Quote:
Originally Posted by
jon1jt
And this is all you could come up with in light of what I just posted??...that if a religious fanatic goes on a mass shooting spree they should be punished accordingly? Wow. :lol:
Yes, if you were making better points I would respond to what you said. However, your throw-away Kurds comment is a great example of why I didn't bother. Yes, because the Kurds only have one religion among them . . . :lol:
They're an ethnic group by any definition of the term.
What I choose to do was instead identify what was worth responding to, the meat-and-potatoes of your post, so to speak. I have a life, you know.
Quote:
Our biggest difference is that you think bible banning should not be permitted even though it inspires some to kill and I believe the bible is inextricably connected to the violence.
No, actually I don't think any book should be banned. That just happens to include the Bible.
Quote:
You're a logical man, right, Mr darkshadow man? Well, if the bible has the capacity to inspire one follower to kill, then logically it follows it has the capacity to inspire all followers to kill. And what we know is that biblical interpretation has led to terror and violence against innocents by religious people, and yet you argue that we must provide some sort of full immunity to the text that inspires the violence because the follower and not The Book is murderous.
You're playing cheap rhetorical tricks here. If we are being historically accurate: "what we know is that biblical interpretation has led to terror and violence against innocent [religious people] by religious people" in most cases throughout history (insertion mine). I don't see that the primary victims should be further victimized by slow-witted atheists who want to take their religion away from them.
If you wish to criticize the text go right ahead, but don't be surprised when someone criticizes your criticisms and schools you intellectually because of the thousand and one fallacious arguments you'll undoubtably make.
Quote:
You try to separate fanaticism from religion but religion cannot be without fanaticism.
Yes, yes. All ideas have their fanatics: Feminism, Platonism, Rationalism, Trekkies, you name it. It doesn't change the fact that most of these ideologies want to accomplish good things and the vast majority of those who espouse those ideas commit no harm any one.
Quote:
In light of this definition, it isn't surprising that in the Old Testament blasphemy is a crime punishable by death.
In America, no constitutional right is above government regulation---not free speech, not religion, not gun ownership. The reason for this is the 14th Amendment that permits the state to regulate certain constitutionally-protected behaviors that pose a public harm.
There are very strict standards American courts must follow to determine whether a law denying such freedom is justifiable. The US has outlawed many civil liberties, from yelling "fire!" in a crowded theater to the performing of certain...ahem...acts between consenting gay couples in the privacy of their own homes (did you know such laws are still on the books in many states?) And as you know there are rules for seditious libel and in America a journalist can sometimes be imprisoned for failing to disclose information of private conversations.
You're again being intellectually disingenuous. When decisions have been made of this sort regarding religion, it has been to rule polygamy illegal or the right to smoke marijuana as part of a religious custom. There is a huge difference between modifying particular Civil Liberties covered under the Bill of Rights and the outright ignoring of the Bill of Rights altogether, which clearly protects freedom of religion. Regulation does not = complete restriction.
Quote:
Public libraries actively keep books like the Satanic Verses off its shelves for the reason that they inspire violence and hate. This is a form of censorship. Yet bibles, which are written by people and not gods, which have caused hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of violent deaths against each other and innocents, is interpreted into every language and has religious leaders passing on the word on cable television.
Do you have any evidence of your claim?
I highly doubt most librarians keep the Satanic Verses off their shelves for the reasons you state; most of the librarians I know are too brain-washed by the ALA in their never-ending quest to allow censorship, real or fake, to dictate their library collections.
I just checked the Rhode Island Public libraries through CLAAN: at least 10 public libraries in Rhode Island own Satanic Verses. Burden of proof is on you.
Quote:
I'm not surprised that you remained silent on the point that religion is a cult. Cults take on a life of their own and have the capacity to do horrible things. To separate individual behavior from cult life is like separating a fetus from its womb.
Because it was a complete non-point. Simply calling a religion a cult doesn't make it so. Likewise, it presumes that cults are automatically bad. What you're really doing is attempting to connect the emotional resonance of one word to the other. There is nothing really to respond to.
Even your loaded metaphor at the end here is rather silly. Fetuses eventually are separated from the womb; they become babies who eventually grow into adults. There are plenty of individuals to be found in religious groups; the fact that you seem to imply otherwise suggests to me that you haven't talked to too many religious folks, most of whom aren't very different from you, other than they believe in G-d, and if our conversation thus far is any indication, are probably a lot smarter as well.
Quote:
Religion, like a drug dealer, tells its followers to try some of this and some of that and they'll feel a whole lot better. Last I checked drugs were outlawed and the dealer goes to jail.
This is yet another fallacious argument: Guilt by association.
You turned to irrelevant qualities that both things supposedly share, and hint that since drugs are outlawed, we should outlaw religion. Of course, my parents tell me I should try some of this and some of that and I'll feel a whole lot better; they're usually talking about broccolli when that happens. I don't see you demanding the outlaw of vegetables. These are basically superficial qualities that you're comparing to make a manipulative emotional point. I could use those irrelevant qualities for a thousand other things, which you'd never think to outlaw. This shows exactly why your argument is fallacious. Try again!
Quote:
Posterity will one day look back on our civilization and wonder what was going on in our heads, how could we have been so ignorant. it was all so obvious. They'll also acknowledge that not everybody was so ignorant, at least I hope so.
Yes, but I doubt you'll be one of those they acknowledge as intelligent. Otherwise, the future is really screwed.