Silva said:
Church and State in America have been melded since the beginning, and in a very subversive way at that.
Your pledge, which students have to take every day in some states, mentions God.
Your Presidents, no matter how obviously left-wing they are, don't dare go a speech without mentioning God.
Private religious schools are powerfully funded over there.
There is a chance of actually being taught creationism in a SCIENCE class over there.
You have Bill 'O Reilly, who's hugely popular, talking about being "left-wing" as though it's a cardinal sin to be given the label. Hello~ political fundamentalism! Think what we think, or you're damned to Hell.
Forget "becoming" a theocracy. America already IS a theocracy. Less of one than maybe ancient Rome was for a minute, but that's about as modern as it gets in those terms.
Of course, there are voices of reason that say that this isn't what secular government or secular schooling is meant to be. People like David Letterman and John Stewart, who fight it with comedy. But it's not yet enough to change where all the big money is in America; and that's with the religious. If you want a new, more serious separation of Church and State in America, you'll have to be pretty dedicated and get other people dedicated to that cause, too. Rich people, particularly.
And a few choice words for the masses who support the current mentions of God in pledges and the required teaching of creationism in schools:
Free will, nutcases. Remember that? Your God taught how important it was. And to give it to others. So stop forcing beliefs on everybody else.
So says Silva, passionate agnostic and defender of your right to say whatever you damn well please, worship nothing or anything, and pledge nothing or anything, except forcing your idiocy on anyone else.
I keep saying this, but I'll say it again; America was NOT founded on the Judeo-Christian tradition. People who came here on boats came here and founded colonies, many of which were based in the Judeo-Christian tradition, but the founding fathers who wrote our constitution were not, this is a myth that has been spread by Christian propagandists. The founding fathers, many of whom were deist, stressed the importance of the seperation of church and state, and understood very well the difference between being American, and being Christian. The addition of "under God" to our pledge was also a recent and unfortunate addition; this was added during the sixties during the red scare with the rediculous premise that somehow it'd help the Americans fight the Communists.
Ancient Rome, while officially a theocracy, did court a doctrine of freedom of religion. Most faiths were tolerated, and the supposed torture of Christians by Romans was in all likliehood one of the many things which never happened (like the entirety of the gospels) that Christians wrote into a historical context.
That said, I agree with you for the most part, at this point in time America has far too many religious influences. I started my first post with some facts about recent presidents, but let me reiterate, the one with Regan is particularly scary
Kpt._Rob said:
Ronald Regan once commented (seriously I might add) to one of his cabinet members that he had set up the necessary conditions for the rapture [feel free to read Sam Harris' "The End of Faith", an excelent book, if you want an exact quote]; George Bush Senior once said that he did not consider atheists to be legitimate American citizens; and the fact that Bush Jr. used to have weekly meetings with Evangelical pastor Ted Haggard speaks for itself.
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jasoncyrus said:
I prefer to go with personal experience about religion. Most of them need to be eradicated from existence due to previous abuse of their belief structure.
Top two are Christianity and Islam. Together those two have maimed, pillaged and extermined countless people, millions upon millions and moving into the billions if we got the full spectrum of the 2009 years christianity has apparently been around.
Ever notice how bhuddists do extreme protests? The sit in a clear area by themselves, pour petrol over their bodies and light a match.
Christianity? Carpet bombing and mass genocide.
Islam? Suicide bombing and mass genocide.
I say we all turn bhuddist or similar.
I think it's remiss of you to forget that Mormonism is tied up in just as much extremism percent-wise, if not more, than Christianity. Most of the funding behind the recent Prop 8 bill in California came from the Mormons, they're guilty too, and we shouldn't forget them completely.
Compatriot Block said:
odubya23 said:
It IS the extremists who give the whole bushel of apples a bad taste, but then again, where are the moderate christians denouncing the extremists?
Right. Fucking. Here. Seriously, show me ONE extreme religious nut on this website.
Here he is!
reaper660 said:
if you are gay and want to get married...just go somewhere else? It is such a small minority, but it screams at the top of it's lungs, and overpowers the huge majority of people against it.
And odubya is right, there aren't a lot of religious moderates attacking the fundamentalists, so it gets left up to atheists like myself. If you religious moderates would like to see the attacks on religion by people like me stop, then I encourage you to find some way to end extremism yourself. Until then, I'm just going to go ahead and keep attacking religion as a whole, sure it's a dirty job, but someone's got to do it.