T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1145.1 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Mon Sep 25 1995 22:43 | 12 |
| I tend to agree, Dave. I personally find attempts at applying pure
emperical analysis or sterile scientific logic to matters of faith
and spirituality unsatisfying at best.
This is not to say that I believe there is no place for reason in
such matters. To the contrary, I believe it's important to ask and
seek answers to the question: "What does reason say?" But I believe
other questions also must be asked.
Shalom,
Richard
|
1145.2 | reason leads us to the edges | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Tue Sep 26 1995 00:02 | 10 |
|
To continue upon what Richard was saying: I believe that the
true role of reason in dealing with matters of faith is to
clarify the nature of our faith and to expose our
assumptions. Reason never discovers substitutes for faith;
however it may take individuals (as well as whole schools of
thought) to starting points which they (but not necessarily
others) regard as unassailably true.
Bob
|
1145.3 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Tue Sep 26 1995 10:28 | 29 |
| re: .0
Faith, to me, is simply trust. I trust God, I trust that the Bible is
His word to mankind.
Now, this does not mean that I have abandoned all reason. On the
contrary, I am continually discovering that the Bible is trustworthy-
confirmations of this truth are obvious to any who pay even a
little bit of attention to what's going on around them.
Human reasoning, like human logic, is not perfect. We are creatures
affected by many things that can alter our perceptions and world view.
Because we are incapable of perfect logic or reasoning, we need
something to anchor us- something that does not change with
circumstance. I have found that the Bible is such an anchor.
In the (not too distant) past, America was well anchored in the Bible.
As we toss this aside for our humanistic reasoning and logic, we are
finding out just what John Adams was talking about when he said, "Our
Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is
wholly inadequate to the government of any other." I see humanism as
the end result to unguided human reason.
There is nothing wrong with reason and logic- they are very useful
tools. What we need to be careful about is puting our complete trust
in our own reasoning ability.
-steve
|
1145.4 | no text is an adequate "anchor" | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Tue Sep 26 1995 10:59 | 12 |
| re Note 1145.3 by CSOA1::LEECH:
> In the (not too distant) past, America was well anchored in the Bible.
> As we toss this aside for our humanistic reasoning and logic, we are
Of course one could read this same chain of events as proving
that the "anchor" you so proudly proclaim was incapable of
holding. Perhaps we didn't "toss it aside", but it came
loose as we came to understand the lawlessness that did
flourish while we were supposedly "anchored".
Bob
|
1145.5 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Tue Sep 26 1995 11:22 | 9 |
| re: . 4
An anchor is only useful if you USE it. When you stop using the
anchor, it should be clear that the boat will drift. Where the boat
ends up is the pointer which tells us whether it was a good idea to
cut the line and let the boat drift about on its own.
-steve
|
1145.6 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Tue Sep 26 1995 13:18 | 19 |
| | <<< Note 1145.3 by CSOA1::LEECH "Dia do bheatha." >>>
| Faith, to me, is simply trust. I trust God, I trust that the Bible is
| His word to mankind.
I have to agree with two thirds of what you said above. It is a matter
of trust. People should trust God. But that is where *I* believe the trust
should end. If a person tries to sell you a car, who do you trust, the
salesperson, or do you pray to God? If you just got the brakes fixed on your
car and are driving away, who do you trust, the person who fixed them or that
God had them fixed correctly? When you need some guidance and you open the
Bible, who do you trust for getting you to the part of Scripture that is going
to help? Just the Bible itself, or Him? Through Him I believe everything is
possible.
Glen
|
1145.7 | | CNTROL::DGAUTHIER | | Tue Sep 26 1995 14:35 | 35 |
| Apparently (and please correct me if I'm wrong) the trust is placed in
the Bible unconditionally (a leap of faith?) and all that it contains
is therefor accepted as the truth. As I mentioned back in .0, I've had
this discussion before when the unconditional acceptance of the Bible was
also mentioned. To that, I would ask about explaining it's apparent
contradictions and giving credence to it's many fantastic stories. The
answer would either be that symbolism was being used (don't take the
Bible literally) or that the meaning escapes the reader, but that
doesn't change the fact that it's the truth. And then I would go about
asking more questions... challenging interpretation, meaning, etc.. .
And again, each question would be avoided with statements which would
spawn more questions.
