T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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560.1 | are they that different from us? | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Mon Nov 30 1992 17:23 | 24 |
| re Note 560.0 by CSC32::J_CHRISTIE:
> Warnings about attacks on the handicapped, who in the master race
> ideologues are weaklings with no right to live, have gradually crept into
> politicians' speeches and concerned editorials for weeks.
I wonder if there are similar undertones in some political
rhetoric in the US, especially from the far right.
During the past political season, especially when "welfare"
issues such as medical care, special education, "headstart"
programs for "disadvantaged" preschoolers, and even family
leave were discussed, one got the impression from
conservative speakers that it was wrong for the US government
to cater to these special needs even though most other
industrialized nations provided far more in these areas. The
rhetoric seemed to imply that it wasn't right to tax "normal"
persons to support such programs and that such social
programs led to a general increase in laziness and
discouraged hard work.
No, it couldn't happen here.
Bob
|
560.2 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Dec 01 1992 08:18 | 8 |
| RE: .1
Wrong Bob. Just because a person is a conservative doesn't mean that
they don't have compassion and feelings for handicapped people or
others. The *DIFFERENCE* is in the way the two groups,liberal and
conservative want to solve the problem.
Marc H.
|
560.3 | "I was hungry and you felt sorry for me." | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:35 | 23 |
| re Note 560.2 by JUPITR::HILDEBRANT:
> Wrong Bob. Just because a person is a conservative doesn't mean that
> they don't have compassion and feelings for handicapped people or
> others. The *DIFFERENCE* is in the way the two groups,liberal and
> conservative want to solve the problem.
Compassion or feelings don't clothe or feed or educate or
medicate anyone.
The conservative rhetoric I refer to implies that it is not
society's collective responsibility to prop up the less
capable or disadvantaged, but merely the option of nameless
private parties, and ultimately it is the less capable or
disadvantaged who must raise up themselves.
I don't find the practical result to be that different from
that of the neo-Nazis who would probably be quite willing to
let the less capable live as long as they put no added demand
on society as a whole and were as productive as people of
normal abilities. (Of course, often this is impossible.)
Bob
|
560.4 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Dec 01 1992 11:52 | 18 |
| RE: .3
Well Bob, my view of conservative approach doesn't talk at all about
"felt sorry for you". I think that you are making a wrong assumption
that a conservative just "feels sorry" for the person and lacks the
desire to help.
I fall under the general heading of "conservative". Although I
can't give you a lengthly answer, the "short version" is that the
conservative views the answers to help the person out, to be
, in general, less government, and more free enterprize.
I really think that the conservative wants and will help,
the means are just different.
You don't have to be a liberal to want to solve problems( and
have your solutions).
Marc H.
|
560.5 | is this is a rat-hole in this topic? | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Tue Dec 01 1992 12:04 | 23 |
| re Note 560.4 by JUPITR::HILDEBRANT:
> conservative views the answers to help the person out, to be
> , in general, less government, and more free enterprize.
Well, then how does it happen in practice? What's the
mechanism? An appeal to "free enterprise" seems to me to be
merely saying "I don't know who will help, but it shouldn't
be government. Surely somebody will help."
I don't believe that free enterprise always works to solve
all the problems that need to be solved in an appropriate
way, any more than I believe that government always can solve
all the problems that need to be solved in an appropriate
way.
When I hear people saying flatly that "government shouldn't
help" this or that truly needful person, when it is obvious
that private enterprise ISN'T helping them, then the end
result isn't that far from what those neo-Nazis are
advocating.
Bob
|
560.6 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Dec 01 1992 13:36 | 5 |
| RE:.5
You are correct. It is a rat hole. Bye.
Marc H.
|
560.7 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Tue Dec 08 1992 10:22 | 5 |
| Just for your information, the founder of Planned Parenthood believed
the poor were a blotch on society. There is alot that the liberal left
isn't telling you!
Jack
|
560.8 | | FATBOY::BENSON | | Tue Dec 08 1992 11:21 | 10 |
|
You're right Jack. Margaret Sanger who founded Planned Parenthood was
a major proponent of eugenics. But PP's public relations department is
so good that they can make people thing PP is working the public's
good. Specifically black people were targeted early in PP's lifetime
as undesireable stock that should be destroyed if possible. PP clinics
first sprang up in black neighborhoods to promote abortion of black
children. PP's is an evil, sick and dark legacy.
jeff
|
560.9 | Writhing in Hypocrisy | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Tue Dec 08 1992 12:48 | 18 |
| Thanks Jeff for that very informative entry. When I hear how
uninformed people are and are coerced by the media to believing
something, I simply don't know whether to laugh or cry for them.
There are alot of things I've learned and much more to learn I'm sure.
I just get so annoyed when I hear what bad people Pat Robertson and Pat
Buchanan are. Like the left wing liberals have a corner market on
virtue and integrity.
Getting back to the original note, I think the best thing the German
government can do is simply brake one of each thugs legs, their choice.
Then award them a free wheelchair and ditch them in downtown Berlin.
If they survive, they will certainly change their attitude!!
Rgds.,
Jack
|
560.10 | Up with Planned Parenthood | MIMS::ARNETT_G | Creation<>Science:Creation=Hokum | Tue Dec 08 1992 13:39 | 18 |
| re: .7
Just for your information, I believe the poor are a blotch on
society, but a blotch that can be helped. I don't believe all the poor
can be raised to prosperity, but if some of the ignorance they hold (I
hate using "they") can be properly raised up, or if a means of birth
control can be made available to them that they wouldn't normally have,
then I am all for PP.
And no, I do not advocate abortion as a form of birth control, but
I do see it as a viable option for women, especially minority women,
who cannot reasonably expect to see their children adopted. It is a
sad fact that most US adoptions are of young, white children and very
few minority kids.
But then, if all "Christians" practiced what they preached, the
lines at adoption centers would stretch around the block.
George
|
560.11 | A Pity | USAT05::BENSON | | Tue Dec 08 1992 13:40 | 1 |
|
|
560.12 | | MIMS::ARNETT_G | Creation<>Science:Creation=Hokum | Tue Dec 08 1992 13:52 | 19 |
| re: .11
Please, with all the technology and knowledge available to us,
there is no good reason for such a large part of our population to be
poor. There is no real excuse for so many people to be on the public
dole, and continuing to have children they cannot afford in the first
place. This leads to a rather vicious circle in that more and more
poor are being born to take advantage of more and more limited public
assitance. Birth control is one way to try and stem the flood to
manageable levels, at least until more training can be given to those
on welfare.
I am all for people having children, but only if you can afford to
have them. If a person cannot bring up the child in some form of
comfort, then by all means use a condom or birth control pills.
