Secular progressive moral agenda...
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People often ask about what is meant by having a 'secular progressive moral agenda' forced upon our society. Here [^] is a perfect example of what it means. The guy is banished for expressing opinions outside the main stream of modern, secular, moral views. There is absolutely no difference between this kind of social ostricism and what we would have if our society had, in fact, been taken over by a religious orthodoxy of some kind and gay people were banned for their views. It is exactly the same kind of social phenomenon and proof that humanity can never really escape religious-like behavior regardless of how far we push actual religion out of our lives. It is always there.
Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about
Ok, you're reaching here. Let me get this right then, a company is subject to tyranny if they're forced to uphold a minimum wage, but they aren't allowed to stop someone for representing them for views they don't agree with? He wasn't fired. He was discontinued from representing the corporation. How is this wrong? And other's have asked this same question but you won't answer this point. Trolling?
This statement was never false.
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John Carson wrote:
Codes of acceptable behaviour are always there, certainly. However, the degree of authoritarianism of those codes can vary greatly. I think that those who transgress on secular orthodoxy generally get off pretty lightly.
And I don't believe that American society has ever lived under a more iron fisted moral authoritarianism than we live under today.
John Carson wrote:
Incidentally, did you notice the campaign against the two bloggers who worked for John Edwards but were eventually forced to resign because they had said some critical things about the Catholic church? Neither of them, as far as I know, ever said:
John Edwards is running for a public office. The two were fired because of public attitudes about what they said. That is a 'bottom up', grass roots, expression of moral outrage. That is completely different from someone being punished because of a 'top down', elitist moral outrage. Moral outrage growing organically from the people is perfectly acceptable.
John Carson wrote:
At least one of the bloggers voted for John Kerry, a Catholic, in the last Presidential election. Apparently, the threshold for "unacceptable hostility" toward Catholics is fairly low.
John Kerry is about as much a catholic as I am a hindu.
Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about
Stan Shannon wrote:
John Edwards is running for a public office. The two were fired because of public attitudes about what they said. That is a 'bottom up', grass roots, expression of moral outrage. That is completely different from someone being punished because of a 'top down', elitist moral outrage. Moral outrage growing organically from the people is perfectly acceptable.
Hahahahahahahaha... Oh that's rich. Public attitudes about what they said. That covers both cases. Its the public attitude that hatred is not to be tolerated. The NBA like Edwards depends on public support, whether through votes, or dollars spent. Both were acting under the same moral outrage growing organically from the people. Which as you say is perfectly acceptable. Thank you for saying it. It is growing organically to treat people of any stripe with tolerance. Including "right" leaning folk such as yourself. Also, the NBA only stopped allowing him to represent. Didn't fire him. The bloggers were fired. So they're point of view was actually persecuted through the act of firing. Where as Hardaway's views were tolerated by not firing him, but only removing him from representing the organization.
This statement was never false.
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John Carson wrote:
Codes of acceptable behaviour are always there, certainly. However, the degree of authoritarianism of those codes can vary greatly. I think that those who transgress on secular orthodoxy generally get off pretty lightly.
And I don't believe that American society has ever lived under a more iron fisted moral authoritarianism than we live under today.
John Carson wrote:
Incidentally, did you notice the campaign against the two bloggers who worked for John Edwards but were eventually forced to resign because they had said some critical things about the Catholic church? Neither of them, as far as I know, ever said:
John Edwards is running for a public office. The two were fired because of public attitudes about what they said. That is a 'bottom up', grass roots, expression of moral outrage. That is completely different from someone being punished because of a 'top down', elitist moral outrage. Moral outrage growing organically from the people is perfectly acceptable.
John Carson wrote:
At least one of the bloggers voted for John Kerry, a Catholic, in the last Presidential election. Apparently, the threshold for "unacceptable hostility" toward Catholics is fairly low.
John Kerry is about as much a catholic as I am a hindu.
Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about
Stan Shannon wrote:
And I don't believe that American society has ever lived under a more iron fisted moral authoritarianism than we live under today.
Do you think gay marriage should be legal? Do you think homosexuality should be legal? If you answer no, wouldn't that also equate to imposing a secular moral agenda on the rest of society? Really you are just arguing that your moral agenda be the one acceptable. Else you would have to support freedom to marry who you want and the freedom to have sexual relations with whomever you want. Murder should then be legal. Because that's just imposing another moral agenda onto society. Stealing should be legal. As that's also just imposing more morality onto society. Where do we draw the lines with this type of argument?
This statement was never false.
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Ok, you're reaching here. Let me get this right then, a company is subject to tyranny if they're forced to uphold a minimum wage, but they aren't allowed to stop someone for representing them for views they don't agree with? He wasn't fired. He was discontinued from representing the corporation. How is this wrong? And other's have asked this same question but you won't answer this point. Trolling?