What would finally result was something along the lines of what was
mentioned in an earlier reply. The statement would be on of accepting
the Bible followed by a realization that it "works", therefor it must
be true, correct, right, divinely inspired. But I'm sure there are
Moslems who say the same thing about the Koran, or Hindus about the
Upanishads.
And so I shrug my shoulders again, having not been satisfied with the
rationale behind accepting the Bible. What I "DO" know is that I have
the ability to reason. If I was "created" by a divine being, then I
should use this gift in my search for the truth. If that's the case,
then reason tells me that the Bible contains much truth and wisdom.
But it also contains much which is irrational and subject to question.
The Koran contains much truth and wisdom along with the irrational.
Add to those the philosophies of Plato, Nietche, Confucius and Modern
Science, etc... . From what I can see, the truth is all around, in
many writtings and philosophies. It's just a matter of plucking out
the truth from the untrue and the noise.
-dave
|
1145.8 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Tue Sep 26 1995 14:43 | 14 |
| .7
> And so I shrug my shoulders again, having not been satisfied with the
> rationale behind accepting the Bible. What I "DO" know is that I have
> the ability to reason. If I was "created" by a divine being, then I
> should use this gift in my search for the truth. If that's the case,
> then reason tells me that the Bible contains much truth and wisdom.
> But it also contains much which is irrational and subject to question.
You'll find little argument on this from me, Dave.
Shalom,
Richard
|
1145.9 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Tue Sep 26 1995 14:53 | 18 |
| DAve,
I second what Richard says.
We women and men were created in the image of God, God gave each one of
us a human brain so that we could make rational decisions for
ourselves.
I find it fascinating that our most brilliant scientist are beginning
to understand that even in science, not everything is predictable.
There is an non rational element everywhere.
The existence of the non rational, does in no way negate the power of
the ration.
Patricia
Patricia
|
1145.10 | a different view | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Sep 26 1995 14:59 | 23 |
|
I recall a quote from "The Power Of Myth", a transcript of interviews
with Joseph Campbell by Bill Moyers. It went something like this:
Campbell: "Some time ago, I met up with a Catholic priest, and the
conversation went like this:
Priest: "Are you Catholic, Mr. Campbell?"
Campbell: "I was once, Father."
Priest: "Do you believe in a Personal God?"
Campbell: "No Father, I do not."
Priest: "I guess that if you can't prove the existence of a Personal
God, then you can't believe in one."
Campbell: "Father, if the existence of a Personal God could be proved,
then what would be the value of faith?"
Priest: "It's been nice talking with you, Mr. Campbell."
I always liked that one. Campbell then goes on at some other point in
the interview and when asked about faith by Bill Moyers, he replied, "I
don't have to have faith - I have experience!" (;^)
Cindy
|
1145.11 | | HURON::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Tue Sep 26 1995 19:50 | 5 |
| I prefer to think of the Bible as a sail rather than an anchor.
I can use it to move through life rather than have it tied around my
neck.
Eric
|
1145.12 | try and break it | CSC32::KUHN | We are the 801. | Tue Sep 26 1995 20:38 | 3 |
| If you want to use reason (this is NOT a challenge), read the New
Testement and see if you can find any contradictions. Thats what I
did.
|
1145.13 | The million dollar question? | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Sep 27 1995 09:31 | 4 |
| Who says that the Bible is broken because it has contradictions within
it?
|
1145.14 | Good metaphor! | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Sep 27 1995 09:45 | 7 |
| re .11
Eric,
I like your metaphor!
Patricia
|
1145.15 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Wed Sep 27 1995 11:15 | 7 |
| | <<< Note 1145.13 by POWDML::FLANAGAN "let your light shine" >>>
| Who says that the Bible is broken because it has contradictions within it?
It takes away it's inerrency claim.
|
1145.16 | | CNTROL::DGAUTHIER | | Wed Sep 27 1995 18:38 | 37 |
| .12
>> If you want to use reason (this is NOT a challenge), read the New
>> Testement and see if you can find any contradictions. Thats what I
>> did.
I believe many of the contradictions are rooted in the differences between
Gospels. At times it seems like the disciples didn't get their story
straight.
.13
>> Who says that the Bible is broken because it has contradictions within
>> it?
Not broken, but loses credibility when viewed on the basis of sending a
single clear message. The more consistent and believable a thing is, the
easier it is to accept it.
