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Latest post 08-11-2008 2:40 PM by pcrs. 23 replies.
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  • 07-10-2008 1:01 PM In reply to

    Re: I felt completely on my own.

    I am not sure which podcast the "Against me" argument is from.  But I am sure there is a specific podcast dedicated to it.  Basically it goes like this:

    Someone tells you they support the war.  You ask if it is okay if you don't support the war.  They usually agree that you are able to hold a contrary opinion.  Ask if they would then support the police hauling you to jail for refusing to pay to support the war. Then simplify the equation for them.  "So you are saying that you would support the use of violence against me if I don't agree with and refuse to pay for the war."  Help them understand exactly what they are advocating, and then if they persist, never speak to this person again.

     

    "When you salute the flag, you are standing in blood." -Stefan Molyneux

    Listen to and download my anarchist songs for free right here  http://www.reverbnation.com/davidkopp

  • 07-10-2008 1:06 PM In reply to

    Re: I felt completely on my own.

    Crystal:

     

    I'm sorry. Maybe it's in a podcast I haven't heard yet. What is the "against me" argument? Could you explain that for me please? Smile

    Crystal

    Heavy sympathies for your 'round the fire situation a while back Left Hug I had a similar situation a couple months ago at a backyard fire, though I skipped out a little sooner than it sounds like you did because I saw it coming. It's hard to see people like that as 'decent' again afterward, and I know that hurts.

    Here's the 'Against Me' video:

    It's also available as podcast 927 here.

    The argument is simple, but sort of drops a bomb on any pretense of politeness on the part of those who would use the force of government to accomplish their goals.

    “How vain it is to sit down to write when you have not stood up to live.” - Henry David Thoreau

    My blog: Ibidus

  • 07-10-2008 3:24 PM In reply to

    • Crystal
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    Re: I felt completely on my own.

     Oh yes... I have heard that argument, but never with the "against me" title. Got it! Thanks for pointing me in the direction of that video as well. I'll have to watch that soon! After a few podcasts today I think. I'm about two years behind and I'm going in order. I'm looking forward to being in the present, in many ways. Cool

  • 07-10-2008 4:21 PM In reply to

    • Crystal
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    • Santa Cruz, CA
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    Re: I felt completely on my own.

     

    Joey:
    I wonder why she turned out that way. What was her relationship to your parents like growing up compared to yours?

    I'm the oldest, she's the youngest, and my brother in the middle. She was always a very observant little girl. She always watched us hurt ourselves doing something, and then not do whatever it was, even though we were having fun, whether it be on a slide or in a climbing tree... etc. She's always been quiet and soft-spoken... far from assertive. I was thinking about this yesterday actually... my mother decided to move to Oregon when her mom got in a really bad car accident. We were 16, 14, & 13, so we all had the choice to stay with my father, who was more physically abusive, especially when we were younger and quite authoritarian when it came to getting things done... or we could go with my mother to Oregon near my mom's family. My mom was a bit of a pushover as we got older, gave us more privacy and didn't dictate things to us as much. She was more cooperative and a bit like a friend, which was not at all the case with my father. My brother and I chose to go with my mom and my sister, oddly enough, stayed with my dad in California. I always thought it was because she felt sorry for him and/or she didn't want to leave the friends she had in school.  

    Joey:
    That's fantastic. Have you talked to her about the things we discuss here at FDR, the family specifically? I think I know the answer to that given the rest of your post, but I'd like a clarification on that.

    I have talked with her about this a bit, but what's even more is that she has listened to quite a bit FDR herself, because my only computer is at my work, and she works with me. She likes most of it, mostly the political podcasts, but she seems to have the brakes on in certain areas. I certainly need to make some time with her, because I do have some questions. We have talked about my brother and his abuse of my nephew, as well as my frustration and pain relating to the way my dad abused us. She agrees with me, but doesn't have anything of her own to say, except bringing up times she knows he "messed up". I need to find out for sure, cause I'm just guessing here with the way she acts when talking about it, but I think she wants to just forget about it and "move on". I need to find out what exactly that means to her. How she thinks it's possible if you don't try to figure out why our father thought that was the way to deal with us. My father has told both my brother and my sister "I just want you to know that there are many things I wish I would have done differently." He has never said that to me. At the time I found out he said that to my siblings (pre-FDR) I was very upset that he never said it to me. Now it makes a bit more sense I think. I was the only one that stood up to him in any way. I ran away from home. It only lasted a day before he found me, but I was extremely defiant when he forced me to go back to his house. I was 15 years old, a few short months before we moved to Oregon.

