Quote from: bl825 on March 29, 2009, 04:12:29 PMQuote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:09:44 PMQuote from: bl825 on March 29, 2009, 03:55:00 PMSo people just need to get over it?Indeed. You either let your life be dictated by the past, or you move on and begin to dictate your future.What a strange way of seeing things. If I get hit by a car and I sue the driver, am I allowing my life to be dictated by the past or am I moving on and dictating my future? And I am not trying to suggest that this is analogous, so please don't bother arguing that point.And it's not analogous. You're within your rights to sue the driver, but you shouldn't let the fact you got hit mean that your life is forever altered by it. Even if you get seriously screwed up in said car accident, you take you cane and hobble your way on down the road. That, or you spend your life rolling out of the way anytime a car comes within 15 feet of you.
Quote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:09:44 PMQuote from: bl825 on March 29, 2009, 03:55:00 PMSo people just need to get over it?Indeed. You either let your life be dictated by the past, or you move on and begin to dictate your future.What a strange way of seeing things. If I get hit by a car and I sue the driver, am I allowing my life to be dictated by the past or am I moving on and dictating my future? And I am not trying to suggest that this is analogous, so please don't bother arguing that point.
Quote from: bl825 on March 29, 2009, 03:55:00 PMSo people just need to get over it?Indeed. You either let your life be dictated by the past, or you move on and begin to dictate your future.
So people just need to get over it?
Oh yea...you're delicious and lean, but unsustainable and not to be consumed daily.
Quote from: mugatu on March 29, 2009, 04:12:48 PMQuote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:09:44 PMQuote from: bl825 on March 29, 2009, 03:55:00 PMSo people just need to get over it?Indeed. You either let your life be dictated by the past, or you move on and begin to dictate your future....except that it still happens.And that's why you keep soldiering through. There is no "win" point in the game.
Quote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:09:44 PMQuote from: bl825 on March 29, 2009, 03:55:00 PMSo people just need to get over it?Indeed. You either let your life be dictated by the past, or you move on and begin to dictate your future....except that it still happens.
Quote from: dashrashi on March 28, 2009, 12:23:14 PMBut you're not planning on addressing the other instances Who? talks about. I see. Everyone has a few screwed up things happen to them at some point in their life. BFD. Like I said, the prelaw thing likely had nothing to do with racism and the paralegal thing probably didn't either. So 2, count 'em, 2 screwed things. I can see why that would greatly affect this poor, tortured soul...But, that's the sort of thought process I can see at work in most Harvard bound/attending folks on here. "Someone was mean to me when I was 10 and it was such an injustice that forever tainted my life!". Lollercoaster.
But you're not planning on addressing the other instances Who? talks about. I see.
Saw dashrashi's LSN site. Since she seems to use profanity, one could say that HYP does not necessarily mean class or refinement.
Quote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:17:33 PMQuote from: bl825 on March 29, 2009, 04:12:29 PMQuote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:09:44 PMQuote from: bl825 on March 29, 2009, 03:55:00 PMSo people just need to get over it?Indeed. You either let your life be dictated by the past, or you move on and begin to dictate your future.What a strange way of seeing things. If I get hit by a car and I sue the driver, am I allowing my life to be dictated by the past or am I moving on and dictating my future? And I am not trying to suggest that this is analogous, so please don't bother arguing that point.And it's not analogous. You're within your rights to sue the driver, but you shouldn't let the fact you got hit mean that your life is forever altered by it. Even if you get seriously screwed up in said car accident, you take you cane and hobble your way on down the road. That, or you spend your life rolling out of the way anytime a car comes within 15 feet of you.I already said it wasn't, but I imagine for different reasons.What if by some strange turn of events, you get hit by cars over and over again?
Quote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:14:48 PMQuote from: mugatu on March 29, 2009, 04:12:48 PMQuote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:09:44 PMQuote from: bl825 on March 29, 2009, 03:55:00 PMSo people just need to get over it?Indeed. You either let your life be dictated by the past, or you move on and begin to dictate your future....except that it still happens.And that's why you keep soldiering through. There is no "win" point in the game.well, i'm not so sure about the bolded. However, it seems quite unenlightened to indicate that no one ever needs any help from society when society is limiting opportunity. It doesn't seem very fair, does it?
Have we seen any evidence to indicate there's ever a definite winning point anywhere in life? I mean, the best you can hope for is to retire well off and have a decent family, maybe leave some kind of legacy. And right about the time you get all that sorted out, you die from old age, death usually being a pretty clear "lose" point.Society limits everyone's opportunities all the time. Well, unless you're a certain recent president, then it seems to insulate you from your poor decisions. But anyway, at what point did it become a social responsibility to help "limited" people up? What ever happened to the concept of people helping themselves up? URMs don't need "help" getting into good law schools, they need to do the same thing non-URMs do; get a better GPA and a better LSAT, both of which are entirely doable. In such an easily remedied situation, there's no need for help, just harder work.
