Passenger killed by air marshall

Instead of merely looking, why don't you point out why I am so bad?

You haven't stated a contention. You are debating soundbites. You insist on the relevance of the DoI contrary to evidence. You avoid the theocratic nature of your own country. You have multiple standards. You really do give the impression of being a true believer.
 
By your "logic", I don't live in a theocracy.

:hb:

Keep banging, self-flagellation is popular among brainless zealots. You may get a photo spread in next year's I live in a theocracy and my tax dollars directly support a horsefaced queen and an evangelical church calendar.
 
*sigh* okay, baby steps:

Laws are only unconstitutional if they are ruled to be unconstitutional. Until they have been challenged, they are not against the constitution. Such a decision is for the SCOTUS to decide.

Are you saying that the laws of the land are unconstitutional until challenged?
False dilemma.

No, I am not saying that laws of the land are unconstitutional until challenged. It is not within my power, nor yours, to make that decision. I can express my opinion on how I think laws ought to be declared, but that's about it.

But, as i said, you have created a false dilemma which is, of course, a logical fallacy. (I'll assume that you know what a false dilemma is even though you did not see that you have engaged in it. Please correct me if I am mistaken.) Your dilemma is this: If the SCOTUS has not declared a law to be constitutional, then it is constitutional. This denies the possibility of a third option and assumes a default state for laws. The third possibility that you have overlooked is that a law, having not been reviewed by SCOTUS, can be said to be undecided with regards to it adherence to the Constitution. Not understanding this third possibility, you have lept to the assumption that the default constitutionality for laws is that they are constitutional.

Why make this assumption? When SCOTUS does declare that a law is unconstitutional, does that mean that the law is suddenly unconstitutional or that it always was and was merely undeclared as such until that point?

To my knowledge, the President's faith-based initiatives have not yet been brought before the SCOTUS, thus such laws/actions are neither decided constitutional nor unconstitutional. Your statement that these initiatves are constitutional because they have not been declared unconstitutional is a logical fallacy and, as such, incorrect.

Give me a break! You know damn well that abstinence is a hallmark of the religious Right. "No sex before marriage". "Sex leads to destruction of society".
Guilt by association.

Abstinance only sexual education is closely associated with religious points of view, but that does not mean that it is, in and of itself, a religious practice. Consider: what are the chances of accidently becoming pregnant while practicing abstinance? It isn't even close to zero. It is zero. What are the chances of catching a sexually transmitted disease while practicing abstinance? Not quite as good as pregnancy, but damn close.

Further, if merely not having sex is to be considered a religious practice, then under that definition how many of us are unknowingly practicing religion at this very moment?

No, Claus, just because religious fundies latch on to and promote something does not make that thing, itself, innately religious. Your argument constitutes (pardon the pun) another logical fallacy.

I'm not telling you what you or your family thought. I am referring to historical facts.
The hell you didn't.

I told you, as an American, what it was like to be an American during the tail end of the Cold War anti-communist hysteria. You responded by telling me that I was wrong about what I was thinking and feeling. You told me that I wasn't afraid of communists, I was embracing religion.

Historical facts? Try researching Senator Joseph McCarthy. Try researching The House Committee on Un-American Activities. How much deep religious fervor do you see floating through these two topics?

What historical facts do you have? You have two meaningless phrases introduced at the point of hysteria that have no net legal or civil effect. They should be removed and I believe that they ultimately will. But, you have cherry picked these two nothing items out of a forrest of events that you have completely ignored. That is flat-out dishonest.

I'm not talking about whether right are unalienable or not. I'm talking about where those rights come from. They come from a supernatural being.
As I said, baby steps. :rolleyes:

Claus, language is an extremely robust thing that has a tendancy to change over time. The cultural and contemporary significance of words and phrases can sometimes be entirely dependant on the context of when and where they were said and by whom.

Modern American students often have difficulty reading Shakespear because, although it is in their native tongue, it is written in an archaic form and format. The cultural references that Shakespear refers to are not so clear cut today and Lit teachers must often fill in the background in order for the plays to make sense.

I know that you don't understand rhetorics, as such. So let me attempt to fill in the gaps of what is going on with the DoI so that you can understand it the way it was intended.

