Foster Zygote
Dental Floss Tycoon
- Joined
- Jun 24, 2006
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Nice: guilt by association.
Like atheists and child molesters?
Nice: guilt by association.
Can he answer ANY question head on, without the assistance of a anti-atheist bigot to quote in his defense?Stone Island, can atheists be good citizens?
Nice: guilt by association.six7s said:
"Father Richard," as he is known to President George W. Bush and many others, is a Catholic priest and... <snip/>
...a leading figure for decades in what some observers view as a conservative, Catholic-driven culture war against progressive and mainstream Protestant churches. Neuhaus has also been a close, if unofficial, adviser to the George W. Bush administration. Described by an administration official in a 2005 Time magazine article as having "a fair amount of under-the-radar influence" on policies ranging from stem cell research to cloning, Neuhaus has apparently had a significant impact on Bush's thinking. The president once said that the priest "helps me articulate these [religious] things" (Time, February 7, 2005; Andrew Weaver, "Neocon Catholics Target Mainline Protestants," MediaTransparency, August 11, 2006).
December 6, 2005
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That politicians would be buffeted by the winds of public opinion – well over half the public believes that the whole war has been a mistake – is hardly surprising. Far more problematic are the intellectuals, particularly religious intellectuals such as Michael Novak, Jerry "God-is-pro-war" Falwell, and the Rev. Richard J. Neuhaus.
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As the blood lust of the Bush administration increased, many religious Catholics were getting nervous, since there was no sense in which an attack on Iraq could be reconciled with Just War teaching. It was not a defensive war, not a last-resort war, <snip/>
Fr. Neuhaus played a very important role in urging people to mute their consciences, ignore the Vatican, and march in lockstep with the Bush administration.
In 2003, Fr. Neuhaus, who lives and moves within the Bush intellectual camp, was asked about Pope John Paul II’s opposition to the Iraq War. He said "Whether that cause [Just War] can be vindicated without resort to military force, and whether it would be wiser to wait and see what Iraq might do over a period of months or years, are matters of prudential judgment beyond the competence of religious authority."
In other words, what does the Pope know about war and peace?
But in the same interview, sent out to millions of Catholics the world over, Fr. Neuhaus didn’t apply this standard to himself. He said that war was just and that Catholicism bound us to embrace it.
"War, if it is just, is not an option chosen but a duty imposed," he said. "To wait until the worst happens is to wait too long, and leaders guilty of such negligence would rightly be held morally accountable…. Religious leaders should bring more to the public discussion than their fears. Nervous hand-wringing is not a moral argument…. In sum, military action in order to disarm Iraq can be morally justified in terms of just-war doctrine."
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But we need to remember that this is not a philosophical parlor game. This isn’t about editorial strategy. Real people die in war. Families are shattered, men are tortured, lives are ruined, enemies are made for generations, governments become more corrupt through their war lies and spending, whole regions are pushed to loathe the occupier, and society and culture become imbued with a tolerance for spilling blood.
Still no answer ?
A nice summation of why, according to Neuhaus, an atheist cannot be a good citizen.
The question isn’t whether someone who doesn’t believe in the truth of the Declaration of Independence can be a citizen, that is up to whether they meet the minimum legal qualifications. Rather, it’s whether they can be a good citizen, so there is an aspect of moral judgment implicit in the statement. After all, one may meet the strict letter of the law while violating its spirit.All honor to Jefferson—to the man who, in the concrete pressure of a struggle for national independence by a single people, and the coolness, forecast, and capacity to introduce into a merely revolutionary document, an abstract truth, applicable to all men and all times (Jaffa, 2000, 73).
And,…we trace our independence to the Declaration and not to the Treaty of Paris. The Declaration… precipitated the creation of permanent governmental apparatuses to oversee the newly-independent states’ pursuit of the common good.
Now, forgive me if I unfairly state your position, but I think that it’s fair to say that you would agree with Carl Becker who wrote,…the rights phrase is hortatory… However, if we treat another in a manner contrary to the rights phrase we would not characterize our actions as illegal; instead, we would characterize them as immoral. Consequently, while the rights phrase may offer sound moral guidance, it is not a legal command and hence does not play a role in constitutional interpretation because of its own legal authority.