Forcing people to bring up children in poverty and squalor is as
great an evil as many of the neo-Nazi activities.
George
|
560.13 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Tue Dec 08 1992 14:12 | 23 |
| Hi George:
I am an advocate of birth control as well. The point I am making is
that the founder of planned parenthood was propagating a hateful
attitude toward the poor. She didn't express the concern in the same
heartful manner you have. Point being that heartlessness is a fruit of
the sin nature of human kind and not just limited to the conservative
party.
I would also question what constitutes a general level of comfort to
bring up a child. If you are talking about a child being raised in a
dangerous environment, I am inclined to agree the parent(s) should
consider their options (before conception hopefully). Our level of
comfort however far exceeds that of our forefathers and I would simply
suggest that a child can have a childhood of hardship yet grow to be a
responsible, intelligent individual,
We play God at times when we should be letting God make those types of
decisions. In mankinds infinite wisdom, we've screwed up royally!
Best Rgds.,
Jack
|
560.14 | When? So? | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Tue Dec 08 1992 21:07 | 15 |
| re Note 560.7 by CSTEAM::MARTIN:
> Just for your information, the founder of Planned Parenthood believed
> the poor were a blotch on society.
When was Planned Parenthood founded?
> There is alot that the liberal left
> isn't telling you!
I'm sure that is true. I'm just as sure that there is a lot
that the conservative right isn't telling me, either. So
what?
Bob
|
560.15 | M. Sanger a devil | FATBOY::BENSON | | Wed Dec 09 1992 11:43 | 18 |
| Margaret Sanger started her eugenics program under the auspices of the
Birth Control League in 1920 or so. She began publishing a magazine ,
The Birth Control Review at the same time. One of her books, The Pivot
of Civilization became a bestseller in 1922. Throughout the book she
unashamedly called for the elimination of "human weeds", for the
cessation of charity, for the segregation of "morons, misfits, and the
maladjusted" and for the sterilization of "genetically inferior races".
In the late '30s and early 1940s she had become closely associated with
the scientists and theorists who put together Nazi Germany's "race
purification" program. She openly endorsed the euthanasia,
sterilization, abortion, and infanticide programs of the early Reich.
She published a number of articles in the Birth Control Review that
mirrored Hitler's Aryan-White Supremacist rhetoric. She even
commissioned Dr. Ernst Rudin, the director of the Nazi Medical
Experimentation program to write for The Review himself.
jeff
|
560.16 | And....? | MIMS::ARNETT_G | Creation<>Science:Creation=Hokum | Wed Dec 09 1992 13:46 | 10 |
| re: .15
So how did she get associated with Planned Parenthood? Also, did
your sources mention any recanting of her beliefs, or perhaps tempering
them after seeing them taken to the extreme by the Nazis? A lot of
people hold to ideals, but once those ideals are made concrete they
become insupportable.
George
|
560.17 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | and the living shall envy the dead... | Wed Dec 09 1992 16:37 | 12 |
| re: .13 (et al)
So, okay. By today's standards, Margaret Sanger was not a very nice
person. So what? Some mighty fine Christians used to use Christian
teachings to justify slavery, and thousands, maybe millions, of people
were put to death in the name of Christ over the years, too. Just as
Christians don't like to have the value of their organization judged by
what their churches did in centuries past, so to y'all shouldn't judge
Planned Parenthood by what some people did under its aegis in the past,
as well. To do otherwise is to be hypocritical in the extreme.
Mike
|
560.18 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Thu Dec 10 1992 09:35 | 7 |
| The only initial point I was trying to make is that the left paints the
right as an exclusionary group of people. When I hear of groups like
planned parenthood promoting this propaganda while they're sitting
there in their height of hypocrisy, I just laugh out of embarrassment
for them!!
Jack
|
560.19 | | FATBOY::BENSON | | Thu Dec 10 1992 09:53 | 4 |
|
The Birth Control League was renamed to Planned Parenthood in 1942.
jeff
|
560.20 | hope this clears a bit | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Thu Dec 10 1992 11:01 | 24 |
| The earlier noter infers that Margaret Sanger's prejudiced attitudes
influence today's Planned Parenthood. This is not so.
While there is much to criticize about Margaret Sanger, the
organization does not now reflect her attitudes, and has not reflected
them in my experiences with this organization, which go back 23 years.
*
Once again, I see some noters here resorting to a black-or-white, angel
or devil, saved or damned, saint or sinner dichotomy. And to
defensiveness.
It's easy to prove that the left has it's evil people and methods. I
mean, how many people today believe that Stalin was pure? You could
count them on one hand.
The presence of bigots, ego maniacs, liars, and extortionists on ALL
portions of the political spectrum does not prove or disprove anything
except some unsavory truths about human nature.
One must evaluate political and social positions on their own merits.
L
|
560.21 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | and the living shall envy the dead... | Thu Dec 10 1992 11:06 | 15 |
| RE:.18
While I agree that there are plenty of hypocritical people who
proselytize their points of view concerning human reproduction, I can
assure you that such people are found preaching from pulpits both in
and out of the Christian faith. In fact, some of the most hypocritical
people I know, preach the Christian doctrine on these matters. As in
say one thing and do another?
Incidentally, I have never quite understood why the Christian faith is
so overly concerned about human reproduction. I wonder if someone
could explain that.
Mike
|
560.22 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Thu Dec 10 1992 12:07 | 29 |
| I will try to answer that as concisely as possible and within the
context of this note.
We all have choices and privacy requires these choices Not to affect
anybody elses rights. Abortion for example, I believe Does in fact
infringe on the right to life of the child. One is playing God when
they use their human understanding to justify this type of action and
is what Hitler has proven to us.
Would you abort your child if:
1. Its a boy and you wanted a girl.
2. Its an inconvenience to you and you should've thought of this
before.
3. This baby is a minority and society KNOWS that minority children
don't get adopted as fast and wouldn't be happy or grow up properly
in a foster home? (What an epitomy of arrogance)
4. Your child has no more significance than cutting a fingernail.
Admiral Stockdale himself during the debates said that although he
abhored abortions, it is a private choice. Thats fine but something in
his conscience made him abhor the act...What exactly is it?!
Adolf committed acts of atrocity mainly because he didn't allow his
conscience to intervene with his free will. What does that say about
America?
Rgds.,
Jack
|
560.23 | | POBOX::DIERCKS | We will have Peace! We must!!!! | Thu Dec 10 1992 13:18 | 8 |
|
re: .21
It's so there will be more people to dump money in the offering place
every Sunday morning!!!!!! 8-)
GJD
|
560.24 | a lousy argument | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Thu Dec 10 1992 13:19 | 25 |
| RE: .22
>>One is playing God when
they use their human understanding to justify this type of action and
is what Hitler has proven to us.