I'm reading a book called "The Gospel according to Jesus". I'll get the
author's name tomorrow. Anyway, he (the author) believes that the Bible
was added to, subtracted from, modified, exaggerated and edited so much over
the years by so many people, that the truth has been obscured and must
somehow be "extracted" and "separated" out from all the artificial chaff.
T.Jefferson undertook the same sort of task in the latter years of his life.
And this author is building on that work. In the Forward, he sites many
stark contradictions of message in the New Testament and uses these to
justify his undertaking. Most notable were the contradictions between the
"flavor" of Jesus portrayed in the Gospels vs some of the teachings of the
early Christians after the death of Jesus (there's a name for those guys,
Paul, and all them, but the verbal pigeonhole escapes me at this time). The
author claims that it's possible to identify most of the human editing,
remove it and reconstruct the Bible in a "truer" form.
-dave
|
1145.17 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Wed Sep 27 1995 18:51 | 26 |
| Dave.
My point is that the Bible is not a single unified whole and ought not
to be read as if it were.
Each of the separate writings ought to be studied for its own
individual contribution. Each contains a message from a particular
perspective aimed at a particular community. The writers never thought
they were writing History. They wrote sacred literature and it should
be viewed as sacred literature.
Understanding the differences and the nuances of the differences tells
the discerned reader a whole lot about the individual theology of the
author of the book.
Just as each individual in this conference has a slightly different
theology and slightly different Christian Perspective, so did each
individual writer of the New Testament.
The problem is not with the source. The problem is with people trying
to interpret the source for that which it is not. Each of us can use
our rational facilities to determine what the Bible truly is and how it
can be use to help each of us in our faith journeys.
I really like Eric's metaphor as the sail that guides the ship and not
the anchor.
|
1145.18 | Faith and Trust | NWD002::BAYLEY::Randall_do | Software: Making Hardware Useful | Thu Sep 28 1995 13:54 | 26 |
| Faith and trust is a good way to look at it. Faith is rooted in
what we trust in.
So, how do we decide what to trust? Here is where reason
helps. Not in us sitting down and deciding what makes sense
to us (we may be uninformed or ignorant of other points of
view), but in using our minds and working hard to dig out
solid evidence, and using reason to put pieces together. There
is quite a bit of evidence, historical and textual, that supports
the authority of the Bible. There is quite a bit of work that has
been done to debunk the argument of Biblical contradictions.
(That conversation usually stops when someone is asked to
name 3, and explain the contradiction, and to be willing to sit
down and examine them).
In the end, though, reason can't get us completely satisfied.
We have to act on imperfect information. But, we do that daily.
I don't know that my car was fixed, and that the brakes will stop it
when I need it to, because I can't see into the future and know the
result. But, the evidence is: the car was designed to stop. It
stopped in the past. The mechanics are trained to fix brakes, and
the parts they used are designed to work as advertised. Other
parts and other repairs they have done have worked as expected
(or I'd take my car elsewhere). So, based on reason and evidence
I decide to trust these brakes to stop me this time. This is a step
of faith.
|
1145.19 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Thu Sep 28 1995 13:58 | 13 |
| It's more accurate to think of the Bible not as a book, but as a
library.
And like many other libraries, the Bible contains many kinds of
literature: poetry, wisdom, history, essays, collected letters,
moral message stories, visions, allegories, a genre called "gospel,"
etc..
Some will tell you the Bible is a homogenous whole, but I think they
are doing it and you a disservice by doing so.
Shalom,
Richard
|
1145.20 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Thu Sep 28 1995 14:26 | 16 |
| Richard,
I agree with you. It is a tremendous disservice to the Bible to
promote it as a unified whole. Most of the richness and beauty of the
Bible is lost when it is promoted as a unified whole because the
contributions of the thousands of people involved in the oral
traditions through the recording and editing is made invisable and
lost and the nature of God's revelation is obscured.
Even in that first 11 chapters of genesis seeing the threads of the two
traditions and tracing the mythology to the ancient near east and
beginning to understand what is the real difference between Ancient
Judaism and the other near eastern religions was an exciting and
beautiful study.
patricia
|
1145.21 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Thu Sep 28 1995 15:57 | 5 |
| re .19
Good note, Richard.
