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MaxS
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lol yeah great, the same genious who claimed heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones and that the body is made up of four biles =)
yep, over 2000 years ago.. when most people where going ugg ugg and beating woman with bats for sex, this man was thinking about "gravity" and the Universe ;-)MaxS said:lol yeah great, the same genious who claimed heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones and that the body is made up of four biles =)
anyway this is a bit off topicIn a democracy the poor will have more power than the rich, because there are more of them, and the will of the majority is supreme.
Because of that man scientific progress was stifled for some 2000 years
You don't have children, do you? I am 48 and my mother does not want me to go to war from the day I was born until now.Evo said:That was the argument for lowering the voting age to 18. I think 18 is too young to go to war.
she has several, but I believe they're all girls.Mercator said:You don't have children, do you? I am 48 and my mother does not want me to go to war from the day I was born until now.
Anttech said:That is an opinion and pure speculation, which cannot be backed up with any data.. Statements like that are what "stifle" scientific progress, not some Man 2000 years ago, who was with very little to go on attemping to understand what was around him..
Obviously his ideas were flawed but you are attempting to debunking him with 2000 years of scientific progress behind you. which he didnt have..
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1264/is_n2_v20/ai_7643409With the cost of living constantly climbing, more and more young people are returning home to live with their parents. One study has shown that although graduates of the high-school class of 1980 bring home larger paychecks than earlier generations, they actually earn 23 percent less than the class of 1972 when figures are adjusted for inflation. While young white middle-class professionals find that their salaries are not keeping pace with the cost of living, those in the Black community--where economic trends exact the harshest blows--are finding it even more difficult to survive on their own. Gone are the days when young professionals hoped to live better than their parents did; downward mobility has forced many young adults to stay at home longer or go back to their parents when things get rough. According to 1988 figures from the U.S. Census Bureau, 18.9 million adults between 18 and 34 share households with their parents, up nearly 50 percent since 1970.
SOS2008 said:I voted unsure in that I'm unsure what age should be considered "adulthood." Whatever the age is, I feel consistency would be nice—meaning as applied to both responsibility (e.g., draft) and privileges (e.g., drinking) as much as possible.
It seems to me that children matured faster in earlier days—in terms of responsibility for chores, often contributing to the household income, helping to rear younger siblings, etc. Furthermore, now children are living at home longer and/or returning home more frequently:
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1264/is_n2_v20/ai_7643409
Parroting is good? Look at your own life and what age you were when you began to think independently. Even younger members here in PF reference what their parents say, which they believe strongly, yet can't logically explain why. Within the education system, students only report on what they read and learn, and aren’t expected to analyze and critique until taking more advanced classes at college universities. I feel there are many other, better ways to teach good citizenship and awareness of the world to our youth without handing over the power of the vote.Smasherman said:It's true that many would just "parrot" their parents' views. The advantage gained from lowering the voting age is instilling an interest in politics that will last for life. So, extend the influence of the parents of teenagers now for a more democratic society later. Conceptually it's good.
I think that's a great argument to not change it. That highlights the issue I was thinking about if we raise the age: would that just raise the age these people start to act more mature because if we don't expect it of them, they'll live down to our expectations?TheStatutoryApe said:Personally I don't think that eighteen is an unreasonable age at which to expect these things. If for some reason or another people at this age tend not to fit the description "responsible and mature" perhaps we should focus on helping them attain those attributes before they reach that age instead of compensating by changing the age we expect it of them.