I salute you ability to keep moving the goal posts every time you're proven wrong, but the fact is that the harshness of the Hamurabi Code, or the fact that it’s punishements do not involve a lightning bolt striking you down has no relevancy whatsoever to any part of this discussion. It is a code predating the ten commandments prohibiting murder theft and perjury, which was what you asked for.
Please show me in black and white where in the Hammurabi Code it says "Thou Shalt Not Kill."
No it would be introducing context that is very relevant for the discussion, ignoring context in order to avoid inconvenient conclusions made apparent by this context is intellectually dishonest.
Indeed and my point exactly. The context in my premise has consistently been shuffled out of sight.
I shuffled it back into the light.
I didn't miss it because that was never the assertion, anybody with a calendar knows that and it would hardly have sparked a discussion.
You apparently have no idea what would and would not spark a discussion when it comes to one particular person. Secondly it is my premise and assertion that was attacked and attacked out of context. You have NO standing whatsoever in defining these. If you want to start a new thread or a new assertion clearly state that elsewhere.
Kindly stay out of my assertion. If not, you are on my ignore list which has just one other person on it.
Make your own, start a new thread.
I believe I already pointed out that this is a false dilemma fallacy. In fact it is a false dilemma fallacy for a question based on a false premise, since Americas earliest laws where never made from scratch but based on the British common law - of which prohibitations against murder certainly origins from before the Brits where christianized, something we can deduce from the self evidenct fact that no socierty throughout time, has failed to have such prohibitation.
Sorry, having a hard time accepting your assertion that the Spanish who founded St Augustine in 1565 or other settlements did so under English Common Law. I have never heard anything so absurd. Later
settlers came here for religious freedom they could not find in England and Europe and were anxious to embrace the ten commandments as the source for their laws against perjury, theft and murder.
But as I said before you are entitled to your opinion that the earliest settlers here did not bring their bibles with them and did not use the ten commandments to establish laws but as I also said an awful lot of people would disagree with you. You are free to revise history if you wish but I am free to call it revisionism. I have opinion as well. You would do well not to trample on my rights to have an opinion. Thank you. Again, have a nice day.
You are, of course, pereptrating the argument used by the ACLU to tear down renditions of the ten commandments in public spaces. I have no problem with a bunch of lawyers making a living doing this but I do not believe that the basis for their argument is correct on this level. Also I am not fond of paying them either. There are better reasons to remove the tablets from public spaces. Congress is trying to shut the lawyers down now by not allowing them to bill their fees to the defendents in their suits. As a taxpayer paying their egregious legal bills I am tempted to side with Congress which passed the legislation. As an atheist I could care less about the ten commandments on public property. It remains to be seen what happens in the Senate and on our president's desk.
See:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=65109
Argument from popularity is a fallacy too.
Whatever. I agree with those historians and descendents of the original settlers who believe that their ancestors' ten commandments formed the basis for their earliest laws, yes, along with the Magna Carta (in English colonies) on some issues (but not murder, theft and bearing false witness) and that an 8 foot high slab of stone lost in Persia for a millenium or more was not the source of the earliest American laws. It just didn't happen.