Quote from: Ninja1 on March 28, 2009, 03:19:39 PMQuote from: dashrashi on March 28, 2009, 12:23:14 PMBut you're not planning on addressing the other instances Who? talks about. I see. Everyone has a few screwed up things happen to them at some point in their life. BFD. Like I said, the prelaw thing likely had nothing to do with racism and the paralegal thing probably didn't either. So 2, count 'em, 2 screwed things. I can see why that would greatly affect this poor, tortured soul...But, that's the sort of thought process I can see at work in most Harvard bound/attending folks on here. "Someone was mean to me when I was 10 and it was such an injustice that forever tainted my life!". Lollercoaster.For the record, this is the kind of thing I meant when I talked about a friend dropping you--"someone was mean to me." That's substantively different in both kind and degree from the kind of racism Who? experienced and discussed (EVEN if you want to just limit it to the two times even you admit were racism), and all I was saying is that it's intellectually dishonest for you to equate the two. Someone being mean to you when you are 10 is someone being mean to you when you are 10. Someone telling you what Who's friend said is racism, not meanness. Different. Not the same. Not that hard. If you want to talk screwed-up *&^%, then we can. And if you think people should just shake off, move on, get over it, whatever, the truly screwed-up *&^% (death of your mother as an 11 year old, or being raped at the age of 7, to use but two experiences of two of my very best friends), then that's your own scary denial/burying-*&^% complex. "Yeah, my mom died when I was a child. Whatever. I got over it." That's...well, in my opinion, that's not a healthy way to live your life. And it's almost never true, anyway. But you're the one who lowered the stakes, as it were, by making it about "mean"ness. Your word. And I'm sorry, you weren't denying that Who? was a peer, were you? On what possible ground would you dispute that?
Quote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:38:51 PMHave we seen any evidence to indicate there's ever a definite winning point anywhere in life? I mean, the best you can hope for is to retire well off and have a decent family, maybe leave some kind of legacy. And right about the time you get all that sorted out, you die from old age, death usually being a pretty clear "lose" point.Society limits everyone's opportunities all the time. Well, unless you're a certain recent president, then it seems to insulate you from your poor decisions. But anyway, at what point did it become a social responsibility to help "limited" people up? What ever happened to the concept of people helping themselves up? URMs don't need "help" getting into good law schools, they need to do the same thing non-URMs do; get a better GPA and a better LSAT, both of which are entirely doable. In such an easily remedied situation, there's no need for help, just harder work.There may not be winning point in any given life, but it strikes me that a winning point in societal life is that all people are equally deserving of rights and opportunity. Both under the law and inside our heads.It became a social responsibility to help people as soon as we started living in groups. So, several million years ago. Hard work doesn't help if the opportunity is not there.Furthermore, your use of "limited" is entirely insulting. Congratulations.
Quote from: mugatu on March 29, 2009, 04:49:35 PMQuote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:38:51 PMHave we seen any evidence to indicate there's ever a definite winning point anywhere in life? I mean, the best you can hope for is to retire well off and have a decent family, maybe leave some kind of legacy. And right about the time you get all that sorted out, you die from old age, death usually being a pretty clear "lose" point.Society limits everyone's opportunities all the time. Well, unless you're a certain recent president, then it seems to insulate you from your poor decisions. But anyway, at what point did it become a social responsibility to help "limited" people up? What ever happened to the concept of people helping themselves up? URMs don't need "help" getting into good law schools, they need to do the same thing non-URMs do; get a better GPA and a better LSAT, both of which are entirely doable. In such an easily remedied situation, there's no need for help, just harder work.There may not be winning point in any given life, but it strikes me that a winning point in societal life is that all people are equally deserving of rights and opportunity. Both under the law and inside our heads.It became a social responsibility to help people as soon as we started living in groups. So, several million years ago. Hard work doesn't help if the opportunity is not there.Furthermore, your use of "limited" is entirely insulting. Congratulations.I agree. And doesn't URM bumps thwart that very goal?Depends on at what scale your looking at. Yeah, everyone is dependent on everyone else to live in society (well, there's probably a few woodsmen out there that would dispute this, but odds are they won't be jumping in here), but I'm not talking about the fabric of society here. I'm talking about feeling compelled to drag other people up. Your talking about the net, which I think we all agree is a good thing. I'm talking about the ladder, where the dispute seems to be if everyone can climb it on their own, or if they need someone to pull them up. I'm of the opinion that if you can't climb on your own power, you're best left behind.Thank ye, I try. If you're going to be "limited" by society, then aren't you one of the "limited"? Seems pretty spot on to me.
