Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Yes, DE, I've never been in a fight.
That isn't what I said. I said you didn't know what you were talking about. Just having been in a fight does not mean you understand the topic. I've been in fights too, but I've also had the benefit of seeing street conflicts of many types on video, slowed down, and analyzed second by second so I could see the mistakes those involved made and learn from them myself. It is much easier to learn how fights go when you can look at them in detached comfort with professional analysis and instruction and when one is not personally involved.
Just "I've been in a fight" is absurd. My wife has had 4 babies; she does not therefor know how to deliver one. My dad was a drunk; that did not qualify him as an addiction counselor. You made an obviously absurd statement that someone can always disengage from conflict, even when its already unfolding, and I pointed out that this is not true and cited a currently prominent case (Zimmerman) where the defendants claim is that this was impossible. Your only response is a sarcastic comment about your personal experience and another silly emoticon.
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I'm not going on about anything. I voiced my opinion, and you're crying because you don't like it. I don't need the law changed, because, honestly, I don't care about it.
Yes you are. You keep responding to me, despite your little "have a nice day" comment. I'm only "going on" in the sense that I keep responding in order to see what hilariously silly viewpoint you will reveal next. This thread has been an absolute gold mine already. Either that, or I half-expect you to reveal that you actually have been making all this up and are just trolling the **** out of everyone (which would be really funny).
If you don't want the law changed and don't care about it, then there was absolutely no point in bringing up what you think should be legal. This entire line of conversation started as a discussion of what
could happen based on the way things actually are. You just went of "but why should it be illegal to fight?" and when its pointed out that this is irrelevant and not the way things actually are, you're right back to "oh well I really didn't care what the law is."
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How things should be handled is utterly irrelevant to the possible outcome in view of how things actually ARE handled.
No ****. When have I ever said differently?
No one said you said differently. Thank you for admitting that your entire tangent about how fighting ought to be legal was entirely irrelevant.
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You clearly don't understand what an opinion means. Once again, at no time have I suggested forcing anyone to do anything.
So.. you hold your opinion for no actual reason at all? You haven't given a single reason in support of it. If one has an opinion on public policy, it makes very little sense to not think public policy ought to be enacted to follow it. Yet your ideas of how things ought to be regarding fights in the public streets are obviously not popular ones. If you think it ought to be legal, that necessarily implies that you think the legislature should change the law in order to legalize it, since that is how previously illegal things become legal.
Either you have some reason for this that you think ought to convince the average person to agree (whether or not you actually care about spending the time and effort to convince anyone notwithstanding), or you feel the legislature should just do what YOU want. Either that or you just think it should be that way, but have somehow severed your opinion on how things should be from the logical avenues for how they would get that way, most likely because when the impracticality and unlikelyhood of fighting in the streets becoming legal was exposed to you, you just retreated into "it's my opinion! I don't care!". It's not going to happen, you knew that perfectly well, and the entire tangent about "it should be legal!" was nothing but pointless resentment of the situation.
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No, actually, I just scrolled up and saw his post now. Your personal narcissism aside, I simply did not see his statement.
Yes, it's my personal narcissism that makes you respond extensively to me, and ignore everyone else. Sam also made a response that you ignored; Khross and Stathol got cursory responses at best. You have a history of bringing up me being a cop in other forums, and you bring it up in every thread about cops. Here's a hint: Observing your behavior and making an assesment of it is not "narcissism". I know you think you're scoring e-points by using that word, but.. you're not.
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My statement in bringing that up was related to the prevailing view of police officers that the general public shouldn't take care of their own issues. This is so dramatically at odds with my own views that there's unlikely to be any common ground. Your coptitude has no basis for the formation of my views, but was merely a prediction in the outcome of this conversation. I can see I was not far off the mark.
The reason the police have that view is that they are
required to enforce the law, and the law does not permit the public to "resolve their own issues" in such a way, because the legislature does not allow the physically powerful to go around enforcing their ideas of street etiquette on everyone else. The fact that you think this has anything to do with cops is a result of your own insecurity regarding cops; the police don't make the laws. Its now evident why you get into confrontations with cops; you go around getting into confrontations with everyone else, too.
What do you think the cops should so if they come upon a street fight? Just watch while one guy gets his *** kicked by the other one, then take the winner's word as to what happened? Presumably you don't think the winner should be allowed to keep kicking the guy when he's down or slamming his head into the concrete. At what point SHOULD the police intervene, why, and how is that workable for society? Should women be entitled to police protection that men are not? What about people with extensive martial arts training? Great physical stamina? Why should they have an advantage in disputes over proper behavior?
DE - why do you think I care about any of this? Cops will do what cops will do. Why should I give a ****?
Because you're discussing the topic. Oh, but now all of a sudden you "don't care". Yes, when you express an opinion about how things should be, and someone points out the possible ramifications of that, the proper response is just to claim you really don't care at all. Your response is a typical one for an adolescent, just bluster about how you "don't care" when faced with insurmountable facts. If you don't care.. then stop responding. That would be the most effective way to not address things you don't care to address, wouldn't it?
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No - there's a huge difference. A schoolyard bully (not sure what a frat boy has to do with anything) will exert force over weaker individuals to achieve some goal. Every single confrontation I have ever been in, with the exception of one, has involved me responding to such force over weaker individuals or myself, and/or encouraging/allowing such individuals to try doing so with me. The difference is motivation, the difference is in the aggressor. I may be an aggressor, but at no time have I been the only aggressor. With one exception. (Exception: gentleman said something highly inappropriate to a woman I was with and got knocked on his *** - he apologized and that was the end of it.)
Umm.. I hate to break this to you, but unless you are getting into fights just for the sake of the fight itself, or for no apparent reason at all, you're "trying to achieve some goal". You just admitted that you've been an aggressor, and that you hit someone over saying something "highly inappropriate".
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Again, wrong. I never once said I am not aware of this possibility, never once did I say I was unconcerned. Simply being aware of a threat does not mean it must be avoided at all costs.
And yet, your very first response in this thread was eye rolling at the suggestion at this could happen, and the description of what its actually like when this happens. That description wasn't melodramatic, either. Actual wounds are gruesome, and bleeding to death is a very bad way to die.
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In none of those situations were they acting in self defense. That said, I refer you to my previous statement:
Arathain wrote:
It's certainly not always the case, but generally I've found that if there is a fight, both created it. They are incredibly easy to avoid.
I don't know if they were or weren't. You saying they weren't doesn't make it so, and no, "I was there" doesn't help you out. They aren't here, and you can only present these situations as you perceived them. You do not know what went through that person's mind, and obviously they felt threatened enough to pull a weapon.. yet you haven't been stabbed or shot.
That makes it pretty clear that they felt they were defending themselves against you - if they were intent on harming you, they would have used their weapon.
Simply saying "both created it" means nothing. I have no doubt that you have confronted people who are less than exemplary in their conduct, but that does not automatically translate to "they were unjustified in pulling out a weapon on me in order to prevent the confrontation from becoming physical".