What it's all about? No. But you did read the tag-line, didn't you? It actually asks you to lead a double life.
It's just a friggin' advertisment to encourage people to come to Daylesdford. That is the purpose and intention of the ad.
Christians are free to be offended that they were chosen as the example.
Free to be offended?
What on Earth do you mean by
free to be offended?
Certainly the author is offended. But consider that the ad has been airing for over a year now and this is apparently the first complaint.
And so what if she is offended? Let her be offended. With free speech comes freedom to attack people's sacred cows and the inevitablility that people will be offended. If you don't want people to be offended, you don't get to have free speech.
Do you really think that the advert couldn't have been made without a baptism?
You don't get to chose what other's decide to do with their creativity. And you don't get to censor it. Free speech is far more important than someone's sacred cow.
Have you seen the way you phrase that first sentence? What about bias against religion?
Here is my sentence: 'Separation of church and state means simply that the state should show no preference towards any religion and should not show preference towards religion as opposed to no religion."
Where is the bias against religion.
Perhaps you misinterpreted something.
Like I said, you have a problem seeing things form another point of view. You don't seem able to imagine what other people might think. You don't seem able to even acknowledge that another interpretation can be just as valid as your own.
What you don't see is that no one can seem do or say a single damned thing without someone somewhere being offended. This ad took 12 months before it found someone who was offended. Life goes on. People will continue to do and say things regardless of the fact that somewhere someone eventually will be offended.
Public money isn't going to the exclusive use of one group. It is being used by everyone in turn.
Good one. Perhaps homosexuals could have their own private sessions as well. And scientologists. And maybe nudists would like a day for themselves. If every group decided they wanted their own special day to the exclusion of all others, the general public would soon be having to book years in advance.
This is a public pool.
If you want a private pool, do some fund raising and build one.
Yes, maybe that might just bring home to their children that there is another view - besides the one in which they have been indictrinated - from which they are being sheltered.
Right. Your way or the high way.
No actual argument then?
There are muslim children in Australia who go to muslim schools and attend social functions attended only by muslims. Now their parents want to complete their indoctrination and isolation from alternative views and lifestyles by having separate swimming sessions from the rest of the population.
You want their tax money but not their culture.
We have parks that are free to everyone who wishes to enjoy them. These parks are built and maintained by taxes. If there are taxpayers who do not avail themselves of these parklands, they are paying tax and not getting the services. That's life.
Perhaps we should also set aside a park day for muslims only.
Way to go. Let's just see what this does for tolerance in our society.