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Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 2:33:52 PM   
jlf1961


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John F. Kennedy said in Houston TX that he believed in an America where the separation of church and state was absolute.

Rick Santorum said he does not believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute.


Considering that the founding fathers made it clear that there was to be a separation of church and state, where do you fall in the two statements? When you figure in that all nine Supreme Court Justices have stated there is a wall of separation between church and state in the US, how can Santorum make such a statement that is clearly defying the Constitution of the United States?

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 2:59:30 PM   
SoftBonds


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I firmly believe there should be an ironclad, unbreakable, ninja-proof wall between Church and State. I don't think there should be any interaction between the two. I don't think anything that is required of anyone should include the word god.
That said, here in the real world, I have to pick which windmills to tilt at. In god we trust is on the currency. It has always been there, it isn't worth worrying about.
"under god," was added to the pledge of allegiance by an act of congress, that is pretty clearly a violation of the 1st amendment.
See the difference?
Of course, even there, getting the standing to challenge something like that in court is almost impossible. Easier to just teach your kids to say "One nation, under Satan," sufficiently loudly that the teacher hears, and then tell the school that you told the kid to, and ask the school what they think they can do about it?
In the long run, one of two things happens. Either the religious population continues to decline in both power and numbers, or they resort to violence to achieve their goals...

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 3:01:22 PM   
angelikaJ


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I went to a church service with a friend whose pastor was trying to suggest that In God We Trust meant that we aren't supposed to have a separation.
He said he wouldn't tell anyone how to vote but later brought up issues such as glbt rights and the right for women to choose.
He said he wouldn't tell anyone how to vote but later essentially said we could vote for Obama (by name) or we could vote for someone righteous.

For me separation between church and State is an absolute.

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 3:48:30 PM   
DarkSteven


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I'd love it if there WAS a firewall between them. But it ain't gonna happen.

Several hundred people already preselected for similar moral/political tendencies, with an authority figure available to guide them - it's just too damn attractive to turn down. And the people who would need to put a stop to it are the same ones who tap into it.

The sad thing is IMO if Jesus was walking the world today, I would expect him to oppose the agendas now being pushed in his name.

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 3:57:21 PM   
erieangel


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Not only would Jesus oppose the agenda being pushed in his name, but Jesus would be seen as a nut case by the religious right. I once told my mother that if Jesus were walking around today, the religious right would have him in a straight jacket and a mental hospital in short order.

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 4:00:26 PM   
SoftBonds


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DarkSteven

I'd love it if there WAS a firewall between them. But it ain't gonna happen.

Several hundred people already preselected for similar moral/political tendencies, with an authority figure available to guide them - it's just too damn attractive to turn down. And the people who would need to put a stop to it are the same ones who tap into it.

The sad thing is IMO if Jesus was walking the world today, I would expect him to oppose the agendas now being pushed in his name.


What, Jesus wouldn't agree with the republican right? Listen, just cause the guy didn't like blood sucking businesses (the money changers), didn't believe in man judging man (he who is without sin throw the first stone), and had his followers pool their money for their common welfare (no, that's not communism at all)... You think he would be some sort of long haired hippy?
OK, granted, he didn't seem to fond of war or soldiers... Plus he was absolutely whiny about the poor (blessed are the poor, yada yada yada)... but still...
I'm sure he would be all for stoning gays and starting wars with Muslims...
It isn't like he was a guy who hung out with 12 other guys and only one woman...

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 4:07:13 PM   
Thaelog


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The thing about the separation of church and state as the founder's envisioned it was not to keep church out of government. It was to keep the government out of church. This fear had its roots in the Anglican schism with Rome and later with governments trying to quash the Protestant reformation in defense of the Catholic church 200 years before.

As with many things the founding fathers wrote into the constitution, there was wisdom relevant beyond what even they were able to envision for the future. Protection from religious persecution has to be a two way door. A lot of folks want protection of their particular beliefs at the price of the beliefs of other.

If you want the freedom to practice your religion or whatever other way you pursue life, liberty, and happiness you have to recognize that this is a pluralistic society we live in. The second you try to pick and choose only specific groups that certain rights apply to then you open up a precedent for someone of a different belief system to attack your own. It's an all or nothing deal because the meta mind that is our society is only able to see in black and white.

