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Fooglmog Game profile

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Aug 15th 2010, 1:10:31

2001 or 2002?

-Fooglmog
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Aug 8th 2010, 13:59:52

Ah yes, I appreciate your rather witty subject which references a two year old controversy that no one actually cared about even then. I also appreciate the quality and insight of the post that followed.

Seriously, what kind of response are you trying to elicit here?

"A-Rod is a wanker and steroids are bad! Grrr!"

Great, I'm going to move on now.

-Fooglmog
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Aug 8th 2010, 3:25:08

"graphic homosexual contact is not appropriate for facebook"

If I may borrow an idea from someone far smarter than I:

"i'm going to become rich and famous after i invent a device that allows you to [mushroom stamp] people in the face over the internet".

However, until that day, I'm not sure how "graphic homosexual contact" will occur over the internet.

-Fooglmog
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Aug 8th 2010, 1:35:30

Started at 8... now 22.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 23rd 2010, 4:24:14

Originally posted by Slagpit:
They're still posting on the jolt boards. They didn't like the idea of change.


Point. Set. Match.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 22nd 2010, 15:29:57

...

Not really.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 22nd 2010, 7:26:12

Orkin, I know the arguement for six weeks. You don't need to make it again. I think it's weak. Frankly, I think that either 28 weeks or 3 days would work much better as demarcation points if we needed them. I also disagree with your assessment that birth and conception are based on primitive understanding. I'd suggest that they're both far more precise and scientific than consciousness. You can look and see if a baby is born, or if conception has taken place. You can only guess as to whether awareness exists based upon measurements of brain development. I could make the full arguement again, but it's not worth it. I've given my point of view on this issue and so have you. Everyone who reads this can decide if they agree with you that six weeks is the point at which a fetus becomes a person, or if they agree with me and think that you've made that association in the same way that others decide its a person when it has finger nails or hair.

Most of the next section is non-sequiters and red herrings. I won't waste anybody's time discussing what's legal (constitutional) in a debate that's about what the law should be. I will, however, response to the accusation that I'm being hypocritical. You see, it doesn't hold water... because everyone can scroll up a couple messages and read what I've actually said in context. To make it clear, I'll summarize your arguement and mine.

My arguement:

"Abortion is wrong but making it illegal would not be productive. The most effective means of curtailing it would be to provide a level of support to mothers that alleviates the pressures pushing them towards abortion in the first place. I think that anyone unwilling to help facilitate this support does more harm than good by ostracizing those who consider abortion".

Your arguement:

"Abortion is wrong, because it's stopping a person from becoming a person. Therefore, we should make abortion illegal. But it's not a person until six weeks after it starts moving towards being a person because I think it's not a person until the fetus has a functional brain which is what makes all of us "us". So abortion then should be legal."

I'll let others determine if either of these arguements is hypocritical.

Here's a couple questions to you though Orkin:

1. Early contraception is not available universally. Morality is not an amero-centric issue and we need to consider the rest of the world. In much of the world, morning after pills are not readily available and pregnancy may not be determined until much later than 6 weeks. Is 6 weeks still the cut off for when abortion is moral?

2. You compared the sacrifice of women bearing a child to the sacrifice of conscripts in WWII. If this comparison is reasonable, why would it be unrealistic to expect a personal sacrifice from yourself in the same spirit as the entire nation sacrificed during WWII?

I may have more later, depending on how you respond to these. Enjoy!

-Fooglmog
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Jul 22nd 2010, 5:37:24

Orkin, the reason that I'm inclined to dismiss your point of view is because it exculpates you entirely from personal responsibility.

You clearly believe that abortion is wrong. However, you allow that it ought to be permitted for the first 6 weeks of a pregnancy. I don't see why. It seems no more valid to me to cut off abortions at 6 weeks than at three days, that that's when the cascade that causes human life has begun, or 28 weeks, that that's when the baby is viable extrarius of the womb.

All of these arguements have always struck me as being based on what an individual's conscience can handle, rather than any rational justification for that time to be the point at which a fetus is truly a human life. Just like some people can't stand the thought of killing something with finger nails, you can't stand the thought of killing something that may have a level of awareness. I think it's all bollocks.

