For many years we have lived on Federal guidelines to keep Church and State Separate. Do you feel it is time to change that law or keep it? Should we begin to mix religion with Politics?
Quote from: lmunchkin on July 04, 2011, 11:37:02 AMFor many years we have lived on Federal guidelines to keep Church and State Separate. Do you feel it is time to change that law or keep it? Should we begin to mix religion with Politics?That sound you hear is our Constitution throwing up....
idk if this is ever relevent, so forgive me if it isnt.The school in which I used to attend, and my son now attends, does not allow anyone to wear "alternate" religious symbols. They do however allow the cross. I don't really think that should be right... I personally love the Cross and I am christian, but I have a friend, who has children that are of the Wiccan faith, and are not allowed to wear their religious symbol. When I was in that school, I was not allowed to wear an old star of david I found at a sale, and thought it was pretty! I had no idea it was even religious symbol at the time! I was told to remove it at once. I find that to be wrong. If they allow one, they should allow all. Or none. Just saying.
In 1984, ironically, Ronald Reagan signed into law the taxation of churches through social security taxation and at the same time made them tax collectors as well. I know a man in prison today who is there because of his misplaced trust in the constitution that would overturn this law. A sad situation no doubt and one that the founders would turn in their graves over.
America is no longer a friendly nation to Christians and our sphere of freedom to practice our religion is slowly becoming more and more restricted to the point that if laws declaring homosexuals protected rights, the US courts will soon in my opinion be able to force American churches to hire openly gay men and women in religious positions. There are many who have already advocated such and I hope and pray that our religious freedoms do not erode to that point, but we are certainly in danger of that right now. In fact, in Canada, several verses in the Bible are already declared hate speech and anyone that preaches these verses from the pulpit can and have been arrested and prosecuted. So, if folks wish to speak about separation of church and state, getting all of the facts is an essential place to start.Is America a Christian nation anymore? Not at the Federal level for sure yet what a glorious past America once had.
Quote from: Hemodoc on July 06, 2011, 05:20:10 PMIn 1984, ironically, Ronald Reagan signed into law the taxation of churches through social security taxation and at the same time made them tax collectors as well. I know a man in prison today who is there because of his misplaced trust in the constitution that would overturn this law. A sad situation no doubt and one that the founders would turn in their graves over.Hemodoc, you have mentioned your friendship with Kent Hovind before. He did not think that those laws were going to be overturned, he bragged repeatedly about outsmarting them. He threatened investigators, made his employees state that they were "volunteers" or "missionaries" (what happens if one of those people needs Medicare and does not have enough work credits?) structured cash transactions, wasted years of the courts time, and lied A LOT. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kent_Hovind (According to this article, he also does not believe there is such a thing as the separation of church and state) He is by every definition a criminal and is exactly where he belongs, having been found guilty on 58 counts. (58!!!) I do not view America as a Christian nation, and I do not see that as a detriment in the least.
I think the Founders were men of the Enlightenment. They professed a belief in God but that isn't the same as being a Christian. There are a lot of Founders and each state has its Founders but if you're talking about Washington Franklin Jefferson Madison Adams Hamilton then I'd say they were free thinkers.
We all know the story about the Puritans fleeing from England to America so that they could have religious freedom. What most people forget is that the Puritans didn't like the idea of religious freedom for others. They were just as tyrannical in this regard as was the Anglican church leaders in England at that time.Which religion are you going to mix with politics?I watched a very interesting documentary on HBO this evening, written, filmed and produced by Alexandra Pelosi, Nancy Pelosi's daughter. It was called "Citizen USA"; it will probably be OnDemand by now, so check it out. Anyway, Alexandra's husband is Dutch, and since he married an American, he was easily able to get a green card. When his first child was born, though, he decided that he didn't want to be the only one in the family who was not American, so he applied for citizenship. Alexandra took his experience and travelled to each of the 50 states and witnessed a Naturalization ceremony in each state. After each ceremony, she spoke with several new American citizens and would ask them why they wanted to become an American. One man from Poland said that he wanted to be a citizen in a country who could overcome its past and elect a black man as President. Many women said that in America, they could own their own home, own their own car, create their own businesses, things that they never would have been able to do in their native land. One Muslim woman in Tennessee, another in Mississippi and another man in Michigan all said that they appreciated the religious freedom they had in this country. You don't really think of Muslims living in the American Bible Belt expressing gratitude for religious tolerance! But that goes to show how much Americans fundamentally cherish not only their faith but also their freedom to have whichever faith they choose.On a personal note, I feel that religion belongs either in the home or in the church. It does not belong in government and it does not belong in our schools. Parents should give their children whichever kind of religious education they feel is appropriate. In saying that, though, I think that government should act in ways that are pretty universally recognized as fair-minded and compassionate. I don't think you have to be of any organized religion to want our government to be responsible, fair and humane.What we understand to be the mixing of Church and State is anti-American. As Aleta pointed out, that would mean our federal government would choose an official state religion, and I can't think of anything more against the ideals of the Founding Fathers than that!
