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  • V Vincent Reynolds

    Yeah, and you use "try to keep up", "you need to take * 101", etc. Glad we're both so pathetically predictable. And you didn't answer my question, pointy-head.

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    Red Stateler
    wrote on last edited by
    #32

    Actually today was the first time I used "101" with you and I didn't use "try to keep up". Here's another new one: Are you EVER right?

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    • R Red Stateler

      Vincent Reynolds wrote:

      Fine, change "local ordinance" to "state law". My point was that, according to you and Stan, if a state were to change their constitution to compel church attendance, that would be peachy so long as the change was the will of the people. Jefferson actively campaigned against this in Virginia.

      We've already been over this. You believe that the people should not be entrusted with the Democratic authority to govern themselves. Militant Islam believes the exact same thing. Again, the constitution protects us from extremists like you and for that I thank our founding fathers.

      Vincent Reynolds wrote:

      Your assertion is irrelevant. My point was that laws should restrict rights only when such restrictions are necessary to maintain social order. Legislating arbitrary religious tenets does not meet that standard. It is admittedly a personal standard, but was held by most of the founders, and by most people outside of fundamental religious groups.

      And you have a Democratic right to push for such laws. However, you go a step further in stating that the people cannot be entrusted to decide which laws are reasonable. As you just stated, you fear the Democratic process because of your faulty perception of it. Again, I thank our founding fathers that our country is safe from people like you.

      Vincent Reynolds wrote:

      Now you're just making sh*t up. I defy you to find that thread, jackass. I have said, and would say, no such thing.

      This one! Sheesh!

      Vincent Reynolds wrote:

      Interestingly, I lump you squarely on the same end of the extremist spectrum as militant Islam. Hopefully, we have a form of government that will protect us from your desire that we not be allowed to drink on your holy days, and continue, in general, to protect people like me from extremists like you.

      Extremists will always view the mainstream world as extremist, so this is of no surprise to me. Fortunately, the founding fathers did well to assure that our country is not ruled by small groups of people who hold views contrary to the general populace.

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      Vincent Reynolds
      wrote on last edited by
      #33

      espeir wrote:

      You believe that the people should not be entrusted with the Democratic authority to govern themselves.

      No, I'm just one of those leftists (by your standards) who interpret the establishment clause as expressing the intent for government to remain a secular institution of moral and ethical men and women, preserving *everyones* personal right to worship as they choose.

      espeir wrote:

      And you have a Democratic right to push for such laws. However, you go a step further in stating that the people cannot be entrusted to decide which laws are reasonable. As you just stated, you fear the Democratic process because of your faulty perception of it. Again, I thank our founding fathers that our country is safe from people like you.

      I don't fear the democratic process; I fear religious tyranny, and those who believe that religious tyranny is acceptable so long as enough people voted for it.

      espeir wrote:

      This one! Sheesh!

      So quote me, jackass! Sheesh!

      espeir wrote:

      Extremists will always view the mainstream world as extremist, so this is of no surprise to me.

      Good thing your brain is immune to logical inconsistency.

      espeir wrote:

      Fortunately, the founding fathers did well to assure that our country is not ruled by small groups of people who hold views contrary to the general populace.

      Fortunate, indeed. Otherwise people like you might frighten rather than amuse.

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      • R Red Stateler

        Again, I'm eternally greatful that the founding fathers would be so wise as to protect us from you.

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        Vincent Reynolds
        wrote on last edited by
        #34

        Do you have that on a macro, or are you still typing it every time?

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        • R Red Stateler

          Actually today was the first time I used "101" with you and I didn't use "try to keep up". Here's another new one: Are you EVER right?

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          Vincent Reynolds
          wrote on last edited by
          #35

          How about "you need to take a class in *" as a variation? And "try to keep up" just sprang to mind because you used it in practically alternating messages in every thread for a while. You have a phenomenal ability to miss the point of even the shortest, simplest statement. Is it something you've worked at?

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          • S Stan Shannon

            Vincent Reynolds wrote:

            And yet Jefferson considered his defeat of one of those local religious tyrannies to be one of only three life accomplishments worthy of inclusion on his tombstone.

