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Reason prevails in Alabama. So there's at least some who realize that non-christians have rights.
From: [identity profile] canadianpuzzler.livejournal.com
Quoting cnoocy (mostly because I like to have the material I'm referring to right in front of me):

It's not that the 10 commandments are being presented as a piece of the history of law, it's that they are being used to represent the idea that God, specifically the one who dictated the commandments to Moses, is "the very source of our rights and liberties and the very source of our law" ... 


I would say that this was underreported where I am in Canada, but in all honsety, I might have been underattentive due to my impending relocation two provinces away.

... which is certainly a valid opinion for an individual to hold, but a disastrous one for the state as an entity to hold, in that it implies that those who do not share faith in that source of rights and liberties may not be entitled to them. 


I concede the point on a matter of practice rather than theory. I think you would find that Baha'i practiced as prescribed would not have this problem (but Baha'i is not at isue here); I think you would also find that Christianity practiced as prescribed would for the most part be likewise, but many, many people practice Christianity nominally or selectively. Unless my understanding of American history is incomplete or erroneous, there was a significant amount of Christian influence in how the constitution and bill of rights were framed, including not only the clause about freedom of religion (and IIRC, also the clause about freedom of association, which is pivotal to true democracy), but also the clause about separation of church and state.

Let me make it perfectly clear that I am not suggesting a thearchy of any sort for any western nation; I'm not sure it is even appropriate for modern-day Israel (which isn't one) or modern-day muslim nations (which tend to lean in that direction). I believe that one of the Gospels mentions rendering to God what is God's and rendering to Caesar what is Caesar's, does it not?

At any rate, if Christianity was being practiced as prescribed in this instance, I don't see the justice in question relying on the defence he is relying on. (Or to beat around the bush a little less, I think he is out to breakfast, lunch, and dinner in this instance.) The "Christian" thing to do here would have been to arrange for the monument to be moved elsewhere, and it would probably be most appropriate to do it at personal expense.

I'm not sure yet whether I believe this particular justice is being wignorant or "incompetent" here however. Your Alabaman friends may not be comfortable with this (heck, I don't think *I* am), but I'm starting to wonder whether this isn't all a ploy to gain grassroots support for a run for governor.

From: [identity profile] canadianpuzzler.livejournal.com

As a non-Christian, this is terrifying to me. Hence my remark about rule of the majority.
I've known plenty of non-Christians living in Alabama, and the last thing the Supreme Justice of the state
should be saying is "this nation was founded upon the laws of God."
They have enough to worry about without having their recourse to the law threatened.


Money, sex, and power attract the unscrupulous (well, they attract the scrupulous, too, but that's not the category where the most dangerous individuals fall); they always have, and they always will, and religion in the modern era has two of the three. The fact of human nature that attracts some pedophiles to the priesthood is also the fact of human nature which attracts some politicians to go centrist against their own principles (Rob Lowe, anyone? ;-), and which prompts others to torture and intimidate their own people under the banner of Islam. One needs to watch out for these types everywhere, and not just in the easily identifiable groups of people who are different from us.

Along these lines, if you'd have said that the suspension of this particular justice as a "victory for the US constitution" (which it was), I'd have probably not said anything contrarian. I honestly think we as a society are better at picking off the problematic outliers of our society if we handle them on a case by case basis instead of making generalizations and falling into an "us vs. them" mentality. At the very least, we are not giving their committed but unthinking minions ammunition for their own "us vs. them" hobbyhorses. Rest assured, there will be more, and they will be Democrats, Republicans, Unitarians, Vegetarians, Rastifarians, and any number of other visible or invisible minorities.

Anyway, disagree with any of the above at your leisure.


PS: Sorry about the formatting on the previous post

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