Eric
|
1145.22 | | CNTROL::DGAUTHIER | | Thu Sep 28 1995 18:20 | 10 |
| Then it's not a good anchor because it can get dragged around in any
direction my any new interpreter.
And it's not a good sail because it's so loosely woven and so full of
holes that a strong wind tears it and passes right through.
(my "devil's advocate" stab at the metaphor game. Something to keep
the conversation alive)
-dave
|
1145.23 | Can U spot the liberal? | CSC32::KUHN | | Thu Sep 28 1995 20:59 | 15 |
| > I agree with you. It is a tremendous disservice to the Bible to
> promote it as a unified whole. Most of the richness and beauty of the
> Bible is lost when it is promoted as a unified whole because the
> contributions of the thousands of people involved in the oral
> traditions through the recording and editing is made invisable and
> lost and the nature of God's revelation is obscured.
Ahhh, the voice of an 'enlightened' liberal.
Step 1: Find some small way to discredit the bible. Cuts down on the
study time.
|
1145.25 | Bible::Sail Wind::Holy Spirit | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Fri Sep 29 1995 10:19 | 11 |
| Re: sail metaphor.
The bible as it is provides a wonderful sturdy sail.
The wind that powers it is the Holy Spirit!.
I didn't see that connection to the metaphor until your question, so
your question was valuable.
Patricia
|
1145.26 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Fri Sep 29 1995 10:49 | 8 |
| I'm not discrediting the Bible. I am learning to truly appreciate and love
the Bible.
I don't understand how the study time would be cut down by
acknowledging that there are thousands of story tellers, authors, and
editors involved in the creation of the Bible. Actually since I am
acknowledging a more complex development process, the study time might in
fact be expanded.
|
1145.27 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Fri Sep 29 1995 13:24 | 8 |
| .26
It actually takes more time and effort to learn about the Bible,
its historical intricacies and development, rather than confining
oneself solely to it.
Richard
|
1145.28 | can U spot a stereotyper? | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Fri Sep 29 1995 14:43 | 30 |
|
Someone in another topic mentioned not liking my 'typical male attitude'
statement that I made *deliberately* to make a point, which was finally
taken.
I happen to be on the liberal end of the spectrum when it comes to
religion, and I resent these kinds of stereotypical comments as follows.
Cindy
----------------------------------------------------------------------
<<< LGP30::DKA300:[NOTES$LIBRARY]CHRISTIAN-PERSPECTIVE.NOTE;2 >>>
-< Discussions from a Christian Perspective >-
================================================================================
Note 1145.23 Faith/Reason? 23 of 27
CSC32::KUHN 15 lines 28-SEP-1995 19:59
-< Can U spot the liberal? >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> I agree with you. It is a tremendous disservice to the Bible to
> promote it as a unified whole. Most of the richness and beauty of the
> Bible is lost when it is promoted as a unified whole because the
> contributions of the thousands of people involved in the oral
> traditions through the recording and editing is made invisable and
> lost and the nature of God's revelation is obscured.
Ahhh, the voice of an 'enlightened' liberal.
Step 1: Find some small way to discredit the bible. Cuts down on the
study time.
|
1145.29 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Mon Oct 02 1995 12:17 | 24 |
| re .0
not having read any of the replies to this topic yet, i would say that
faith and reason are the two sides of the very same coin and are as
complementary to eachother as are day and night.
faith covers what reason cannot (yet) reach. faith is grounded on hope
and reason is grounded on doubt. faith is tied to the individual and
hardly communicable, reason is the exact opposite.
i also think that in life, a balance between faith and reason should be
sought (see also 389.16), a life wholly centred on faith is irrational
and potentially damaging whilst a life centered on reason only is dry
and uneventful.
if you doubt that there should be any place left for faith then try to
remember how it was when you first fell in love - how much did faith,
and how much did reason have to do with you then? ;-)
andreas.
|
1145.30 | Here we go again | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Mon Oct 02 1995 17:18 | 24 |
| .3, .5 CSOA1::LEECH
In the (not too distant) past, America was well anchored in the Bible.
As we toss this aside for our humanistic reasoning and logic, we are
finding out just what John Adams was talking about when he said, "Our
Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is
wholly inadequate to the government of any other." I see humanism as
the end result to unguided human reason.