            But only as a member of the Virginia government, not as a member of the federal government. HERE WAS BURIED THOMAS JEFFERSON AUTHOR OF THE DECLARATION OF AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE OF THE STATUTE OF VIRGINIA FOR RELIGIOUS FREEDOM AND FATHER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA He also wrote... "The federal judiciary [is] an irresponsible body (for impeachment is scarcely a scarecrow), working like gravity by night and by day gaining a little to-day and a little to-marrow, and advancing its noiseless step like a thief, over the field of jurisdiction, until all shall be usurped from the States, and the government of all be consolidated into one. ... when all government ... in little as in great things, shall be drawn to Washington as the centre of all power, it will render powerless the checks provided of one government against another and will become as venal and oppressive as the government from which we separated." "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson

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            Vincent Reynolds
            wrote on last edited by
            #36

            And yet he apparently saw state involvement in religion to be just as oppressive. What do you think his opinion would be of any state -- or community -- that attempted to codify religious beliefs as law?

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            • S Stan Shannon

              The christian version. It has a better track record. "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson

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              Colin Angus Mackay
              wrote on last edited by
              #37

              Stan Shannon wrote:

              The christian version.

              Yup... We haven't burned any witches in a while.


              Scottish Developers events: * .NET debugging, tracing and instrumentation by Duncan Edwards Jones and Code Coverage in .NET by Craig Murphy * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

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              • S Stan Shannon

                Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                Let's just skip to the end, where I say "the right to restrict rights isn't a right," and you disagree while making a disparaging comment about leftists eating live kittens.

                OK. Thats my favorite part anyway. (Except that I would brilliantly point out the obvious that in addtion to the kittens, secularists have been restricting rights they don't like for a long time now.) :-D "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson

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                Vincent Reynolds
                wrote on last edited by
                #38

                Stan Shannon wrote:

                secularists have been restricting rights they don't like for a long time now.

                Only one: the right of fanatical, live-puppy-eating religious extremists to restrict everyone's rights.

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                • V Vincent Reynolds

                  And yet he apparently saw state involvement in religion to be just as oppressive. What do you think his opinion would be of any state -- or community -- that attempted to codify religious beliefs as law?

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                  Stan Shannon
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #39

                  Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                  And yet he apparently saw state involvement in religion to be just as oppressive.

                  That is because it is just as oppressive. But just not as oppressive as the central federal government imposing its will to affect religion one way or another or to promote some other set of opposing philosophical principles. Find me some example of Jefferson saying "Gee, I sure wish those supreme court guys would outlaw prayer in the schools of Virginia so we would never have to decide the issue for ourselves!" "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson

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                  • V Vincent Reynolds

                    Stan Shannon wrote:

                    teaching children a secular world view

                    It amazes me that you can't see that not teaching a religious world view is not at all the same as teaching a secular world view.

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                    Stan Shannon
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #40

                    Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                    not teaching a religious world view is not at all the same as teaching a secular world view.

                    But teaching a secular world view is teaching a secular world view. A couple of years ago I attentend a weekend highschool band competition that my son was participating in one weekend at a nearby school. While waiting for him to play, I was walking around the cafeteria and happended to notice that the walls were covered with "Compassion" posters. There were posters invovling famous quotes from famous people about compassion, Martin Luther King, jr. Gandhi and every body you could possibly think of except for any quotes from Jesus or the Bible. No "Do unto others..." No goldern rule. Nothing. I would submit to you that represents an example of the secular state promoting a moral agenda of its own formulation, designed specifically and purposefully to present children with a non-christian, pro-seucular world view, in order for them to see the secular state as a legitimate source of moral authority rather than the church. Modern scularism is not the same thing that Jefferson would have understood as secularism. It is not the benign, all inclusive, compassionate, multi-cultural philosophy the left tries to push. It has positioned itself as a competitive set of moral and philosophical principles. It is in fact nothing less than the state finally finding a way to force its moral will upon a people precisely as was once done by the church. "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson

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                    • V Vincent Reynolds

                      Stan Shannon wrote:

                      secularists have been restricting rights they don't like for a long time now.