>>Adolf committed acts of atrocity mainly because he didn't allow his
conscience to intervene with his free will. What does that say about
America?
I really must object to the rhetorical comparison of abortion to the
Nazi atrocities. I feel this somehow reduces the Nazi atrocities to a
sort of generic evil and shows a perhaps unintentional disrespect for
the victims of this regime.
As for the second paragraph, that is a very weird statement if you
don't mind me saying so. What leads you to believe that Adolf Hitler
had any pangs of conscience about his actions? This sounds like a
rather strange form of psychobiography.
It further proves that you are trying very hard to force the abortion=
Nazi atrocities comparison. It just doesn't work very well.
L
|
560.25 | | FATBOY::BENSON | | Thu Dec 10 1992 14:24 | 27 |
| .20
Laura,
There is nothing different about PP today than there was in its
inception. It still performs the same function, aborting children and
preventing their birth. It seems absurd to say that the organization
does not reflect Sanger's attitudes today. Except for the language,
what has changed? The methods are the same.
Margaret Sanger and Planned Parenthood are both instruments of evil
from their inception to this very moment. One need only look at the
30,000,000 children which have been killed by abortion, the hundreds of
thousands of teenagers whose lives have been altered due to pregnancy,
disease and dysfunction brought on by "sex eductation" and the
availability of birth control and condems in our public schools. By
all measures PP has failed miserably and has, in fact, created many
more problems than would exist without it or something like it.
What's it like to be associated so closely with death and destruction?
Can you see God patting you on the back for being related to so much
killing and misery? I can see it now, the babies bodies all piled up
with arms and legs placed just right, and God saying, "you did a great
job". The blood of the innocent cries out for God's judgement. We
are, will and shall receive that judgement.
jeff
|
560.26 | | FATBOY::BENSON | | Thu Dec 10 1992 14:28 | 8 |
| .24
Abortion, genocide and all the other forms of mass killing are related.
Abortions are strictly controlled in Germany today (if allowed at all).
This is a direct and proper response to the Nazi atrocities which
resulted, as you know, from the idea of Eugenics.
jeff
|
560.27 | Just listen to the news, we can all learn. | MIMS::ARNETT_G | Creation<>Science:Creation=Hokum | Thu Dec 10 1992 14:44 | 14 |
| re: .25
Yet another person blaming sex education for disease, etc. in
teens. In the recent news, say October or November, there was a report
by a group that had studied a group of adults who as teens had had sex
education. In this group, as compared to another group of adults who
had not had sex ed while attending the same high school, the folks on
average had waited a year later than their compatriots to have sex,
they used prophylactics in more instances, and there were less
pregnancies. With this as a basis, how can you place the blame for
those diseases, dysfunctions and everything else on sex ed?
George
|
560.28 | | CRONIC::SCHULER | Greg - Hudson, MA | Thu Dec 10 1992 15:13 | 29 |
| In fact, many conservative religious groups have finally begun
to realize that arguing against sex ed is counter-productive
due to mounting evidence of its effectiveness in preventing disease
and teen pregnancy (not to mention wide-spread support among parents).
So they have actually turned to trying to influence the content
of sex ed classes. This has been going on since the early-mid
1980s. Two widely used sources in public school sex ed classes
were developed during the Reagan Administration - funded by a
10 million dollar federal grant under the [I can't remember the
name] Act - something to do with children I think... Anyway,
it has been my understanding that these curricula were specifically
designed to promote the conservative, Christian point of view
(abstinence/chastity outside of marriage) that prevailed under
Reagan/Bush.
It is also my understanding (from a recent article on the subject)
that these curricula have been criticized for being "fear based"
rather than "knowledge based" (emphasizing the dangers of abortion,
pregnancy, etc.... sort of like "Don't Smoke!!!! It's bad for
you! Period!" - not the most effective way to convince young
people not to do something, if you ask me....)
Personally, I think schools should teach just the facts about
sexuality and leave the moral instruction to the parents/churches.
|
560.29 | | JURAN::SILVA | Nobody wants a Charlie in the Box! | Thu Dec 10 1992 15:39 | 10 |
|
Jeff, do you have any data that supports your writings that sex
education has caused more harm (diseases, pregnancy) than without it?
Glen
|
560.30 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Thu Dec 10 1992 15:42 | 47 |
| Re: POBOX::DIERCKS - God is the one that told us to bring the whole
tithe to the storehouse. If you have a problem with this, yell at God,
not at the local church. As far as the way the church handles their
finances, God will certainly handle this in His own usual way!
Re: .24 To Laura -
<<I really must object to the rhetorical comparison of abortion to the
<<Nazi atrocities. I feel this somehow reduces the Nazi atrocities to
<<a sort of generic evil and shows a perhaps unintentional disrespect
<<for the victims of this regime.
Upon reading this, at first it sounded like you were inferring that the
Nazi atrocities were atrocities and abortion is a generic evil. The
original question posed was why Christians are so concerned about
reproductive rights. I am not trying very hard to force the abortion -
Nazi atrocities comparison. I'm simply stating what I and millions of
Americans see as fact.
Evil is evil no matter what form it comes in. Hitler was a paranoid
Schyzophrenic and hence was an irrational individual. Because of this,
he totally lacked conscience in what he did and in fact desensitized a
nation into following him.
Without trying too hard, I can say there are organizations (such as
planned parenthood) that are attempting to do the exact same thing. I
don't have to force any comparisons, It is written very large on the
wall of common sense. The motives of this generations actions may
differ, however, the same deadly result has been inevitable!
To those victims of the Nazi regime, no offense intended. To live that
kind of hell certainly has stronger implications to the individuals in
that the memories are there. The unborn have no memory of this as they
didn't even have a chance.
Re:.27
George - I don't think sex education is to blame for disease, etc. I
believe irresponsible sex education is to blame in a large way, giving
our youth the message they shouldn't be hearing. I went to a sex ed
seminar at our church and found it to have alot of substance. quite
honestly, I feel the local church is part to blame as they do not take
part in this as much as they should.
Rgds.,
Jack
|
560.31 | | POWDML::THAMER | Daniel Katz MSO2-3/G1, 223-6121 | Thu Dec 10 1992 15:52 | 5 |
| I think it goes beyond stretching to compare *today's* organization
called Planned Parenthood to Nazi eugenics.
That's like saying Mercedes is still making trucks with inverted tail
pipes...
|
560.32 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Thu Dec 10 1992 16:07 | 10 |
| It would be a hasty generalization for me to say that all Planned
Parenthood members equate to some sort of class or ethnic cleansing
promotors. I would say that the organization is a catalyst itself for
promoting acts that people think are atrocious, regardless of how we
white wash them.