This implies that you believe that 'unguided human reason' is accountable for
today's problems, which in turn implies that you believe that a reasonable
person would claim that today's problems are a reasonable state of affairs?
You say that you believe that the constitution can't work except under the
guise of religion? It appears to me that many of the problems we see today are
more closely related to a lack of personal responsibility than to a lack of
religion, and no, the two are NOT synonomous.
I am constantly amazed at your inability to realize that you can have good
people (by any definition that you care to propose save one) that are NOT
religious. BTW, I see religion as the end result of unbounded human
superstition.
Steve
|
1145.31 | Faith is Faith | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Mon Oct 02 1995 17:27 | 25 |
| To the base note,
I began participating in this conference in order to get a better
understanding of why intelligent people buy into this stuff despite the
fact that I (as another intelligent person) can see no *rational* basis for
doing so.
I believe that I have begun to understand, and the answer is faith. There
are no arguments that I consider logical to support belief. In the end,
just as you have found, it comes down to faith.
Although I'm sure that there are as many reasons for faith as there are
people that have it, there seems to be a few general categories that people
fall into:
1. Those that were taught to believe ('It's true because I say so')
2. Those that had a 'need' to believe (the 'God shaped hole')
3. Those that had some sort of physical (or mental) experience that they
could explain by believing ('Spoke to me')
Although I'm sure that there are some, I have yet to meet anyone that
started with an open mind (not pre-disposed) and believed because
observable facts left them no choice...
Steve
|
1145.32 | was Adams a Christian? | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Oct 03 1995 13:26 | 11 |
|
Re.30
The quote from .3/.5 'America was well anchored in the Bible' is
interesting. Patricia, perhaps you can provide more insight here,
however I believe that John Adams was actually a Unitarian, and
not a Christian at all. Therefore to assume that he was referring
to the Christian Bible, and that 'religion = Christian' when making
that statement, is, in fact, incorrect.
Cindy
|
1145.33 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Tue Oct 03 1995 13:29 | 5 |
| John Adams would not have espoused to the practices of intolerance
today that is practiced. John Adams would have been a staunch opponent
of the ACLU.
-Jack
|
1145.34 | interesting | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Oct 03 1995 13:39 | 18 |
|
Re.31
Steve,
I am intrigued by your 3rd 'category', since by your definition I seem
to fall into it.
My own direct experiences, I did not find, came from any pre-disposed
belief or from observing undeniable external 'facts'. If anything,
these experiences completely shattered what had previously been both my
logical and scientific observations/conclusions as taught in western
science (I was an engineering science major), and any residual 'faith'
or beliefs I had dictated/taught to me as a child by the western
Christian religion (I was raised Baptist, Episcopalian, and Methodist).
Cindy
|
1145.35 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Tue Oct 03 1995 14:50 | 8 |
|
> I believe that John Adams was actually a Unitarian,
And Thomas Jefferson was a Deist. The founders were certainly
Christians in my book, but I'm not sure they would past muster with
todays Fundamentalist litmus test.
Eric
|
1145.36 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Tue Oct 03 1995 15:09 | 4 |
| Perhaps not. However, they were proponents of the freedom of religion.
Not the freedom from religion.
-Jack
|
1145.37 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Tue Oct 03 1995 17:32 | 7 |
|
> Not the freedom from religion.
Actually, yes they did. They proposed that I be free from a state
sanctioned religion.
Eric
|
1145.38 | It can't be explained to another... | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Tue Oct 03 1995 18:17 | 9 |
| Cindy,
By definition, your experience is (I assume) intensely personal, and would
not transfer to another. Therefor, unless one experiences something along
these lines it is incomprehensible to them (or at least to me). That is why
I can't really argue with this type of belief, although I can't imagine a
real world experience that would cause me to believe.
Steve
|
1145.39 | Free from religion if desired? | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Tue Oct 03 1995 18:18 | 9 |
| Perhaps not. However, they were proponents of the freedom of religion.
Not the freedom from religion.
Jack,
Do you believe that our freedoms do not include the right to be free from
religion, if that is what one chooses?
Steve
|
1145.40 | in a way, you are right... | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Oct 03 1995 19:10 | 15 |
|
Re.38
Steve,
Time is short, so this will be brief - more later.