                      Only one: the right of fanatical, live-puppy-eating religious extremists to restrict everyone's rights.

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                      Stan Shannon
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #41

                      How about my right to come together with my neighbors and decide that we don't want people buring a flag in our community? "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson

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                      • V Vincent Reynolds

                        espeir wrote:

                        You believe that the people should not be entrusted with the Democratic authority to govern themselves.

                        No, I'm just one of those leftists (by your standards) who interpret the establishment clause as expressing the intent for government to remain a secular institution of moral and ethical men and women, preserving *everyones* personal right to worship as they choose.

                        espeir wrote:

                        And you have a Democratic right to push for such laws. However, you go a step further in stating that the people cannot be entrusted to decide which laws are reasonable. As you just stated, you fear the Democratic process because of your faulty perception of it. Again, I thank our founding fathers that our country is safe from people like you.

                        I don't fear the democratic process; I fear religious tyranny, and those who believe that religious tyranny is acceptable so long as enough people voted for it.

                        espeir wrote:

                        This one! Sheesh!

                        So quote me, jackass! Sheesh!

                        espeir wrote:

                        Extremists will always view the mainstream world as extremist, so this is of no surprise to me.

                        Good thing your brain is immune to logical inconsistency.

                        espeir wrote:

                        Fortunately, the founding fathers did well to assure that our country is not ruled by small groups of people who hold views contrary to the general populace.

                        Fortunate, indeed. Otherwise people like you might frighten rather than amuse.

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                        Stan Shannon
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #42

                        Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                        I fear religious tyranny, and those who believe that religious tyranny is acceptable so long as enough people voted for it.

                        So you fear your neighbors, but trust the government to protect you from tyranny. How very Jeffersonian of you. "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson

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                        • S Stan Shannon

                          Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                          not teaching a religious world view is not at all the same as teaching a secular world view.

                          But teaching a secular world view is teaching a secular world view. A couple of years ago I attentend a weekend highschool band competition that my son was participating in one weekend at a nearby school. While waiting for him to play, I was walking around the cafeteria and happended to notice that the walls were covered with "Compassion" posters. There were posters invovling famous quotes from famous people about compassion, Martin Luther King, jr. Gandhi and every body you could possibly think of except for any quotes from Jesus or the Bible. No "Do unto others..." No goldern rule. Nothing. I would submit to you that represents an example of the secular state promoting a moral agenda of its own formulation, designed specifically and purposefully to present children with a non-christian, pro-seucular world view, in order for them to see the secular state as a legitimate source of moral authority rather than the church. Modern scularism is not the same thing that Jefferson would have understood as secularism. It is not the benign, all inclusive, compassionate, multi-cultural philosophy the left tries to push. It has positioned itself as a competitive set of moral and philosophical principles. It is in fact nothing less than the state finally finding a way to force its moral will upon a people precisely as was once done by the church. "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson

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                          Vincent Reynolds
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #43

                          Stan Shannon wrote:

                          non-christian

                          Non-Christian, not anti-Christian.

                          Stan Shannon wrote:

                          the secular state as a legitimate source of moral authority

                          So they were presenting secular quotes from very religious men, and they left one out. I don't see the problem. It is the parent's responsibility, not the state's, to present children with the option of seeing religion as a source of moral authority.

                          Stan Shannon wrote:

                          Modern scularism is not the same thing that Jefferson would have understood as secularism. It is not the benign, all inclusive, compassionate, multi-cultural philosophy the left tries to push. It has positioned itself as a competitive set of moral and philosophical principles. It is in fact nothing less than the state finally finding a way to force its moral will upon a people precisely as was once done by the church.

                          The state is a source of moral and philosophical principles. When those principles are secular, they don't compete with any religion.

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                          • S Stan Shannon

                            How about my right to come together with my neighbors and decide that we don't want people buring a flag in our community? "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson

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                            Vincent Reynolds
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #44

                            How about my right to come together with my neighbors and decide that we don't like that pesky "free speech" stuff? That people of other religions should be driven from our community? That thou shalt not suffer a witch to live? The difference is quantitative, not qualitative.