The fact still remains that many minorities utilize planned parenthood
services within the inner cities. Let me ask this, What element in
this makes it separate from genocide? Just trying to learn!
Jack
|
560.33 | perhaps all national leaders should be psych tested... | TFH::KIRK | a simple song | Thu Dec 10 1992 16:08 | 12 |
| re: Note 560.30 by Jack
> Hitler was a paranoid Schyzophrenic
Interesting. Can you tell me who performed the clinical diagnostic? where?
other test results?
Peace,
Jim
p.s. If this sounds like a challenge, it isn't; I'm seriously interested.
|
560.34 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | and the living shall envy the dead... | Thu Dec 10 1992 16:24 | 19 |
| RE: .25
Oh, good. I was hoping you would go on this sort of rampage. Shall we
now talk about the millions of people killed by, and at the behest of,
Christianity? Shall we now talk about the evils perpetrated by so many
leaders of the various Christian churches? Shall we also take judicial
notice of the fact that the worst murderers of the 20th century were
brought up in the grand Christian tradition, including Hitler and
Stalin? Shall we talk about the evils that Christianity has
perpetrated on children through sexual, physical, and emotional abuse?
Well, Benson, shall we? Or shall we each get off our high horse, calm
down, and recognize that neither one of us is without sin, and that
such false moral posturing will accomplish nothing good, and probably
lead people into occasions of sin, rather than an understanding of
good?
Shall we?
Mike
|
560.35 | the magic word is.... | POWDML::THAMER | Daniel Katz MSO2-3/G1, 223-6121 | Thu Dec 10 1992 16:34 | 5 |
| .32
The fact that nobody is holding a gun to their head and forcing them to
go. People in the inner city who go to Planned Parenthood clinics do
so of their own *choice*
|
560.36 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Thu Dec 10 1992 16:40 | 37 |
| Sure Mike...Be Glad To!
I am a member of a local Church...Adult Sunday School Teacher...Lay
Preacher when asked to...Compared to a dumb sheep in Isaiah...All my
works counted as filthy rags to God...Have the wisdom of man which
James says is of the devil...A heart desperately wicked as said by
Jeremiah...and the list goes on and on and on...ends with, deserves
eternal death!!!!
Now that I know my condition, lets talk about what is/was available to all
humankind...myself, Hitler, Stalin and the like. A personal
relationship with Jesus Christ.
The local Church is flawed because it is held in stewardship by sinful
humans such as myself. Remember Jesus said, "Thou art Peter and upon
this rock I will build my church." Not ten or so verses later He said
to Peter, "Get thee behind me Satan for thou art an offense to me."
This pretty much spells out the condition of the stewards of the local
church when they are not lead by the Holy Spirit. Members and curators
of the local church of history past and present will be judged by God,
some as wolves in sheeps clothing. I make no defense for the stupidity
of members of various local churches.
Remember, church members are members because they choose to be members.
To add a twist to this. When you fund clinics with MY money (thats
right...MY MONEY!!! LISTEN one more time...I can't stress it enough...MY
money and YOUR YOUR YOUR Money too), You are dragging me into your
personal choice...You are dragging me into your bedroom...You are
dragging me into your sex life...I DO NOT WANT TO BE THERE!!! As long
as clinics are being subsidized with MY money, I can and will pray that
the efforts of these places will be thwarted because sin brings no
peace but simple chaos!
On that note...Have a beautiful day!
Best Rgds.
|
560.37 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Thu Dec 10 1992 16:45 | 11 |
| Re: .35
Dan, you are absolutely correct. However, Does Planned Parenthood
receive Federal Funds? As I just indicated, I am being dragged into
this...Private Choice = Private Funds.
P.S. Do I see the military argument coming on the horizon
Best Rgds.,
Jack
|
560.38 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | and the living shall envy the dead... | Thu Dec 10 1992 17:28 | 8 |
| Well, then, fine. So you don't want to help young women in trouble
unless they join your church. That's jake with me.
However, you and young Benson would be very well advised to drop this
moral equivalent to Hitler and the Nazis schtick, if only because this
is bad evangelistic technique. You don't draw people to your cause by
calling them hateful names, ya know?
Mike
|
560.39 | but... | MIMS::ARNETT_G | Creation<>Science:Creation=Hokum | Fri Dec 11 1992 07:23 | 16 |
| re: .30
Jack,
Schools are limited (or should be limited) to teaching the facts
about sex, not whatever morality parents & various churches want to
impose on the teens. Morality & whatever other values you hold dear
are a matter of personal ethics and not something that the education
system should be responsible for. Oh, I'm not saying they shouldn't
instill some sort of respect for the authority of society and teach
adherence to the just laws of the land, but when it comes to sex ed,
they need to stick to the facts. The teens are ultimately going to
make up their own minds anyway, so schools should spend their time more
effectively.
George
|
560.40 | Choice | MIMS::ARNETT_G | Creation<>Science:Creation=Hokum | Fri Dec 11 1992 07:25 | 2 |
| re: .32
|
560.41 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Fri Dec 11 1992 13:25 | 35 |
| Mike:
I guess I don't understand what your getting at. The purpose of my
participation here is not to evangelize. I'm simply here to give my
point of view and quite honestly, I am sitting here very calmly telling
you that although I feel the way I feel, the laws of the land are the
way they are and I continue to pay my fair share like everybody else.
I'll sugar coat this as much as I can so nobody will get hot under the
caller.
As a U.S. citizen, I will graciously do everything within legal and
spiritual means to thwart the ongoing trend the United States is going
through. If it is convicting to others where they get all bent out of
shape, then they need to understand that we are a melting pot society
and come from all different backgrounds. Private Choice = Private
Funds!
Since we're on the theme of being two-faced. I thought it was
extremely suspicious that planned parenthood is filing a lawsuit
against family planning agencies sponsored by churches in California.
It seems these agencies are providing counciling, room and board for
pregnant teens, adoption alternatives, and many more services I am
fully supportive of. There is some church and state argument the PP is
using which to me, confirms they have an agenda.
Mike, I am glad to help anybody in trouble and have many times in the
past. As far as calling people hateful names, there is a broad line
between hateful name calling and exposing something for what it is.
If your asking whether I hate PP as an organization, then the answer is
obviously yes because I don't trust them. I'm not going to sit here
and lie to others and myself by being politically correct! If PP wants
to be looked upon favorably in the eyes of many, then the onus is on
them to change their facade and so far they have failed miserably!