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 4:19:04 PM   
Thaelog


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SoftBonds

That said, here in the real world, I have to pick which windmills to tilt at.


I think you just summed up my general feeling towards political activism in general. I'm totally stealing your line next time someone asks me why I am not actively protesting something.

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 6:32:32 PM   
DesideriScuri


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Thaelog
The thing about the separation of church and state as the founder's envisioned it was not to keep church out of government. It was to keep the government out of church. This fear had its roots in the Anglican schism with Rome and later with governments trying to quash the Protestant reformation in defense of the Catholic church 200 years before.
As with many things the founding fathers wrote into the constitution, there was wisdom relevant beyond what even they were able to envision for the future. Protection from religious persecution has to be a two way door. A lot of folks want protection of their particular beliefs at the price of the beliefs of other.
If you want the freedom to practice your religion or whatever other way you pursue life, liberty, and happiness you have to recognize that this is a pluralistic society we live in. The second you try to pick and choose only specific groups that certain rights apply to then you open up a precedent for someone of a different belief system to attack your own. It's an all or nothing deal because the meta mind that is our society is only able to see in black and white.


Ding! Ding! Ding! Ding! Ding! #1 Answer!!

On the money, Thaelog!

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 6:48:12 PM   
Winterapple


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FR
The founders wanted there to be no state
religion. No Church of America. They wanted
this so American citizens would have freedom
to worship as they chose and could not be
persecuted for their religious beliefs.
There would also be no pope or archbishop
across the way putting his two cents in.
JFK as the first Catholic president had to reiterate
before and after he was elected that the Pope
wasn't running things or offering undue influence
because JFK was Catholic.
The doctrines of no sect can decide or make
the laws in a democracy. That's one of the things
that distinguishes a democracy from a theocracy.

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 6:55:19 PM   
Winterapple


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But separation of church and state doesn't mean a
president can't talk about God or pray or put
his hand on the bible when he takes the oath of
office. These are all things a president does by
choice. The words so help me God at the end of
the swearing in service like the bible itself are
voluntary.
And though non Christian has be elected president
yet there's no law forbiding it.
To declare a president could never say God
in public or pray in public would in itself be
a violation of separation of church and state.

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 6:56:40 PM   
Winterapple


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And though no non Christian has been elected yet.
Is what I meant to say.

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 7:01:29 PM   
Real0ne


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quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

John F. Kennedy said in Houston TX that he believed in an America where the separation of church and state was absolute.

Rick Santorum said he does not believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute.


Considering that the founding fathers made it clear that there was to be a separation of church and state, where do you fall in the two statements? When you figure in that all nine Supreme Court Justices have stated there is a wall of separation between church and state in the US, how can Santorum make such a statement that is clearly defying the Constitution of the United States?



there is nothing to agree or disagree with since your premise is completely fucked.

The purpose of the establishment clause was to prevent the establishment of a state religion as it was in england.

That means the state making laws such that everyone has to be muslim etc.

Beyond that the idea that law is somehow detached from religion is completely absurd and you do not need to go beyond wiki to find that out.



English jurisprudence
Heinrich A. Rommen has observed "the tenacity with which the spirit of the English common law retained the conceptions of natural law and equity which it had assimilated during the Catholic Middle Ages, thanks especially to the influence of Henry de Bracton (d. 1268) and Sir John Fortescue (d. cir. 1476).[44] Bracton's translator notes that Bracton "was a trained jurist with the principles and distinctions of Roman jurisprudence firmly in mind"; but Bracton adapted such principles to English purposes rather than copying slavishly.[45] In particular, Bracton turned the imperial Roman maxim that "the will of the prince is law" on its head, insisting that the king is under the law.[46] The legal historian Charles F. Mullett has noted Bracton's "ethical definition of law, his recognition of justice, and finally his devotion to natural rights."[47] Bracton considered justice to be the "fountain-head" from which "all rights arise."[48] For his definition of justice, Bracton quoted the twelfth-century Italian jurist Azo: "'Justice is the constant and unfailing will to give to each his right.'"[49] Bracton's work was the second legal treatise studied by the young apprentice lawyer Thomas Jefferson.[50]

