Miumaru said:
You have your terms mixed up. I am against religious fundamentalism as a political movement, and defiantly against the restrictions to freedoms living by the rules they wish to force upon people would cause. I am not against religion in general.
Edit: I am not against people that wish to live by the rules of their religion, but I don't see how it is any of their buisness how I am living my life. They should have the choice to live in the way they wish, as much as I should have the choice to live in the way I wish, as long as we don't interfere with each other excessively (as in: I shouldn't be able to pillage and murder at whim). Just wanted to clarify that a bit.
Being conservative does not mean you have to have anything to do with religion. Core conservative values are family unit oriented, smaller goverment, less goverment interference in peoples lives.
Liberal core values are supposed to be progress and reform, with maximum civil liberties along the way.
Neither party that claims those titles follows those values, and they both twist those words, and associate them with groups that have little or nothing to do with them other then sharing some minor bit of the ideology.
I think at this point it's easy to see how exactly the message you tried ended up corrupted in how I viewed it. I get where you are coming from, but it still reeks of the biased political rhetoric I hear all the time. Especially the last bit. It makes you sound as closed minded as you are trying to make the people who's values you oppose sound. Both sides are sitting around patting themselves on the back for being openminded. If it wasn't such a problem I would crack up about.
A little side note. Separation of church and state doesn't mean what you think it means. Remember that at the time the English had a powerful state church. It was to allow the churches freedom from interference from the goverment to fulfill freedom of religion, while at the same time making sure that situation could not be repeated in the new country. While the goverment could not force people to follow any specific religion they could other wise influence this by giving preferential treatment, to one religions or another. Seeing how religious persecution figured heavily in the fairly recent history of some in the new world I think they wanted to avoid that at any cost. Funny how that turned out.