I relate my experiences to the taste of a strawberry. Nothing I say
or do could convince you to believe that it tastes as I describe it,
however if you yourself tasted it, then there would be no need for
'belief or faith', since then the experience would be a shared one.
Then if you shared a strawberry with others to taste, they would then
have a similiar experience.
Cindy
|
1145.41 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Wed Oct 04 1995 11:09 | 14 |
| re: .39
There is a difference between choosing not to participate in religion,
and forcing religion out of all things public by law.
One is your constitutional right (you do not have to participate in
any religion), one is not.
It gets even hairier when you realize that making laws that regulate
religion are against the Constitution, via the First. "Congress shall
make no law" has been ignored for far too long.
-steve
|
1145.42 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Wed Oct 04 1995 12:11 | 15 |
|
> There is a difference between choosing not to participate in religion,
> and forcing religion out of all things public by law.
No one is suggesting that religion be forced out of all things public.
Public accommodations, such as hotels and restaurants, and places open
to the public from grocery stores to art galleries are certainly free to
profess and display and promote whatever religious views they wish.
Public, governmental establishments and their agents are not.
If the freedom to choose not to participate in a religion means that I
must choose not to participate in public school or governmental
activities, then the line has been crossed.
Eric
|
1145.43 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Oct 04 1995 12:14 | 10 |
| ZZ Do you believe that our freedoms do not include the right to be free
ZZ from religion, if that is what one chooses?
No. I believe that is clearly the intent of the 1st Ammendment. We
are to be free to worship as we choose...or not worship at all. The
state should have no say in this. My contention is as Steve said...the
making of laws prohibiting the freedom to worship. I agree with Eric
but at the same time, I have seen restrictions sorely abused.
-Jack
|
1145.44 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Wed Oct 04 1995 12:58 | 8 |
|
Jack, if the state had no say in the matter at all, then the curches
would be paying taxes.
Glen
|
1145.45 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Oct 04 1995 14:21 | 11 |
| ZZ Jack, if the state had no say in the matter at all, then the
ZZ curches would be paying taxes.
Specify. A church like any other non profit organization is made up of
individuals who are already taxpayers. Furthermore, a church is not a
business just as ACT UP is not a business. Even further still, the
government sees the non taxation of a church as more beneficial since
churches defray the cost of welfare and the like. Non profit being
taxed would be detrimental to the welfare of this country.
-Jack
|
1145.46 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Wed Oct 04 1995 14:35 | 28 |
| re: .42
> Public, governmental establishments and their agents are not.
This is not correct, at least not according to the First. You have to
first take "establishment of religion" completely out of context in
order to rationalise what has been done in the Courts in recent years.
[much of which, btw, is being reversed as it has no constitutional
ground to stand on]
> If the freedom to choose not to participate in a religion means that I
> must choose not to participate in public school or governmental
> activities, then the line has been crossed.
I think you may have a skewed idea of what "participating in a
religion" entails. A cross displayed on a courthouse is not "an
establishment of religion". *Voluntary* prayer in school is not "an
establishment of religion".
What has been done over the last few decades is to establish a new
"freedom" (the irony is killing me on this one)- freedom FROM religion,
which is certainly not written into the First.
There is a big difference between "freedom FROM religion" and "freedom not
to participate in a religion".
-steve
|
1145.47 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Wed Oct 04 1995 16:50 | 9 |
|
Thank you for your answer Jack. And I agree with it 100%. But you see,
your answer also shows that the government is involved already. If you want
total exclusion from the government, then churches pay taxes. If you want to
pick and choose, then you can see where the problems that people have are.
Glen
|
1145.48 | Yes, but the same experience can have different meanings to different people | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Wed Oct 04 1995 17:02 | 10 |
| .40
Cindy,
Good analogy, that is what I was trying to convey. Now keep in mind that one
person may taste a strawberry and love it, the next might hate it, or even be
killed by it if they happen to be allergic. Same experience, different
interpretations.
Steve
|
1145.49 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Oct 04 1995 17:19 | 8 |
| No Glen:
It was the PEOPLE who put the restriction of taxation for the churches.
The government didn't get involved as nice guys who said, "Well....we
won't tax you guys." No no no...it was the people who said, YOU
Washington...will not tax us.
-Jack
|
1145.50 | The 'One way wall' theory again | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Wed Oct 04 1995 17:20 | 49 |
| .41
There is a difference between choosing not to participate in religion,
and forcing religion out of all things public by law.
