Law
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Does anybody actually believe that there is or ever was "law"? It's something frequently touted by Governments, but does anybody actually believe it exists? Has any one ever seen one of these laws? Farmer Giles was fat and enjoyed a slow, comfortable life. Then one day a giant blundered on to his land. Farmer Giles managed to scare him away and instantly became a hero. So it was natural that when the dragon Chrysophylax visited the area, it was Farmer Giles who was to do battle with it.
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Does anybody actually believe that there is or ever was "law"? It's something frequently touted by Governments, but does anybody actually believe it exists? Has any one ever seen one of these laws? Farmer Giles was fat and enjoyed a slow, comfortable life. Then one day a giant blundered on to his land. Farmer Giles managed to scare him away and instantly became a hero. So it was natural that when the dragon Chrysophylax visited the area, it was Farmer Giles who was to do battle with it.
Ægidius Ahenobarbus Julius Agricola de Hammo wrote:
Has any one ever seen one of these laws?
Yes. I read pages and even more pages. There are laws but what does it mean? Is there a difference between having a law and not having a law without looking at it? By the way: in Germany we have lot more lawbooks than any other country - it's not better this way. :cool: Regards, Ingo ------------------------------ PROST Roleplaying Game War doesn't determine who's right. War determines who's left.
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Does anybody actually believe that there is or ever was "law"? It's something frequently touted by Governments, but does anybody actually believe it exists? Has any one ever seen one of these laws? Farmer Giles was fat and enjoyed a slow, comfortable life. Then one day a giant blundered on to his land. Farmer Giles managed to scare him away and instantly became a hero. So it was natural that when the dragon Chrysophylax visited the area, it was Farmer Giles who was to do battle with it.
or are you talking about justice ? They are different "things" ( can't think of the good word here ! ) The law is absolute, you either follow it or break it; a judge will ( should ? ) follow the law, even if the judgement does not seem just by one or both parties involved.
Maximilien Lincourt Your Head A Splode - Strong Bad
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Does anybody actually believe that there is or ever was "law"? It's something frequently touted by Governments, but does anybody actually believe it exists? Has any one ever seen one of these laws? Farmer Giles was fat and enjoyed a slow, comfortable life. Then one day a giant blundered on to his land. Farmer Giles managed to scare him away and instantly became a hero. So it was natural that when the dragon Chrysophylax visited the area, it was Farmer Giles who was to do battle with it.
Every country has laws. Not every country has the rule of law.
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Every country has laws. Not every country has the rule of law.
Many of the countries that you despise have the rule of law. It is a primitive and oppressive law, determined and enforced by a religious theocracy, but the law nonetheless, much like the Christian version of Sharia that you would have this country adopt. If you are talking about countries that have had their governments destroyed by conflict, however, then you are correct, they do not currently have the rule of law.
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Many of the countries that you despise have the rule of law. It is a primitive and oppressive law, determined and enforced by a religious theocracy, but the law nonetheless, much like the Christian version of Sharia that you would have this country adopt. If you are talking about countries that have had their governments destroyed by conflict, however, then you are correct, they do not currently have the rule of law.
Vincent Reynolds wrote:
Christian version of Sharia that you would have this country adopt.
WTF? the 10 commandments??? Mike Dear NYT - the fact is, the founding fathers hung traitors.
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Many of the countries that you despise have the rule of law. It is a primitive and oppressive law, determined and enforced by a religious theocracy, but the law nonetheless, much like the Christian version of Sharia that you would have this country adopt. If you are talking about countries that have had their governments destroyed by conflict, however, then you are correct, they do not currently have the rule of law.
Vincent Reynolds wrote:
much like the Christian version of Sharia
...or the secular version, which we are currently living under. "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson
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Vincent Reynolds wrote:
much like the Christian version of Sharia
...or the secular version, which we are currently living under. "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson
Stan Shannon wrote:
...or the secular version, which we are currently living under
So which one would you prefer, Stan?
The bible was written when people were even more stupid than they are today. Can you imagine that? - David Cross
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Vincent Reynolds wrote:
much like the Christian version of Sharia
...or the secular version, which we are currently living under. "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson
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.
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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.
Vincent Reynolds wrote:
the right to restrict rights isn't a right
Then you misunderstand our government and should take civics 101.
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Many of the countries that you despise have the rule of law. It is a primitive and oppressive law, determined and enforced by a religious theocracy, but the law nonetheless, much like the Christian version of Sharia that you would have this country adopt. If you are talking about countries that have had their governments destroyed by conflict, however, then you are correct, they do not currently have the rule of law.