The American Revolutionists found themselves at odds with not only their king, but also a rather formidable empire. The DoI was basically their letter of resignation from that empire and him. Rather than ask for King George's permission to make such a resignation, they proclaimed that permission had already been granted from a more innate source. (I know you're anxious to jump to the conclusion that this source is an innate God, but try to control your zeal for just a moment and hear me out.)

When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

Note that they do not say "our God" or even just "God", but rather "the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God".

Now consider, if they were, as you believe, invoking a supernatural entity from whom they believe that all rights originate, why include the Laws of Nature? (Of course, by Laws of Nature they are referring to the laws of the physical universe in which we exist.) Here, they are saying that the innate equality of all people, kings included, are derived from the fact that we are all subject to Natural Law.

Even though they had the advantage of the Enlightenment going on, their undersanding of Natural Law, or the laws of physics as it were, was woefully incomplete. There were still a lot of unknowns or, rather, at least more unknowns than there are today. There was still a possibility that there was yet still something else that controlled Natural Law. Maybe it was a supernatural entity, maybe not. But you'll note that they still did not envoke God, but rather Nature's God. This has a two-fold effect. (1) it implies that the equality they were talking about came not only from Natural Law but possibily from something even deeper than that, should it be found. (2) it was designed to impress upon the religious monoarchy that the Revolutionists authority springs from the same well that thier authority does.

Remember, the Revolutionists are playing to a very specific audience and they want to be taken very seriously. Their goal is to impress upon King George that he certainly has no more authority over them than they do themselves. (That isn't the end of the argument, but that is what that passage accomplishes.)

We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the consent of the governed.

Note still that they still haven't envoked "our God" or "Christ Jesus our Savior" or even just "God".

When they say that all men are created equal, they are saying that this equality is not something that is bestowed upon them at some date, earned through their actions, or deserved because of who they are. They are saying that this equality is a part of the very being of mankind, like having a brain or a torso or ears. Whatever criteria you use to define "mankind", equality is part of that definition.

Later in that same sentince, they mention a creator, but just who is that creator? Given that "Creator" relates back to term "created" in the same sentince, it is that which is the root of man's equality. What is the root of man's equality? Natural Law. Thus, Natural Law is the "Creator" referred to in the sentince.

But wait, you say, they are obviously referring to a being! The "c" is capitalized, indicating that it is a proper name, or at least a proper title.

Here is where the changes in language thoughout time come into play. The gramatical rules of capitalization were not the same then as they are now. You'll note that Truths, Rights, Life, Liberty, and Happiness are also all capitalized. This was not done to indicate proper nouns, but to make create emphasis, much in the same way I use italics today.

Far from invoking a supernatural entity, they were all about Natural Law, which was really the core of the Enlightenment. Yes, they did play to their audience a little, but the main thrust of their argument is from a point of Nature and the natural world.

--------

and just to cover as many bases as possible, let's take a very brief look at The Enlightenment:

The term also more specifically refers to a historical intellectual movement, "The Enlightenment." This movement advocated rationality as a means to establish an authoritative system of ethics, aesthetics, and knowledge. The intellectual leaders of this movement regarded themselves as courageous and elite, and regarded their purpose as leading the world toward progress and out of a long period of doubtful tradition, full of irrationality, superstition, and tyranny (which they believed began during a historical period they called the "Dark Ages").
My emphasis.


How can God not mean a supernatural being?
Context, context, context. The meaning of words can change drastically depending upon the context.
god
Pronunciation: 'gäd also 'god
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Old English; akin to Old High German got god
1 capitalized : the supreme or ultimate reality: as a : the Being perfect in power, wisdom, and goodness who is worshiped as creator and ruler of the universe b Christian Science : the incorporeal divine Principle ruling over all as eternal Spirit : infinite Mind
2 : a being or object believed to have more than natural attributes and powers and to require human worship; specifically : one controlling a particular aspect or part of reality
3 : a person or thing of supreme value
4 : a powerful ruler
Note that only two of the four definitions of "god" in webster mean a supernatural being, and that's just one form. There are many ways for "god" to not mean a supernatural being.
 