I can understand the arguement that a woman has the right to choose until the birth of the child. I can also understand the arguement that from the moment of conception, this is a human life and ought to be treated as such.

I cannot understand the middle ground. The only rational reason I can come up with for its existance is that there's people who've decided (based on whatever reasoning they've stumbled upon) that abortion is wrong, but don't want the responsibility associated with giving a woman no choice. So they find a position that their conscience can handle where they can oppose abortion without feeling any personal responsibility.

Maybe I'm wrong and being unfair in characterizing you this way Orkin, but I can't help but be a little cynical about the motives behind a moral arguement that stops just on the cusp of demanding action from the person making it.

I believe that abortion is wrong. But I will not tell someone that they need to make the sacrifices inherent in having a child in order to satisfy my morality -- especially if I'm not willing to make any sacrifices myself. However, I will tell someone the sacrifices that I'm able and willing to make to help them if they do decide to have the child, and hope that they find it to be enough to have that child.

Not all morality needs to be legislated. Abortion legislation has never been terribly effective anyway. I'm convinced that we can do better by supporting mothers than by trying to impose upon them. The issue is, it requires us as individuals to take responsibility, instead of handind a wad of cash to someone else to deal with it and patting ourselves on the back for having done the "right thing".

-Fooglmog
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Jul 22nd 2010, 3:23:26

I was brought up going to Church. I consider myself a very devout Christian and am typically very open about my faith. However, I rarely go to church anymore. One of the main reasons for that is this very issue of abortion.

You see, I have a friend who I've known my whole life. We grew up going to the same Church and were both the type of Christian kids who would try to let our friends into that by doing bible studies or prayer groups or whatever after school. The kind of thing that's rarely successful in high schools, but there's always a couple kids trying to make happen... that was us.

Then she got pregnant. The guy wanted her to have an abortion. I think that she would have done it, except that there was a lot of pressure from people at our church for her not to. They were convinced that she ought to carry the kid to term. That's what she chose to do.

Of course, after the kid was born she was an unwed mother inside a church. Suddenly, she couldn't work with kids at sunday school, couldn't lead bible studies, wasn't invited to anything that was going within the church. She came to services on Sunday mornings and that was tolerated -- and tolerated is the right word -- but that was it. She became a social pariah within the Church community. She stopped going.

Up until that point, our church had been the most important support she had in her life. She'd given everything she had to this church. But now, when she needed help, it shunned her. I got pissed off. I yelled at a few people over the whole thing (though I missed the ones that most needed it, those who'd convinced her not to have an abortion) and ended up leaving the church myself. The story goes on, and the reasons why I don't go to Church often anymore are in that story. But my point is in what I've already written.

If you are going to tell a woman that she can't have an abortion, you had better be damned ready to support her once she has that baby.

This is my biggest issue with the abortion debate. The people who most vehemently oppose abortion also tend to be the people who have the least interest in helping a mother who's made the choice to have a baby as they advocate.

In my opinion, the government will never be able to provide the kind of support that a struggling mother needs to raise a child. Therefore, the government has no right to say that anyone should not have an abortion.

Having said that, I believe that there are groups that can provide that kind of support. Churches ought to be one of these groups. They ought to be able to take a struggling mother, support here emotionally, physically and financially and help her to raise a child. There are even individual people in the world who are secure enough to be able to provide that level of support. If you can, I have no problem with you telling an expectant mother that you think she shouldn't have an abortion. But you had better take that mother and that child and treat them as a member of your own family. If you don't, you've commit a horrible crime.

This is why I can't tell anyone not to have an abortion. I can't provide that security for them. It's also why I will never have any respect for someone who stands outside an abortion clinic holding a sign, and thinks they've done something great for the world.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 21st 2010, 20:14:15

I'm sorry Kess... I was just having fun with the fact that I know you tend to lean right. I didn't mean for a bunch of people to team up on you over it.

It's a decent Dr. Suess parody... a lot better than most of the political rubbish that gets tossed around. Thanks for sharing.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 21st 2010, 4:15:21

The interesting thing about the Tea Party is how they complain about all politicians... point to the problems caused by conservative party policies as a rationale... then demand that democratic party policies be stopped.

It's like a bunch of 14 year olds who've decided that their parents are both idiots because their dad lost all their money gambling... then yell at their mom because she won't buy them a new iPod.