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                            • V Vincent Reynolds

                              Stan Shannon wrote:

                              non-christian

                              Non-Christian, not anti-Christian.

                              Stan Shannon wrote:

                              the secular state as a legitimate source of moral authority

                              So they were presenting secular quotes from very religious men, and they left one out. I don't see the problem. It is the parent's responsibility, not the state's, to present children with the option of seeing religion as a source of moral authority.

                              Stan Shannon wrote:

                              Modern scularism is not the same thing that Jefferson would have understood as secularism. It is not the benign, all inclusive, compassionate, multi-cultural philosophy the left tries to push. It has positioned itself as a competitive set of moral and philosophical principles. It is in fact nothing less than the state finally finding a way to force its moral will upon a people precisely as was once done by the church.

                              The state is a source of moral and philosophical principles. When those principles are secular, they don't compete with any religion.

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                              Stan Shannon
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #45

                              Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                              It is the parent's responsibility, not the state's, to present children with the option of seeing religion as a source of moral authority.

                              It is not the state's responsibility to teach children anything other than what the parents prefer be taught. But clearly the state has taken upon itself the responsibility of promoting a secular moral agenda. If that doesn't bother you than you don't have the slightest clue what separation of church and state was intended to achieve.

                              Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                              When those principles are secular, they don't compete with any religion.

                              They do when they are intentionally crafted to. "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson

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                              • V Vincent Reynolds

                                How about my right to come together with my neighbors and decide that we don't like that pesky "free speech" stuff? That people of other religions should be driven from our community? That thou shalt not suffer a witch to live? The difference is quantitative, not qualitative.

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                                Stan Shannon
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #46

                                Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                How about my right to come together with my neighbors and decide that we don't like that pesky "free speech" stuff? That people of other religions should be driven from our community? That thou shalt not suffer a witch to live? The difference is quantitative, not qualitative.

                                What about it? You don't seem to understand at all that those same problems are not remedied by simply giving more and more power to centralized federal authorities. That somehow magicially if you just get enough power in the hands of the right set of people there can no longer be any possibility of witch burning. The truth is quite the contrary. As the founders well knew, witches are far safer with power distributed among the people than concentrated in the hands of a few. Our entire form of government was predicated upon a trust in people and a distrust in government. The modern, Marxist, left stands those principles on their head and calls it Jeffersonian in order to obfuscate their ugly little truth. "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson -- modified at 20:05 Tuesday 18th July, 2006

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                                • V Vincent Reynolds

                                  espeir wrote:

                                  You believe that the people should not be entrusted with the Democratic authority to govern themselves.

                                  No, I'm just one of those leftists (by your standards) who interpret the establishment clause as expressing the intent for government to remain a secular institution of moral and ethical men and women, preserving *everyones* personal right to worship as they choose.

                                  espeir wrote:

                                  And you have a Democratic right to push for such laws. However, you go a step further in stating that the people cannot be entrusted to decide which laws are reasonable. As you just stated, you fear the Democratic process because of your faulty perception of it. Again, I thank our founding fathers that our country is safe from people like you.

                                  I don't fear the democratic process; I fear religious tyranny, and those who believe that religious tyranny is acceptable so long as enough people voted for it.

                                  espeir wrote:

                                  This one! Sheesh!

                                  So quote me, jackass! Sheesh!

                                  espeir wrote:

                                  Extremists will always view the mainstream world as extremist, so this is of no surprise to me.

                                  Good thing your brain is immune to logical inconsistency.

                                  espeir wrote:

                                  Fortunately, the founding fathers did well to assure that our country is not ruled by small groups of people who hold views contrary to the general populace.

                                  Fortunate, indeed. Otherwise people like you might frighten rather than amuse.

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                                  Red Stateler
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #47

                                  Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                  No, I'm just one of those leftists (by your standards) who interpret the establishment clause as expressing the intent for government to remain a secular institution of moral and ethical men and women, preserving *everyones* personal right to worship as they choose.