Quote from: Hemodoc on July 06, 2011, 05:20:10 PMAmerica is no longer a friendly nation to Christians and our sphere of freedom to practice our religion is slowly becoming more and more restricted to the point that if laws declaring homosexuals protected rights, the US courts will soon in my opinion be able to force American churches to hire openly gay men and women in religious positions. There are many who have already advocated such and I hope and pray that our religious freedoms do not erode to that point, but we are certainly in danger of that right now. In fact, in Canada, several verses in the Bible are already declared hate speech and anyone that preaches these verses from the pulpit can and have been arrested and prosecuted. So, if folks wish to speak about separation of church and state, getting all of the facts is an essential place to start.Is America a Christian nation anymore? Not at the Federal level for sure yet what a glorious past America once had.I am truly, truly baffled by this victimhood mindset. Who is preventing you from practicing Christianity? How are you defining "Christian"? Do you know any Christians who are prevented from going to church or praying in their homes or wherever they like? My husband and I were out for dinner the other evening and noted a family at a nearby table praying before their meal. No one persecuted them. What kind of worship or show of your Christian faith is being denied you?And what exactly is this "glorious past" that America once had but now does not because it is now "unfriendly" to Christians? Are you perhaps talking about the "glorious past" where plantation owners believed God created black people to serve white ones? Or perhaps it's that glorious past where God meant for whites to sit at the front of the bus with blacks in the back. Oh, I know! It's must be the glorious past of Manifest Destiny where God told the white man that he was destined to fill the American continent, almost obliterating an entire race of people that couldn't possibly be favored by God.You seem to have a rosy image of America's past, and I for the life of me can't figure out why, but it certainly doesn't have to do with a greater presence of God in America. If it is true that America had indeed once been a Christian nation, then that is a lie. If it were so, we would not have enslaved or killed millions and millions of people. We have NEVER been a Christian nation....NEVER!(Oh, and I am sure that Jesus Christ heartily approved of women being burned for being "witches", yet another chapter of our glorious Christian past.)
That is in part one of the reasons why we are at such a cross roads that immigrants have no trouble whatsoever understanding when comparing life in America to many of the nations from which they have come. Just ask my wife how she appreciates America compared to her native land. My wife is a naturalized citizen and has a greater love of this nation and its ideals and freedoms than most native born Americans. There is a reason for that which seems to escape many born here today.You are certainly free to your own opinions, but a review of historical documents points to the fact that America was a Christian based nation actually starting as a theocracy in most of the original colonies. Sorry, no amount of modern historical revisionism will obviate those facts. The fact that sin existed in this nation likewise does not obviate the historical facts that we were at our onset a Christian nation. Those that braved the Atlantic for religious freedom and economic freedom I believe would take issue with your assessment of their motivations and sacrifices to find a place where they could exercise their beliefs in freedom. It truly was and is an amazing experiment in freedom that you would be hard placed to find another such example despite all of its well noted failures along the way.
Hemodoc, Kent Hovind knowingly and purposefully broke the law. I don't have the time nor desire to re-fight an argument that has been put to rest by our court system. There is nothing innocent nor accidental about structuring cash transactions. He has been caught on tape (which can be accessed on YouTube) discussing ways to hide assets with his son. Who knows how many public dollars he has wasted in entering nonsense pleas in court such as "subornation of false muster". You don't tell your employees to pass themselves off as volunteers without sending a neon-lit message to the world that you are trying to get out of paying your due employee-related taxes. In fact, this is such a fundamental issue in the tax code that it does not matter if all parties agree to, say, a contractor relationship. If the intent is to get out of paying tax, you are breaking the law. My father is a tax attorney and has been an employer for the past 30 years, and for personal reasons, I have discussed this at length with him. This is money that is to be used to care for these employees and their families, and he stole it from them and the rest of us who have to pick up the tab for any shortfalls. Kent Hovind tried to game the system and he lost. There is really nothing more to say.MM, well-said, so much of what you've written. I don't understand the need to portray oneself as a victim all the time, either, other than it's what people do when they have run out of other arguments. I care very little for what the founding fathers would think of our interpretations today, and I don't really understand the need to endlessly go over and over what they might do in our present circumstances, to pretend to be, as Stephen Colbert put it, "a time-traveling mind reader". The separation of church and state is a basic principal on which our country operates - and to get back to the original, horrifying question, no, no, one million times no, we should not insert anyone's religion into our government. This idea that the Constitution does not include the separation of church and state - this seems to have started up recently with the Tea Party and that one nutter candidate Christine O'Donnell asking Chris Coons in a debate where exactly the Constitution says this. He had the most priceless tone, as if he could not believe what she was asking. Here is the entire text of the First Amendment, (in case you're still following along, Bruno ): 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. Straightforward and to the point, with precedent being set in the ensuing years to further define and establish this basic, basic tenet of American society. And precedent means a lot in this country, cases are won or lost on it. Christian is not synonymous with moral, and non-Christian is not in any way synonymous with immoral or amoral. Nor does the word 'religious' automatically mean Christian. I would put atheist morality against Christian morality any day. Seeing this film in which Julia Sweeney, a long time Catholic, turns to Humanism, she explained that the first moment she entertained the idea that there was no God, she immediately thought about all the poor and suffering people of the world, realised that there was no deity looking after them, and thought "Someone's got to help them!" That's right - atheists cannot relieve themselves of responsibility by saying 'God will sort this one out'. It can be heartbreaking and it can cause a lot of guilt, but there it is. I am going to have to leave you all to it. Like so many other discussions, this one has gone out of control with oversized posts (mine, for example!) and people talking past each other. Why do I ever involve myself in these discussions? It's not like I delude myself into thinking that I will ever change anyone's mind. Anyhow, a good day to all of you.
I'm curious Peter. What in your view would be different about our society if your understanding of the First Amendment was the basis for our society and laws?In other words given a counter factual history of your choice - maybe starting in 1961 to keep it simpler or 1790 if you like - what would I notice in 2011 in that counter factual world that is different from the world out my window?