-Jack
|
560.42 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Fri Dec 11 1992 13:29 | 6 |
| Re: .40
Whose choice George, the mothers or the "non-persons"! (Strange
Oxymoron)
-Jack
|
560.43 | Choice for People | MIMS::ARNETT_G | Creation<>Science:Creation=Hokum | Fri Dec 11 1992 14:31 | 21 |
| re: .42
re: .42
>Whose choice George, the mothers or the "non-persons"! (Strange
>Oxymoron)
Jack,
Well, you got it right. Fetusi up to a certain point are
non-persons and non-thinking beings. Forcing human beings to attribute
some rights to them that they do not deserve, especially when forcing
those so-called rights interferes with the rights of the mothers, is
absurd. Kind of like giving a virus the right to vote.
Until science can prove that early fetusi possess cognitive
processes above those of plants, then abortion will continue to be a
viable and sin-free alternative.
|
560.44 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Fri Dec 11 1992 14:46 | 19 |
| Sounds kind of like Ready...Fire...Aim! I equate this argument kind of
to the standard of the EPA. A drug is not supposed to be put on the
market until they have tested it. They are sure beyond the shadow of a
doubt that it is useable before it is sellable.
You say it is sin free because we live in a state of moral relativism.
It is sin free because we haven't proven it is not a human being. Tell
me, what if five years from now, we find proof beyond a shadow of a
doubt that a fetus is human? How should we feel about the last thirty
years we have committed this "sinless" act. Should we say, "Oh gee,
well we didn't know any better?" Kind of like the Germans at the post
WW2 era.
Other than, "Gee we didn't know any better". I'd be really curious to
hear some of the answers to this.
Rgds.,
Jack
|
560.45 | please | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Fri Dec 11 1992 15:50 | 42 |
| RE: .44
>>Should we say, "Oh gee, well we didn't know any better?" Kind of
like the Germans at the post WW2 era.
Dear Jack,
I have never heard of a German in the post WW2 era making this claim.
Some claim they never knew what was happening, some didn't care or were
glad to participate, and many are clearly remorseful. You need only
listen to the statements out of Germany today in response to the neo-
Nazis to hear these positions.
Your statement is both inaccurate and quite alienating.
Once again, I request that you stop comparing the current American
abortion legal status to Nazi Germany.
As I said before, this blurs the uniqueness of the Holocaust and is
profoundly disrespectful to the millions of victims of that era.
In fact, to take this discussion of the neo-Nazis and bend it to yet
another diatribe on the abortion topic, is disrespectful to both the
Holocaust victims and to those in Germany who are being persecuted
today by these thugs.
This is an important subject of great concern to Christians. It poses
profound moral questions to all thinking people.
If I thought that the abortion debate was the only thing American
Christians can think of when they consider the resurgence of Naziism,
I'd feel ashamed of these fellow Americans.
At the very least, you should respect the thousands of American
soldiers who gave their lives in fighting the Nazi regime. Some died
not on the battle field, but in concentration camps along with a
cross-section of all Europe.
Again, I ask readers of this conference to avoid this rhetorical
device. Surely you can make your point without it.
L
|
560.46 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Fri Dec 11 1992 16:13 | 14 |
|
And the phrase "I was just doing my job" arose repeatedly at Nuremburg.
Yes Laura and three of my uncles are now resting in Arlington.
I will stop the conversation from here on in. Just please, for the
love of God, remember that we who do not learn from history are
condemned to repeat it!
Respectfully Yours,
Jack (who is still paying for it!)
|
560.47 | No, you are putting words in my mouth. | MIMS::ARNETT_G | Creation<>Science:Creation=Hokum | Mon Dec 14 1992 07:13 | 14 |
| re: .44
No, I did not say it (I presume you mean abortion) is sin free
because "we live in a state of moral relativism." I said it is sin
free because we have no proof that a fetus has thinking, cognitive, or
awareness process going on (above that of plants reacting to
sunlight) until it reaches a certain age. Giving a fetus any rights
before the point of "cognition", especially any rights that supersede
those of the mother, is foolish and just trying to impose your choices
on someone else. As I said before, giving a fetus rights before this
point is like giving a virus the right to vote in our elections.
George
|
560.48 | | MIMS::ARNETT_G | Creation<>Science:Creation=Hokum | Mon Dec 14 1992 07:19 | 16 |
| re: .44
Jack,
Unless we come up with some new way to measure human intelligence
or some new way to detect cognitive processes, we aren't going to
suddenly find out that fetusi think from the moment of conception. And
if we do, we'll treat it like any other medical or conciousness
breakthrough - utilize it and move on from there.
Heck, it wasn't so long ago that mentally handicapped persons were
summarily sterilized or that deformed children were exposed at birth.
When we found out we were wrong, we improved our actions. If your
miracle "proof" comes through, I'm sure we will react in the same
manner.
George
|
560.49 | We _do_ know that the fetus feels pain during the abortion | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Dec 14 1992 08:23 | 7 |
| What does "thinking" have to do with it?
Destroying life is destroying life, whether it "thinks" or not.
Some would argue that newborn babies don't "think" yet.
/john
|
560.50 | silent on Bosnia and Croatia? | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Mon Dec 14 1992 09:27 | 17 |
| These notes have lingered in my mind the last few days. A question
came to me and would not depart. I share it here with you.
I cannot understand why Christians are not speaking out against the
slaughter in Bosnia and Croatia. Here are purportedly Christian Serbs
interning, starving, raping, and displacing Bosnian Moslems and
Croatian Christians who who are of a different church.
We are witnessing this dreadful "ethnic cleansing", a replay of the
genocide that occured under the Nazis 50 years ago, yet I do not hear a
word of protest from the Christian community in Europe or America.
Please tell me that I am wrong. Please show me the news releases and
give me news of the prayer vigils, sermons, and other actions against
this horror.
L
|
560.51 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Note with 18-inch camels. | Mon Dec 14 1992 09:35 | 8 |
| Laura, there has been considerable discussion in the Quaker mailing
list about the situation in former Yugoslavia. Joel Sax, a Friend,
traveled to that region recently and sent back many moving dispatches
about his experiences there. Unfortunately, the volume of mail I
receive from QUAKER-L is quite high, and I don't keep much of it
around, so I don't have anything at my fingertips that I can post here.
-- Mike
|
560.53 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Mon Dec 14 1992 09:44 | 8 |
| > I cannot understand why Christians are not speaking out against the
> slaughter in Bosnia and Croatia.
They are. I haven't a clue as to why you are not hearing about it.
Alfred
|
560.54 | Just found an example. | DEMING::VALENZA | Note with 18-inch camels. | Mon Dec 14 1992 09:48 | 6 |
| I have a copy of a message just recently posted on the Quaker mailing
list that discusses the victimization of women and children in the
Bosnian concentration camps. It is over 200 lines, so I am afraid that
I cannot post it here in its entirety.