If so, according to Neuhaus, you cannot then be a good citizen.To ask whether the natural rights philosophy of the Declaration of Independence is true or false is essentially a meaningless question (Jaffa, 2000, 73).
Neuhaus does not, near as I can tell, at any point call for a system where men are challenged as to their truth beliefs regarding the moral justification for the United States.Does this nation in its maturity still cherish the faith in which it was conceived and raised? Does it still hold those “truths to be self-evident? (Jaffa, 2000, 74)”
Repeating logical errors doesn't make them any less illogical.President Abraham Lincoln once wrote,
The question isn’t whether someone who doesn’t believe in the truth of the Declaration of Independence can be a citizen, that is up to whether they meet the minimum legal qualifications. Rather, it’s whether they can be a good citizen, so there is an aspect of moral judgment implicit in the statement. After all, one may meet the strict letter of the law while violating its spirit.
Now, to see this sort of argument in action, please see the following quotes from “Originalism, the Declaration of Independence, and the Constitution: A Unique Role in Constitutional Interpretation?” by Lee J. Strang, Penn State Law Review (Fall, 2006). He writes,
And,
Now, forgive me if I unfairly state your position, but I think that it’s fair to say that you would agree with Carl Becker who wrote,
If so, according to Neuhaus, you cannot then be a good citizen.
Leo Strauss once asked,
Neuhaus does not, near as I can tell, at any point call for a system where men are challenged as to their truth beliefs regarding the moral justification for the United States.
joobz said:Any attempt to redefine the terms atheist and citizen to such a degree that it would make the statement "Atheists can't be good citizens" true would be so different from common usage as to render the statement unitelligible in english. These new definitions (which make that sentence true) do not by proxy make the original definitions hold true in that sentence. Yet, it appears that this is the whole goal of this exercise. That is the reason for the continual question, Do you believe that atheists can't be good citizens?
This proof by proxy is intellectually dishonest and meaningless
Stone Island, would you be so kind as to point out what laws are contained within the Declaration of Independence? Or just demonstrate that you have an original thought within your own head. Based on the available evidence I expect to see further refusal to directly address relevant questions, special pleading and appeals to authority.The question isn’t whether someone who doesn’t believe in the truth of the Declaration of Independence can be a citizen, that is up to whether they meet the minimum legal qualifications. Rather, it’s whether they can be a good citizen, so there is an aspect of moral judgment implicit in the statement. After all, one may meet the strict letter of the law while violating its spirit.
And? The fact is that Neuhaus wants to define others of a generic group as inferior to himself. He does this by forcing definitions of "atheism" and "good citizen" and pretending that citizenship is somehow based on the Declaration of Independence rather than the United States Constitution. This is arrogant bigotry and couching his bigotry in academic language makes it no less so.Neuhaus does not, near as I can tell, at any point call for a system where men are challenged as to their truth beliefs regarding the moral justification for the United States.
Whether atheists can be good citizens is not a legal question. Neuhaus made that clear from the beginning.Stone Island, would you be so kind as to point out what laws are contained within the Declaration of Independence?
So far as I know, for example, no historian who has written about the Civil War has seriously asked whether Lincoln's belief in the truth of the Declaration can be accepted, not merely as emotionally evocative and persuasive, but as philosophically sound. Neither has anyone inquired as to whether it was intrinsically reasonable to believe, as Lincoln did, that the principles of the Declaration form the ground for distinguishing the healthy from the pathological in the body politic. But if the question as to whether the philosophy of the Declaration is true or false is essentially meaningless, then questions as to whether slavery is right or wrong or whether freedom is better than despotism are equally meaningless (Jaffa, 2000, 75).
Sorry, but the United States as it is today is defined by the United States Constitution, not the Declaration of Independence. Citizenship requires only that one abide by the Constitution. Why did the authors of the Constitution write Article VI section 3?Whether atheists can be good citizens is not a legal question. Neuhaus made that clear from the beginning.
Whether atheists can be a good citizens is a moral question. What is the moral basis for the Constitution? The Declaration of Independence is one possibility, perhaps the best.
Can atheists provide an objective moral grounding for the Constitution consistent with the Declaration of Independence and the philosophy of natural law?
.Article VI said:The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the Members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of the several States, shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this Constitution; but no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States