrong because 'gender' isn't underpinned by biological reality, when it comes to these types of people. So, not only are you going to be constantly getting it wrong, you're getting it wrong for people known to be the most violent and intolerant, when it comes to speech they don't agree with: Violence threatens freedom of speech on college campuses (debateart.com) . These people are KNOWN for blowing up at people for misgendering them.

However, gender, because it isn't underpinned by biological reality, can't as easily be determined. You can glance at someone and have a guess, but you don't know for sure. There's a whole host of angry "non-binary" people teeing off on others for "assuming gender", and now you're suggesting that it's "common sense" to assume it?

What's worse is that you've claimed to know what the "trans community" wants, and thus are assuming gender (potentially incorrectly) for large swathes of people.

Irony, anyone?
What the trans community wants is for their preferred pronouns to be respected, which again, does not require 100% accuracy. All you have to do is try. It's not that hard.
Their preferred pronouns are nonsense. We know they're either making them up because they want attention/think it's trendy, or they're genuinely mentally ill.

Therefore, (1) respect isn't solely about wishes (despite you previously arguing it), and thus (2) it's possible to respect someone without adhering to their wishes (as shown by the "or" for my definition of respect).
1) I never argued it was "solely" about respecting others wishes. I literally just broke down for you what "the most" means according to the English language.
I know you said "the most", but we need to contextualize it with your words surrounding it, rather than myopically analyzing it in isolation.

You're arguing (and have argued) that "respect" has the mandatory component of appeasing people's wishes. Again, your words: "...Just ignore their wishes, that's literally all you got. That's by definition, the opposite of respect."

Your words state that the opposite of respect is ignoring transgender people's wishes.

Hence, when you say "the most", you mean "the most [mandatory]" form of respect.

In other words, if we don't respect transgender people's wishes (in regards to their gender identity), then we cannot respect them (and you even go further and assert later that it's "disrespectful").
There is absolutely nothing about my words here that place the appeasement of another's wishes as mandatory to respect. Let me educate you on basic English. Again.

According to your own definition, respect can come in 3 different forms, and by the use of the word "or", they are not all required at once to qualify.

Disrespect is the opposite of respect, therefore the opposite of any of these 3 different forms definitionally qualifies as the opposite of respect.

Disregarding someone's wishes, therefore, by definition, qualifies as disrespect

Disregarding someone's feelings, therefore, by definition, qualifies as disrespect

Disregarding someone's rights, therefore, by definition, qualifies as disrespect
You didn't address the main contention (what you meant by "most basic form of respect") in any significant way. Merely saying, "there is absolutely nothing about my words that place the appeasement of another's wishes as mandatory to respect", doesn't contend with the framework, quotations (of your words) and definitions that I've given. You've effectively just said "no" without any elaboration -- that's not logical.

2) Yes, as I already explained, it's possible to respect someone without adhering to their wishes, because respect can come in other forms. But it's not possible to respect someone while you're disrespecting them.
Is it disrespectful to deny a child ice-cream that he/she wished for?
Disrespecting? No. But depending on the circumstances it could be said that you are not respecting their wishes either.
"Disregarding someone's wishes, therefore, by definition, qualifies as disrespect" -- Double_R

This is quite a contradiction in your argument.

We generally don't talk about respect when it comes to children because that's not what we give them. Children are in a different category because they aren't yet deemed capable of deciding what's best for themselves. Same goes for people with some severe mental illnesses.
12 year olds are capable of making many decisions about what is best them, let alone 17 year olds. Some 17 year olds are actually functionally more capable as living as adults than some 35/40 year olds, because they were raised correctly and given appropriate responsibility and autonomy to mature. Hell, even some people younger than 12 are capable of making some important decisions, and clearly show that they understand the consequences. Sure, they shouldn't be making every decision in their lives, but to refrain from generally talking about respect when it comes to children, you're depriving them of their rights, their feelings and their reasonable wishes -- all things you've complained at length about.

The thing you have failed to understand is demonstrated nicely by your own example of schizophrenia. You acknowledge it as a mental illness, and yet you also acknowledge that many schizophrenics are perfectly capable of living on their own and making their own choices. That's because rightfully determining one to be incapable of making their own choices requires an individual diagnosis. We do not just categorize people into vague camps and then assert that all of them should get the same treatment all the time.
I've repeatedly said that we need not appease anything born from mental illness. I haven't ever said that all schizophrenics are the same and we should deny their every request. This strawman isn't going to work.

This goes back to the point I've been making for weeks or even months now. Your assertion that trans people are mentally ill even if correct is entirely useless. Show mean trans person who is suicidal and I'll agree with you that they shouldn't be allowed to have a gun. Not because they are trans, but because they are suicidal.
It's entirely useful because, like the schizophrenic, we need to determine what delusions their mental illness is producing. The higher suicide rates are a product of their mental illness, and whilst are certainly a problem, they're not the only problem. Transgenderism is a problem in itself because it's a mental illness.

Your logic here is literally the same logic as me digging through statistics to prove that black people are more dangerous than white people and using that to justify locking up any random black person. That's what we call rationalized bigotry.
Being Black isn't a mental illness LOL.

FYI transgender people have a 40% incarceration rate (a rather alarming point that I don't think you've addressed at all), something Black people don't even come close to matching.

At least this strawman was funny.

A wife's wish to have a violent free home is reasonable. A mentally ill person thinking they're born in the wrong body is not.
You have done absolutely nothing to show that the latter is unreasonable, except to egregiously strawman what trans people are telling us.

Your argument here has been that their feelings are invalid because they are not in line with their biological reality, while utterly failing to understand that that's literally what they're telling you. This isn't an example of them being delusional as you claim, it's them telling you something that is almost literally a self affirming statement.
I've extensively shown that it's unreasonable because: (1) attempting to put them in the 'right body' has virtually no effect on their suicide rate, (2) their brains aren't that of the opposite biological sex, and (3) they're mentally ill and that's what is causing them to think they're 'transgender'.

I have never argued that their feelings are invalid. I have argued that their feelings are valid but are a result of a mentally ill perception of themselves, the latter of which is not valid.

What they're "literally" telling me is wrong. They're not born in the wrong body. I'm not arguing that they're born in the wrong body. I'm arguing that they were born in the right body and that they're mentally ill. Being mentally ill doesn't enable you to change your biological sex.

Do you think it's moral to give a suicidal person a loaded gun because he/she wishes to die? Do you think it's moral to give someone with a peanut allergy some peanuts because he/she wishes to eat them? Do you think it's moral to agree with a schizophrenic that the voices are right and their wish to strangle a duck should be enacted? Do you honestly think every wish must be appeased?
Appeasing and regarding are not the same thing.

This is basic English.
This is a major walking back of your stance.

I guess it's fine now to 'regard' transgender people's wishes and not appease them. As long as we 'regard' them, we don't have to actually do anything to literally support them.

Also, please actually deal with the analogical questions that contradict your stance, rather than just deleting them.

If a terrorist wished to blow up a shopping center, would it be disrespectful to call the police or bomb squad to thwart that wish of his/hers? 
Yes. But disrespect comes with a negative connotation that doesn't apply here. Disrespect is to act towards someone without regard for their wishes, feelings or rights. So if you are not regarding them, you are not respecting them.

Would you respect terrorist's plot to blow up a shopping center? No - Then you would disrespect them.
On what grounds have you decided that a "negative connotation" doesn't apply here? My terrorist example is analogistic to some transgender people's wish to transition, except you haven't explained why one deserves a negative connotation and the other doesn't.

And no, common sense isn't a logically valid answer.
Because most people wouldn't absurdly combine an inherently negative term such as "disrespect" with another inherently negative term such as "terrorist".
Ah, like most people wouldn't absurdly combine an inherently negative term such as "disrespect" with another inherently negative term such as "the mentally ill".

I guess in some circumstances, it's okay to disregard someone's wishes. We're still being respectful, right?

"Disregarding someone's wishes, therefore, by definition, qualifies as disrespect" -- Double_R

Uh...

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Let's actually do something
He should be banned for gross inhumanity. I can't find the CoC now, but that shouldn't be so controversial. 
'He should be banned because feelings were hurt'.

How the hell are people saying badger isn't an SJW libtard? He doesn't even care what the CoC says. He just wants people banned because he doesn't like them, due to hurt feelings.