Of course, for Claus' contention to be worthy of a second glance, one would expect to see references to god, religion and so on embodied in the only relevent document, the Constitution, again and again (like a certain monarchy that we all know). It does not, alas, occur. I feel like I am dealing with a numerologist of some sort.
 
Upchurch, you have been nominated.

Except, since the December thread isn't up yet, it's in the November thread.
 
Apparently, all your years of debating psychics, homeopaths, UFO abductees and other assorted woos have taught you the debating technique you employ here. You do them all proud w/ your performance in this thread, though at the expense of your reputation. It is now obvious to me and, I'd bet, many others on this forum that you will use any dishonest, manipulative, selective out-of-context quotes and outright lies in a desperate, yet futile attempt to prove your case.
Which is why I will not read his publication. I don't know what his publication is like, because I have never read it. I got to know Claus before I had even heard of his publication. His behavior on this forum has convinved me to not bother looking at a publication that he has such involvement with. Even if it is good, I wouldn't want to support such a jacka$$, anyway.
 
Context, context, context.

Nicely written.


It is like there are two different people looking at the Danish constitution and the DOI here. When speaking about Denmark, several more prominent mentions of God and religion and explicit ties to the state are placed into context so that the ultimate decision is that the contacts do not amount to a theocracy.

And then the same steps with an even more tenuous mention in the DOI are never taken -- lightning flashes, the blood roars in the ears and soon, the fervor and zeal causes someone to bite his own tongue, taste blood, and go wild -- completely avoiding the same type of analysis (which was, I think, the point that people have been trying to ram home with their points on the Danish Constitution, but they've just been too subtle, I guess).
 
Nicely written.


It is like there are two different people looking at the Danish constitution and the DOI here. When speaking about Denmark, several more prominent mentions of God and religion and explicit ties to the state are placed into context so that the ultimate decision is that the contacts do not amount to a theocracy.

And then the same steps with an even more tenuous mention in the DOI are never taken -- lightning flashes, the blood roars in the ears and soon, the fervor and zeal causes someone to bite his own tongue, taste blood, and go wild -- completely avoiding the same type of analysis (which was, I think, the point that people have been trying to ram home with their points on the Danish Constitution, but they've just been too subtle, I guess).

I suppose so. Everyone, I am convinced, has a trace of the woo in them. With Claus it is the US and everything USish, it appears.
 
Ummmm the DoI is 1776 before our constitution. Your document is a baby, comparatively. So, if old documents are problematic, why harp, ignoranyly I might add, on the DoI. Accept the one, accept the other.

I love the double standard......

It's not a double standard. The law you referred to is not in effect anymore.

Did the US Constitution render the DoI invalid? Of course not.

Of course, for Claus' contention to be worthy of a second glance, one would expect to see references to god, religion and so on embodied in the only relevent document, the Constitution, again and again (like a certain monarchy that we all know). It does not, alas, occur. I feel like I am dealing with a numerologist of some sort.

They wouldn't need to, because where their rights come from have already been established in the DoI.

I suppose so. Everyone, I am convinced, has a trace of the woo in them. With Claus it is the US and everything USish, it appears.

What kind of criticism of the US would you accept?
 
For starters, you have completely ignored the many folks here who have pointed out to you repeatedly that the DoI is in no way, shape, or form a legal document of the USA. In fact, it pre-dates the USA by several years and the US Constitution by 13 years. Not only that, but you have based the great bulk of your case on one rhetorical word in that non-legal, non-binding document.

I'm not saying that it is legal. I'm saying that in one of the Freedom Chapters, where rights are defined, those rights are endowed by a supernatural being.

And yet, you persist in this nonsense. Apparently, all your years of debating psychics, homeopaths, UFO abductees and other assorted woos have taught you the debating technique you employ here. You do them all proud w/ your performance in this thread, though at the expense of your reputation. It is now obvious to me and, I'd bet, many others on this forum that you will use any dishonest, manipulative, selective out-of-context quotes and outright lies in a desperate, yet futile attempt to prove your case. Sorry Claus, the emperor has no clothes, and it is right here for all to see. Whether or not you care any more is up to you to decide.

I've already come to the conclusion that you're full of bull feces, and your ego is far more important to you than is an objective, skeptical path to the truth will or can ever be.

Congratulations, you must be so proud!