Vincent Reynolds wrote:
Many of the countries that you despise have the rule of law. It is a primitive and oppressive law, determined and enforced by a religious theocracy, but the law nonetheless, much like the Christian version of Sharia that you would have this country adopt.
And by endorsing an "international law", you're either endorsing that they have influence on American laws. Since demographically speaking, Arabs will soon rule Europe, I'd give you silly ideas a second thought.
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Does anybody actually believe that there is or ever was "law"? It's something frequently touted by Governments, but does anybody actually believe it exists? Has any one ever seen one of these laws? Farmer Giles was fat and enjoyed a slow, comfortable life. Then one day a giant blundered on to his land. Farmer Giles managed to scare him away and instantly became a hero. So it was natural that when the dragon Chrysophylax visited the area, it was Farmer Giles who was to do battle with it.
I'm all for a law against really long user names. Your question makes me wonder if you're doing drugs. I used to work in a University library, as such I saw plenty of laws, if you mean to see them written down. That is self evident, but I can't imagine what else you're talking about. Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog
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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.
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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Stan Shannon wrote:
...or the secular version, which we are currently living under
So which one would you prefer, Stan?
The bible was written when people were even more stupid than they are today. Can you imagine that? - David Cross
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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Vincent Reynolds wrote:
the right to restrict rights isn't a right
Then you misunderstand our government and should take civics 101.
And because government is based on a limited right to restrict rights, you're fine with having rights whittled away? Oh, right, only so long as they're ones that you don't care about. When you are cavalier in granting the right to restrict rights, you end up with tyranny. In fact, what the Christian right is trying to do right now is force the whole of society to live by their specific set of religious rules, just like Islam. Their God says they must observe the Sabbath, therefore all people, everywhere, without exception, and regardless of their personal beliefs, must observe the Sabbath as well. This is lunacy, and is in diametric opposition to the beliefs of the founders, and shows that you seem to lack a fundamental understanding of what it means to be free. Normally, I'd make a snarky remedial education comment in return, but your posts on this topic, and in this forum in general, appear to indicate that you lack both empathy and social skills, and have an unchecked, rampaging, colossal ego matched in size only by the breadth of your ignorance, an ignorance that must truly be fractal in nature in order for its nearly limitless scope to fit in the small and very closed space that is your head. I don't think any amount of education, from PolSci to Dale Carnegie, could clean up the mess in there. Mushrooms, maybe, or ECT.
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And because government is based on a limited right to restrict rights, you're fine with having rights whittled away? Oh, right, only so long as they're ones that you don't care about. When you are cavalier in granting the right to restrict rights, you end up with tyranny. In fact, what the Christian right is trying to do right now is force the whole of society to live by their specific set of religious rules, just like Islam. Their God says they must observe the Sabbath, therefore all people, everywhere, without exception, and regardless of their personal beliefs, must observe the Sabbath as well. This is lunacy, and is in diametric opposition to the beliefs of the founders, and shows that you seem to lack a fundamental understanding of what it means to be free. Normally, I'd make a snarky remedial education comment in return, but your posts on this topic, and in this forum in general, appear to indicate that you lack both empathy and social skills, and have an unchecked, rampaging, colossal ego matched in size only by the breadth of your ignorance, an ignorance that must truly be fractal in nature in order for its nearly limitless scope to fit in the small and very closed space that is your head. I don't think any amount of education, from PolSci to Dale Carnegie, could clean up the mess in there. Mushrooms, maybe, or ECT.
Balance is a general theme in our government. We make it very difficult to restrict fundamental rights (such as speech, the press and the right to bear arms). However the people also have a fundamental right (also granted in the constitution) to elect a governments that actually govern. That translates to restrictions on activities that the general populace agrees with (such as prostitution, pedophilia, polygamy and public drunkeness). While you are on one extreme (demanding anarchy) and militant Islam is on the other (lacking protections of fundamental rights), America (excluding Venezuela) finds itself in the middle. We have protections from both extremes in place. The result?...The greatest country on earth!
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Balance is a general theme in our government. We make it very difficult to restrict fundamental rights (such as speech, the press and the right to bear arms). However the people also have a fundamental right (also granted in the constitution) to elect a governments that actually govern. That translates to restrictions on activities that the general populace agrees with (such as prostitution, pedophilia, polygamy and public drunkeness). While you are on one extreme (demanding anarchy) and militant Islam is on the other (lacking protections of fundamental rights), America (excluding Venezuela) finds itself in the middle. We have protections from both extremes in place. The result?...The greatest country on earth!
espeir wrote:
prostitution, pedophilia, polygamy and public drunkeness
What about a local ordinance compelling church attendance on Sunday? Restrictions necessary to maintain social order -- to keep people from impeding the rights of others -- may very well be necessary; other than that, they shouldn't even be possible, short of constitutional amendment. Consider restrictions on the acts of driving while intoxicated, and drinking on the Christian Sabbath. If you think there is no difference, and believe that they both merit restriction, then you're espeir.
