I am not talking about stamping yer feet and protesting. ;)
Would you take up arms against your country, if a rebellion started?
(This is kind of my answer to the WWIII/fight for country poll.)
Just trying to weed out the cowards. :shifty:
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I am not talking about stamping yer feet and protesting. ;)
Would you take up arms against your country, if a rebellion started?
(This is kind of my answer to the WWIII/fight for country poll.)
Just trying to weed out the cowards. :shifty:
poll?
I am always living in the wrong country
that country is not mine
so how does your question apply to immigrants, long term tourists or refugees?
What is "your" country?
no need to answer
then there was no need for you to post :PQuote:
Originally Posted by 15%
i'd do the stamp feet and protest first, boycott and make a nuisense of myself first. if all else fails yes i would fight
:PQuote:
No, I believe in my country and it's leaders (AKA Im American)
Im not sure to be honest, i might refuse to put litter in bins if i was really pissed off.
hmmm....looks like i left out a couple of necessary options :(
"not sure" and "if all else fails" good points ppls
but i thought when i added teh "i just wanna shoot manker" option,
that i had all bases covered :lol:
i vote to shoot manker...then we can abuse grammar w/o fear of ramification :shifty:
:P
yeah it does. twas too much effort to stop the iraq invasion though
agreed, but dont spoil my poll, ok? :P :lol:Quote:
Originally Posted by j2k4
i guess it depends how well the propaganda works on me
Again, cowardice doesn't manifest itself in not wanting to shoot anyone.Quote:
Originally Posted by FKDUP74
You are just being silly now.
First, in the other thread you ask us if we wouldn't feel guilty if we didn't join the army if our friends and loved ones did, now you want us to possibly start a war against them, assuming they did what the government told them. :huh:
And if it's not our friends and loved ones then it might still be people just like us who might, for any number of reasons have chosen, or been made to fight for the government.
nearly 2% of the entire population of britain amassed in london to protest against the iraq war. not a gnat's weight eh?
now imagine how many more millions couldn't be there because of the cost, work, school or any other responsibility
plus polls suggested over 80% of the population were against the war.
i guess we just were happier to go on with our regular lives than overthrow the government
good point - but it depends how "far away" it is and how much it affects our "daily lives"Quote:
Originally Posted by GepperRankins
I don't know if that was a dig at me personally or not :huh:Quote:
Originally Posted by j2k4
There are, as always reasons as to why something like it might happen.
Fkdup mentioned people being drafted.
If that happens, and they get sent to war, while dissent grows on the home-front, they might entirely miss out on what happens at home, oppressive governments have been known to use censure after all, a situation where these people then being recalled to fight the horrible rebels without being told any of the particulars of the situation isn't entirely implausible, in fact I think it has happened once or twice throughout history, and the army does its best to teach you how to follow orders after all, so there's no guarantee they'd immediately rebel in turn.
I'm pretty sure instances of members of the same family fighting on opposite sides of a conflict because they've been in contact with different elements who have influenced their opinions are more common than you think.
In the second world war this happened, and cousins of german descent, for instance, would fight on both sides, I'm fairly certain I've read about it a few times.
The same thing probably happened during your civil war, and during the revolution in China. As far as I know, the older generations weren't quite as fond of the revolution when it happened.
I really don't think you have time to make sure it isn't someone you know in a grand scale battle before firing at them.
It seems such a waste, a war.
Civil protests might take time, lots of time, but if they mean that no one has to die unnecessarily then that's the way to choose.
cant argue with that :P :lol:Quote:
Originally Posted by SnnY
hence the "I'd shoot my own mother...." option :PQuote:
Originally Posted by SnnY
one can have different oppinions to their family. that isn't even questionableQuote:
Originally Posted by j2k4
what about students?
lets just ban freedom of thought, that'll make the world a better place :01:
I voted yes.
Luckily here, there would be alot of back and forth diplomacy before that ever arose.
Me, i wouldn't do it on purpose though. :unsure:Quote:
Originally Posted by FKDUP74
I said yes but i mean no.i live in my apartment and dont get into politics and wars.
80% said they were against it 2% were almost militant
did it need to be exaclty 51% of the population or more marching in london to be a mass movement then? http://moderation.invisionzone.com/s...fault/dabs.gif
you gotta start by making your voice heard. if people don't listen then you fight
Not quite understanding where you're coming from, j2. You said it wasn't a gnat's weight toward a mass-movement, Dave correctly disputed it.
He didn't assert that it was a mass movement, he simply said that it was more than a gnat's weight toward it. Two percent of an entire country's population travelling to London to protest against a decision undertaken by it's government is rather substantial - particularly in our, relatively lackadaisical, societies, eh.
And hippies...you forgot hippies. :dry:Quote:
Originally Posted by j2k4
Well ... yeah, but you brought it up to dispute Dave's point about it being more than a gnat's weight, the mass-movement psycology doesn't work either because this protest demonstrates the depth of feeling among people who reside here concerning helping big boys bully smaller kids. If the government continued with similar foreign policy, the next statistic could be 5%, and then 10% ... and then ... .Quote:
Originally Posted by j2k4
It may only have been 2% that felt compelled to shift their arses this time but the 80% is relevant as mass-movement could be used as a metaphor for a vote swing next month. Elections can be lost on a single issue, the opposition parties are homing in on this very one.
Oh quite. I will bash a keyboard all day about my opinions and ideas but I didn't go to the protest :DQuote:
Originally Posted by j2k4
:blink:Quote:
lackadaisical
i'm gonna leave you guys to use your long words to argue about this shit. even though i don't talk like some kind of self righteous thesaurus, i'm always right
Ide give my goverment the fists of furry :cool:
Yogi (a hippy :dry: ) got promoted. Or demoted depending on your viewpoint.Quote:
Originally Posted by j2k4
I went to a protest but it was more for the free coach trip to London than for the protest. Stupid shops were all closed though.:(Quote:
Originally Posted by manker
Now you know me, I'm an easy going sort of guy. Always have been, always will be.Quote:
Originally Posted by manker
I can live with your grammatical nazism ... usually.
However to type your ellipsis, leave a space, then place a fool stop is frankly beyond the pale.
You, Sir have taken that too far, ken.
I think they closed them all because the Anarchists were so well organized that day. :blink:Quote:
Originally Posted by MCHeshPants420
AFAIC, it's the only logical course of action when confronted with a situation that demands an ellipsis at the end of a sentence, anything else would be utter ludocrisy.Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr JP Fugley
You, dear fellow, have dangled your rod in a swirlsome eddy :snooty:
AFAIC :lol:
Don't try the reverse double roddery on me that's just being ridiclious.
its a pretty good poll i must say