Since I am not arguing that the DoI is a legal document, I wonder if that will make you change your description here.

Do you understand that we don't teach people to become religious, but that we teach them about religion?

Do you understand that religions must be "approved" because otherwise, they won't enjoy tax breaks?

Do you understand that it is irrelevant what religion the Regent has to belong to?

Do you understand that we have religious freedom in Denmark?

Do you understand that I am not saying that the US is a theocracy?

Are you able to tell me just how far back in time we have to go?

Is the DoI not one of the founding documents?

You can take them one by one, if you like.
 
False dilemma.

No, I am not saying that laws of the land are unconstitutional until challenged. It is not within my power, nor yours, to make that decision. I can express my opinion on how I think laws ought to be declared, but that's about it.

But, as i said, you have created a false dilemma which is, of course, a logical fallacy. (I'll assume that you know what a false dilemma is even though you did not see that you have engaged in it. Please correct me if I am mistaken.) Your dilemma is this: If the SCOTUS has not declared a law to be constitutional, then it is constitutional.

I think you meant: "If the SCOTUS has not declared a law to be UNconstitutional, then it is constitutional.

This denies the possibility of a third option and assumes a default state for laws. The third possibility that you have overlooked is that a law, having not been reviewed by SCOTUS, can be said to be undecided with regards to it adherence to the Constitution. Not understanding this third possibility, you have lept to the assumption that the default constitutionality for laws is that they are constitutional.

Why make this assumption? When SCOTUS does declare that a law is unconstitutional, does that mean that the law is suddenly unconstitutional or that it always was and was merely undeclared as such until that point?

To my knowledge, the President's faith-based initiatives have not yet been brought before the SCOTUS, thus such laws/actions are neither decided constitutional nor unconstitutional. Your statement that these initiatves are constitutional because they have not been declared unconstitutional is a logical fallacy and, as such, incorrect.

A law is passed on the Hill. It is not contested yet by any court. Then, as the first, you are arrested for breaking that law.

Have you done anything illegal?

Guilt by association.

Funny you should say "guilt". I'm not accusing you of being right-wing.

Abstinance only sexual education is closely associated with religious points of view, but that does not mean that it is, in and of itself, a religious practice. Consider: what are the chances of accidently becoming pregnant while practicing abstinance? It isn't even close to zero. It is zero. What are the chances of catching a sexually transmitted disease while practicing abstinance? Not quite as good as pregnancy, but damn close.

Further, if merely not having sex is to be considered a religious practice, then under that definition how many of us are unknowingly practicing religion at this very moment?

No, Claus, just because religious fundies latch on to and promote something does not make that thing, itself, innately religious. Your argument constitutes (pardon the pun) another logical fallacy.

Hardly, because I am not saying that abstinence in itself is religious. I am saying that it is used by the Religious Right to promote religious values.

The hell you didn't.

I told you, as an American, what it was like to be an American during the tail end of the Cold War anti-communist hysteria. You responded by telling me that I was wrong about what I was thinking and feeling. You told me that I wasn't afraid of communists, I was embracing religion.

Where did I do that?

Historical facts? Try researching Senator Joseph McCarthy. Try researching The House Committee on Un-American Activities. How much deep religious fervor do you see floating through these two topics?

You misunderstand. I'm not arguing the severity of the McCarthy era, quite contrary. It was a black spot on American history. I'm just saying that religion is a far more pervasive issue than McCarthy is.

Do you have much McCarthyism in the US today?

What historical facts do you have? You have two meaningless phrases introduced at the point of hysteria that have no net legal or civil effect. They should be removed and I believe that they ultimately will. But, you have cherry picked these two nothing items out of a forrest of events that you have completely ignored. That is flat-out dishonest.

I have found the evidence to back up my contention. That's neither cherry-picking or dishonest.

Claus, language is an extremely robust thing that has a tendancy to change over time. The cultural and contemporary significance of words and phrases can sometimes be entirely dependant on the context of when and where they were said and by whom.

Agree. Which is why I point to the use of Creator in those days. They meant what they said. They didn't say "Origins", "Mom & Pop", "evolution" or, as suggested here, a stick. Creator in those days - capitol C - meant God. They didn't mess around. Each word was carefully chosen.

