Quote from: cariad on March 09, 2012, 07:46:26 AMQuote from: Hemodoc on March 08, 2012, 04:16:34 PMThe first amendment is freedom of religion not freedom from religion.WRONG. Absolutely, 100%, without any doubt whatsoever FALSE. You are wrong, Peter, and Gerald is completely correct. If you have to twist and torture the Constitution to try to force it to say what you want it to say, that certainly reveals quite a bit about the ideal world that you envision. Ick.OK, let's read directly to see what it says:Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.The First Amendment is doing BOTH, i.e., protecting the free exercise of religion ("freedom OF religion") and prohibiting any government sponsored "establishment" of religion ("freedom FROM religion"). So you are both only half right.
Quote from: Hemodoc on March 08, 2012, 04:16:34 PMThe first amendment is freedom of religion not freedom from religion.WRONG. Absolutely, 100%, without any doubt whatsoever FALSE. You are wrong, Peter, and Gerald is completely correct. If you have to twist and torture the Constitution to try to force it to say what you want it to say, that certainly reveals quite a bit about the ideal world that you envision. Ick.
The first amendment is freedom of religion not freedom from religion.
Quote from: Willis on March 09, 2012, 12:55:52 PMQuote from: cariad on March 09, 2012, 07:46:26 AMQuote from: Hemodoc on March 08, 2012, 04:16:34 PMThe first amendment is freedom of religion not freedom from religion.WRONG. Absolutely, 100%, without any doubt whatsoever FALSE. You are wrong, Peter, and Gerald is completely correct. If you have to twist and torture the Constitution to try to force it to say what you want it to say, that certainly reveals quite a bit about the ideal world that you envision. Ick.OK, let's read directly to see what it says:Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.The First Amendment is doing BOTH, i.e., protecting the free exercise of religion ("freedom OF religion") and prohibiting any government sponsored "establishment" of religion ("freedom FROM religion"). So you are both only half right. Willis, I am not sure how this translates to me being only half right when I said in the discussion of contraception and CKD "freedom of religion includes freedom FROM religion". I was saying exactly what you are saying. Peter came onto this discussion to say the opposite. He is wrong. Of course freedom of religion MUST include freedom to not have someone else's beliefs forced upon you via the government. Of course, when churches are given tax-free status and then they turn around and donate to a cause such as the support of Prop 8 in California, this should be a direct violation of the First Amendment. Political contributions are NOT tax-deductible and should never, ever be tax-free. That is religion interfering with our government. Anyhow, Willis, no matter if you disagree with me or state that I am only half right - I will always be a sucker for you and your calm, reasonable statements. Thanks for offering the opinion!
Dear Cariad,If you had "freedom FROM religion," you would be able to exclude me from quoting the Bible on the IHD forum in public. Gerald has spouted that at me more than once. Since we have instead freedom OF religion, that is perfectly legal today even with the new interpretation of the establishment clause since 1962. You may wish to check with your dad on that issue more closely. No, you don't have freedom FROM religion guaranteed anywhere.Now, you do have freedom OF religion which means you can walk away from it and be an atheist, agnostic, Wiccan or what ever religion or lack of religion you wish. That is freedom OF religion. You have the freedom to pick and choose or not choose. That is all covered under freedom OF religion. I believe you and your father are conflating the two.
I would also add--and someone already pointed out this hypocrisy--that any religious organization (or private college or corporation for that matter) who accepts money from the government directly through grants or favored loans or indirectly through tax exemptions or free land or whatever have willingly given up their independence. The government now has a dog in the hunt and they are going to demand a say in how things are run--and rightfully so! There are mighty few churches or private religious colleges that do not feed on the government teat! The government has repeatedly and surreptitiously violated the First Amendment for more than a hundred years by slowly instituting such "favors" to the point that to reject such aid puts an organization at financial and competitive risk. Now having wrested power from places where the government never belonged (I will insert the 9th and 10th Amendment arguments here too), we are all virtually slaves of the government.