Quote from: mugatu on March 29, 2009, 05:11:30 PMQuote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:59:55 PMQuote from: mugatu on March 29, 2009, 04:49:35 PMQuote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:38:51 PMHave we seen any evidence to indicate there's ever a definite winning point anywhere in life? I mean, the best you can hope for is to retire well off and have a decent family, maybe leave some kind of legacy. And right about the time you get all that sorted out, you die from old age, death usually being a pretty clear "lose" point.Society limits everyone's opportunities all the time. Well, unless you're a certain recent president, then it seems to insulate you from your poor decisions. But anyway, at what point did it become a social responsibility to help "limited" people up? What ever happened to the concept of people helping themselves up? URMs don't need "help" getting into good law schools, they need to do the same thing non-URMs do; get a better GPA and a better LSAT, both of which are entirely doable. In such an easily remedied situation, there's no need for help, just harder work.There may not be winning point in any given life, but it strikes me that a winning point in societal life is that all people are equally deserving of rights and opportunity. Both under the law and inside our heads.It became a social responsibility to help people as soon as we started living in groups. So, several million years ago. Hard work doesn't help if the opportunity is not there.Furthermore, your use of "limited" is entirely insulting. Congratulations.I agree. And doesn't URM bumps thwart that very goal?Depends on at what scale your looking at. Yeah, everyone is dependent on everyone else to live in society (well, there's probably a few woodsmen out there that would dispute this, but odds are they won't be jumping in here), but I'm not talking about the fabric of society here. I'm talking about feeling compelled to drag other people up. Your talking about the net, which I think we all agree is a good thing. I'm talking about the ladder, where the dispute seems to be if everyone can climb it on their own, or if they need someone to pull them up. I'm of the opinion that if you can't climb on your own power, you're best left behind.Thank ye, I try. If you're going to be "limited" by society, then aren't you one of the "limited"? Seems pretty spot on to me.How would providing the same opportunity to people who may not otherwise be able to obtain it not work.Re: ladder example. If the ladder doesn't go all the way up, you can't use it to climb up. Thus, we need a way to make sure that everyone is able to get to the same level the ladder goes to. I'm not sure how much clearer I can be about this. We live in a meritocracy, yes, but its only part of the equation. Finally, people aren't "limited". Society can, however, limit opportunity. Try using it as verb next time, rather than an adjective, and maybe everyone who reads this won't think you're completely racist. :!Too late.
Quote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:59:55 PMQuote from: mugatu on March 29, 2009, 04:49:35 PMQuote from: Ninja1 on March 29, 2009, 04:38:51 PMHave we seen any evidence to indicate there's ever a definite winning point anywhere in life? I mean, the best you can hope for is to retire well off and have a decent family, maybe leave some kind of legacy. And right about the time you get all that sorted out, you die from old age, death usually being a pretty clear "lose" point.Society limits everyone's opportunities all the time. Well, unless you're a certain recent president, then it seems to insulate you from your poor decisions. But anyway, at what point did it become a social responsibility to help "limited" people up? What ever happened to the concept of people helping themselves up? URMs don't need "help" getting into good law schools, they need to do the same thing non-URMs do; get a better GPA and a better LSAT, both of which are entirely doable. In such an easily remedied situation, there's no need for help, just harder work.There may not be winning point in any given life, but it strikes me that a winning point in societal life is that all people are equally deserving of rights and opportunity. Both under the law and inside our heads.It became a social responsibility to help people as soon as we started living in groups. So, several million years ago. Hard work doesn't help if the opportunity is not there.Furthermore, your use of "limited" is entirely insulting. Congratulations.I agree. And doesn't URM bumps thwart that very goal?Depends on at what scale your looking at. Yeah, everyone is dependent on everyone else to live in society (well, there's probably a few woodsmen out there that would dispute this, but odds are they won't be jumping in here), but I'm not talking about the fabric of society here. I'm talking about feeling compelled to drag other people up. Your talking about the net, which I think we all agree is a good thing. I'm talking about the ladder, where the dispute seems to be if everyone can climb it on their own, or if they need someone to pull them up. I'm of the opinion that if you can't climb on your own power, you're best left behind.Thank ye, I try. If you're going to be "limited" by society, then aren't you one of the "limited"? Seems pretty spot on to me.How would providing the same opportunity to people who may not otherwise be able to obtain it not work.Re: ladder example. If the ladder doesn't go all the way up, you can't use it to climb up. Thus, we need a way to make sure that everyone is able to get to the same level the ladder goes to. I'm not sure how much clearer I can be about this. We live in a meritocracy, yes, but its only part of the equation. Finally, people aren't "limited". Society can, however, limit opportunity. Try using it as verb next time, rather than an adjective, and maybe everyone who reads this won't think you're completely racist. :!