Much Love Kess.

-Fooglmog
Guy with no clue.

Edited By: Fooglmog on Jul 21st 2010, 4:22:23. Reason: Corrected grammar.
See Original Post

Fooglmog Game profile

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Jul 21st 2010, 4:04:20

Conservative and Liberal are such fluid terms that it's hard to say that someone is no longer either of them. Both of them are defined on a regional basis in a manner that essentially amounts to "Person A calls himself a conservative/liberal. Therefore we can define what conservative/liberal means by describing Person A".

To say that someone has moved away from what is traditional for either of these political labels is ridiculous. My assumption is that what most people view to be the "traditional" outlook of these two labels is what it was when they were very young (whenever that was in the last 50 years). However, both of these labels have been associated with both sides of nearly every major political issue at some point in the last 200 years. I can guarantee that at whatever point in time you believe truely traditional conservatism/liberalism existed, they could have had this same debate about how those associated with those labels had moved away from the traditional outlook for that label from 20, 30 or 50 years earlier.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 19th 2010, 22:55:16

You're welcome.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 15th 2010, 1:08:08

As one of the founders of Vengeance, I'd be awfully pissed if you changed the name...

Having said that, I'm glad to see the old clan is still around :)

-Fooglmog
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Jul 11th 2010, 19:31:39

This isn't really "of all time"... this is more like "Of the last 3 years".

What about m0m0, Uber, Uber BU... etc. ?

Oh, and this one:

-Fooglmog
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Jul 8th 2010, 5:20:51

Nah, the real end of the world is 03:14:07 UTC on Janury 19 2038. Every programmer knows that 1.e+31 is the most dangerous second out there.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 7th 2010, 3:22:58

Originally posted by qzjul:
should it just roll over to 1.0.0.0.0.0 just like we go from 99 to 100 :)

they just didn't want to use more than 5 digits! OMG Y5126 bug!


I don't think so. Mayan calanders seem to be more designed to keep track of an interval of time defined by an event. It's sort of like, after WWII if we started measuring time in an interval defined by the length of that war. So today we'd be just about 11 of those spans later.

The long count seems to relate to how long it took Earth to be created in Mayan mythology. Of course, you were being facetious so I don't know what I'm responding to this like it's a serious line of thought.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 5th 2010, 15:23:15

Originally posted by Devestation:
Originally posted by Fooglmog:
Not that I subscribe to the end of the world crap, but that's a horribly written article with a few glaring omissions.

For example, if you were to try to calculate a date based upon their explanation you'd never get it right. This article leaves the reader thinking that all 5 slots on the Long Count Calandar are base 20... but that's not the case. The central numeral is actually base 18.

There's also good reason to believe that the furthest left numeral only goes up to 13. Essentially, all Mayan calandars consistantly end at the same spot before rolling over. One wouldn't end at 4.0.0 one time and 5.0.0 the next. The current Long Count cycle began the day after the date upon which Mayan's believe the world was finished being made. The time it took for that to occur was 13.0.0.0.0. In otherwords, this calandar last cycled at 13.0.0.0.0... and there's no reason to suspect it would be expected by the Mayans to cycle at a different point now.

There's strong reason to believe that the date in question is, in fact, the end of the Mayan Long Count. However, I'm a skeptic that this has any significance to the world as a whole.

-Fooglmog
Guy with no clue.


It's still fairly unlikely that the calender actually ends then if all the slots being 20 only gets us to 13.0.0.0.0


That's my point. There's no reason to suspect that it ends at straight 20s. In fact, it's impossible for it to. If the final numeral is base 20, than this calandar could still only go up to 19.19.17.19.19. (In a base system, you go to the next digit when you hit your base number, hence in base 10, 10 doesn't have a numerical representation, it's the first 2 digit number)

Be he conveniently doesn't tell us that one of the numerals already isn't base 20. Instead, he made this statement: "But the Mayans had a counting system based on 20, so most of the 'slots' in their calendar had 20 potential numbers (0 to 19)". This was his only nod to the fact that one of the numerals isn't base 20. But, since he was just talking about how the Mayan's have multiple Calandars, it's easy to gloss over and assume that on this calandar, all the numerals are base 20.

