Can hate be justified? Is it something to avoid or trust?
Is hate ever rational
Hate is fear directed outward
When backed up by statistics, yes, fully.
Talk to Hugo, he'll get to work on your suit.
Do you hate anything? If so why?
>Can hate ever be justified
Yes.
If you do not hate the destruction of the West and its destroyers, you are arguably committing a greater act of evil than those threatening the white race. At least they are bold enough to do something about their beliefs.
Yes, it's natural to humans.
You're a faggot
Hate is the source of power, without hate you can do nothing. It is everything.
Why do you think governments are always going on about how hate needs to be stopped? They speak of hate as if it is some sort of elemental force and not just a feeling. Because that's what it is.
>guy rapes your toddler
>guy is lanklet 4ft tall
>you are buff 6ft
>you hate lanklet pedo
>so you are afraid of lanklet
You're full of shit
Hate is a strong word and emotion. You can never trust someone who hates with anything important. Hate leads to irrationality and bad decisions.
Hate is no different than love or any other strong emotion. It exists for a reason, but just like every other emotion you shouldn't let it become all consuming.
Learn from Ahab, hate can keep you alive but it can also be your downfall.
First, a lanklet is someone tall and thin
Second, no one who's 4ft tall is raping anyone, I don't care if they are shorter or not
Third, he isn't talking about anger, he is talking about inborn hatred for someone else.
Which is generally built from ignorance and fear.
>i.e. I see muslims blowing people up on TV all day so I now hate them
Nigger, you don't get to ask the question "is hate x" and then claim that the definition is wrong because you're butthurt about it. Hate is a thing people do all the time, and it very rarely has no logical basis. People just aren't wired that way.
Fun fact!: you can most definitely grow to hate a rapist in the 45 minutes it takes to drive to his house.
That's not hatred. That's prejudice. Hatred can be for specific people so you're not thinking of everything.
Today, the word and its usage are little understood, and in addition, is used too often. People aren't "just saying" hate is a strong word.
For me, hatred is unremitting anger, for whatever it may be. It doesn't cease, and is highly motivated by (whether real or imagined) a serious problem. Yes, it can certainly be justified, but you should always try to be rational and temper yourself; that temperance is where you will find the answer to your problem.
Use hatred to become motivated towards solving the issue, and turn your hatred into industriousness. It will reward you with deeper insights into yourself and the problem at hand.
Why do some people try to say love and hate are an equivalent feeling?
>Is love ever rational
Can love be justified? Is it something to avoid or trust?
And love is fear directed inward. What's your point?
wrong
Did Hitler secretly love the Jews?
I don't hate other races, user. I just want all races to continue to survive and have self-determination in the form of their own state. If push comes to shove, I obviously prefer my own tribe, though.
I recognize certain races as more intelligent and less prone to crime as my own. Good for them. It's my wish to improve my own volk and work towards it's betterment.
I want to expand on this point.
Have ever noticed how everything you love you are also afraid to lose? The two ideas are so connected to one another that we use them interchangably in social settins without ever even noticing we do it.
i.e.
>user, I'm so glad your alright! I don't know what I would have done if I lost you!
Expressing the fear of loss to communicate love
>user, please don't do this. I love you too much.
Expressing love to communicate fear of loss.
Have you told yourself:
>i love my family so much, i'm afraid to lose them
???
That sentence goes the other way as well.
>i'm so afraid to lose my family, i love them
but we don't like to look at it that way do we?
We combine the two ideas, saying that they come from same place and are somehow manifestions of one another.
Yes. It can be the purest reason for doing something.
In a platonic way, yes.
Think about it like this. If I don't care about you at all, can I hate you? No of course not. There must be some level of platonic love before I can hate anything. That's the nature of hatred.
Hate is almost always rational and directed at something that did or will harm you in some way. Only stupid humanists who watched too much Star Trek and jacked off to Spock think emotions are bad or illogical.
An oft-repeated mindless platitude that means nothing other than the person saying it wrongly thinks themselves to be clever.
>kill my wife and children
>burn my house down
>I am left absolutely bankrupt, homeless and alone
>but I love my criminal :) hate is irrational
/r/equesting that pic of the German family that is hugging their rapist and killer that killed their daughter. They forgave him :) he didnt mean it ;) he didndu nuddin
Hate is a survival mechanism. In early human society...something takes a child or tribe member. Maybe a tiger, maybe a neanderthal, whatever.
What do we do? Get scared? Maybe. But we also HATE. We hunt that tiger. We hunt ALL tigers. Because we hate them. And that hate kept us alive.
>Think about it like this. If I don't care about you at all, can I hate you? No of course not. There must be some level of platonic love before I can hate anything.
This is fucking retarded. "You hate something, so you must care about and even love it on some level!" No. Perhaps that thing you hate threatens that which you love or has deprived you of that which you love? I mean sometimes hatred is born of love turned sour, but most of the time hate comes from the hated threatening or denying the hater's object of love.
>Perhaps that thing you hate threatens that which you love
In other words. I care about the actions of the thing I hate. I care so much that I wish this thing wouldn't do these actions. I have to care about this thing before I can hate it. That caring I'm doing is referred to as platonic love, not to be confused with romantic love, aka the fear of loss, in any way.
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