-- Mike
|
560.55 | See also numerous notes in the Catholic-Theology conference | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Dec 14 1992 10:48 | 12 |
| > I cannot understand why Christians are not speaking out against the
> slaughter in Bosnia and Croatia.
We are. I haven't a clue as to why you are not hearing about it.
We're also speaking out against the slaughter in Palestine;
Every morning at Mass at St. George's Cathedral in Jerusalem a
prayer is said for the emerging nation of Palestine and its leaders,
and regularly Bishop Samir Kafity also prays for peace in the region
and the world, and also specifically in Bosnia and Croatia.
John
|
560.56 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Mon Dec 14 1992 11:36 | 10 |
| Laura:
We need to also realize that Jesus said to be careful of wolves in the
fold. There are many nations that use the word "Christian" quite
loosely. We need to understand there is a vast difference between
professing Christ and Possessing Christ.
Warmly,
Jack
|
560.57 | | CSCOA2::ARNETT_G | Creation<>Science:Creation=Hokum | Tue Dec 15 1992 09:07 | 16 |
| re: .49
>Destroying life is destroying life, whether it "thinks" or not.
So picking a tomato and eating it is another means of destroying
life and is thus a sin? You cannot argue that a tomato is not alive in
some fashion. Is it because you can separate the tomato fruit from the
tomato plant without killing the plant that causes eating a tomato not
to be a sin? By this statement, the only thing you could truly eat
safely would be some sort of symbiont or parasite.
In my view, eating a tomato is fine and sin-free. While it may
have "life", it is not "alive". Up to a certain point, a fetus is not
"alive" either.
George
|
560.58 | Go look at an exhibit of fetal development in a science museum | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Dec 15 1992 09:11 | 1 |
| Destroying human life is destroying human life, thinking or not.
|
560.59 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Tue Dec 15 1992 10:37 | 12 |
| Yes George, your arguments don't really stand because you are comparing
someone made in the image of God to something that is not an inadimate
(spelling) object. God made vegetables and fruit for consumption
amongst other reasons. God made bacteria for scientific reasons such
as helping us survive in this environment.
As humans, we are stewards of what God has given us. We are violating
this trust by our actions and IMHO, we had better repent of it!!
Rgds.,
Jack
|
560.60 | begging the question | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Tue Dec 15 1992 12:15 | 14 |
| re Note 560.59 by CSTEAM::MARTIN:
> Yes George, your arguments don't really stand because you are comparing
> someone made in the image of God to something that is not an inadimate
> (spelling) object.
But that's just begging the question, isn't it: is a
fertilized egg (to take the most extreme example) already
"made in the image of God"? You would answer "yes" because
you believe it is human life (in some way that a human blood
cell is not human life). Another might answer "no" because
they have a different opinion whether it is human life.
Bob
|
560.61 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Dec 15 1992 15:06 | 8 |
| If abortionists only killed fertilized eggs and not several week old living and
feeling human fetuses there would be much less of an outcry.
Even though many of us believe that a life is a life from the moment it starts,
many of us are much more horrified by the incredibly painful end a young fetus
of several weeks faces in the abortion mills.
/john
|
560.62 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Strength through peace | Tue Dec 15 1992 18:43 | 8 |
| You all know, of course, that there exists an Abortion Debate note
(Topic 31).
Please address the abortion issue there.
Richard Jones-Christie
Co-Mod/Christian-Perspective
|
560.63 | What encourages Nazism? | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Strength through peace | Wed Dec 16 1992 12:01 | 13 |
| I believe certain conditions have to be right for Nazism to flourish.
Economic conditions must be poor. It must appear that a few are privileged
to the disadvantage of the many. The few must also be perceived as a drain
on society; a parasitic hindrance to the betterment of humanity.
Nationalism must be established as the highest and noblest good.
People must feel that conditions have gotten out of control and extreme
measures are required to bring about restoration or recovery.
Richard
|
560.64 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Wed Dec 16 1992 14:39 | 14 |
| I hate to say this Richard but it sounds an awful lot like you just
described Congress in bullet #1.
I believe Nationalism or the sovereignty of the U.S. is of the utmost
importance - actually third under God and family if one has a family.
Without God, the proper perspective can be wrong!
A country of course also needs somebody with enough charisma to incite
a mob if he/she wanted, and thats exactly what happened.
Rgds.,
Jack
|
560.65 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Wed Dec 16 1992 15:07 | 12 |
| Richard, I would agree with you on points 1 and 3. I'm afraid we
are close to that situation already. It is why I fear a tyranny
(most likely of the left) in my lifetime. The third think I think
that is needed is a leader. Someone to capture the imagination and
bring people together for their own purposes. That purpose or focus
need not be nationalism, though that is a possible one to use.
Nationalism does not always lead to bad things. And even when it does
it as likely, in the US anyway, to lead to intreversion as it is
expansionism.
Alfred
|
560.66 | on our behalf | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Wed Dec 16 1992 15:19 | 7 |
| re Note 560.64 by CSTEAM::MARTIN:
> I hate to say this Richard but it sounds an awful lot like you just
> described Congress in bullet #1.
The big difference being that the (voting) majority elected
them.
|
560.67 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Wed Dec 16 1992 15:53 | 5 |
| Re: 66
Yes, you are correct on that one. No one to blame but ourselves. I
mentioned congress with the thought of how they've excluded themselves
from the accountability their constituents have to adhere to!
|
560.68 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Strength through peace | Wed Dec 16 1992 17:04 | 13 |
| I agree that nationalism is not necessarily a bad thing. At the same time
I think there is a danger when one nation is considers itself superior to
all others and maintains its superiority at the expense of all others.
I don't believe the United States in God's chosen nation (though I concede
that the concept is integral to the American myth).
We're all inhabitants of the same planet. God isn't limited by national borders
any more than the air that we breathe. And it has become increasingly
apparent, at least to me, that we're all interdependent.
Peace,
Richard
|
560.69 | God is not partial | YERKLE::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Thu Dec 17 1992 06:20 | 31 |
| Richard,
The Scriptures do back up what you are saying in the following paragraph:
;We're all inhabitants of the same planet. God isn't limited by national
;borders any more than the air that we breathe. And it has become increasingly
;apparent, at least to me, that we're all interdependent.
Acts 17:26 NWT "He made out of one man every nation of men, to dwell upon
the entire surface of the earth." We should recognise the original family
tie.
Acts 10:34,35 NWT "Peter opened his mouth and said: 'For a certainty I
perceive that God is not partial, but in every nation the man that fears
him and works righteousness is acceptable to him.'" If God is not partial,
should one not try and cultivate impartiallity by trying to imitate him.