Why is it important that he doesn't bother to tell us this?

Simple. The only reason for thinking the final numeral is base 20 is because the other numerals are. That was his arguement. This becomes a much weaker arguement if he lets us know that the other numerals aren't all base 20. He's trying to hide this.

So, why do we think that this calander is meant to end at 13.0.0.0.0? Because that's when it last ended and there is no known example of a Mayan calander changing its end date.

From all appearances, he's a skeptic who's looking for a way to disprove the 2012 theories. I have no problem with that. My problem is with the fact the he's manipulating the evidence to suit his notions. He's decided that since he *knows* 2012 isn't the end of the world, he's justified in presenting evidence in a way which misleads people as long as it also leads them to the same conclusion as him. Frankly, that's the most damaging thing a scientist can do.

Fortunately, he isn't very good at this game and his arguement falls to pieces as soon as someone who has a basic understanding of the Mayan Calander looks at it. Unfortunately, very few people have bothered to do even a basic level of research on the Mayan Calander... and so get suckered when they read this because people are inclined to trust the first person to tell them about something they don't understand.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 5th 2010, 2:56:02

Originally posted by iXenomorph:
wtf? Are you an idiot sifos? When did we start abbreviating imaginary numbers as IN? ITS IMAG YOU fluffIN TRAITOR!!!


Uh... we've used that abbreviation since 2000. In fact, our logo still uses that abbreviation, you see it every time you log into the site.

Newb.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 5th 2010, 2:46:02

17) 82 - Imaginary Numbers

BAM!

-Fooglmog
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Jul 5th 2010, 2:39:20

I blame the oil spill.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 4th 2010, 5:58:47

Only from pre-mergers... I was in Dominion for a time.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 4th 2010, 5:57:46

Not that I subscribe to the end of the world crap, but that's a horribly written article with a few glaring omissions.

For example, if you were to try to calculate a date based upon their explanation you'd never get it right. This article leaves the reader thinking that all 5 slots on the Long Count Calandar are base 20... but that's not the case. The central numeral is actually base 18.

There's also good reason to believe that the furthest left numeral only goes up to 13. Essentially, all Mayan calandars consistantly end at the same spot before rolling over. One wouldn't end at 4.0.0 one time and 5.0.0 the next. The current Long Count cycle began the day after the date upon which Mayan's believe the world was finished being made. The time it took for that to occur was 13.0.0.0.0. In otherwords, this calandar last cycled at 13.0.0.0.0... and there's no reason to suspect it would be expected by the Mayans to cycle at a different point now.

There's strong reason to believe that the date in question is, in fact, the end of the Mayan Long Count. However, I'm a skeptic that this has any significance to the world as a whole.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 1st 2010, 5:46:29

Okay... so I stumbled upon a post by Pang in another thread which mentioned QPawn... I don't know how many people remember this game (or its several iterations) but I know a bunch of people from the Earth community used to play it.

Does anybody still?

I ask because I stumbled upon it again a few weeks back and started playing again.

This isn't advertising for it... I won't post a link or nothing, it just hadn't ocurred to me until now that any Earthers might still play it... does anyone?

-Fooglmog
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Jul 1st 2010, 5:26:11

I think this thread is negated by the fact that Detmer ranked iMagNum as one of the 10 best alliances in Earth history.

-Fooglmog
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Jul 1st 2010, 5:24:54

I think that this may be the first serious attempt at alliance rankings that has ever put iMagNum in the top 10...

Holy fluff...

-Fooglmog
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Jun 16th 2010, 4:17:15

Originally posted by Sifos:
Pretty lolz yes. We miss you at lks :S


...

I still log into lks most days mate.

-Fooglmog
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Jun 15th 2010, 21:16:42

I thought some of you may enjoy this, I did.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2AAa0gd7ClM

-Fooglmog
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Jun 12th 2010, 13:56:54

It's not a bullet that I'm familiar with... at least, not from the description. Though I doubt there's anyone in the world that can identify all bullets.

Would you be able to post a picture?

-Fooglmog
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Jun 10th 2010, 18:58:20

iMagNum's a good candidate for everything.

-Fooglmog
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Jun 7th 2010, 0:29:50

You know... if people didn't protest because it cost too much, they wouldn't have to spend so much on security at the protests.