This statement was never false.
Chris-Kaiser wrote:
you're reaching here.
No, I'm not. Its a crucial point.
Chris-Kaiser wrote:
How is this wrong?
The NBA is free to enforce whatever standards it pleases. The question is why this paticular standard? I have no problem with this guy being 'banished' by the NBA. But neither would I have a problem if the NBA had treated a player in the same way for being gay. Whats the difference? Why isn't the NBA free to enforce what ever morality it choices? Yours or the Baptists? The answer is that, socially, we are not controlled by any moral agenda of the Baptists, we are controlled by that of the secularists. Just because it happens to be a moral agenda some, such as yourself, happen to endorse, doesn't mean that we are any less under the control of moral authoritarianism.
Chris-Kaiser wrote:
And other's have asked this same question but you won't answer this point. Trolling?
I have addressed that very point repeatedly.
Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about
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Stan Shannon wrote:
John Carson wrote: I believe that certain civil rights are not morally contingent on public support for them. Than you believe that society needs the guiding hand of moral elitist to protect us all from the dangerous, unpredicable passions of the mindless masses. You trust centralized authority and distrust decentralized, grass-roots, 'authority' in the hands of your neighbors.
That is a non sequitur. As I wrote, if the public does not support civil rights, then that is a political problem. Likewise, if a centralised authority denies civil rights, then that is another political problem. There are plenty of centralised authorities in the world doing just that right now. Whether restrictions on reasonable civil liberties come from a democracy or some sort of autocracy, the restrictions should be opposed just the same. Abolishing democracy in the former case is an extreme solution that could only be endorsed in the most extreme circumstances (if, say, there was majority backing for a holocaust). In less extreme circumstances, action could range from, at the mildest level, voting for political candidates who you agree with to, at the most radical level, certain forms of civil disobedience. In neither case is there an attempt to overthrow democracy, just an attempt to frustrate it on selected civil-liberties-related issues. People who helped slaves escape from their masters were engaging in civil disobedience, based on the belief that slaves had moral rights independently of society's willingness to grant them. I believe they did right, notwithstanding that their neighbours disapproved.
John Carson
John Carson wrote:
That is a non sequitur.
No, it isn't.
John Carson wrote:
Whether restrictions on reasonable civil liberties come from a democracy or some sort of autocracy, the restrictions should be opposed just the same. Abolishing democracy in the former case is an extreme solution that could only be endorsed in the most extreme circumstances (if, say, there was majority backing for a holocaust).
But who gets to define 'civil liberties'? The secular moralists, thats who. When did the issue of where you put your penis become a civil liberty? What about the civil liberty of being allowed to say "I hate people who put there penises into the body cavities of other men". Why isn't such free speech a protected 'civil liberty'? Because the secular moral agenda says so, thats why - and we had all damned well better like it, or we'll be socially bludgeoned into accepting it just as Hardaway was.
John Carson wrote:
People who helped slaves escape from their masters were engaging in civil disobedience, based on the belief that slaves had moral rights independently of society's willingness to grant them. I believe they did right, notwithstanding that their neighbours disapproved.
Except, in this case, it was Hardaway who was engaging in civil disobedience, and the system you support disapproving of it and therefore punishing him. You are the one who now punishes forms of civil disobedience you disapprove of just as did those who opposed the abolitionist movement.
Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about
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Stan Shannon wrote:
Hatred is merely a harmless emotion. It doesn't hurt anyone. People should be allowed to freely express and act on their hatred so long as they otherwise cause no physical harm to anyone.
One of the dumbest things you have ever said. Hatred, by its very nature, does not lend itself to moderation in its expression.
John Carson
John Carson wrote:
Hatred, by its very nature, does not lend itself to moderation in its expression.
Well, than, by God, we had better give the state the power to stamp it out, eh? Yeah, thats the smart thing to do. More state power! More authority! More state sanctioned moral autoritariansim for us all to bow down to. Wow, I'm sure glad people as smart as you are in charge of the government. That is certainly the best way to avoid fascism! :rolleyes:
Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about
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Stan Shannon wrote:
John Edwards is running for a public office. The two were fired because of public attitudes about what they said. That is a 'bottom up', grass roots, expression of moral outrage. That is completely different from someone being punished because of a 'top down', elitist moral outrage. Moral outrage growing organically from the people is perfectly acceptable.