Sir John Fortescue stressed "the supreme importance of the law of God and of nature" in works that "profoundly influenced the course of legal development in the following centuries."[51] The legal scholar Ellis Sandoz has noted that "the historically ancient and the ontologically higher law--eternal, divine, natural--are woven together to compose a single harmonious texture in Fortescue's account of English law."[52] As the legal historian Norman Doe explains: "Fortescue follows the general pattern set by Aquinas. The objective of every legislator is to dispose people to virtue. It is by means of law that this is accomplished. Fortescue's definition of law (also found in Accursius and Bracton), after all, was 'a sacred sanction commanding what is virtuous [honesta] and forbidding the contrary.'"[53] Fortescue cited Leonardo Bruni for his statement that "virtue alone produces happiness."[54]

Christopher St. Germain's Doctor and Student was a classic of English jurisprudence,[55] and it was thoroughly annotated by Thomas Jefferson.[56] St. Germain informs his readers that English lawyers generally don't use the phrase "law of nature," but rather use "reason" as the preferred synonym.[57][58] Norman Doe notes that St. Germain's view "is essentially Thomist," quoting Thomas Aquinas's definition of law as "an ordinance of reason made for the common good by him who has charge of the community, and promulgated."[59]

Sir Edward Coke was the preeminent jurist of his time.[60] Coke's preeminence extended across the ocean: "For the American revolutionary leaders, 'law' meant Sir Edward Coke's custom and right reason."[61] [62] Coke defined law as "perfect reason, which commands those things that are proper and necessary and which prohibits contrary things."[63] For Coke, human nature determined the purpose of law; and law was superior to any one man's reason or will.[64] Coke's discussion of natural law appears in his report of Calvin's Case (1608): "The law of nature is that which God at the time of creation of the nature of man infused into his heart, for his preservation and direction." In this case the judges found that "the ligeance or faith of the subject is due unto the King by the law of nature: secondly, that the law of nature is part of the law of England: thirdly, that the law of nature was before any judicial or municipal law: fourthly, that the law of nature is immutable." To support these findings, the assembled judges (as reported by Coke, who was one of them) cited as authorities Aristotle, Cicero, and the Apostle Paul; as well as Bracton, Fortescue, and St. Germain.[65]

As early as the thirteenth century, it was held that "the law of nature...is the ground of all laws"[66] and by the Chancellor and Judges that "it is required by the law of nature that every person, before he can be punish’d, ought to be present; and if absent by contumacy, he ought to be summoned and make default.".[67][68] Further, in 1824, we find it held that "proceedings in our Courts are founded upon the law of England, and that law is again founded upon the law of nature and the revealed law of God. If the right sought to be enforced is inconsistent with either of these, the English municipal courts cannot recognize it."[69]

American jurisprudence
The U.S. Declaration of Independence states that it has become necessary for the United States to assume "the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them". Some early American lawyers and judges perceived natural law as too tenuous, amorphous and evanescent a legal basis for grounding concrete rights and governmental limitations.[3] Natural law did, however, serve as authority for legal claims and rights in some judicial decisions, legislative acts, and legal pronouncements.[70] Robert Lowry Clinton argues that the U.S. Constitution rests on a common law foundation and the common law, in turn, rests on a classical natural law foundation.[71]

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 7:08:20 PM   
MrRodgers


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quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

John F. Kennedy said in Houston TX that he believed in an America where the separation of church and state was absolute.

Rick Santorum said he does not believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute.


Considering that the founding fathers made it clear that there was to be a separation of church and state, where do you fall in the two statements? When you figure in that all nine Supreme Court Justices have stated there is a wall of separation between church and state in the US, how can Santorum make such a statement that is clearly defying the Constitution of the United States?

As far as I am concerned with politicians in general and the right in particular for the last 30-40 years...pander for votes at election time.

Santorum is trying to appeal to the religious right. Two compelling reasons for this, he has little else and the republican party has little else.