Badger is a turbo libtard.
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Let's actually do something
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@PREZ-HILTON
I don't think Thett is a white nationalist, but if you look at their posts than you see they do a better job of moving that Overton window than you do. 
How so?

What do you think I could do better?
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Let's actually do something
This place is an intellectual wasteland by comparison, made so by TWS, Kaitlyn and company. 
You're not in a place to decide that at all. You're the one who advocates for violence against speech you don't like. You're the one who uses braindead shitlib terms like 'transphobia' or 'bigot'. You're the one who creates intellectually worthless threads like 'I bought a guitar and I am in love' I bought a guitar and I am in love (debateart.com) 

You can disagree with my political views, that's fine. But try finding someone else who's going to attempt to intellectually and seriously defend race realism, hereditary monarchies (over democracy), antinatalism, trans/post-humanism, White nationalism etc.

You're not at all interested in actually helping the site. This push of yours is a smokescreen for your real intention: to get people banned you don't like.


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Is it okay to be White? A lot of Black Americans don't think so
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@sadolite
Good thing I don't define myself by my skin color and all the other moronic identity BS. Sooner or later everyone around me  will come begging for my skills and talents regardless of my skin color or their skin color. Identity politics is for short sighted, myopic, moronic, indoctrinated, imbeciles.
The problem with not defining yourself by your skin color is that other people will. They'll then form political groups and vote based on that skin color, making your non-skin color based voting lose every time.

Skin color is also a good way to see who is roughly like you, given that political views and race are heritable. It's not perfect and it would be better if humans evolved to be above these primitive heuristics (as long as the replacement wasn't worse), but now is not the age to be above it.
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Antinatalism is theoretically correct
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@Critical-Tim
You are also correct that losing even if expected is never a positive experience, but it also isn't always a negative one. A clear example of how someone could lose and still feel positive is by progression. Progression is a sense of accomplishment and seeing yourself lose by less and less gives you the motivation to trudge forward and eventually accomplish victory.
Losing is always a negative experience. You can draw positive or mitigating lessons from it, but the act of losing (separate from those lesson) is 100% always negative.
Again, what if you make no progression? It's just a negative state that wasn't met with any "progression".
Do you see how the negative is always coming before the positive? It's critical to understanding my argument.
It is not always the case that a person does not meet progression, it is almost always a certainty. The human mind was made to develop more, given more life experience and as time moves forward everyone develops more life experience so it is almost a certainty that progression will be made if determined and focused on one's goals.
No, it's not almost always a certainly. People don't always remain "determined and focused". I could agree that progression towards goals is frequent, but sometimes people give up, sometimes people go backwards, sometimes people just die.
In that case, it would be determined by the individual's mindset if they are focused and determined they will make progress if they stray from their goals and give up hope then they have no chance of progression. Ultimately, whether an individual makes progress or experiences positivity from the relation to where they were is determined by the individual's mindset and focus, thus making this a subjective resolve.
The subjectivity in response to the negative affect doesn't at all determine whether negative affect was experienced in the first place -- that's the issue. Progress isn't made in a vacuum; it is built upon goals (which produce negative affect). 

You can argue that mentality can change this negative affect into another valence, but since progress isn't guaranteed, this positive outcome in conjunction with the positive mentality isn't guaranteed, whereas the initial negative affect is.

There is no "subjective resolve" in the fact that people experience the negative affect first.
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Trump Said 'No One Will Be Above the Law' Regarding Protection of Classified Information
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@FLRW
You guys are literally gay for Trump. You literally cannot stop talking about him. He is your everything.
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Antinatalism is theoretically correct
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@Critical-Tim
I must agree that certain obstacles are less of a challenge to overcome and more of a tragedy of life. Such as your example of an infant dying from heart disease right after birth. However for most individuals this is not the case and I still believe that if the child and parents were unaware that this would happen the child would have wanted to take the chance of being the majority who don't get the disease and potentially if raised properly view life through a positive lens and therefore live a happy life.
It's possible that some people would want to take the chance, but we don't know for sure because there is no consent (my OP's argument 2). So, you're just gambling with someone's life without asking them first.

There's plenty of other horrible things that can go wrong in life, particularly towards the backend of life. Various cancers are quite common and often devastating. Chronic illnesses can pop up, too. It's not just dying from heart disease in infancy that is the only serious problem. The chances of you making it through life without something terrible happening can't be too high (and you're guaranteed to die at the end, too).

Also, unless you think that 100% of people would be fine taking this gamble, you're imposing this gamble on people without their consent *and* without thinking they would accept it -- that's morally problematic.
You mention 100% of people must be willing to accept it, what if 99% of people would have been grateful and experienced a good life. Are you to say that we are to deny those 99% of people the chance or human right to experience life? It's a give and take, you argue it's wrong to bring a person into existence if there is an even a small chance they will dislike it, but you don't mention about denying the many people who would have been grateful and glad to have it. How is this justifiable without their consent for the denial of life?
Do you think it's morally acceptable to torture 1% of people for the benefit of the 99%?

If yes, what about torturing 20%? Or 50%? Or 99%?

I assume you would respond this is not a valid question because they are not humans, only humans have human rights and therefore the rights of an individual to life without yet being a human are invalid. Then my response would be, so are the people who have not yet been brought into existence. Therefore, you do not need their consent to be brought into existence because they are not a person. But then you would argue but they are now a person. Then I would say, well you're not bringing them into life now, you did it before they were human and had human rights. What do you think?
I'm not arguing from a stance of "rights". I'm arguing from the stance of human life is, overall, an experience that produces heavier weighted negative affect than positive affect.

We know what will happen if we bring children into existence, not in the exact sense, but we know there is a range of possibilities. We know they're not going to enjoy pain. We know that they're going to enjoy pleasure. It's a 100% expected range of outcomes, even if we don't know what the specific outcomes will be.

It is certain that looking back from an adult standpoint of the infant they would be disappointed possibly even angry with the concept of life that they got the unlucky small percentage, but this is not the child or the parent's fault but rather a tragedy of life, And I believe the child again with a positive lens of life would have been willing to take the risk.
It is the parents' fault because they chose to bring the child into existence. We're not forced to have children. Parents are the ones imposing these risks on a future human.
Should I hold you morally accountable for going to work every day because you know that there is a chance someone could jump in front of your car you are aware that it's possible? You know it's a possibility, you know it's a small percentage, you still consistently do it every single day. How is this justifiable?
There's a clear difference in likelihood and imposition, but you know what?

It's not.

Let's bring a graceful end to human life so scenarios like this can't happen.

What I'm trying to say is that anyone who truly believes the stance of anti-natalism wouldn't be alive to argue it. This is because in order to have a coherent mindset the thoughts that are consistent with anti-natalism relate to the many things a person does through their life that are contrary to their belief. Do you acknowledge that you being alive is actively living out against the belief of anti-natalism principles? Are you aware that your very existence, however small the possibility, might bring a negative experience to another individual that you have forcefully imposed on them by being alive?
Antinatalism isn't necessarily a pro-suicide stance. It's a very different scenario once people are born, because they have a will to live, would bring tragedy to others if they were to kill themselves, and wouldn't be able to fight for antinatalism if they are dead. There's great moral issues in killing someone who is already alive, as opposed to preventing further lives from existing.

Antinatalism is ultimately about preventing lives from coming into existence, rather than ending lives that already in existence.
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@Critical-Tim
Again, it is based on the mentality of the individual. My mentality of a being defeated by an obstacle, or a challenge is that I will always come back stronger, and I acknowledge I may never be the world champion of whatever I try to accomplish but then again positive effect is subjective as it's met by the individual's preferences and desires of what they consider success. for myself it is always being better than I was previously and that progression is what I value as positive. For another individual they may not feel positive unless they are the world champion and for them, I can't say much. Ultimately the feeling of positive or negative comes down to what makes the individual feel satisfied and that is subjective and varies. If we're going to support the concept of anti-natalism upon a subjective varying factor, our conclusion will be varying upon the individual and therefore is not a concrete or definitive answer.
The mentality of the individual is certainly a factor, but human affect isn't based on that.

It's actually based on the fact that humans universally view pain/suffering/discomfort/negative affect as something undesirable. Humans enter these universally agreed upon negative states through various ways (or vice versa), and THEN we take into account the mentality factor. So, mentality is a mitigating/amplifying factor, and certainly not what all this is based on.

