Message from @flyingfoxel
Discord ID: 431601516776783892
@flyingfoxel Luckily we are starting to get bobcats coming back in Pennsylvannia
A bobcat, in it's natural habitat.
watch this
@flyingfoxel My area has exactly the same problem with deer.
This is my area
massive deer problem
They compared it to the fucking holocaust.
Pennsylvannia
@Broo TulsiGang 2024 π¬π§ πΊπΈ Sumo wrestlers do still have a significant amount of muscle though. It's not all fat.
@flyingfoxel On the server, not in voice right now.
their balding
@Baraban @meratrix @Broo TulsiGang 2024 π¬π§ πΊπΈ why the fuck are you guys deafened in VC?
I guess everyone else left while I was in the bathroom
I didn't know everone left
Sargon dropped a MOAB
I mean the VC
Not the left
I wanna listen to this video before chatting
HOW DARE he refer to us as moose people I am no neufy that basterd
@Deleted User In "The Vision of the Anointed," conservative author Thomas Sowell connects many of the social pathologies of recent decades with the failed vision that led to them. This vision of the anointed, as Sowell defines it, is the prevailing vision in society today, even though it disallows feedback from reality and is not based on logic or evidence, but on emotion and self-congratulation.
Sowell contrasts the vision of the anointed, which always searches for sweeping solutions, with the tragic vision espoused by conservatives today, which realizes that there are always trade-offs in the real world. Liberals seek to build utopias, but conservatives realize that implementing one policy can have serious side effects elsewhere in society and that wisdom involves knowing that a catch-all solution is not available for virtually any serious social problem. The author describes typical scenarios that ensue when the vision of the anointed is implemented and the real world responds by not cooperating.
Liberals, though, almost never admit their failures, and Sowell details how the Left misuses statistics to invite false inferences as to the results of liberal programs. The author dissects fallacies the anointed use to dismiss evidence of the failure of their vision, and notes that the Left commonly substitutes ridicule and attacks on motives instead of real, logical arguments.
Sowell also describes some of what he calls the "crusades" of the anointed and the effect that the vision of the anointed on the American judicial system and the all-important rule of law, as well as offering his opinion as to why the anointed are so invested in their vision. Even though "The Vision of the Anointed" was written two decades ago, it is even more timely today than it was in the mid-Nineties and is an indispensable book for conservatives, especially young conservatives.