-Fooglmog
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Jun 4th 2010, 2:58:14

iMagNum is more controlled than people give us credit for. We rarely end up in wars other than the ones we want. That's not luck, it's a testament to how well we control our members.

Of course, the truly uncontrollable ones we makes leaders. But then, when they hit people, it's not out of control membership -- it's properly formulated alliance policy.

-Fooglmog
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Jun 4th 2010, 2:50:37

Fair enough. Take a nap mate. The average student will actually do better on tests if they study 30% and use that time to sleep instead.

Sleep is good for you.

-Fooglmog
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Jun 4th 2010, 2:15:28

...

Did you not bother to read the thread, or are you intentionally being a jackass because you think that my reaction will be amusing?

-Fooglmog
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Jun 3rd 2010, 1:47:17

It has nothing to do with formality. It's simply the best way in which to put forth a cohesive arguement.

My arguement is entirely reasonable. You may disagree. But I'd like to know exactly what it is about it that you find to be invalid.

-Fooglmog
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Jun 2nd 2010, 3:51:12

Professional sports I watch:
- Baseball

Sports that I compete in and love:
- Baseball
- Fencing
- Ultimate Frisbee
- Broomball
- Archery

-Fooglmog
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Jun 2nd 2010, 3:43:56

Debating 101:

I debated competitively for a number of years. I'm by no means brilliant, but I can string an arguement together and did relatively well. Here's a breakdown of a debate:

1. One person states a premise and draws a conclusion from it. In this case:

Premise - A sport is a display of physical prowess in an organized and competitive structure.
Conclusion - Since Nascar hides the physical prowess present, it doesn't meet the criteria I mentioned in my premise and is not a sport.

2. The opposing side either attacks the premise or the conclusion from above.

Attacking the premise: "So long as the physical, competitive and organized elements exist, it does not matter whether or not the athletics are actually on display."

Attacking the conclusion: "The athletics of Nascar are clearly displayed. You can see it in the way the cars move and from cameras that are placed inside the cars."

NOW3P attempted to take a third course which doesn't work in debates. He attempted to redefine the arguement. Rather than disagreeing with me, he simply gave a premise and conclusion of his own. The reason this doesn't work is because it gives me free reign to question your arguement without ever having to defend my own.

It doesn't really matter whether or not I'm right in the challenges I make to your arguement. The point is that I'm challenging it. To any neutral observer an arguement that has been challenged will always appear weaker than one that hasn't.

Therefore, if this debate were to continue as it has thus far, I will be viewed as having the stronger arguement (whether right or not). Some will side against me because I'm opposing their views while you're reinforcing them; but if the issue were removed, my arguement would be seen as much stronger.

Does this make sense?

Obviously, a challenge to the original premise or conclusion isn't the end of the debate. But until you get that right, you'll always be flapping your arms uselessly instead of putting forward an arguement that may convince others.

-Fooglmog
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Jun 2nd 2010, 3:04:42

Originally posted by hoop:
Fooglmog, that's an extremely sill argument. If I state something is lacking x and thus isn't y. It doesn't mean all things with x are y.


You've got lost somewhere in this discussion mate. You're actually supporting my arguement against NOW3P while phrasing your discourse as if it disagrees with me.

NOW3P said that Nascar has athletics (X) and therefore is a sport (Y).
I pointed out that there are activities with athletics (X) that aren't sports (Y).

This doesn't settle whether or not Nascar is a sport. It simply demonstrates that NOW3P's arguement is not conclusive. However, since I initiated the discussion by giving my rationale for why Nascar isn't a sport (ie. It doesn't display the athletic prowess that may be present) and no effort has been made to counter this arguement, the initiative of this debate rests with those who disagree with me. Until some effort is made to counter either my original premise or conclusion, this debate is not moving forward the the victory in it is mine.

I wish they taught both logic and debating as mandatory classes in highschool.

-Fooglmog
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Jun 1st 2010, 3:11:56

Originally posted by martian:
Fooglmog:
"14) How is the government formed after an election?
A. The party with the most elected representatives becomes in power.
B. The Governor General proposes a plan to form the government."

B is correct. A is not correct (not even technically) and this has been true in practice as well as in theory.
See king-byng affair. Also Certain minority governments.
Most of the time B results in A.