For example, being told that you have cancer will produce negative affect. Someone with a weak mentality will be crippled with depression. Someone with a strong mentality will still be upset but determined to beat it. One person experiences a lot of negative affect; the other person feels minimal negative affect, but the basis is the initial negative affect felt from the event, not the mentality in response to it.

You can say things like, "I will always come back stronger" and other positive platitudes, but that positive attitude isn't guaranteed, and people might not even be capable of it (what if people aren't genetically capable of a positive mindset?). Those people are still part of the equation as to whether human life is desirable, so you can't hand wave their lives away with, "I can't say much". Unless you want to argue that everyone is capable of this "I will always come back stronger" mentality for all scenarios (or even most), there will be people who are sacrificed on the altar of human continuation.
I believe you're confusing obstacles with tragedies.
Tragedies are obstacles. I'm using extreme examples of obstacles to show you that obstacles produce negative affect.

Obstacles refer to difficulties or barriers that we encounter in pursuit of our goals or desired outcomes. They are typically seen as challenges or setbacks that require effort, problem-solving, and perseverance to overcome. Obstacles can be external, such as financial constraints, time constraints, or resource limitations. They can also be internal, such as self-doubt, fear, or lack of motivation. The key characteristic of obstacles is that they present hurdles that need to be tackled or circumvented to move forward. On the other hand, tragedies are events or circumstances that bring immense pain, suffering, and often irreversible loss. Tragedies are typically associated with significant negative impact on individuals or communities, such as the loss of a loved one, natural disasters, serious accidents, or major health crises. Tragedies can be deeply distressing and can have long-lasting emotional, psychological, and sometimes physical consequences. Unlike obstacles, tragedies are often unexpected and uncontrollable, and they can profoundly alter the course of a person's life.
Do tragedies not refer to, "difficulties or barriers that we encounter in pursuit of our goals or desired outcome?" Does cancer not pose as a difficulty/barrier in literally any profession for that professional to pursue their goals/desired outcomes?

Tragedies are functionally extreme obstacles, but obstacles nonetheless. 

Meanwhile, it is also important to keep in mind the good fortune in life, along with the rewards in life in order to come to an accurate conclusion.
I agree but this just more mitigation.
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@Critical-Tim
You are correct, positive feelings of accomplishment are expensive in terms of time and effort but that's what makes them so valuable. The moment that the time and effort required to obtain the positive feeling of accomplishment ceases so does its value of accomplishment.
And I'm saying that this valuation results in more instances of negative affect than positive affect. The expenses are guaranteed and aren't always met with a paycheck. 
I do agree that the effort put into accomplishment isn't always met with success. It is also possible that an individual may feel defeated and that they are never able to achieve their goals and therefore feel negative.
Right. You're basically agreeing with my argument 1a at this point.
Again, this is not quite true. I said it is possible for an individual to feel defeated, and you are saying: Therefore, everyone's lives are more negative than positive.
I'm not saying it isn't possible for an individual to have more negative than positive in their life, but I am saying that it's subjective to the individual and that individual's mindset and how they react with the world. You cannot just say life is more negative than positive given this information.
My argument 1a isn't about whether the qualitative value of a human life is weighted more towards negative or positive affect (that's my argument 1b).

My argument 1a is about how many instances there are of negative and positive affect there are. When some people may be defeated (and feel negative
 affect), that literally states that not everyone wins. Since everyone starts off anything not having won (experiencing negative affect), and since only some people win (experience positive affect), mathematically, there has to be fewer instances of positive affect than negative affect.
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@Critical-Tim
I value challenges and obstacles because they provide a means to a better life than just being the neutral individual. Sure it's work, but that is what makes it such an accomplishment to achieve. Without the work it wouldn't be much of an accomplishment and as I've said before without accomplishment there is no sincere value for overcoming it.
No, you don't value challenges or obstacles. You value the result of overcoming those challenges/obstacles. 

If we suddenly dumped 50 obstacles in your life right now, you wouldn't so, "finally, more obstacles," you would instead be overwhelmed.
That is subjective, one individual may feel one obstacle is overwhelming while another may take 50.
This is not a real mentality someone can have.

If someone were to be diagnosed with cancer, have their parents die, have their children die, get raped, contract AIDs all in one day, that's catatonic and probably suicidal depression right there. That isn't even to mention the other 45 obstacles. You're just not talking about reality if you think anyone wouldn't find that overwhelming.

Therefore, it's obvious that obstacles produce negative affect.

Again, this is based on the mentality of the individual whether or not they are going to take on the challenge.
It's not. I've already explained it's based on the negative affect produced by the experience. You don't have the capacity to use your mentality *before* the event happens, hence the mentality isn't the basis.

My mindset is that if you can't avoid a challenge then deal with it straight on, the same can be said with your fears, this is one of the many things clinical psychologists have clients do to overcome their fears. You cannot escape your fears, they will always find you, but you can defeat them if you face them head on. This has been demonstrated in about every movie made where the protagonist has a fear at the beginning of the movie, by the end of the movie one way or another they were caught up to by their fears and had to either give up or face them. Typically, the film will portray the protagonist gaining courage and facing their fears and conquering them but not forever, they cannot defeat them from existence. This is why in many movies the hero will never kill the villain, the characters in the movie are people who embody the spirit or ideas of life. Evil and fears will always lurk, but you can still become an eternal victor of your fears.
This mindset/mentality argument is literally an argument for mitigation of negative affect produced through obstacles, not complete removal or avoidance of it.

Making things less bad is great, but not having the bad in the first place is better.

You're correct, I value the feeling of overcoming obstacles, but I am not defeated when I fail to overcome an obstacle. By definition, it's an obstacle, if it didn't stop me, it wouldn't be much of an obstacle. Therefore, by being defeated by obstacles I do not feel mentally defeated, but rather challenged, and then by conquering the obstacle and overcoming the challenge I feel positive. This is how the mindset of the individual determines whether or not they feel negative or positive when they are faced with an obstacle, do they have the mindset of a coward or a conqueror?
I'm not arguing whether obstacles really stop you, or whether you can feel positive affect after overcoming obstacles.

I'm arguing that there is an initial, unavoidable negative affect that is experienced when you first encounter an obstacle. Your argument, which is one that argues mitigation is possible with the right mentality (which is true), doesn't address the argument I'm making.

Ultimately, it again proves that obstacles are not negative or positive but rather the individual subjectively determines whether or not the obstacle affects them negatively, neutrally, or positively. Therefore, the question of Anti-Natalism is a matter of subjective opinion, one individual may feel overall negative and therefore anti-natalism would be correct for that individual, while for another feels they can cope with life's challenges and therefore anti-natalism would be incorrect for that individual, there is no one size fits all.
You're just not thinking about the words you're typing.

For example, anyone who is raped in life experiences massive obstacles of (often life-long) trauma that is clearly severe negative affect. Nobody who is raped thinks, 'Great. This is an opportunity to overcome this obstacle and show that I have a mind of a conqueror'. It's just sheer nonsense to think that people who were raped don't have to experience negative affect.

You seem to think that any emotional reaction to events is purely a matter of choice, as if blowing a chunk out of someone's arm with a shotgun wouldn't immediately send them into shock. Total non-reality.
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@Critical-Tim
I'm trying to demonstrate that work is not negative or positive, rather it sets the stage to become a champion and without it no one could become a champion.
Even if it does set the stage to "become a champion", it's still negative in itself. That's why we have phrases like 'motivated to work': work is a negative state to be in that requires mental discipline and endurance to come out the other side of (hopefully a champion).

Also, the concept of 'champion' is often a zero-sum game that produces far more losers than it does winners. Not everyone can win gold at the Olympics. Not everyone can lift their sport's world cup. It might even be a universal: people have to lose so that winners (i.e. champions) can be made. Thus, having the concept and implementation of 'champions' should actually be avoided, due to the overall harm it causes (and often unnecessary in things like sport).
Positive does not mean to win, just as negative does not mean to lose. Positive and negative are both words that are relative to an instance in which most cases it is used to reference the point of oneself.
When I say "positive" and "negative", I'm arguing specifically about the affect involved.