Also one would risk becoming any enemy of God, that is if one becomes an
enemy of a person that is acceptable to Jehovah. For he will protect his
loyal ones, for example Revelation 7:9,10 NWT shows peoples coming through
the great tribulation and it reads "I saw and look! a great crowd, which
no man was able to number, out of all the nations and tribes and peoples
and tongues, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, dressed in
white robes; and there were palm branches in their hands. And they keep
crying with a loud voice, saying :'Salvation we owe to our God, who is
seated on the throne, and to the Lamb.'" those not showing love to his
loyal ones will not fare so well (Compare Matt 25:31-46). Notice too
that this "great crowd" is made up of people from "all the nations",
that would include some Americans as well as some in Iraq.
Phil.
|
560.70 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Thu Dec 17 1992 09:26 | 7 |
| I agree as the Bible also states it would be better if a millstone were
tied around his neck and thrown into the depths of the sea then for
that same person to hurt one of my little ones!
We can take a lesson from Israel during the Babylonian exile...God is
no respector of persons!
Jack
|
560.71 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Strength through peace | Thu Dec 17 1992 12:33 | 24 |
| I am a quadriplegic. I am one of the few. If you don't believe me, take a
look around your area right now and count how many people are in wheelchairs.
Now, some might see me as being in a "privileged" or protected status minority,
especially since the ADA was signed into law by President Bush. Some might
feel that just because I happen to have a handicapping condition, I shouldn't
be entitled to any special considerations or rights. And, you know something?
I tend to agree. I don't believe I'm entitled to be treated any better than
anyone else. And you know something else? I don't think I am.
But I can see how others might see me as a charity case and suspect that I
probably don't truly pull my own share of the load -- that the only reason
I'm here is because of Digital's aggressive philosophies regarding EEO/AA
and VoD ("hiring the handicapped"). I wouldn't doubt that some see me as
taking gainful employment away from some equally qualified able-bodied family
man. This would qualify me as one of the few who are privileged, to the
disadvantage of the many, and therefore, the object of resentment.
]B^} Wouldn't things be a lot fairer for everyone if we could just get rid
of people like me? ]B^}
Peace,
Richard
|
560.72 | What About Class Warfare!? | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Thu Dec 17 1992 15:19 | 26 |
| Richard:
I've been reading your last entry over and over, quite honestly trying
to figure out how to respond to it. When using notes, one has no
preconceived notions of the other person as alot of us don't know or
see each other personally. My perception of you is that you are an
individual with various gifts and talents, probably alot more than myself.
You brought up an interesting twist to this whole matter so I'd like to
pose a question. Government regulation, in all its good intentions,
does at time propagate class warfare through outdated programs that
have never worked and never will. Don't get me wrong, although I
thought Lyndon Johnson wasn't the most stable man in the world for
example, he instituted medicare which I thought was a very good idea!
I am willing to pay into this since it is proven to have value in our
society and can work. However, I cringe at programs like affirmative
action, if not for the fact they appear to be reverse discrimination,
they are also an insult to minorities in some of its policies.
Do you feel government in propagating class warfare such as penalizing
individuals who succeed is a danger in the development of a Neo-Nazi
attitude?
Rgds.,
Jack
|
560.73 | | YERKLE::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Fri Dec 18 1992 09:06 | 37 |
| re .71
Richard,
;]B^} Wouldn't things be a lot fairer for everyone if we could just get rid
;of people like me? ]B^}
No, persons would continue to find something else to show their prejudices.
These would include skin colour, education or even lack/abundance of material
wealth.
Fortunately, God does not weigh up people the way humans do. He looks
at what a person is in the inside and man looks at the outside (Proverbs
17:3) . My mother used to tell me "dont judge a book by it's cover",
however we all seem to fall into judging a person's outside appearance.
All need to cultivate love of neighbour by imitating God and not being
prejudiced of these external appearances.
I also say no because I have a few friends that are dependent on wheelchairs.
One in particular is a dear friend, who shares our car to the meetings
at the local Kingdom hall. He is conscious of being dependant on others, so
when possible I always let him do things in his own strength. Also he worries
about the weight and awkwardness of his wheelchair (he has changed it twice
in the last few months), I tell him not to fuss. He plays an active part
in the Jehovah's Witnesses door to door ministry and I join in with him
quite often. He often says that he believes that he only gets a listening
ear because of his disability, but this is not totally true because he
always gets my attention and he is a very good talker and listener. One
comment that he made was that he always found that the love the brothers
show in and outside the congregation upbuilding and yet to me I believe
the brothers draw an immense amount of encouragement from such ones as him.
Who under difficulties still cling to their hope, that God has given them,
and see the importance of helping others to see His will and purposes. To
me his example shows the importance of relying on Jehovah and not on my
own strength, unlike many today whose lives are independant of God.
Phil.
|
560.74 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Strength through peace | Fri Dec 18 1992 17:53 | 16 |
| Jack .72,
Class warfare?? Hmmmm. I don't think I understand your question.
What I was suggesting in .71 was that it's not difficult to find situations
where the few are perceived as being "privileged" to the disadvantage of
the many. Some may also see these "privileged" few as opportunistic leeches
and parasites, sucking the life out of society, a society that was good and
decent before a bunch of extremists started agitating for "civil" (aka
"special") rights.
Phil .73,
Agreed.
Peace,
Richard
|
560.75 | | CSTEAM::MARTIN | | Tue Dec 22 1992 10:18 | 15 |
| Well, the majority of Americans (myself included) feel there is needs
for civil rights legislation and programs for those in need although I
still blame the local church for shirking their responsibilities in
this area. The local church relies on government to do their job!
I think what annoys me and many Americans is the disingenuous attitude
of the congress. It is perceived most representatives have ulterior
motives in what they do. This is why we have problems with lobbyists
and PAC money.
If there is a wave of neo-nazi attitudes in this country, I feel our
government certainly played a role in the development of the same.
-Jack
|
560.76 | thanks | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Tue Dec 22 1992 11:19 | 4 |
| Thanks for the information about Christian response to the problems in
Bosnia and Croatia. This is heartening.
L
|
560.77 | Some may see this as undeserved "special" rights | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Celebrate Diversity | Mon Jan 18 1993 11:47 | 63 |
| Cost of federal mandate lamented
--------------------------------
By Barry Noreen Gazette Telegraph December 23, 1992
What one Colorado Springs city councilman termed "a very expensive
taxi service" for the disabled will begin rolling next year [1993],
probably offering rides for $1.50.
Called "paratransit" service, the program will be offered to an
estimated 4,000 city residents who are physically unable to take
advantage of the city's bus service. City officials say it'll
actually cost about $10 to provide each ride, so the city will
lose roughly $8.50 a trip.
