Everyone gets stopped at red lights
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
In the most basic of ways, we are all equal.
-
Everyone you’ve ever known or heard of, from Marie Antoinette to your favourite teacher at school, from Albert Einstein to your grandma to Vladimir Putin, shits.
-
All blood is red.
-
“Whether you’re a king or a little street sweeper, sooner or later you’re gonna dance with the reaper “.
-
-
There is a whole community of rabid bicyclists (a subset, I'm not generalizing to all bicyclists) who fervently believe they should be able to ride through red lights if there's no cross traffic because "it's haaaard" when they have to stop.
Also: cops and ambulances can literally rig the system in their favor, which means the impartiality of red lights is questionable. (And, the rigging is probably in most cases for a good cause, but still.)
I like another commentator's post: everybody poops. The people who don't probably - almost uniformly - wish they could, because it they don't it's because of some medical condition they'd trade pooping for in an instant. It's probably not even a silver lining, because they still have to deal with the waste and it's almost certainly more of PITA than just pooping.
Nice shower thought, though, Marcus A. I'm not strong-willed enough to practice stoicism - I can barely manage to be a reliably hedonist - but I do firmly believe and practice the dichotomy of control. It's the only thing keeping me sane since the election.
-
That was my comment, I said everyone poops, lol
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
'Memento mori'
I had heard the "everyone shits" but all blood is red is much more powerful. -
Oh, you're right, you did. Well, I agree. It's a better metaphor about equality. Everybody pees, and breathes, and uses ATP. But pooping of more funny, so let's go with that.
-
Hemingways_Shotgunreplied to [email protected] last edited by
I get what you're trying to say. But the truth is, a red light doesn't stop anyone from doing anything. It just tells them that there will be consequences if they choose to do so and get caught.
For the sake of the metaphor that you were going for, we can say that some people know that they'll face no consequences if they're caught. So they feel entitled to not bother stopping. While some people know that, based on previous history, that they'll be stopped even if they just managed to squeak through while the light was still yellow.
-
[email protected]replied to Hemingways_Shotgun last edited by
I would posit that it could be based on something else entirely, a civic or moral obligation a person feels to abide by the spirit of the law to help protect fellow people, even if they would not be punished or could some how gain something - in this case, a finite resource - time, for violating the law.
-
[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
This is objectively not true. Cops, paramedics and people who feel like breaking the all go through red lights. I get where you're coming from but you're trying a bit too hard