In regards to affect, losing produces negative affect, and winning produces positive affect. There's no relativity involved in that. There is relativity involved in the severity of positive/negative affect, but that's a matter of severity, not actuality.

To be negative would be to be negative from where you were at, to be positive would be to be positive from where you were at. If I'm at 10th place and I score my best time ever and I get 9th place that is positive even if I'm not a winner. Similarly, if I was in 1st place and I made a blunder becoming 2nd place, I am not in last place and therefore not the loser, but it is still a negative. Therefore, to say that there are more losers than winners in the Olympics means that there is more negative than positive is inaccurate. If first place went to last place and everyone else went up one there would be more positive individuals the negative ones. You could argue that the sum of the impact between the individuals is still zero sum, but I would argue that more individuals went up than down.
Quantitatively, there are more losers than winners at the Olympics. This satisfies my argument 1a. 

Qualitatively, there's more debate, but I think the conclusion is clear enough. In regards to winning gold, it's probably true that not everyone expects gold or will be thoroughly upset if they don't win, but on some level they enter a negative state for not winning gold. Even the person getting their best time ever and doing better than expected will still view not winning gold as a negative experience, but that person's overall positive experience is built upon all the negative affect they experienced beforehand in not having their best time, not performing above expectations, and having to slog through grueling training to have a chance at getting there.

2nd place is still a loss. They've lost in regards to winning gold. They may even enter a more negative affect state than the person getting 9th because they were far closer to winning.

Even if first place went to last, they're going to feel absolutely dreadful, and the others might not even feel positive (because they expected gold or a better position).

Again, we need to take into account all the unpleasant training that took place beforehand, all the strict diets, and all the denial of doing other things in order to prepare properly for the Olympics. Before we even start the Olympics, there is a precedent of massive negative affect experienced by everyone.

Imagine a world where everyone was average, it would be pretty pathetic.
Not objectively, and this is yet another argument for antinatalism -- there's just no world for humans in which everyone can win. If everyone had 130 I.Q. and was strong enough to bench 500 lbs, then that would be "average" and would be deemed "pretty pathetic". People would feel better if they had 115 I.Q. and could only bench 375 lbs, if everyone else only had 100 I.Q. and bench 280 lbs, even if they're objectively worse numbers.

We all live in an age of prosperity that people 2000 years ago couldn't dream of, yet a lot of people are still unhappy with their lives. Even in the most backwards part of Africa, they're still living at a far higher standard than most people in human history. 

Objective improvements that cost real world resources don't impress the human mind for long -- it's a faulty psychology.
I agree that many people feel unsatisfied with their lives even though they have much better living conditions than 2000 years ago. This is a result of them comparing themselves to others rather than to themselves. It is not right or wrong to compare yourself to yourself or to others, they are different reference points in which you can acknowledge your place.
People compare themselves naturally and that produces affect (usually negative), regardless of whether it's "right or wrong".

In our galaxy of outer space, we could measure where the Earth is moving in a reference to the sun or in a reference to the moon or in reference to a star one is not more accurate than the other, they are all just additional ways of acknowledging one point moving from another. Similarly, referencing our dance compared to others in the same time and era is a valid comparison just as comparing oneself with themselves. A person can do either and that is what makes it subjective, one person may feel positive because they have accomplished something they could never do before by referencing their past self, another individual may feel negative because they have not accomplished world dominance because they are referencing the world champion.
I think it's quite difficult for people to engage in this positive reference point mentality (due to social status meaning a lot to people). If you put someone better than you next to you, and they're doing something better than you, that's never initially a good feeling. Sure, having a positive reference point/durable mentality helps to mitigate that negative feeling, but that only makes the negative affect less bad. If you put 20 people next to you who are better than you, and they all start doing something better than you, good luck with your positive reference point mentality.

Besides, even if they did engage in this mentality, what's the end goal? Everyone is the same? You've already said that's pretty pathetic. You're arguing for a world that has to have losers, and since it's true that losing produces negative affect, you're arguing for a world that mandates people experience negative affect -- not a desirable outcome.

Ultimately, to say that the Olympics is a negative because there are not many winners is not true. It is true there are not many winners in the Olympics but it is also true that a winner is not a positive just as a loser is not a negative a person who references a stance and moves from a positive or negative direction determines whether it is positive or negative.
In a purely myopic sense, there are more losers than winners in the Olympics. You can counter-argue by saying that despite this, people can experience negative affect through the lesser goals (i.e. not winning gold) that they set themselves, but that is marred by the issue of goals producing negative affect.

Also, absolutely nobody wants to spend years training hard, in order to not be rewarded for it. Not everyone is going to be happy with their Olympic results, and thus all that negative effort experienced over the years is wasted on failing to achieve a goal -- that's a massive dump of negative affect.
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@Critical-Tim
It really depends on the person's mentality. If a person believes they deserve something that they don't have they will feel as if they are being robbed by life of something they are owed, implying a negative emotion. If a person believes that they don't deserve something even if they value it, they will not feel as though they've earned it. Therefore, out of the necessity of work will they only genuinely believe they deserve it and therefore enjoy it.
I understand the functionality of mentality and how it can vary outcomes, but that's not at all the point of contention.

I'm arguing (in 1a) that this functionality produces more negatives than positives, and you're helping me to further make my case here.

You've shown that's it possible to have people achieves their goals, yet not experience positive affect because they feel it wasn't earned -- that increases the number of instances wherein negative affect exists.

You're also agreeing with that work is a "necessity" to achieve positive affect, hence the negative affect (found in work) proceeds the positive affect (feeling like they deserved the reward). Again, seeing that in this instance, the negative affect comes before the positive, this biological mechanism makes negative affect guaranteed but positive affect not -- zero-sum at best.
Not quite. You claim that I'm demonstrating by people achieving their goals they can still lack positive feeling. However, being given something with no effort is not an achievement, therefore I am not claiming that someone can make an achievement and not feel a positive outcome. Rather by someone robbing them of that achievement they can feel no positive outcome.
The person still reached their goal, even if the feeling of achievement was robbed of them. But again, this only strengthens my antinatalist argument (1a) as someone can reach their goal (something not guaranteed), and yet still be unsatisfied because of the way in which it was reached. You're just arguing for more instances wherein the person won't reach their goal (hence not be in a state of positive affect).

I can agree with everything you've said in your paragraph and that would strengthen my case.
I don't believe so, your argument is that there is always equal or more negative in the world. I'm pointing out that by someone taking away someone's obstacles of accomplishment that they can have no accomplishment and you're saying that they still made a positive but that's not a positive they were given it with no effort or obstacles which is not an accomplishment which is not rewardable by joy or satisfaction.
No, I'm not saying someone having reached their goal in a way that is unsatisfactory to them is positive.

I'm saying that people being able to reach their goals in an unsatisfactory way create *more* instances of negative affect, despite the goal being reached. This makes my 1a argument stronger because it shows that even if a person reaches their goal, they can still be a negative state.

Additionally, your argument requires negativity to always precede positivity. If you agreed with my argument, you would agree that people can move from a neutral state which is not dislikable but rather neutral as negative would be dislikable and they move from that neutral to a positive state in which the positive state they are drawn towards because it is a surplus and desirable more so than the absence of positive or negativity. It is evidence that positivity can exist without the predecessor of negativity. This disproves the foundation of the argument that there is always more negative in the world. This is not much of a new question, but it is another way of expressing the belief of the negative, neutral, and positive state of beings. Only once we have established that can we begin to answer the question of whether negativity always precedes positivity.
I'm agreeing which the specific part of your argument that argues, "that's not a positive they were given it with no effort or obstacles which is not an accomplishment which is not rewardable by joy or satisfaction". I'm not agreeing with your overall argument, especially the part that claims people can be a in a neutral state whilst having goals.