Here's a very good example of the use "Creator":

The Origin was first published on 24 November 1859, price fifteen shillings, and was oversubscribed, so that all 1250 copies were claimed by booksellers that day. The second edition came out on 7 January 1860, and during Darwin's lifetime the book went through six editions, with cumulative changes and revisions to deal with counter-arguments raised.

In January 1871 Mivart published On the Genesis of Species, the cleverest and most devastating critique of natural selection in Darwin's lifetime. Darwin took it personally and from April to the end of the year made extensive revisions to the Origin, using the word "evolution" for the first time and adding a new chapter to refute Mivart. Other changes included adding Herbert Spencer's phrase "survival of the fittest", and adding "by the Creator" into the closing sentence, making it read "There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone circling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being evolved."
Source

Evolution closes its first and last episodes with a reading of the last sentence of On the Origin of Species:

There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed laws of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.​

The series repeatedly frames this passage as evidence of Darwin's "fundamentally religious" view of nature. But later in life Darwin explicitly disavowed this view of nature's "grandeur." Furthermore, the words "by the Creator" only showed up in the second edition of the Origin, released several weeks after the first. Why this change? Because after Darwin came under vicious attack for his views—science versus religion—he went back and stuck in references to God as a form of appeasement.
Source

Read that last sentence.

The American Revolutionists found themselves at odds with not only their king, but also a rather formidable empire. The DoI was basically their letter of resignation from that empire and him. Rather than ask for King George's permission to make such a resignation, they proclaimed that permission had already been granted from a more innate source. (I know you're anxious to jump to the conclusion that this source is an innate God, but try to control your zeal for just a moment and hear me out.)

When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

Note that they do not say "our God" or even just "God", but rather "the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God".

Now consider, if they were, as you believe, invoking a supernatural entity from whom they believe that all rights originate, why include the Laws of Nature? (Of course, by Laws of Nature they are referring to the laws of the physical universe in which we exist.) Here, they are saying that the innate equality of all people, kings included, are derived from the fact that we are all subject to Natural Law.

Even though they had the advantage of the Enlightenment going on, their undersanding of Natural Law, or the laws of physics as it were, was woefully incomplete. There were still a lot of unknowns or, rather, at least more unknowns than there are today. There was still a possibility that there was yet still something else that controlled Natural Law. Maybe it was a supernatural entity, maybe not. But you'll note that they still did not envoke God, but rather Nature's God. This has a two-fold effect. (1) it implies that the equality they were talking about came not only from Natural Law but possibily from something even deeper than that, should it be found. (2) it was designed to impress upon the religious monoarchy that the Revolutionists authority springs from the same well that thier authority does.

In which case, I'm right. Because King George's right to rule came directly from God.

Remember, the Revolutionists are playing to a very specific audience and they want to be taken very seriously. Their goal is to impress upon King George that he certainly has no more authority over them than they do themselves. (That isn't the end of the argument, but that is what that passage accomplishes.)

We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the consent of the governed.

Note still that they still haven't envoked "our God" or "Christ Jesus our Savior" or even just "God".

They don't need to. All they need is, once, to refer to God as the power who gives them the right to do what they do. They have to invoke God, because King George has God on his side. We are not talking about some fuzzy concept here, we are talking about The God, The Biblical God, He Who Striketh, etc.

When they say that all men are created equal, they are saying that this equality is not something that is bestowed upon them at some date, earned through their actions, or deserved because of who they are. They are saying that this equality is a part of the very being of mankind, like having a brain or a torso or ears. Whatever criteria you use to define "mankind", equality is part of that definition.

And who did people believe had created them? God.

Later in that same sentince, they mention a creator, but just who is that creator? Given that "Creator" relates back to term "created" in the same sentince, it is that which is the root of man's equality. What is the root of man's equality? Natural Law. Thus, Natural Law is the "Creator" referred to in the sentince.

If this was the case, they wouldn't even need to refer to "Nature's God". But they do, and they do for a very good reason.

But wait, you say, they are obviously referring to a being! The "c" is capitalized, indicating that it is a proper name, or at least a proper title.

Here is where the changes in language thoughout time come into play. The gramatical rules of capitalization were not the same then as they are now. You'll note that Truths, Rights, Life, Liberty, and Happiness are also all capitalized. This was not done to indicate proper nouns, but to make create emphasis, much in the same way I use italics today.