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espeir wrote:
prostitution, pedophilia, polygamy and public drunkeness
What about a local ordinance compelling church attendance on Sunday? Restrictions necessary to maintain social order -- to keep people from impeding the rights of others -- may very well be necessary; other than that, they shouldn't even be possible, short of constitutional amendment. Consider restrictions on the acts of driving while intoxicated, and drinking on the Christian Sabbath. If you think there is no difference, and believe that they both merit restriction, then you're espeir.
Vincent Reynolds wrote:
What about a local ordinance compelling church attendance on Sunday? Restrictions necessary to maintain social order -- to keep people from impeding the rights of others -- may very well be necessary; other than that, they shouldn't even be possible, short of constitutional amendment.
Uhhh...Something like that isn't possible since the first amendment clearly states that the federal government can't establish a religion (in addition to not being able to restrict it)*. I challenge you to find one local ordinance in the United States that requires church attendance that has held up in court.
Vincent Reynolds wrote:
Consider restrictions on the acts of driving while intoxicated, and drinking on the Christian Sabbath.
The differenec is in substance only. A ban on drinking one day a week does not establish a religion (especially since this was commonplace in 1787). If you think so, then this is just another example of how the constitution protects America from people who hold extremist views like yourself and militant Islam. *If you understand the constitution, then you can understand that this restriction is only at the federal level. Each state constitution, however, is modelled after the federal, so local statues like this are not allowed in any state in the union.
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Vincent Reynolds wrote:
What about a local ordinance compelling church attendance on Sunday? Restrictions necessary to maintain social order -- to keep people from impeding the rights of others -- may very well be necessary; other than that, they shouldn't even be possible, short of constitutional amendment.
Uhhh...Something like that isn't possible since the first amendment clearly states that the federal government can't establish a religion (in addition to not being able to restrict it)*. I challenge you to find one local ordinance in the United States that requires church attendance that has held up in court.
Vincent Reynolds wrote:
Consider restrictions on the acts of driving while intoxicated, and drinking on the Christian Sabbath.
The differenec is in substance only. A ban on drinking one day a week does not establish a religion (especially since this was commonplace in 1787). If you think so, then this is just another example of how the constitution protects America from people who hold extremist views like yourself and militant Islam. *If you understand the constitution, then you can understand that this restriction is only at the federal level. Each state constitution, however, is modelled after the federal, so local statues like this are not allowed in any state in the union.
espeir wrote:
Uhhh...Something like that isn't possible since the first amendment clearly states that the federal government can't establish a religion
Uhhh...we're talking about local ordinance. The reason community laws such as that haven't held up is because of the ideal of a secular government of religious men. Read Jefferson.
espeir wrote:
The differenec is in substance only. A ban on drinking one day a week does not establish a religion (especially since this was commonplace in 1787). If you think so, then this is just another example of how the constitution protects America from people who hold extremist views like yourself and militant Islam.
A ban on drinking on the Sabbath has nothing to do with social order, and everything to do with legislating the beliefs of a specific religion -- a subset of the religion, actually. Your assertion to the contrary is just another example of how the country must be protected from people who hold extremist views like yourself and militant Islam.
espeir wrote:
so local statues like this are not allowed
But you and Stan have both made your views clear that, should a state choose to compel church attendance, there should be nothing preventing them from doing so.
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espeir wrote:
prostitution, pedophilia, polygamy and public drunkeness
What about a local ordinance compelling church attendance on Sunday? Restrictions necessary to maintain social order -- to keep people from impeding the rights of others -- may very well be necessary; other than that, they shouldn't even be possible, short of constitutional amendment. Consider restrictions on the acts of driving while intoxicated, and drinking on the Christian Sabbath. If you think there is no difference, and believe that they both merit restriction, then you're espeir.
Vincent Reynolds wrote:
What about a local ordinance compelling church attendance on Sunday?
What about it? How about the federal government enforcing a school curriculum that requires teaching children a secular world view? When the choice is between a million little local tyrannies and one big centralized one, all true Jeffersonians understand that the former is always to be preferred to the latter. "You have no concept of the depth and complexity of my beliefs." Jim A. Johnson -- modified at 16:36 Tuesday 18th July, 2006