                                  No...You specifically stated that Democracy cannot be trusted. In a previous example, you tried to claim that a slim majority would send the minority to gas chambers. Claiming that you have certain positions on certain issues is one thing. Claiming that the our constitutional rights to self government should be stripped is quite another.

                                  Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                  I don't fear the democratic process; I fear religious tyranny, and those who believe that religious tyranny is acceptable so long as enough people voted for it.

                                  And yet you say that the citizens of a state do not have the right to pass a law disallowing the sale of alcohol on Sunday, even though there is no religious practice forced upon or denied from the people.

                                  Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                  So quote me, jackass! Sheesh!

                                  I already did. You said in this post and the last that you oppose the constitutionally granted democratic right to self-government whenver it conflicts with your own anti-religious wishes.

                                  Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                  Good thing your brain is immune to logical inconsistency.

                                  Apparently you're just incapable of basic logic. Here's a picture for you:

                                  |-----------------------------------|------------------------------------------|
                                  You Most People Militant Islam

                                  Being the same distance from both you and militant Islam on this scale, we reasonable people see both groups as crazy extremists. Notice how Islam thinks America is extreme? Get the picture? Probably not...Extremists rarely do.

                                  Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                  Fortunate, indeed. Otherwise people like you might frighten rather than amuse.

                                  You should join Islam. At least you'd still have company.

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                                  • V Vincent Reynolds

                                    How about my right to come together with my neighbors and decide that we don't like that pesky "free speech" stuff? That people of other religions should be driven from our community? That thou shalt not suffer a witch to live? The difference is quantitative, not qualitative.

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                                    Red Stateler
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #48

                                    There aren't that many extremists...even in your neighborhood.

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                                    • R Red Stateler

                                      Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                      No, I'm just one of those leftists (by your standards) who interpret the establishment clause as expressing the intent for government to remain a secular institution of moral and ethical men and women, preserving *everyones* personal right to worship as they choose.

                                      No...You specifically stated that Democracy cannot be trusted. In a previous example, you tried to claim that a slim majority would send the minority to gas chambers. Claiming that you have certain positions on certain issues is one thing. Claiming that the our constitutional rights to self government should be stripped is quite another.

                                      Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                      I don't fear the democratic process; I fear religious tyranny, and those who believe that religious tyranny is acceptable so long as enough people voted for it.

                                      And yet you say that the citizens of a state do not have the right to pass a law disallowing the sale of alcohol on Sunday, even though there is no religious practice forced upon or denied from the people.

                                      Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                      So quote me, jackass! Sheesh!

                                      I already did. You said in this post and the last that you oppose the constitutionally granted democratic right to self-government whenver it conflicts with your own anti-religious wishes.

                                      Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                      Good thing your brain is immune to logical inconsistency.

                                      Apparently you're just incapable of basic logic. Here's a picture for you:

                                      |-----------------------------------|------------------------------------------|
                                      You Most People Militant Islam

                                      Being the same distance from both you and militant Islam on this scale, we reasonable people see both groups as crazy extremists. Notice how Islam thinks America is extreme? Get the picture? Probably not...Extremists rarely do.

                                      Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                      Fortunate, indeed. Otherwise people like you might frighten rather than amuse.

                                      You should join Islam. At least you'd still have company.

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                                      Vincent Reynolds
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #49

                                      espeir wrote:

                                      No...You specifically stated that Democracy cannot be trusted. In a previous example, you tried to claim that a slim majority would send the minority to gas chambers. Claiming that you have certain positions on certain issues is one thing. Claiming that the our constitutional rights to self government should be stripped is quite another.

                                      I never claimed any such thing. If that's the way you interpret what I say, you are an idiot.

                                      espeir wrote:

                                      And yet you say that the citizens of a state do not have the right to pass a law disallowing the sale of alcohol on Sunday, even though there is no religious practice forced upon or denied from the people.

                                      Sure there is. The practice of abstaining from alcohol on that religion's Sabbath. How about no meat on Friday? Or banning the sale of pork altogether? Or alcohol? Or birth control? None of those are intrinsically religious practices, yet all stem directly from tenets of religion that other religions do not share. How about we limit the rules to prohibiting doing physical or mental harm to others, denying them property, and the other rules that have developed across cultures because they are what society needs to function, and leave the religious rules up to the individual to follow or not, depending on their faith? How's that sound? Not restrictive enough for you? Then move to the Middle East and enjoy life with the rest of the people who value the rules of a state religion over personal freedom. Enjoy.