Far from invoking a supernatural entity, they were all about Natural Law, which was really the core of the Enlightenment. Yes, they did play to their audience a little, but the main thrust of their argument is from a point of Nature and the natural world.

I disagree. I'm not convinced by your arguments.

and just to cover as many bases as possible, let's take a very brief look at The Enlightenment:

I'm not contesting that at least some of the Founding Fathers were, in a non-woo sense, "enlightened". But since they knew they were addressing a mostly religious colonist population, they knew they couldn't just get away with referring to a non-religious power.

Context, context, context. The meaning of words can change drastically depending upon the context.

Sure it can. I just don't agree with your rendering of the context.

Note that only two of the four definitions of "god" in webster mean a supernatural being, and that's just one form. There are many ways for "god" to not mean a supernatural being.

3 : a person or thing of supreme value

I think you'll agree that freedom is a thing of supreme value. Is freedom a god?

4 : a powerful ruler

Dubya is a powerful ruler. I doubt you will disagree. Is he a god? If not, why not?
 
Because you would have to ignore and reject anything that wasn't written in English. That's rather condescendingly superior of you. And, of course, you would be wrong.

Will you be ok if from now on I post all my response in a language you do not understand?
 
Too bad there is no "ignore in this thread" option. When CFL isn't ranting about how horrible the USA is, he has some good posts. However, especially in this thread, it would be best to just ignore him.
 
Will you be ok if from now on I post all my response in a language you do not understand?

Considering that Claus has already demonstrated that he cannot understand plain English, I'd say this is a moot question.
 
I think you meant: "If the SCOTUS has not declared a law to be UNconstitutional, then it is constitutional.
Yes, thank you.

A law is passed on the Hill. It is not contested yet by any court. Then, as the first, you are arrested for breaking that law.

Have you done anything illegal?
Yes. Your example, however, is irrelevent because "illegal" and "unconstitutional" are two different things. The constitutionality of the law is not determined until it is challenged.

Funny you should say "guilt". I'm not accusing you of being right-wing.
"Guilt by association" is the name of the logical fallacy that you were committing. Am I mistaken that you are familiar with logical fallacies? May I recommend this site as a resource?

Hardly, because I am not saying that abstinence in itself is religious. I am saying that it is used by the Religious Right to promote religious values.
What an attention span you have. Mayflies live longer. Here is what we were talking about:

CFLarsen said:
Upchurch said:
Abstenance only birth control, actually. Tell me, what is innately religious about that? Strictly speaking, it is an effective form of birth control, albeit nieve and not particularly popular. Do you see the problem? The action itself is not inherently religious even though the motivation behind it probably is. It isn't as black and white as you make it out to be.
Give me a break! You know damn well that abstinence is a hallmark of the religious Right. "No sex before marriage". "Sex leads to destruction of society".

My point, which you seem to have forgotten, is that it is not a black and white issue that you have made it out to be. Yes, it is used by the religious right to promote their religion, but does that make abstenance-only birth control education unconstitutional? Of course not. This is the problem with faith-based initiatives, it is very difficult to say just where the service ends and the religion begins. It just isn't that clean cut.

Where did I do that?
here
CFLarsen said:
Upchurch said:
In God we Trust" was made the national motto and "under God" was added to the pledge in the 1950's during the height of McCarthyism and anti-communism furvor. One of the aspects of communism that Americans fixated on was the disallowment of any religion whatsoever. Thus, the acceptance of religion was seen as decidedly anti-communist. Adding these reminders of religion to the civil arena were methods of politically distancing oneself from communism. Opposing their addition was seen as being pro-communism. Given the Cold War hysteria of the time, being perceived as pro-communist in those days was tantamount to political, career, social, and sometimes actual sucide.

It was never about religion, Claus. It was all about the communists. I was born 15-20 years after the height of that hysteria and I can still remember being scared of the Soviet Union. It will take a while for that irrationality to go away. We're starting to see the beginnings of that in the last few years with people pointing out the unconstitutionality of things like the motto and the pledge.
It is very much about religion, for the very reasons you outlined. When the commies threatened you, you chose to fall back on a religious statement, when you could have chosen so many more.

