▲ | noobermin 12 hours ago | |
While reading about history can always be enlightening, I sure hope you aren't looking to a book to inform you on what is right or wrong and what your behaviour should be. | ||
▲ | jrmg 11 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
Who or what should we be discussing or consulting ethics with? Is the line drawn at the written word? It’s easy to read your comment as meaning ‘never let others influence your opinions on right or wrong’ which is (I hope!) obviously ludicrous. | ||
▲ | jebarker 10 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
Yes, I do read books to give me different perspectives on life that help me form my beliefs about what is right, wrong and ethical. The suggestion that’s a bad idea is pretty incredible to me. Where do you think I should go for such things? | ||
▲ | schiffern 11 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
While it's not my cup of tea, from what I've heard there are a few major world religions that might disagree on that point. | ||
▲ | ProllyInfamous 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
The entire purpose / point of this book is that the overly-oppressed majority is easily susceptible to becoming "NAZIS," and why National Socialist mentality ought to be actively DISCOURAGED. But you're just going to see the swastika on the cover (which is used appropriately as the symbol of hate it represents) and you'll not even attempt discussions at preventing future Nazi-creating societies. Good work /s If you search my username, I have provided the couple-dozen quotes from this book that alarmed me most, in regards to society in 2020 (when I first read the book). I am not a supremicist in any capacity — I am a blue collar union electrician (so: I hate everybody equally smile_face.GIF). But I've heard it all on jobsites, and not all hate is "misdirected"... |