Message from @Cody
Discord ID: 507951830135734273
You can address the matter in a more root way.
I mean I can see why you would think that, I'm just using a easier way for me to explain it
Which would you say is more dangerous, bad laws or bad philosophy?
Bad philosophy
Philosophy is generally what directs what becomes law
So having a overall bad philosophy means you are gonna end up with bad laws
If you wanted me to answer something, ask it directly and I'll respond
I was just responding to your question
You said I was avoiding a question
I said you were dodging my point
Ah, right. My bad, I'm texting on the job, lol
I was doing that at the beginning of this discussion
Basically my belief us that by having sex, your agreeing to biology granting you the honor of a child
don't you wish all political debates were this nice?
Not everyone gets to have a Child
Especially not in a word were abortion is legal
Service Guarantees the ability to childbare! The implication in this joke is much more authoritarian than it should be
So
Admittedly I was being a little aggressive there because I thought codes was being specifically contrarian.
I'm assured you're arguing in good faith.
Becuase like it's a fine line
I could see either side
So... I'll argue on your terms here
Plan B is fine.
Just saying my side
So, let's assume it's a literal contract
Ok
Contract says "let's have sex". Both sign.
I agree with you to the extent that it's an agreement between two people to fuck, to that extent it's a contract
But being impulsive as we are, we don't consider the risks of the contract.
We treat it like a game EULA.
Right, right, right, skip past all this shit let's get to the fun stuff, right?
Yes I got you
Yeah, I get you on that.
More over, something 98% working might as well be 100%
I likely misinterpreted the argument. What you said was sort of accurate.
I think I took it more as a literal comparison as opposed to a metaphor.
Like I'm not saying is an exact fit, just a simpler way to explain it
Like sure it's not a real contract
Acceptable risk.