You misunderstand. I'm not arguing the severity of the McCarthy era, quite contrary. It was a black spot on American history. I'm just saying that religion is a far more pervasive issue than McCarthy is.

Do you have much McCarthyism in the US today?
No, but we were discussing why those phrases were added to the pledge and made the motto. They were not done for religious reasons, but for anti-communist reasons as I have outlined. You have provided no evidence to the contrary except to claim that you know my culture and its motivations better than I do.

And do you know why there isn't much McCarthyism in the US today? Because it posed a much greater and immediate threat. At that point, it was even a greater threat than the "Red Scare" it was trying to protect America against.

I have found the evidence to back up my contention. That's neither cherry-picking or dishonest.
Yes, and what was your evidence? Articles from 2004 and 2005 discussing modern America. Nothing concerning why those phrases were put there in the first place. Zero. Zip. Nada.

It is both cherry-picking and dishonest.

Agree. Which is why I point to the use of Creator in those days. They meant what they said. They didn't say "Origins", "Mom & Pop", "evolution" or, as suggested here, a stick. Creator in those days - capitol C - meant God. They didn't mess around. Each word was carefully chosen.
Yes, they meant what they said, but they didn't mean what you seem to think they said. Please provide some evidence that "Creator" in that specific instance and context meant "God". There are loads and loads of books, articles, and analysis of the DoI as well as original papers from the writers of the document. It shouldn't be hard to find something to back your claim.

Here's a very good example of the use "Creator":
The Origin was first published on 24 November 1859, price fifteen shillings, and was oversubscribed, so that all 1250 copies were claimed by booksellers that day. The second edition came out on 7 January 1860, and during Darwin's lifetime the book went through six editions, with cumulative changes and revisions to deal with counter-arguments raised.

In January 1871 Mivart published On the Genesis of Species, the cleverest and most devastating critique of natural selection in Darwin's lifetime. Darwin took it personally and from April to the end of the year made extensive revisions to the Origin, using the word "evolution" for the first time and adding a new chapter to refute Mivart. Other changes included adding Herbert Spencer's phrase "survival of the fittest", and adding "by the Creator" into the closing sentence, making it read "There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone circling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being evolved."
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*sigh*

Claus, this takes place 83 years (or 95, depending on which date you look at) after the DoI was written. You consider this a "very good example" of the contemporary and contextual meaning for the use of the word "Creator" in the DoI, written 2 or 3 generations before? Seriously?


In which case, I'm right. Because King George's right to rule came directly from God.
King George perceived that his rule came from God. That has no bearing on whether or not the writers of the DoI thought the same.

They don't need to. All they need is, once, to refer to God as the power who gives them the right to do what they do. They have to invoke God, because King George has God on his side. We are not talking about some fuzzy concept here, we are talking about The God, The Biblical God, He Who Striketh, etc.
...

This is ludicrous. I spent about an hour or more this morning explaining why that is absolutely not true. It certainly isn't the Biblical God they are referring to.

If this was the case, they wouldn't even need to refer to "Nature's God". But they do, and they do for a very good reason.
Yes, and I addressed what that reason is.

I disagree. I'm not convinced by your arguments.
Have you ever been convinced by an argument? Has anyone ever made an argument that caused you to re-think something you were convinced was right? Seriously, these are not rhetorical questions.

edited because I apparently don't pay very good attention to my use of negatives.
 
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Will you be ok if from now on I post all my response in a language you do not understand?

I would be fine with that, as long as there were people would could understand it and state that the content was what you claimed it was.

Fortunately, I know more languages than just my own. That puts me at an advantage.
 
Yes. Your example, however, is irrelevent because "illegal" and "unconstitutional" are two different things. The constitutionality of the law is not determined until it is challenged.

When is the legality of a law determined?

"Guilt by association" is the name of the logical fallacy that you were committing. Am I mistaken that you are familiar with logical fallacies? May I recommend this site as a resource?

I'm very aware of logical fallacies.

My point, which you seem to have forgotten, is that it is not a black and white issue that you have made it out to be. Yes, it is used by the religious right to promote their religion, but does that make abstenance-only birth control education unconstitutional? Of course not. This is the problem with faith-based initiatives, it is very difficult to say just where the service ends and the religion begins. It just isn't that clean cut.