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@Critical-Tim
Humans have decided that it's a negative because they want to move away from those neutral or absence states. It's almost impossible to imagine a human, lying in bed with no desires and no goals, being totally okay with doing that for most of the day (obviously, the person will need to eat, drink and relieve themselves).
Your example suggests that because someone desires to move from a neutral state to a positive state then the neutral state must be negative, but this is incorrect. It rather implies that people value something positive over nothing at all, nothing at all, which is not necessarily negative. They value positive as better than neutral, not neutral as negative. Therefore, the absence of something positive is not necessarily a negative. In essence they're not leaving neutral because they dislike it in the sense that they leave something negative because they dislike it. Rather, they are moving from the neutral to the positive because they like where they're going more than where they're at.
I know what you're saying but it's just not true.
Let's exaggerate to the extreme to see the exact value of having goals: If a person had a myriad of goals in life and never achieved any of them, would that be a life lived in a neutral state? Would that person be totally indifferent to the fact that they achieved zero of their goals?
Also, states of hunger, thirst and relieving oneself are super clearly states of deprivation. Not attending to those goals very obviously creates negative affect. 
I suppose whether a person would feel indifferent would be determined on whether the person had any goals or accomplishment that they wanted to achieve, which would then fall back to the mentality of the individual and not become anything more than a subjective answer to the question of anti-natalism.
Failing to achieve any of your goals in life is a universally bad experience, regardless of what those specific goals are.

Hunger and thirst are not accurate ways of depicting a neutral state because our bodies naturally digest and dissolve what's inside, therefore, we are constantly moving towards the negative state within and therefore it is necessary to eat.
I agree that hunger and thirst are not neutral states -- that's my point. The goal to eat or drink is inherently built upon negative affect, of which is bad.

On the other hand, not having anything does not continue to make us have less and less in the sense that our stomach would, this is why it is not an accurate depiction.
It does continue to make us have "less and less" because failing to have goals complete is inherently negative (brings negative affect that ranges from slight annoyance, to irritation, to frustration, to depression), even if to a far lesser degree than being hungry or thirsty. People aren't in a neutral state when they fail to attain their goal of making it into Harvard. People aren't in a neutral state when after several years, their investments on the stock market fail to rise at all (assuming their goal is to make money).

I believe that there are three states of being consisting of negative, neutral, and positive; It is quite similar to the laws of electrical engineering. A person moves from the negative to the neutral because they dislike the negative circumstance, they can also move from the neutral to the positive because they like the positive.
I think what you're saying about the moving from neutral to positive could be theoretically correct, it's just never correct in regards to goals. 

An example would be having enough money to make a means of living in a decent house to that person's standards. A neutral state would be having the basic necessities of life which are subjective to the individual so keep that in mind.
I would even question whether there is a true neutral in this because once all the basic necessities are met, boredom and self-actualization become the problems.

A negative state would be having an absence of what would be considered neutral and people dislike this because it is negative. Meanwhile people are more than happy to have an abundance surpassing the basic necessities because that is a positive. They are not trying to have an abundance because they dislike having the basic necessities, they are grateful for the basic necessities. It would make no sense to consider the neutral state of having the basic necessities as a negative. Rather having an absence of the basic necessities is negative and dislikable, while having the basic necessities is acceptable and a neutral state, while having an abundance surpassing the basic necessities is a positive and more desirable than having a neutral state of the basic necessities. The point here is that having the basic necessities or a neutral state is not a negative, people are grateful to have the basic necessities which is a neutral state of being, but they are drawn towards an abundance or positive state, not out of dislike from the neutral, but out of desire for the surplus.
If people want more than the basic necessities, then they've reentered a negative state because they've decided what they have isn't enough. They've adapted/become accustomed to their material state, no doubt experienced some degree of boredom, and then attempted to leave this negative state by acquiring more. 

If people were truly neutral about their existence in your scenario, they would be fine in living with basic necessities satisfied, and thus wouldn't seek more.
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Is it okay to be White? A lot of Black Americans don't think so
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@FLRW
Were white babies ever used as alligator bait?   "Alligator Bait" is the term derived from an activity conducted by white men, mostly in the swamps of Louisiana and Florida throughout the south. These white people were sick beyond belief. These alligator hunters needed to lure the larger bull alligators with human flesh and blood. During the slave era, our ancestors in America were only considered 3/5 of a human being. Which is why these sick hunters had no regard for human life! The alligator hunters kidnapped black infants, skinned them alive, and tied their neck to a string and dropped them into a swamp! Dangling them near the mouths of hungry 700 pound alligators! These black babies were stolen, caged and fed to alligators whole! The activity is retold in various forms in researched documents, many found in the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia in Michigan.
This has nothing to do with this thread.
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@Critical-Tim
Yes, they're typically not, but Sidewalker and IwantRooseveltagain are trolls. Best Korea doesn't understand the antinatalism argument at all. Badger is a snowflake SJW with an inability to debate properly, hence his tendency towards violence. 

Not everyone is worth responding to.
I agree, I typically only respond to coherent arguments. However, sometimes others truly don't understand what one is saying. Therfore, I often attempt in expressing myself better before assuming it is their incompetence.
When these types of people immediately resort to personal insults (not really Best Korea, but certainly the others), you know that your expression of your argument isn't the issue.

Even in this thread, you can see this. Sidewalker calls me a "white supremacist" in a thread that has nothing to do with it: Antinatalism is theoretically correct (debateart.com) 

Badger's is kinda on topic but it's still a personal attack that doesn't address the content of the OP: Antinatalism is theoretically correct (debateart.com) 
It is a tragedy when people let their emotions get the better of their logical judgment. I do wish people could separate their feelings from their logic but unfortunately it is very difficult for some people. I would say I'm quite reasonable and do an excellent job at separating my feelings from my logical judgment but keep in mind it is myself saying this so it is potentially a bias of my own personal opinion but I do try my best to avoid my personal biases so make of that what you will.

Ultimately, I enjoy searching out the people who are more logical and mentally stimulating rather than resulting to swearing and verbal assaults. I personally don't like to use swearing because the words themselves are quite valueless and vague because they are used in so many different situations and circumstances. If in the event I was to become frustrated with another person's incompetence I still would not swear I would more than likely use accurate and definitive words and statements such as impotence which is quite an accurate description of what is being demonstrated by Individuals who let their emotions get in the way of their judgment.
Yes, you're doing a much better job than those people, and frankly, people irl, too. A lot of people lose their minds on the topic of antinatalism, even the above-average-intelligence people this site attracts. The fact that a lot of people feel a compulsion to swear and personally attack those espousing antinatalism shows what a flawed creature some humans are.

Being that it is not certain that one can say a child's life could be overall positive or negative, it is not definitely a right or wrong choice for any parent to have or not have a child. 
Would you be okay with someone taking your money (without your permission) and gambling with it in a casino?
It would depend if the alternative was having no money ever by never existing. If I had the chance to exist with the money or not exist at all I would say go ahead and do it.

Even now you are asking my consent to be brought into existence. Therefore, the best thing we can do is make the assumption of what the individual would want.
Okay, let's assume that you did have the chance to exist, and that this money was placed in a trust fund for you to eventually use (i.e. it's effectively yours). Once you're born and 18 years old, is there any question as to whether you'd be okay with someone taking and using this money to gamble in a casino?

Obviously, the potential human wouldn't be okay (once they exist) with you using their money to gamble in a casino (you're more than likely going to lose and you didn't get their consent). So, it's obvious that a potential human, once they're born, wouldn't be okay with you gambling with their quality of existence (if life is, overall, a net negative in terms of instances of negative affect *and* the total value of those instances. You also didn't get their consent).
This is a different example as it uses an individual who is already born, and you are gambling with the money so I'm not sure whether my example or your example correlates to the example of bringing someone's life into existence. However, if the money was given to me, I suppose I would not want the money to be gambled but I would also keep in mind that this was not rightfully my money to begin with rather it was a gift. It's wrong to take a gift back once you have given it, But I still don't see a clear relation between your example and bringing someone into existence.

Nonetheless we are still basing it upon the child's consent and by never bringing that child into existence they don't have much to say against being brought into existence. Therefore, the child can say nothing until it has existed about its will to be non-existent.
It is a different example, but it's about a person yet to be born (who we can guess will be born), and that's the reason I changed it (it's more similar than my original example because it talks about someone yet to be born, rather than someone already born).

The analogy here is that, without the future person's permission, you're gambling with his/her money (analogous to his/her quality of life).

Money gifted to you is your money, otherwise it's a loan. There's no expectation for the money to be paid back. Analogously, your quality of life is your own, and in both scenarios this analogy sets up, both are gambled with without consent.

We know that the child can't currently say anything, but are we assuming that any future person would be okay with having their money gambled with like that, all without their permission? Similarly, if life is overall a negative experience, are we assuming that any future person would be okay with having their quality of life gambled with like that, all without their permission?

