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Lord Raffles

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Frederick the Great once said something which clearly defined the relationship of might and right. He said that the law is worth nothing if it is not defended by the sword.

In other words, the law was always worthless unless protected by might.
 
Lord Raffles said:
Frederick the Great once said something which clearly defined the relationship of might and right. He said that the law is worth nothing if it is not defended by the sword.

In other words, the law was always worthless unless protected by might.

Bon appetite Lard Ruffles.

180pxssammich6lk.jpg
 
It's amazing how you can follow something incredibly childish and immature with something incredibly pretentious and inane, all in the same post.
 
Lord Raffles said:
As users go, I wish you would.

Remember that all humour is nothing more than emotional chaos remembered in tranquillity.

Learn from this.

Or stolen from Six Short Plays By John Galsworthy.

Although it is reworded as the actual line was something along the lines of "My he's an open minded individual" To which the reply was "Yes, I can feel the draft from here".

Haven't read the actual text in a few years.
 
Sarek said:
Or stolen from Six Short Plays By John Galsworthy.

Although it is reworded as the actual line was something along the lines of "My he's an open minded individual" To which the reply was "Yes, I can feel the draft from here".

Haven't read the actual text in a few years.

Nothing more than a testimony to the fact that I'm so well read - my intellectual references know no bound.
 
FBI parte due said:
It's amazing how you can follow something incredibly childish and immature with something incredibly pretentious and inane, all in the same post.

Thus a little of the magic of Lord Raffles was bestowed upon you.
 
Lord Raffles said:
Nothing more than a testimony to the fact that I'm so well read - my intellectual references know no bound.
A well-read asshole who can't spell is still an asshole who can't spell.
 
Lord Raffles said:
Nothing more than a testimony to the fact that I'm so well read - my intellectual references know no bound.

Uh huh.

And we both know your shits getting deep. ;)
 
Post something like this, carrot:

Lord Raffles said:
There is one question that is seldom asked of Nazi Germany yet is fundamental to understanding how it could behave as it did towards the populations under it's power: why did Nazi Germany think it were right? National Socialism never regarded the vicious persecution unleasehed against it's enemies as criminal or immoral. It is unlikely that Hitler spent sleepless nights tortured by the thought of the millions victimized at his behest. Nazi Germany never displayed any outward doubts about the justice of it's cause. The lack of conscience was not merley a consequence of exceptional power unscruplously exercised, the expression of might as right. In National Socialism, as well as Stalinism, there existed a unique moral universe that was constructed in order to justify and explain what appear otherwise to be the most sordid and arbitrary of acts.

Historians have been wary of trying to reconstruct the moral outlook of National Socialism because it's ethical claims are seldom taken to be more than rehtorical or demagogic devices to sweeten the sour taste of state repression. Yet the faliure to take the ethical discourse, in my opinion, seriously distorts historical reality and undermines any attempt to understand the operation of the dictatorship on it's own terms. National Socialism was driven by powerful moral inperatives that challenged and transcended the norms derives from the heritage of Roman antiquity and Christianity. It did not simply rely on the existance of a tough coerive power to enforce its values, but directly contested other moral claims that compromised its own claim to legitimacy and moral worth. The most evident examples of this moral contest can be found in the attitudes National Socialism took to organized religion and the law. National Socialist institution was rooted in moral traditions that pre-dated dictatorship.

The moral plane of dictatorship was not an irrelevance, but a battleground between differing interpretations of justice and moral certainty.

http://www.trollkingdom.net/forum/showpost.php?p=614824&postcount=7
 
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