Paradox
Unregistered
P
According to some catholics, the church's position "is not as obvious or immediate." A view on CP by a christian:Christian said:I can't speak for all Christians, I'm sure it is the position of the Protestant and Catholic church and the US Supreme Court.
http://www.nospank.net/popcak.htm
In addition, it appears not to be supported at all by Methodists...
http://www.indcatholicnews.com/methodists.html
..and although this particular issue revolves specifically around the allowance of such practices in schools (not necessarily in the home) you can also feel free to add:
"Anglican; Apostolic; Assemblies of God; Associated Churches of Christ; Baptist; Brethren; Congregational; Churches of Christ...New Life Churches; Presbyterian; Salvation Army; Religious Society of Friends"
to the list of denominations who seem to have at least some problem with the issue.
http://www.socialissues.godzone.net.nz/submissions/smedcorp92.htm
The position, yes. As it should be if it merits such responses. So long as the position is being attacked, and not the person. (Although, the irony of this is, that, applying this idea in general, those who do support CP should not feel bothered by being punished for their positions! It is an acceptable form of discipline, after all!To criticizes is one thing, to insult is another. The position is not being criticized, it is being insulted, attacked, chasticed.
That 'widespread', commonplace notion is dwindling year after year.You are forgetting one important aspect, as I said before, I'm not using the argument of the masses in this case, I'm stating that the practice is widespread because it is a sanctioned practice not only in Churches but in secular legislation.
If you want to talk strict shop, your's is just an uninformed opinion, a poor one at that. Jurisprudence is not on your side. It is your views that are seen as extremist or radical, not mine.
http://www.extension.umn.edu/distribution/familydevelopment/components/7266b.html
Seems 'my' 'extremist or radical' views are gaining popularity, and it is you who are (or at least, if trend follows, will be) in the minority.
Even using the U.S. Supreme Court as the pillar for an appeal to authority won't strengthen your argument. Just in case you wanted to rely on this, thoughIf the Supreme Court of the US agrees with my position, I think I have a fair handle on the issue.
"Mrs. Sweaney appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on the theory that qualified immunity was not applicable because of the deputy's conduct violated an alleged parental right, under the U.S. Constitution's Court and Fourteenth Amendments, to inflict corporal punishment upon the parent's child. Mrs. Sweaney predicated her theory on federal court cases which deal with various aspects of parental rights under the Constitution but none of which specifically consider the right to strike a child without being the subject to criminal investigation and charges. The Court of Appeals refused to find that more general parental constitutional rights- such as the right to bring the children or a right to privacy- clearly establish a federal constitutional right in parents to corporally punish their children." (emphasis mine)
http://www.stophitting.com/laws/legalNews.php
I thought we were abandoning the arguments of popular opinion...?That you don't like it or don't agree with it is just noise on the grand scale of most world's legislation. And this is not an argument of the masses. This is how the law of most countries in the world see it, including the one where you post you live.
As seen above, the law is not necessarily on your side.So as you can see, my initial comparisons to criminal actions was appropriate. The law already imposes criteria including being reasonable or it being necessary.
So, if anybody wants to ask what is reasonable, there is a legal standard. This means people, the are objective elements that determine what is reasonable or when it is appropriate.
The law is on my side in this regards, and it is not a matter of social customs or religious rituals.
I've deconstructed your repeated references to popular opinions, either in this country or not, to the point of irreducibility. Not that they provided anything solid in the first place. However, if you fancy these majority opinions so much, why don't I make a poll as to how many posters here would consider that 'ridiculous' analogy to be actually ridiculous?We don't have wonder about the validity of these types of ridiculous comparisons (I'm sorry, this is not my view, it is the view in your country).
What my government sees as irrelevant IS irrelevant. We are speaking of what 'ought' to be, not what is. The anaology was not meant to specifically draw parallels in the degree of 'punishment', but the reasons that a punishment is allowed in the first place. If you were not able to see this, "it is your shortcoming".Another ridiculous comparison, your government does not see it as irrelevant either. It makes clear distintions between discipline to children with CP and rape. If you can't see the distinction, it is your shortcoming.
No, we have not determined that the legal system has a 'very specific standard' at all. Even if it did, you're still using the same tired argument. For pete's sake, segregation and slavery used to be supported by legal systems and popular opinion. That you rest the brunt of your case on the infallibility of the modern judicial system is sad.Particularly the case, when studies focused not necessarily on the detriments of spanking, but the positives of non-spanking seem to show such methods as more fruitful:Your legal system has a very specific standard of what is decent and what is obscene. Your society as a whole says it warrants respect. And in this case, the argument of the masses is valid.
http://silcon.com/~ptave/straus3.htm
2 points for witty rebuttal, -8 for substance.Paradox wrote:
but it will show who abandons said logic in order to retain their views.
Clearly.