I know. I answered B but the test seemed to think that A was the correct answer.

-Fooglmog
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Jun 1st 2010, 3:09:09

Originally posted by NOW3P:
the difference being foog, your fights are choreographed and planned - were you to take away the choreography, you'd basically have fencing, which I believe is a sport still.


You're dancing around my point.

My contention is that a number of criteria must be met for an activity to qualify as a sport. Any activity that doesn't meet all of these criteria does not qualify as such.

Your counter arguement didn't address my criteria, it simply stated that "Nascar is athletic, therefore it is a sport".

I chose to rebutt this by giving an example of another activity that is Athletic but not a sport. The fact that you can identify why my named activity isn't a sport and explain what changes would be necessary to make it a sport is entirely moot. Choreographed swordplay is extremely athletic but is not a sport. Therefore athleticism alone cannot qualify an activity as a sport.

In other words, the only arguement that you've raised for why Nascar ought to be considered a sport (ie. "It's athletic") does not bear up when interrogated in other contexts.

-Fooglmog
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May 31st 2010, 11:36:57

This isn't piracy. Piracy is a term that only applies in the absence of a sanctioning nation-state.

That's not a comment on whether or not the Israeli actions were justifiable. I simply see no reason to use incorrect terminology in referring to this event.

-Fooglmog
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May 31st 2010, 11:26:00

Originally posted by NOW3P:
foog - I see your point, but go to the go-kart track and run 20 laps. Then imagine that times 10 or times 20...racing is HARD work. It's mentally and physically intensive just as much as any other sport I've played.

I'll give racing sport status, but in my opinion it's more of a fusion of sport and engineering.


I'm about to go and spend six hours today working on choreographed fights for stage. Some of these fights will be unarmed while others will be done with swords or sword & companion systems. This is hard work. It's more mentally and physically intensive than any sport that I've ever played. These attributes, however, do not qualify what I'm doing today as sport.

-Fooglmog
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May 31st 2010, 1:50:38

It's not murder if it ain't human.

-Fooglmog
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May 30th 2010, 20:26:45

Originally posted by Marshal:
canuckland is gonna massacre seals!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

BAD CANUCKS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


As opposed to massacring the populaton of just about everything living on or off the Gulf Coast?

-Fooglmog
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May 30th 2010, 20:12:11

*Sheds a tear for what iMagNum would be like in such a game*

-Fooglmog
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May 30th 2010, 20:11:03

In my opinion a sport is a display of physical prowess in an organized and competitive structure.

Nascar is obviously organized and competitive and I take no issue with the fact that Nascar drivers are all physically adept and athletic. However, it does not truly display this trait. The entirety of the human physical element is hidden from the spectator. In some ways the outcome of the physical effort is visible, however the spectator is still removed from it. In the end, Nascar is much more akin to games of strategy (such as chess) than it is to sports.

This isn't to belittle Nascar as an entertainment. It obviously carries great appeal to a large portion of the American population and I don't begrudge it that. Popularity, however, does not allow it to overcome the shortcomings that prevent it from being a sport.

-Fooglmog
Guy with no clue.

Fooglmog Game profile

Member
1149

May 29th 2010, 20:56:38

I hate tests like this, because I often find that I'm smarter than the person who wrote the question. I got this question for example:

14) How is the government formed after an election?
A. The party with the most elected representatives becomes in power.
B. The Governor General proposes a plan to form the government.
C. The Premiers of each province vote for the party to be in power.
D. The Queen selects a party to form the government.

They want "A"... but technically speaking, "B" is more correct. This stupid question dropped me down to 99/100.

BAH!

-Fooglmog
Guy with no clue.

Fooglmog Game profile

Member
1149

May 29th 2010, 20:47:58

Originally posted by mrford:
But calling all NASCAR fans rednecks is just ignorant since it's the largest and fastest growing spectator sport in America


Nascar is not a sport.

-Fooglmog
Guy with no clue.

Fooglmog Game profile

Member
1149

May 29th 2010, 3:20:26

Originally posted by galleri:
Give it up. Your plain just hated.
(cept I don't hate ibujke, he is an exception)


:(

-Fooglmog
Sad guy with no clue.