Quote from: Hemodoc on March 09, 2012, 03:41:26 PMDear Cariad,If you had "freedom FROM religion," you would be able to exclude me from quoting the Bible on the IHD forum in public. Gerald has spouted that at me more than once. Since we have instead freedom OF religion, that is perfectly legal today even with the new interpretation of the establishment clause since 1962. You may wish to check with your dad on that issue more closely. No, you don't have freedom FROM religion guaranteed anywhere.Now, you do have freedom OF religion which means you can walk away from it and be an atheist, agnostic, Wiccan or what ever religion or lack of religion you wish. That is freedom OF religion. You have the freedom to pick and choose or not choose. That is all covered under freedom OF religion. I believe you and your father are conflating the two.Willis already went over this, but I'll reiterate some of what he said: I do not own the forum but if I did, I could absolutely stop you from talking about religion. Now, I like the freedom of this forum so I don't really care that this is allowed, but I have the freedom, which I exercise all the time, to ignore your posts the minute the bible quotes come out. However, when accessing government services - my city's public schools for example - we have full right to freedom from religion. In fact, a friend of mine who works as a teacher for the state told me that if I really wanted to aggressively seek remedy to a problem I've been having with my son, I could go straight to the superintendent with a complaint about the school observing Valentine's Day. She was not suggesting I do this, she just said that I could use it as ammunition if I so desired, because this is celebrating 'St. Valentine' and thus has a religious aspect. Personally, I think that's going too far and is not something I wish to bring up as I try to resolve this issue. No, I do not need to discuss this further with my father. I trust him and his legal experience and his intellect much more than I trust your take on this. Willis, I disagree that the government protecting women's access to healthcare is a violation of the first amendment. They are ensuring that someone else does not impose their religious beliefs on women and try to interfere with their access from A THIRD PARTY. These women are paying for this. But this was all argued out in the other thread. Karen made excellent points and its all there for you to read if you choose. The founders would be lost in our current society and clearly they understood that society was going to change beyond what they could envision and so the document needed to be flexible enough to change with the times. I think it's safe to say that they did not expect Americans in the next millennium to be using the exact same laws and exact same interpretation of those laws over two hundred years later. The founders were all white males. They were also falliable - they owned slaves for heavens sake. It creeps me out when interpreting the Constitution begins to take on the air of interpreting the Bible. There is a difference, even to an atheist such as myself, between asking What Would Jesus Do (he is, after all, supposed to be divine and all-knowing) and what would Thomas Jefferson do. Who cares what Jefferson would do! The Bill of Rights gives the right to a trial by a jury of our peers - they recognised in their own limited way that there are certain things that you need context and experience to evaluate. Anyone who knows what its like to carry a baby for 8 months or longer and then give birth, go ahead and raise your hand. You are the people that know what a disgusting statement it is that Santorum cavalierly suggests that we take pregnancy via rape as a 'gift' from a god that I do not even believe exists. This is where the government needs to step in and ensure my access to my basic right to control my own body.
Quote from: cariad on March 09, 2012, 07:03:35 PMQuote from: Hemodoc on March 09, 2012, 03:41:26 PMDear Cariad,If you had "freedom FROM religion," you would be able to exclude me from quoting the Bible on the IHD forum in public. Gerald has spouted that at me more than once. Since we have instead freedom OF religion, that is perfectly legal today even with the new interpretation of the establishment clause since 1962. You may wish to check with your dad on that issue more closely. No, you don't have freedom FROM religion guaranteed anywhere.Now, you do have freedom OF religion which means you can walk away from it and be an atheist, agnostic, Wiccan or what ever religion or lack of religion you wish. That is freedom OF religion. You have the freedom to pick and choose or not choose. That is all covered under freedom OF religion. I believe you and your father are conflating the two.Willis already went over this, but I'll reiterate some of what he said: I do not own the forum but if I did, I could absolutely stop you from talking about religion. Now, I like the freedom of this forum so I don't really care that this is allowed, but I have the freedom, which I exercise all the time, to ignore your posts the minute the bible quotes come out. However, when accessing government services - my city's public schools for example - we have full right to freedom from religion. In fact, a friend of mine who works as a teacher for the state told me that if I really wanted to aggressively seek remedy to a problem I've been having with my son, I could go straight to the superintendent with a complaint about the school