                                      espeir wrote:

                                      I already did. You said in this post and the last that you oppose the constitutionally granted democratic right to self-government whenver it conflicts with your own anti-religious wishes.

                                      You have yet to supply a direct quote, instead offering only your twisted interpretations of what I say. You can't understand the simple fact that people can want to keep a single religion -- even their own religion -- from dominating and controlling their government, while not being "anti-religion". Secularism is not against religion, it is without consideration of religion. You can't comprehend that. You are terminally clue-challenged.

                                      espeir wrote:

                                      Apparently you're just incapable of basic logic. Here's a picture for you:...

                                      Notice how you label me an extremist. Recall your observation that extremists c

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                                      • S Stan Shannon

                                        Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                        And yet he apparently saw state involvement in religion to be just as oppressive.

                                        That is because it is just as oppressive. But just not as oppressive as the central federal government imposing its will to affect religion one way or another or to promote some other set of opposing philosophical principles. Find me some example of Jefferson saying "Gee, I sure wish those supreme court guys would outlaw prayer in the schools of Virginia so we would never have to decide the issue for ourselves!" "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson

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                                        Vincent Reynolds
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #50

                                        How about we just keep government -- all government, top to bottom, president to dog catcher -- from instituting religious rules, period. Keep the rules limited to those which prevent people from harming each other or depriving each other of property, and the minimum administrative regulation necessary to keep society and government functioning. How's that sound? If your religion says don't drink on Sunday, then you, yourself, and other believers don't drink on Sunday. No images of your prophet? Don't f**king draw any. Don't like sex on TV? Don't get Cinemax. Keep either organized prayer or government out of the schools. You can have one or the other, but not both. Remove "under God" from the pledge. Remove "In God We Trust" from currency. Remove the commandments from every government building. If a judge wants a ten commandments bumper sticker next to the NRA sticker on his Hummer, or wants to wear ten commandments boxer briefs under his robes, fine; just don't indicate to me that coveting my neighbor's ass will influence the outcome of a court case. This, I truly believe, was the founders' intent, and is the desire of the quiet majority of people in this country; a secular government, filled with people of any and all religions -- or no religion at all -- making decisions for the good of the country from a firm moral and ethical grounding.

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                                        • S Stan Shannon

                                          Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                          It is the parent's responsibility, not the state's, to present children with the option of seeing religion as a source of moral authority.

                                          It is not the state's responsibility to teach children anything other than what the parents prefer be taught. But clearly the state has taken upon itself the responsibility of promoting a secular moral agenda. If that doesn't bother you than you don't have the slightest clue what separation of church and state was intended to achieve.

                                          Vincent Reynolds wrote:

                                          When those principles are secular, they don't compete with any religion.

                                          They do when they are intentionally crafted to. "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson

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                                          Vincent Reynolds
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #51

                                          Stan Shannon wrote:

                                          It is not the state's responsibility to teach children anything other than what the parents prefer be taught. But clearly the state has taken upon itself the responsibility of promoting a secular moral agenda. If that doesn't bother you than you don't have the slightest clue what separation of church and state was intended to achieve.

                                          They aren't teaching the children religion, any religion. There is no such thing as this "secular religion" you keep yammering about. It doesn't exist. Secular religion is an oxymoron. There is also no "secular agenda". Secularism is barely an "-ism" at all, and certainly doesn't merit an agenda, unless you count keeping your religion out of my kids' classroom, and mine out of yours. If you believe that it is okay for the religion of the majority to be taught in public schools to everyone, it is most certainly you who hasn't the slightest clue about separation of church and state.

                                          Stan Shannon wrote:

                                          They do when they are intentionally crafted to.

                                          I'm sure that, somewhere in Idaho, there exists a compound of like-minded people who would welcome you. You should seek them out.

                                          S R 2 Replies Last reply
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