    Joey:
    I'm an only child myself, but many of the regulars here who have defooed came from families with siblings. Many of them had to leave the siblings behind because those siblings just could not be reached.

    I certainly know I can't sit back and hold my breath if that's what it comes to. We'll see, I guess. I know one thing, and that is I can't sit in limbo forever waiting for them, or anyone.

    Thanks so much for the wonderful questions Joey. I found some things out for myself just answering them!

    Much Appreciation,

    Crystal

  • 07-18-2008 7:50 PM In reply to

    Re: I felt completely on my own.

    This is exactly the way I feel whenever I have an argument with one of my freinds on the subject.  It feels horrible.  I go all introverted for an hour or two after I have to give up, because they are not listening.

  • 07-18-2008 8:44 PM In reply to

    • enigma
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    • Joined on 06-05-2008
    • Virginia
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    Re: I felt completely on my own.

    Crystal:

     I'm actually not totally sure why she was there with me. But she certainly wasn't thinking the same things I was in the dream.

    My relationship with my sister is probably one of the most difficult for me to deal with in all this. She has never been abusive towards me. She is a very shy, scared person, in my view. She will never say anything to "hurt someone's feelings", and is very complacent, which for me is hard to respect, but I think it's because I have a lot to do in that area as well. I view her as a victim, but that could be a manipulation tactic. I'm not sure. She was the only one in my life that took the journey out of religion and the idea of god with me, so I have a lot of respect for her about that.

    The other problem I have with her is she's engaged to her first boyfriend ever, and it's been around 7 years now they've been together. He's a cop. Well, now he's a CSI detective, but he's still the typical cop. Thinks he's doing the community a huge service, "catching the bad guys". It's disgusting. I never have to see him, which works for me, but it's hard because I don't understand what my sister is doing with him. I think she's way too smart for him, but obviously not. Potential is what I see in her, but she is free to do what she wants, and I'm gonna need to figure out what I'll do for me in regards to her and my relationship. If I need to let it go, I'm willing to, but it's the hardest for me, cause I've been closest to her out of anyone in my family.

    Does anyone have a sibling and this kind of relationship with him or her? 

    My relationship with my brother is somewhat similar. He works for a company that designs and constructs aircraft carriers for the navy. I made my disaproval clear to my parents a week ago, but they just said, "Oh, don't bother him about his job. It's just his job, etc." I wish my brother could see the connection between his job and the violence of the military. Part of me believes that he does see the connection but just doesn't care and is in it for the money. Whenever I talk to him on the phone I can feel my false self taking over and I don't know how much longer I can keep up the act. I will most likely break off the relationship around the same time I defoo from my parents. It makes me sad to see someone I looked up to when I was younger become a part of something so evil.

     

  • 08-11-2008 10:19 AM In reply to

    Re: I felt completely on my own.

    Best of thoughts to you Crystal. Reading about your experience I recognize the very first time I tried to explain to my classmates that santa claus was a hoax. That was a terrible and isolating event for me and nobody would explain to me that what I did was noble. I was treated like the person who blurts out how the book/movie/story ends in the most disapproving manner by the adults in my life. About your circle of friends, what a shame they weren't ready or willing to hear you out. Genocide is clearly abominable and
    defending it is ugly. Here's to you for braving waters that are difficult to navigate when the mix of people around you are afraid to deal with what is really there. Best of luck on your journey.

  • 08-11-2008 11:56 AM In reply to

    • Crystal
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    • Joined on 11-27-2007
    • Santa Cruz, CA
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    Re: I felt completely on my own.

     Thanks so much!

    Smile

  • 08-11-2008 2:40 PM In reply to

    • pcrs
    • Top 10 Contributor
    • Joined on 04-01-2007
    • Houten, The Netherlands
    • Posts 1,670
    • Philosopher King

    Re: I felt completely on my own.

    That sounds horrible, even more for a woman, as a guy you can always be the lonely cowboy far away from home, for a woman it feels pretty essential to have a supportive group around you. Not that it is in any consolation, but if it was last sunday, we might have been in the same situation at the same time, I can almost feel the connection in retrospect. Philosophical nonsense was flying all over the place and I felt increasingly alone. My usual eagerness to throw a javelin of truth into the tsunami of nonsense and evil, made way for fatalism. It felt it would be like convincing my cat to become a vegetarian.

    To top it off I had flipped over in a canoo with my mobile phone and headset on me and ... well let me stop there.

     

     

    Violence has nothing with which to cover itself except the lie, and the lie has nothing to stand on other than violence. Any man who has once acclaimed violence as his method must inexorably choose the lie as his principle. Solzhenitsyn, Alexander

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