We must also consider what morals are. Morals are the collective agreement of what is permissible for a civil society. A clear example of this is if there was no society, we would need no morals. This is because no one would be affected. Therefore, morals are created to form a coherent and successful society. The moment we attempt to use morals to imply that the existence of society is wrong, we are using the concept of morality to prove its purpose as wrong. This is an illogical flaw, as morals are meant to promote societal wellbeing, and by using morals to destroy that is the opposite of their purpose. It's similar to using a tool for construction for destruction, it's not correct usage of the tool. Therefore, if you create a reason society shouldn't exist, you aren't using morals, but something else.
I don't agree with that specific definition of morals. Morals can simply be a standard of human behavior; it doesn't have to be about what is permissible for a civil society.

If we are granted the axiom that suffering/pain/discomfort/negative affect is bad for humans, and human life has more negatives than positives, then avoiding bringing more humans into existence should be the ideal standard of human behavior. 
It is fine that you do not agree with my specific definition of morals, though you don't provide any stance by which you oppose it.
The stance in which I oppose it is that it is too unnecessarily specific ('permissible for a civil society', as opposed to, 'standard of human behavior'), and that a simpler definition of 'morals' is acceptable. 

To elaborate, we can see harm in usage of your definition as it would excuse the torture of human beings (bringing humans into existence), if that was required to keep 'civil society' running.

Additionally, I have provided a stance in which I believe my case to be true. I will try my best to explain my idea more definitively.

imagine there is a group of many individuals and individually they could not form a society in which they could build iPhone and houses and there were no specialists but rather everyone was a general survivor and hunter gatherer. I believe most people would agree that it is better that we live within a city and society in which we can reap the benefits of many of the luxuries that consists of one. In order to have societies we must have a general code of conduct or what is permissible in order to make everyone feel safe and want to be a part of that society. If there was no moral standard for a society, it would be dangerous, and many individuals would not want to participate and therefore the society would not be highly successful the only alternative to creating a moral standard in order to run a society is tyranny and as history has provided us evidence tyranny is a temporary and most destructive means of running a society. Therefore, the most beneficial way to create a successful and thriving society is to create a moral standard in which everyone willingly participates. as I've said before there is no need for morals if you are an individual living on your own in the jungle with no one but yourself there is no need for morals there is no standard.
This is all fine.

Therefore, morals were created to allow a society to thrive. My argument is that because morals were created for society to thrive then by using morals to destroy society would be the opposite of their intended purpose. This is why I claimed that you were using a tool for the opposition of its intended purpose. Therefore, I don't believe it's correct to use morals in such a way.

I still want to discuss with you whether life is more negative than positive and if it truly is harmful to individuals to bring them into existence but nonetheless, I wanted to point out that by using morality in this way it is an incorrect use of its purpose upon creation.
Hypothetically, if a thriving, civil society was built upon the literal torture of all of its citizens, would that be morally permissible?

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Is it okay to be White? A lot of Black Americans don't think so
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@rbelivb
"It's OK to be White" has been a widely used slogan, so the entire framing of this poll is misleading and dishonest.
The poll respondents were not ask, "Do you agree with the political slogan: 'It's OK to be white?'"

Instead, they were asked whether they agreed with the statement, "It's okay to be white".

Just because someone might answer a poll that they disagree with the phrase "Black Lives Matter" does not mean that they believe that black lives don't matter.
I think the political movement 'Black Lives Matter' is a Black supremacist movement that I don't support at all, yet I agree with the statement, 'Black lives matter'.

Unless you think Blacks are too stupid to see the clear difference, there is a clear difference that shows how racially hateful some Blacks are of Whites.
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@PREZ-HILTON
But they are generally more violent and less emotionally mature. Certainly we could reduce gun crime by not allowing blacks to own guns
Yes, they're generally more violent but I'm not sure they're necessarily "less emotionally mature" (depends on how you're defining that).

You would reduce gun crime per capita, but that comes at the expense of being able to deal with a corrupt government.

Guns are super useful in self-defense, too. 80 year old grandma isn't much of a match against a young adult wanting to bash her head in for her purse, but a gun sure as hell levels that playing field.

I kind of feel like your repulsion by the word nigger makes you an SJW
Lol.
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@PREZ-HILTON
The right to bear arms should be a universal right in every country. Every country needs a way to overthrow a corrupt government. Guns are a great method of self-defense, too
Even niggers?
I don't think we should call people that word.

I think African Americans/Blacks should have the right to bear arms, too.
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@PREZ-HILTON
Maybe he is anti free speech. I don't think he is an SJW. 
He thinks freedom of speech means violence is okay against speech you don't like: Ireland is an international disgrace (debateart.com) . 

He uses terms like "racist", "transphobia" and other bogus libtard concepts: DART Growth and Userbase (debateart.com)

You should look up Andrew Neil BBC interview with Ben Shapiro. 
I've seen it multiple times. It's quite interesting.

How can I argue when perhaps him arguing against guns in Ireland is entirely appropriate for Ireland? 
The right to bear arms should be a universal right in every country. Every country needs a way to overthrow a corrupt government. Guns are a great method of self-defense, too.

Similarly, there is universality to his political stances are libtardery. He's anti-free speech, quick to violence, uses the SJW buzzwords and lives like a massive degenerate.

He's a libtard in America. He's a libtard in Ireland. He's a libtard.

He is also right about the site being held back because it is being dominated by varying levels of bigotry. Don't get me wrong. People like Roosevelt are also very harmful to the site, but he is just a different flavor of bigot than those on the right here. Also I am not using bigot in a negative way and making a value judgement. 

I am saying that when the site is nothing but these extreme positions than there really isn't much to debate. Bigots should be welcome here, but once they reach above 20% of the site it kind of ruins the experience. 
"Bigots" generate a whole lot of discussion and debate, even if they don't contribute to the debate themselves. It's the extreme, bigoted opinions that make people passionate enough to post, not the milquetoast, calm posts. People LOVE a hot dumpster fire, even if they publicly protest it, they still turn up to watch things burn.

For example, I'm having few people post serious responses to my various antinatalism threads. It's quite self-actualizing and fulfilling to have those conversations with people, but that's not what the majority of people want all the time. Meanwhile, IwantRooseveltagain (someone you labelled a bigot) posts a nearly worthless antagonistic thread attacking Trump: So many hoaxes since the idiot Donald Drumpf came on the political scene (debateart.com) , and that generates far more responses and interest because it's a bigoted dumpster fire. 

It would be bad if ALL threads were these bigoted, rage-baiting dumpster fires that were of little intellectual merit, but some amount of them is what people want. The thought-provoking, nourishing conversations are great, but they're not dramatic enough to hold people's attention all the time.
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This is the type of scorned bitch that makes false rape allegations. 
I've never made a false rape (or any allegation) in my life, and I think women and men who do them are utterly disgusting.

It's rather unfortunate that your claim of false allegations is, in itself, a false allegation, but we've come to expect nothing more from a drunken thug indoctrinated by far-left politics. 
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@Critical-Tim
You are also correct that losing even if expected is never a positive experience, but it also isn't always a negative one. A clear example of how someone could lose and still feel positive is by progression. Progression is a sense of accomplishment and seeing yourself lose by less and less gives you the motivation to trudge forward and eventually accomplish victory.
Losing is always a negative experience. You can draw positive or mitigating lessons from it, but the act of losing (separate from those lesson) is 100% always negative.
Again, what if you make no progression? It's just a negative state that wasn't met with any "progression".
Do you see how the negative is always coming before the positive? It's critical to understanding my argument.
It is not always the case that a person does not meet progression, it is almost always a certainty. The human mind was made to develop more, given more life experience and as time moves forward everyone develops more life experience so it is almost a certainty that progression will be made if determined and focused on one's goals.
No, it's not almost always a certainly. People don't always remain "determined and focused". I could agree that progression towards goals is frequent, but sometimes people give up, sometimes people go backwards, sometimes people just die.