observing Valentine's Day. She was not suggesting I do this, she just said that I could use it as ammunition if I so desired, because this is celebrating 'St. Valentine' and thus has a religious aspect. Personally, I think that's going too far and is not something I wish to bring up as I try to resolve this issue. No, I do not need to discuss this further with my father. I trust him and his legal experience and his intellect much more than I trust your take on this. Willis, I disagree that the government protecting women's access to healthcare is a violation of the first amendment. They are ensuring that someone else does not impose their religious beliefs on women and try to interfere with their access from A THIRD PARTY. These women are paying for this. But this was all argued out in the other thread. Karen made excellent points and its all there for you to read if you choose. The founders would be lost in our current society and clearly they understood that society was going to change beyond what they could envision and so the document needed to be flexible enough to change with the times. I think it's safe to say that they did not expect Americans in the next millennium to be using the exact same laws and exact same interpretation of those laws over two hundred years later. The founders were all white males. They were also falliable - they owned slaves for heavens sake. It creeps me out when interpreting the Constitution begins to take on the air of interpreting the Bible. There is a difference, even to an atheist such as myself, between asking What Would Jesus Do (he is, after all, supposed to be divine and all-knowing) and what would Thomas Jefferson do. Who cares what Jefferson would do! The Bill of Rights gives the right to a trial by a jury of our peers - they recognised in their own limited way that there are certain things that you need context and experience to evaluate. Anyone who knows what its like to carry a baby for 8 months or longer and then give birth, go ahead and raise your hand. You are the people that know what a disgusting statement it is that Santorum cavalierly suggests that we take pregnancy via rape as a 'gift' from a god that I do not even believe exists. This is where the government needs to step in and ensure my access to my basic right to control my own body.Dear Cariad, I am not sure if you know it or not, but more than one of the owners of IHD is a Christian and is often offended by the divisive anti-Christian remarks on threads such as this. You are simply ignorant that they are tolerating you here today. You might want to consider your statements in light of those facts.
Yes, true, many of the owners/moderators on IHD are personally offended by the nature of many of the anti-Christian comments as they have told me in person by PM on more than one occasion. Yet they tolerate your right to your own opinions according to the first amendment. Imagine that.
The entire contraception issue is a manufactured crises by Obama to gain the uterus vote.
Quote from: Hemodoc on March 09, 2012, 07:11:34 PMThe entire contraception issue is a manufactured crises by Obama to gain the uterus vote. Wow. Just wow. The uterus vote. Referring to women by one of their reproductive organs? That sets a new low for disrespect, and it's been quite the week for sexism. This is just plain gross.
Yes, but the fact is, you are the one saying it on here.
Quote from: amanda100wilson on March 09, 2012, 08:02:44 PMYes, but the fact is, you are the one saying it on here.Nope, not the first and even if I was the first to use that term uterus vote, I didn't come up with that phrase that I am quite sure most have already heard several other places already. In any case, just one more example of false righteous indignation especially since this is a liberal motto, not GOP at all. Anyway, go figure.
For all those that believe that they have freedom FROM religion, please take that case to a lawyer and see how far you get with that idea. No such thing in America as of today anyway. Maybe you could lobby your congressman to introduce a freedom FROM religion bill. See how he responds. Simply nonsense, that is of today anyway.You certainly have the freedom to read and choose what you wish, but that does not abridge the right to freedom OF religion in any manner.
Oh dear...the uterus vote. Am I a terrible person for thinking that is kinda funny? Worse still, I do not have one anymore. Does my vote still count? Lol
Quote from: Hemodoc on March 09, 2012, 08:06:34 PMQuote from: amanda100wilson on March 09, 2012, 08:02:44 PMYes, but the fact is, you are the one saying it on here.Nope, not the first and even if I was the first to use that term uterus vote, I didn't come up with that phrase that I am quite sure most have already heard several other places already. In any case, just one more example of false righteous indignation especially since this is a liberal motto, not GOP at all. Anyway, go figure.I've never heard it before. I don't agree with every blogger and could not care less what random strangers on the Internet say. It is offensive to use a body part as a stand in for women, just as it would be very offensive for me to talk about the d*** vote. I do not care whether that has been used by every blogger from coast to coast, it is wrong and I have too strong a moral centre to hide behind the 'everyone's doing it' excuse. I love how you say you're not the first to use it, or maybe you are, or no, it's suddenly a 'liberal motto'. That's news to me.