But the city has little choice: Paratransit service was mandated by
by the Americans With Disabilities Act for all cities with transit
systems.
The only way for the city to avoid offering paratransit service
would be for it to get out of the bus service altogether. Even in
the face of mounting subsidies, the council has resisted the
temptation to drastically cut back on bus service.
The federal law set no specific deadline for the service to begin
as long as cities with toward the goal. Colorado Springs is doing
that, having budgeted $236,000 this year for specially equipped
vans.
Hans Schalk of the city's Transportation Department told the City
Council on Tuesday that it remains unknown how much the service
will have to be subsidized, mainly because no one knows how many
of the 4,000 residents will use it.
By March, Schalk said, the city expects to receive bids from
various operators to run the service; sometime in the second
quarter of the year, the vans should be carrying passengers.
Schalk suggested the council could make the service free until
Jan. 1, 1994, to give the city time to evaluate the demand for
the service.
The council members balked at the idea. "I'd rather see us
start right out in `93 and charge them," Councilwoman Cheryl
Gillaspie said.
Councilman David White agreed: "This is a very expensive taxi
service, is what it's turning out to be."
Others on the council feared a backlash in the community if
the service is offered for free and later is subjected to the
$1.50 fee. "There are plenty of handouts. Government can't
be doing this," White said.
Mayor Robert Isaac noted that fares from regular bus service
only pay for about 19 percent of the operating cost. In a
fiscal environment of tax and spending limits, Isaac said adding
more subsidies to the equation should be viewed seriously.
"There are more people out there who are interested in this than
just the ones who are eligible for the service," Isaac said, in
a reference to taxpayers.
The federal law allows the city to charge twice its normal bus
fare for the paratransit rides. The current bus fare is 75 cents.
|
560.78 | the compassionate society | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Mon Jan 18 1993 12:12 | 14 |
| re Note 560.77 by CSC32::J_CHRISTIE:
I guess that I would have to agree with those who would say
that the topic of "special consideration to the handicapped"
is only very slightly related to the "neo-nazi" topic
(although the neo-nazis are on record as objecting to such
special consideration).
Yet I do think that this is a worthy topic for our
discussion. Can a society be compassionate? Is a society
compassionate if governmental policy states that compassion
is a private affair?
Bob
|
560.79 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Celebrate Diversity | Mon Jan 18 1993 12:48 | 25 |
| Note 560.78
> I guess that I would have to agree with those who would say
> that the topic of "special consideration to the handicapped"
> is only very slightly related to the "neo-nazi" topic
> (although the neo-nazis are on record as objecting to such
> special consideration).
I guess I'm still concerned about the news article that appears in .0 of this
string. Mine is of more than passing interest. For the past 38 years I've
required the use of a wheelchair.
But there's also another factor. It is the mindset of who and who is not
generally considered a parasite, or even simply a blemish, on society.
> Yet I do think that this is a worthy topic for our
> discussion. Can a society be compassionate? Is a society
> compassionate if governmental policy states that compassion
> is a private affair?
Who are society's outcasts and how are they treated?
Peace,
Richard
|
560.80 | Racism versus Nationalism | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Celebrate Diversity | Wed Feb 10 1993 16:50 | 12 |
| My spouse, Sharon, is taking a class on Racism through the Sociology
Department at UCCS.
The notion has been put forth that Hitler wasn't so much a racist as he
was an extreme nationalist.
The difference is that a nationalist will destroy anyone who might be
considered a threat or a detriment to the success of nationalist policies.
What do you think?
Richard
|
560.81 | Sounds about right... | CSC32::KINSELLA | it's just a wheen o' blethers | Wed Feb 10 1993 16:58 | 9 |
|
I think they are right that there is a difference between racists
and nationalists and that both might carry out acts of hate for
their cause. In addition to Hitler being a nationalist, he was
extremely unbalanced making him all the more dangerous.
Although, the root of both is still hate.
Jill
|
560.82 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Feb 11 1993 07:13 | 16 |
| >The notion has been put forth that Hitler wasn't so much a racist as he
>was an extreme nationalist.
>
>The difference is that a nationalist will destroy anyone who might be
>considered a threat or a detriment to the success of nationalist policies.
I think he was more power mad than anything else. There is evidence
that he used racism and nationalism as a tool to get power. Initially
he targeted Communists more so than anything. This did not work so he
shifted to Jews. And he clearly used nationalist policies and attitudes
in his rise to power. But he himself was really Austrian more than
German so if nationalist was what he was he'd have been an Austrian
nationalist. No, I think power mad was what he was and everything else
was used to that end.
Alfred
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560.83 | German state bans neo-Nazi group | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Pacifist Hellcat | Thu Jul 15 1993 13:22 | 41 |
| From: [email protected] (LEON MANGASARIAN)
Subject: German state bans neo-Nazi group
BERLIN (UPI) -- Authorities in Baden-Wuerttemberg banned a neo-Nazi
group, raiding 23 homes of alleged members but making no arrests,
officials said Wednesday.
Also Wednesday, suspected rightists in a Berlin suburb attacked a man
from Ghana, beating him with baseball bats before robbing him and
fleeing, police said.
Police in the western German state of Baden-Wuerttemberg raided 23
homes belonging to members of the Alliance of Faithful for the German
Homeland, HVD, after the group was banned by the state government.
``This is clear political signal aimed at rightists in the state...
they should know the police and intelligence are continuously hot on
their heels,'' said Frider Birzele, the state's Interior Minister.
Birzele said the HVD was a militant neo-Nazi group with about 30
members and a larger number of supporters active almost exclusively in
Baden-Wuerttemberg.
He said police seized documents at the HVD members' homes, but that
no arrests were made.
Last fall, Germany's Interior Ministry banned three rightist groups
that were active in more than one of Germany's 16 federal states.
Germany's state governments have the power to ban rightist groups if
they are active only in their respective state.
Police in the Berlin suburb of Strausberg said Wednesday that
suspected rightists attacked a 29-year-old Ghanaian man with baseball
bats at a train station.
The two attackers first shouted insults at the Ghanaian, who refused
to respond, police said.
The pair then beat the man with baseball bats before robbing him of
$290 and fleeing in a car, police said.
Also, Germany's Federal Supreme Court in Karlsruhe upheld an eight-
year prison sentence imposed by an eastern German court on a rightist
convicted of attempting to kill a Nigerian national.
The court refused to reduce the prison term after noting the 24-year-
old rightist had been found guilty of attempting to beat the Nigerian to
death last May outside a disco in the eastern German state of
Brandenburg in order to impress a group of his rightist friends.
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