Moreover, it is possible for a person to meet progression often, and even if not often, still occasionally, and even if occasionally, it means that negativity is not always a predecessor of positivity. Your claim is that negativity is always a predecessor of positivity and above you say what if a person makes no progression that is a form of negativity. I would agree it is a form of negativity to make no progression, but I would also say what if they do make progression and therefore negativity is not always a predecessor of positivity. Therefore, I can prove that negativity is not always a predecessor of positivity.
We agree that "it is a form of negativity to make no progression". Having not achieved any progress always comes before achieving progress. Achieving progress is not guaranteed, but entering a state of having yet achieved progress is. Therefore, negativity is always a predecessor of positivity.


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@Critical-Tim
It's now easy to understand that without these obstacles many values in life would be lost. Therefore, I don't see obstacles as negative but rather the platform to becoming a champion.
People want the positive effect that results from overcoming the obstacles; they do not want the obstacles themselves. 

Again, it is a net negative when goals are guaranteed in life, but fulfillment of those goals (in a satisfactory way) is not.
I agree with you that people want the positive effect and not the obstacles themselves. However, that is how the world works.
Again, I'm not arguing that this isn't how the world works. I'm arguing that because this is how the world works, it's morally wrong to bring people into it.

To base your claim of anti-natalism on the foundation of a hypothetical world where positive effects could be obtained without the obstacles of life is not a suitable foundation for your argument. Rather to make a case for anti-natalism in our universe we should base it on our universe as principles and not a hypothetical one.
I'm not arguing that at all here.

I'm agreeing with you that "that is how the world works", but I'm drawing different conclusions to you because I think that your valence judgment (work and desire being states of neutral affect) is just dead wrong.

You are correct, positive feelings of accomplishment are expensive in terms of time and effort but that's what makes them so valuable. The moment that the time and effort required to obtain the positive feeling of accomplishment ceases so does its value of accomplishment.
And I'm saying that this valuation results in more instances of negative affect than positive affect. The expenses are guaranteed and aren't always met with a paycheck. 
I do agree that the effort put into accomplishment isn't always met with success. It is also possible that an individual may feel defeated and that they are never able to achieve their goals and therefore feel negative.
Right. You're basically agreeing with my argument 1a at this point.

Again, it is based on the mentality of the individual. My mentality of a being defeated by an obstacle, or a challenge is that I will always come back stronger, and I acknowledge I may never be the world champion of whatever I try to accomplish but then again positive effect is subjective as it's met by the individual's preferences and desires of what they consider success. for myself it is always being better than I was previously and that progression is what I value as positive. For another individual they may not feel positive unless they are the world champion and for them, I can't say much. Ultimately the feeling of positive or negative comes down to what makes the individual feel satisfied and that is subjective and varies. If we're going to support the concept of anti-natalism upon a subjective varying factor, our conclusion will be varying upon the individual and therefore is not a concrete or definitive answer.
The mentality of the individual is certainly a factor, but human affect isn't based on that.

It's actually based on the fact that humans universally view pain/suffering/discomfort/negative affect as something undesirable. Humans enter these universally agreed upon negative states through various ways (or vice versa), and THEN we take into account the mentality factor. So, mentality is a mitigating/amplifying factor, and certainly not what all this is based on.

For example, being told that you have cancer will produce negative affect. Someone with a weak mentality will be crippled with depression. Someone with a strong mentality will still be upset but determined to beat it. One person experiences a lot of negative affect; the other person feels minimal negative affect, but the basis is the initial negative affect felt from the event, not the mentality in response to it.

You can say things like, "I will always come back stronger" and other positive platitudes, but that positive attitude isn't guaranteed, and people might not even be capable of it (what if people aren't genetically capable of a positive mindset?). Those people are still part of the equation as to whether human life is desirable, so you can't hand wave their lives away with, "I can't say much". Unless you want to argue that everyone is capable of this "I will always come back stronger" mentality for all scenarios (or even most), there will be people who are sacrificed on the altar of human continuation.

The amount of negative affect and positive affect will vary from individual to individual, but I'm arguing that, overall, human life has more instances of negative affect than positive affect, and the negative affect outweighs the positive affect. This is an argument about what the overall experience of human life produces in terms of affect (whether it's overall positive or negative), not whether we can precisely measure each affect experienced in each individual life.

Ultimately, obstacles are a necessary part of life, and I am grateful to have them. So many aspects of life would become valueless if obstacles ceased to exist. 
They're a necessary part of biological human life, and that makes them bad. You being grateful for them is just nonsense. Again, nobody wants more obstacles in their lives. You really don't want 50 pedestrians flying out in front of you on your way to work, of which would test your driving ability. You really don't want to get Covid, Measels, AIDS, cancer and the flu all at the same time, even if it would bring obstacles to your life for you to overcome.

It's fine to say that obstacles are the way in which humans generate value in their lives, but nobody actually wants obstacles (they want the positive affect after plowing through them).
I must agree that certain obstacles are less of a challenge to overcome and more of a tragedy of life. Such as your example of an infant dying from heart disease right after birth. However for most individuals this is not the case and I still believe that if the child and parents were unaware that this would happen the child would have wanted to take the chance of being the majority who don't get the disease and potentially if raised properly view life through a positive lens and therefore live a happy life.
It's possible that some people would want to take the chance, but we don't know for sure because there is no consent (my OP's argument 2). So, you're just gambling with someone's life without asking them first.

There's plenty of other horrible things that can go wrong in life, particularly towards the backend of life. Various cancers are quite common and often devastating. Chronic illnesses can pop up, too. It's not just dying from heart disease in infancy that is the only serious problem. The chances of you making it through life without something terrible happening can't be too high (and you're guaranteed to die at the end, too).

Also, unless you think that 100% of people would be fine taking this gamble, you're imposing this gamble on people without their consent *and* without thinking they would accept it -- that's morally problematic.

It is certain that looking back from an adult standpoint of the infant they would be disappointed possibly even angry with the concept of life that they got the unlucky small percentage, but this is not the child or the parent's fault but rather a tragedy of life, And I believe the child again with a positive lens of life would have been willing to take the risk.
It is the parent's fault because they chose to bring the child into existence. We're not forced to have children. Parents are the ones imposing these risks on a future human.
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@PREZ-HILTON
Trust me: I'm not interested in a violent, anti-free speech, SJW snowflakes who feels the need to brag about everything they might have.

I got handed the information on DDO from people not too pleased with badger.

I've certainly got far better things to do with my time than document personal data about a grotty, drunken degenerate.
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@Critical-Tim
Humans have decided that it's a negative because they want to move away from those neutral or absence states. It's almost impossible to imagine a human, lying in bed with no desires and no goals, being totally okay with doing that for most of the day (obviously, the person will need to eat, drink and relieve themselves).
Your example suggests that because someone desires to move from a neutral state to a positive state then the neutral state must be negative, but this is incorrect. It rather implies that people value something positive over nothing at all, nothing at all, which is not necessarily negative. They value positive as better than neutral, not neutral as negative. Therefore, the absence of something positive is not necessarily a negative. In essence they're not leaving neutral because they dislike it in the sense that they leave something negative because they dislike it. Rather, they are moving from the neutral to the positive because they like where they're going more than where they're at.
I know what you're saying but it's just not true.

Let's exaggerate to the extreme to see the exact value of having goals: If a person had a myriad of goals in life and never achieved any of them, would that be a life lived in a neutral state? Would that person be totally indifferent to the fact that they achieved zero of their goals?

Also, states of hunger, thirst and relieving oneself are super clearly states of deprivation. Not attending to those goals very obviously creates negative affect. 

It really depends on the person's mentality. If a person believes they deserve something that they don't have they will feel as if they are being robbed by life of something they are owed, implying a negative emotion. If a person believes that they don't deserve something even if they value it, they will not feel as though they've earned it. Therefore, out of the necessity of work will they only genuinely believe they deserve it and therefore enjoy it.
I understand the functionality of mentality and how it can vary outcomes, but that's not at all the point of contention.

I'm arguing (in 1a) that this functionality produces more negatives than positives, and you're helping me to further make my case here.

You've shown that's it possible to have people achieves their goals, yet not experience positive affect because they feel it wasn't earned -- that increases the number of instances wherein negative affect exists.