Hahahahahahahaha... Oh that's rich. Public attitudes about what they said. That covers both cases. Its the public attitude that hatred is not to be tolerated. The NBA like Edwards depends on public support, whether through votes, or dollars spent. Both were acting under the same moral outrage growing organically from the people. Which as you say is perfectly acceptable. Thank you for saying it. It is growing organically to treat people of any stripe with tolerance. Including "right" leaning folk such as yourself. Also, the NBA only stopped allowing him to represent. Didn't fire him. The bloggers were fired. So they're point of view was actually persecuted through the act of firing. Where as Hardaway's views were tolerated by not firing him, but only removing him from representing the organization.
This statement was never false.
Chris-Kaiser wrote:
Both were acting under the same moral outrage growing organically from the people.
No, they weren't. There has been no grass roots moral upheaval to end any portion of the human emotional spectrum. That is being imposed from above by varioius media outlets and by the state via its monopolistic control of educational institutions.
Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about
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Homosexuality is extremely offensive and repulsive to a very large number of people in the world. He has the right to express his own personal views on the subject without being punished. I think it is going a bit too far to punish gays for being gay but there is only so much you can tolerate. That guy has the right to express his views just as a gay person has the right to express his views. I knew a gay guy at work. I went outside for a cigarette and he was out there smoking too. I didn't know he was gay at the time, I barely knew him. He showed me a CD he had just bought and it seemed like a girly CD. He then sung a song from it and I realized there was something different about him. He then told me that his personal life is none of people's business and he keeps everything secrete. He then told me that he lives a controversial life? I then asked "Controversial?" He told me he was gay and he was adement that he was going to hell, he kept saying he was going to hell. I was feeling very uncomfortable at this time and I told him he wast going to hell and asked why he told me he was gay right after telling me he doesn't tell people anything about him. :laugh: He said I seemed like a laid back guy and could trust me with the information. I never had any problems with him because he knew that I wasn't gay and kept his conversations normal. However when I was in high school there was a gay guy who really flaunted it and wore dresses sometimes and was really upfront about his gayness. That is when they really push there luck because it strikes nerves and can cause great offense to many people. That kind of shit can really make my blood boil, because it is completely uncalled for.
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Captain See Sharp wrote:
I knew a gay guy at work.
Captain See Sharp wrote:
He then told me that his personal life is none of people's business and he keeps everything secrete.
Captain See Sharp wrote:
He said I seemed like a laid back guy and could trust me with the information.
Given that you published the information on the web, that we all here know your real name and that that the person in question was a workmate, I think it's safe to say the guy was wrong; he could not trust you with the information.
Steve
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Captain See Sharp wrote:
I knew a gay guy at work.
Captain See Sharp wrote:
He then told me that his personal life is none of people's business and he keeps everything secrete.
Captain See Sharp wrote:
He said I seemed like a laid back guy and could trust me with the information.
Given that you published the information on the web, that we all here know your real name and that that the person in question was a workmate, I think it's safe to say the guy was wrong; he could not trust you with the information.
Steve
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Stephen Hewitt wrote:
he could not trust you with the information
Perhaps he felt he was in with a chance. You know what they say..."takes one to know one" :)
System.IO.Path.IsPathRooted() does not behave as I would expect
:laugh:
Steve
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Captain See Sharp wrote:
I knew a gay guy at work.
Captain See Sharp wrote:
He then told me that his personal life is none of people's business and he keeps everything secrete.
Captain See Sharp wrote:
He said I seemed like a laid back guy and could trust me with the information.
Given that you published the information on the web, that we all here know your real name and that that the person in question was a workmate, I think it's safe to say the guy was wrong; he could not trust you with the information.
Steve
Stephen Hewitt wrote:
Given that you published the information on the web, that we all here know your real name and that that the person in question was a workmate, I think it's safe to say the guy was wrong; he could not trust you with the information.
Yeah right. You don't know where I live and you don't know where I have worked and you don't know who the person is. I don't even know his name so how is this letting the cat out of the bag?
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Stephen Hewitt wrote:
he could not trust you with the information
Perhaps he felt he was in with a chance. You know what they say..."takes one to know one" :)
System.IO.Path.IsPathRooted() does not behave as I would expect
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Stephen Hewitt wrote:
Given that you published the information on the web, that we all here know your real name and that that the person in question was a workmate, I think it's safe to say the guy was wrong; he could not trust you with the information.
Yeah right. You don't know where I live and you don't know where I have worked and you don't know who the person is. I don't even know his name so how is this letting the cat out of the bag?
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Captain See Sharp wrote:
Yeah right. You don't know where I live and you don't know where I have worked and you don't know who the person is. I don't even know his name so how is this letting the cat out of the bag?
I wasn't talking about me. Obviously I was referring to someone who knows you. A coworker for example. I admit that the chances are fairly slim; but nevertheless the internet is a very public place to publish very private details entrusted to you by another individual.
Steve
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led mike wrote:
because of someone's size or financial status that somehow "proves" their sense of morality is correct.