< Message edited by MrRodgers -- 2/26/2012 7:30:40 PM >

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 7:11:32 PM   
Lucylastic


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FR
So is he going to try and change the amendment? LOL good luck with that.
This does not mean that one religion has the right to suddenly change the rules over any other religion or non religious persons personal rights.
My interpretation is that the religious right are scrabbling for a way to gain more control, thru "smaller government" and overwhelming religious moral governing. They are shitting themselves, and it shows in Santorums stance, and Newts too
Fuck that for a game of soldiers

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 7:20:12 PM   
SoftBonds


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri

quote:

ORIGINAL: Thaelog
The thing about the separation of church and state as the founder's envisioned it was not to keep church out of government. It was to keep the government out of church. This fear had its roots in the Anglican schism with Rome and later with governments trying to quash the Protestant reformation in defense of the Catholic church 200 years before.
As with many things the founding fathers wrote into the constitution, there was wisdom relevant beyond what even they were able to envision for the future. Protection from religious persecution has to be a two way door. A lot of folks want protection of their particular beliefs at the price of the beliefs of other.
If you want the freedom to practice your religion or whatever other way you pursue life, liberty, and happiness you have to recognize that this is a pluralistic society we live in. The second you try to pick and choose only specific groups that certain rights apply to then you open up a precedent for someone of a different belief system to attack your own. It's an all or nothing deal because the meta mind that is our society is only able to see in black and white.


Ding! Ding! Ding! Ding! Ding! #1 Answer!!

On the money, Thaelog!


So Mormons have the right to Polygamy!
As do Muslims!
What level of animal sacrifice is acceptable in someone is Satanist? I think Human wouldn't be acceptable, rats would be fine. Maybe if they do it humanely they can get strays from the SPCA???
BTW, if my religion requires nudity while shopping, does that trump the "no shirt, no shoes," thing in stores? Or should I just wear shoes and a tiny shirt, and no pants?
Or the Xtians could drop this whole "our religion should determine what is moral in the US," silliness and work on things like expanding human liberty...

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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 8:12:52 PM   
Real0ne


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politicians

_____________________________

"We the Borg" of the us imperialists....resistance is futile

Democracy; The 'People' voted on 'which' amendment?

Yesterdays tinfoil is today's reality!

"No man's life, liberty, or property is safe while the legislature is in session

(in reply to SoftBonds)
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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 8:33:42 PM   
Thaelog


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SoftBonds



So Mormons have the right to Polygamy!



That is the constant point of contention. At which point do your practices begin to infringe on another person's practices and beliefs? Honestly, I am amazed at the level of coexistence we have managed in this country. When it comes down to it the conflict is necessary and somewhat Darwinian.

I think consciously and subconsciously there are certain behaviors we agree on as beneficial and we reach an equilibrium. Those we do not agree on, might tends to make right. Its the whole of human history in a nutshell.

Personally, I am not concerned about who marries 5 goats so long as they aren't my goats.


< Message edited by Thaelog -- 2/26/2012 8:35:08 PM >


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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 8:37:10 PM   
Aynne88


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quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

John F. Kennedy said in Houston TX that he believed in an America where the separation of church and state was absolute.

Rick Santorum said he does not believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute.


Considering that the founding fathers made it clear that there was to be a separation of church and state, where do you fall in the two statements? When you figure in that all nine Supreme Court Justices have stated there is a wall of separation between church and state in the US, how can Santorum make such a statement that is clearly defying the Constitution of the United States?



Santorum is a fucking fool. I'm a Kennedy liberal.

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As long as people will shed the blood of innocent creatures there can be no peace, no liberty, no harmony between people. Slaughter and justice cannot dwell together.
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RE: Do you agree or disagree with the statement - 2/26/2012 8:43:43 PM   
Winterapple


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Lucylastic

FR
So is he going to try and change the amendment? LOL good luck with that.
This does not mean that one religion has the right to suddenly change the rules over any other religion or non religious persons personal rights.
My interpretation is that the religious right are scrabbling for a way to gain more control, thru "smaller government" and overwhelming religious moral governing. They are shitting themselves, and it shows in Santorums stance, and Newts too
Fuck that for a game of soldiers

He's just doing his usual asshole pandering.
Rick's to stupid to grasp the ways it could
blow up in his face.
And Newtie? Even the pope has to be rolling
his eyes at Newtie.
The Christian Conservative right breaks
down in three rather distinct segments.
When you really look closely at them they
aren't as united as they seem on the face
of it.

_____________________________

A thousand dreams within me softly burn.
Rimbaud




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