You're also agreeing with that work is a "necessity" to achieve positive affect, hence the negative affect (found in work) proceeds the positive affect (feeling like they deserved the reward). Again, seeing that in this instance, the negative affect comes before the positive, this biological mechanism makes negative affect guaranteed but positive affect not -- zero-sum at best.
Not quite. You claim that I'm demonstrating by people achieving their goals they can still lack positive feeling. However, being given something with no effort is not an achievement, therefore I am not claiming that someone can make an achievement and not feel a positive outcome. Rather by someone robbing them of that achievement they can feel no positive outcome.
The person still reached their goal, even if the feeling of achievement was robbed of them. But again, this only strengthens my antinatalist argument (1a) as someone can reach their goal (something not guaranteed), and yet still be unsatisfied because of the way in which it was reached. You're just arguing for more instances wherein the person won't reach their goal (hence not be in a state of positive affect).

I can agree with everything you've said in your paragraph and that would strengthen my case.

I'm trying to demonstrate that work is not negative or positive, rather it sets the stage to become a champion and without it no one could become a champion.
Even if it does set the stage to "become a champion", it's still negative in itself. That's why we have phrases like 'motivated to work': work is a negative state to be in that requires mental discipline and endurance to come out the other side of (hopefully a champion).

Also, the concept of 'champion' is often a zero-sum game that produces far more losers than it does winners. Not everyone can win gold at the Olympics. Not everyone can lift their sport's world cup. It might even be a universal: people have to lose so that winners (i.e. champions) can be made. Thus, having the concept and implementation of 'champions' should actually be avoided, due to the overall harm it causes (and often unnecessary in things like sport).

Imagine a world where everyone was average, it would be pretty pathetic.
Not objectively, and this is yet another argument for antinatalism -- there's just no world for humans in which everyone can win. If everyone had 130 I.Q. and was strong enough to bench 500 lbs, then that would be "average" and would be deemed "pretty pathetic". People would feel better if they had 115 I.Q. and could only bench 375 lbs, if everyone else only had 100 I.Q. and bench 280 lbs, even if they're objectively worse numbers.

We all live in an age of prosperity that people 2000 years ago couldn't dream of, yet a lot of people are still unhappy with their lives. Even in the most backwards part of Africa, they're still living at a far higher standard than most people in human history. 

Objective improvements that cost real world resources don't impress the human mind for long -- it's a faulty psychology.

I value challenges and obstacles because they provide a means to a better life than just being the neutral individual. Sure it's work, but that is what makes it such an accomplishment to achieve. Without the work it wouldn't be much of an accomplishment and as I've said before without accomplishment there is no sincere value for overcoming it.
No, you don't value challenges or obstacles. You value the result of overcoming those challenges/obstacles. 

If we suddenly dumped 50 obstacles in your life right now, you wouldn't so, "finally, more obstacles," you would instead be overwhelmed.
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@IwantRooseveltagain
I'm not a Proud Boy and I'm not even sure that's what they think.
You have the same ideology as a Proud Boy.
Wrong.

They would pass you around at their racist meetings 
No. I'm not a whore.
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@IwantRooseveltagain
you're literally obsessed with my butt and your wife's laundry.
You are a delusional
You've literally mentioned my butt like a dozen times on this site. You keep trying to imagine what it looks like, too.

You've refused to deny that you sniff your wife's laundry dozens of times. It's very obvious to anyone with inferential ability that you sniff your wife's laundry.

racist,
I'm not racially hateful.

loser
Says the guy who: talked at length about me having a vibrator, keeps mentioning my butt, kept referring to my breast size, is confirmed as having sniffed his wife's laundry, is overtly sexist against women, posts nearly worthless threads about Trump daily, and is universally disliked/hated by most people on this site.

Who was the loser again?
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@oromagi
I think they are just emulating professional athletes, who truly can't keep their hands off each other's asses.
Sorry but remind me in which sport do they play in assless chaps and bondage gear?

You know this is a sexually explicit, dreadful look for homosexuality (done in public, nonetheless), and you don't have a serious answer to excuse it.
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@IwantRooseveltagain
I think people who aren’t married, have no friends and live all alone are lonesome losers.
Dude, you're literally obsessed with my butt and your wife's laundry. Most people would call you a loser.

What about gender? You admit women are inferior to men, right?
No. You're just sexist. No wonder you think you're entitled to sniff women's laundries.

Physically, mentally? That’s what the Proud Boys believe.
I'm not a Proud Boy and I'm not even sure that's what they think.
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@IwantRooseveltagain
There is nothing racially hateful about thinking that race is real.
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@IwantRooseveltagain
I've just had the flu and I'm recovering from it, so I'm taking it slower.
Right, and you had the flu last Saturday too, loser
I actually had a cold lol.

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@IwantRooseveltagain
most people think racist chicks are creepy
I'm not racially hateful.

The only thing creepy here is your obsession with my butt and your habit of sniffing your wife's laundry.
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@IwantRooseveltagain
But how would you know if I'm ugly?
Well for starters you are all alone banging away on the computer on a Saturday night.
I've just had the flu and I'm recovering from it, so I'm taking it slower.

Is that okay with you?


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@IwantRooseveltagain
I think people who aren’t married, have no friends and live all alone are lonesome losers.
Most people think sniffing your wife's laundry is creepy.

You don't have a proper conception of reality, therefore your designations of who are losers is next to worthless.
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@IwantRooseveltagain
Ya, all guys are obsessed with ugly girls. It’s a big thing in America 
You clearly are obsessed with me, so that part is right.

But how would you know if I'm ugly?
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@IwantRooseveltagain
By “they” you mean the other lonesome loser on this site? Loneliness is such a terrible thing.
So, you think people who think sniffing laundry is weird are "lonesome loser[s]?"

L take.
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@IwantRooseveltagain
So this is what racist young girls with fat asses do on a Saturday night, I guess 
There you go again with thinking about my butt.

I'm surprised you haven't asked if I have an Onlyfans yet or if I sell my underwear.

Literally obsessed.
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@Greyparrot
I forgot he does that.
Yeah. It's something unpleasant that you'd want to erase from your mind.
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@IwantRooseveltagain
Is this why they call you fanchick: you're a fan of chicks' laundry?

You're such a grotty old man.
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@IwantRooseveltagain
Everyone but you thinks it's creepy that you sniff your wife's laundry.
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@IwantRooseveltagain
Why do you keep deflecting from the topic?

Why do you sniff your wife's laundry?

Do you think that isn't a bad thing? Like seriously, why do you do it?
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@Greyparrot
Fanchick go brrr...
He goes brrr after a big inhale (I'll leave you to guess what he's inhaling).
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@IwantRooseveltagain
You are pathetic 
Not as pathetic as IwantRooseveltagain who sniffs his wife's laundry.

What is wrong with you?
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@FLRW
Thanks. I have my anal sex flags hanging all around my house at the moment, so all my guests can join in on the fun
So you are not an Antianalist like Kaitlyn is?
I'm not actually an antinatalist, although I think the position requires serious examination and consideration.

Me being an advocate for it with my threads is me testing the limits of the position.

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@zedvictor4
For sure.

I don't live my life worrying about flipping coins.
You're just not being unreasonable.

I'm sure you're perfectly turning on the tap to get water, and not worrying about the slim chance the water hasn't been purified, or the government accidentally swapped your water supply with ricin. I'm sure you're perfectly fine stepping on the sidewalk without worrying about the cement beneath you melting or being too frail enough to hold your weight.

The 99.9999999% likelihoods are a cornerstone of how we live our lives.

Nor do I worry about purposefulness or purposelessness....And I certainly don't believe either.
You're free to believe what you want, but I think your stance is unreasonable.

As for lower and higher purpose.

I was thinking more a deistic GOD scenario  (higher)...... In comparison to an evolutionary system of material processes and development of which humanity is a part. (lower).
That works as well.

Not that I would disagree with the idea of innate human purpose. Which in itself is contradictory to the abstract concept of antinatalism.
And how would you go about proving that innate human purpose?

Which of course is not to say that intellectually derived conclusions and subsequent actions in themselves are not purposeful.

From which we could infer that antinatalism might also be purposeful within that context.
They can be purposeful but it's incredibly unlikely that they're objectively purposeful.

Nice discussing with you.
You too :)
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"I have no interest in playing house with a bunch of degenerates." DART Growth and Userbase (debateart.com)

"I'd guess 100,000 people have seen my cock honestly. Be fun if we had like game stats for life and that was on there. " Announcing The New President and stepping down (debateart.com)

This contradiction is on the level of satire.
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