I didn't say it proves anything one way or another about his morality. The point would be that even someone as powerful as Hardaway has no power against the moral authoritarianism of the secularist agenda. He must humbly and meekly bow, as we all do, to the moral elitist of our age (such as yourself, for example).
led mike wrote:
I see. So all those statements you made of "what" Christianity is were not based on your own personal experience of Christianity. Interesting, but you should not find it surprising that someone would take your statements to mean you are a practicing Christian.
And I never said I was not a practicing christian. The hypocricy here isn't mine. It is entirely your own. The notion that the only possible reason someone could have for opposing the Marxist agenda people like you are trying to force down the throat of our society is some form of 'Right-wing-christian-extremism' is an example of your own bigotry and prejudice - or stupidity. Take your pick. Frankly, I happen to agree that 'hating homosexuals' is not somthing an otherwise moral person should do. However, unlike yourself, I don't believe that my morality should hold any more sway in society than should anyone elses. And I believe that the sight of Hardaway being compelled to recant his 'sins' against the might of elitist secular moral authoritarianism should strike fear in the hearts of all of those who trully understand the importance of 'separation of church and state'. People in our society should be allowed to say 'I hate homosexuals' 'I hate blacks' 'I hate women' 'I hate liberals' 'I hate conservatives' with absolutely no social, professional or economic repercussions of any fucking kind.
Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about
Stan Shannon wrote:
People in our society should be allowed to say 'I hate homosexuals' 'I hate blacks' 'I hate women' 'I hate liberals' 'I hate conservatives' with absolutely no social, professional or economic repercussions of any f****ing kind.
Well there lies the rub, eh Stan? When someone with power or influence says things like "I hate gays" or "I hate blacks" and that individual is not criticized, thats the same as saying that everyone approves of those statements and then gays and blacks do suffer social, professional and economic repercussions of every f***ing kind.
Stan Shannon wrote:
I don't believe that my morality should hold any more sway in society than should anyone elses.
Good lord, you really are a moral relatavist, aren't you? Nothing is good or bad, right or wrong? All behavior is OK with you? The KKK is just one more center of moral authority, just like the Catholic Church?
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Josh Gray wrote:
Perhaps he felt he was in with a chance. You know what they say..."takes one to know one"
HA HA HA cough cough cough ... J/K it wasn't funny.
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Captain See Sharp wrote:
HA HA HA cough cough cough
Dont cough too hard, I've heard it can cause you guys little accidents :)
System.IO.Path.IsPathRooted() does not behave as I would expect
Josh Gray wrote:
Dont cough too hard, I've heard it can cause you guys little accidents
:confused: What are you talking about and what do you mean as "you guys". I assure you I am not gay if that is what you are implying.
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Josh Gray wrote:
Dont cough too hard, I've heard it can cause you guys little accidents
:confused: What are you talking about and what do you mean as "you guys". I assure you I am not gay if that is what you are implying.
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Captain See Sharp wrote:
What are you talking about
Think about it for a bit, you'll get it
Captain See Sharp wrote:
I assure you I am not gay if that is what you are implying
Im not so sure, I know a crush when I see it ;P
System.IO.Path.IsPathRooted() does not behave as I would expect
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Captain See Sharp wrote:
What are you talking about
Think about it for a bit, you'll get it
Captain See Sharp wrote:
I assure you I am not gay if that is what you are implying
Im not so sure, I know a crush when I see it ;P
System.IO.Path.IsPathRooted() does not behave as I would expect
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I'm not going to argue with you about my own damn sexuality. I said I am not gay and that is all there is to it.
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Chris-Kaiser wrote:
you're reaching here.
No, I'm not. Its a crucial point.
Chris-Kaiser wrote:
How is this wrong?
The NBA is free to enforce whatever standards it pleases. The question is why this paticular standard? I have no problem with this guy being 'banished' by the NBA. But neither would I have a problem if the NBA had treated a player in the same way for being gay. Whats the difference? Why isn't the NBA free to enforce what ever morality it choices? Yours or the Baptists? The answer is that, socially, we are not controlled by any moral agenda of the Baptists, we are controlled by that of the secularists. Just because it happens to be a moral agenda some, such as yourself, happen to endorse, doesn't mean that we are any less under the control of moral authoritarianism.
Chris-Kaiser wrote:
And other's have asked this same question but you won't answer this point. Trolling?
I have addressed that very point repeatedly.
Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about
Stan Shannon wrote:
we are controlled by that of the secularists
But how do you know they made this desicion because of the control of moral seculatists? Its equally possible that the NBA is headed by a raving queen who got his panties in a knot
System.IO.Path.IsPathRooted() does not behave as I would expect