My point, which you seem to ignore, is that I said that abstinence is a hallmark of the religious Right. I didn't say that abstinence in itself is religious. Are we clear on this?


I meant Americans in general. It's not my fault that "you" have several meanings in English. I'll try to make it more clear in the future.


Thus proving my point.

but we were discussing why those phrases were added to the pledge and made the motto. They were not done for religious reasons, but for anti-communist reasons as I have outlined. You have provided no evidence to the contrary except to claim that you know my culture and its motivations better than I do.

I have not done so. I have pointed to historical evidence, e.g. that McCarthyism is not as prevalent in American culture as religion is.

And do you know why there isn't much McCarthyism in the US today? Because it posed a much greater and immediate threat. At that point, it was even a greater threat than the "Red Scare" it was trying to protect America against.

I'm not sure I agree with you there. While McCarthyism was a rather scary force in American culture, it was never a question of what to be more scared of.

At any rate: We agree that the impact of McCarthyism is not as prevalent in American culture as religious issues.

Yes, and what was your evidence? Articles from 2004 and 2005 discussing modern America. Nothing concerning why those phrases were put there in the first place. Zero. Zip. Nada.

If you don't agree with the evidence, you don't agree with it.

Yes, they meant what they said, but they didn't mean what you seem to think they said. Please provide some evidence that "Creator" in that specific instance and context meant "God". There are loads and loads of books, articles, and analysis of the DoI as well as original papers from the writers of the document. It shouldn't be hard to find something to back your claim.

I have presented my evidence. You can accept it or not.

Claus, this takes place 83 years (or 95, depending on which date you look at) after the DoI was written. You consider this a "very good example" of the contemporary and contextual meaning for the use of the word "Creator" in the DoI, written 2 or 3 generations before? Seriously?

Yes, seriously. What changed in the meantime? But, hey, if you reject this evidence, how about this quote from Jefferson?

The Creator has not thought proper to mark those in the forehead who are of stuff to make good generals. We are first, therefore, to seek them blindfold, and then let them learn the trade at the expense of great losses.
Thomas Jefferson

You think Jefferson was not speaking of God here?

On matters of religion, Jefferson was sometimes accused by his political opponents of being an atheist; however, he is generally regarded as a believer in Deism, a philosophy shared by many other notable intellectuals of his time. Jefferson repeatedly stated his belief in a creator, and in the United States Declaration of Independence uses the terms "Creator", "Nature's God", and "Divine Providence". Jefferson believed, furthermore, it was this Creator that endowed humanity with a number of inalienable rights, such as "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness". His experience in France just before the Revolution made him deeply suspicious of (Catholic) priests and bishops as a force for reaction and ignorance.

Jefferson was raised Episcopalian at a time when the Episcopal Church was the only denomination funded by Virginia tax money. Before the American Revolution, when the Episcopal Church was the American branch of the Anglican Church of England, Jefferson was a vestryman in his local church, a lay position that was part of political office at the time. Jefferson later expressed general agreement with his friend Joseph Priestley's Unitarianism.
Source

And Deism being:

For a "rational basis for religion" they refer to the cosmological argument (first cause argument), the teleological argument (argument from design), and other aspects of what was called natural religion. Deism has become identified with the classical belief that God created but does not intervene in the world, though this is not a necessary component of deism.
Source

Get it yet?

King George perceived that his rule came from God. That has no bearing on whether or not the writers of the DoI thought the same.

That's not my argument. I'm saying that Colonial America was under the rule of England. England was ruled by a King, who got his power from God.

This is ludicrous. I spent about an hour or more this morning explaining why that is absolutely not true. It certainly isn't the Biblical God they are referring to.

I disagree, and I've presented my arguments why.

How long do you think I spend replying to people? If that's going to be an argument in itself, then I doubt I can lose any debate here. ;)

Yes, and I addressed what that reason is.

And I disagree.

Have you ever been convinced by an argument? Has anyone ever made an argument that caused you to re-think something you were convinced was right? Seriously, these are not rhetorical questions.

Yes, I have. I've changed my mind on the subject of hypnosis, based on sound arguments and evidence.
 

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