I don't think the problem is with public expressions, it is with government
sponsored public expressions. Eric says it well in .42
One is your constitutional right (you do not have to participate in
any religion), one is not.
Well, this is open to interpretation...
It gets even hairier when you realize that making laws that regulate
religion are against the Constitution, via the First. "Congress shall
make no law" has been ignored for far too long.
This also applies to pro-religion laws.
.46
This is not correct, at least not according to the First. You have to
first take "establishment of religion" completely out of context in
order to rationalise what has been done in the Courts in recent years.
[much of which, btw, is being reversed as it has no constitutional
ground to stand on]
Or your interpretation of the first. If you look back over court decisions,
you will see that they ebb and flow in both directions around their
interpretations of the first amendment, and I trust they will continue to
do so. The decisions of recent years is just another swing in the pendulum,
it has little to do with constitutional ground to stand on.
I think you may have a skewed idea of what "participating in a
religion" entails. A cross displayed on a courthouse is not "an
establishment of religion". *Voluntary* prayer in school is not "an
establishment of religion".
What about the practice of taking an oath on a bible within that
courthouse? I believe that you can also make an argument that a displayed
cross establishes a christian religion for that building. Both invoke a
particular brand of religious belief and put an official stamp of approval
(which is *not* extended to other religions) on it.
Using a classroom for voluntary prayer would be OK, prayer read over the PA
system each morning by a student is not.
I believe that your understanding of the principle of the separation of
church and state is skewed.
Steve
|
1145.51 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Wed Oct 04 1995 17:30 | 3 |
|
Jack, can you prove what you just said? That it was the people?
|
1145.52 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Wed Oct 04 1995 18:09 | 8 |
| Glen:
Surprise surprise. I believe it is the Declaration of Independence
which states that the government will be of the people, for the people,
and by the people. The big prostitution arena you and I have been
exposed to all our lives WAS NOT the intent of the founding fathers.
-Jack
|
1145.53 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Wed Oct 04 1995 18:13 | 54 |
|
RE .46
>> Public, governmental establishments and their agents are not.
> This is not correct, at least not according to the First. You have to
> first take "establishment of religion" completely out of context in
> order to rationalise what has been done in the Courts in recent years.
> [much of which, btw, is being reversed as it has no constitutional
> ground to stand on]
Now let me get this right, the Supreme Court and I are twisted, but you
carry the banner of supreme constitutional knowledge? I'll mention
you're name to Bill next time he's hunting for a nominee. :^)
The courts, to my knowledge, have not overturned laws as much as they
have ruled against over zealous school boards and principals. I stand
by my assertion that the government and its agents may not
constitutionally promote a particular religious view.
>> If the freedom to choose not to participate in a religion means that I
>> must choose not to participate in public school or governmental
>> activities, then the line has been crossed.
> I think you may have a skewed idea of what "participating in a
> religion" entails. A cross displayed on a courthouse is not "an
> establishment of religion". *Voluntary* prayer in school is not "an
> establishment of religion".
I must not have made myself clear. Student's are not agents of the
government, and therefore can pray to their heart's content (to the
same extent as voluntary singing is allowed, for example). a teacher or
administrator may not conduct a prayer service during normal school
time.
> A cross displayed on a courthouse is not "an establishment of
> religion".
Tell it to a Jew. I would not not support the display of religious
icons on the courthouse, however I would not remove historical
architectural features.
> There is a big difference between "freedom FROM religion" and
> "freedom not to participate in a religion".
The first amendment does not say that I have the freedom not to
participate in government sponsored religious activities. It says I
will be free FROM government sponsored religious activities. So it's
true, the first amendment doesn't provide for a religious free society
or culture,... only a religious free government. A distinction I think
you miss.
Eric
|
1145.54 | spiritual experiences | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Wed Oct 04 1995 18:19 | 16 |
|
Re.48
Steve,
Now this is getting interesting! Indeed, I agree with you.
My experiences in this area - with the exception of one or two - are
not terribly personal, so I share them openly.
I was just thinking though, to create a new topic and move our
discussion there so that the other folks might continue on continuing
on here...(;^) So, will create a new note for 'spiritual experiences',
and feel free to repost your earlier note if you'd like.
Cindy
|
1145.55 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Thu Oct 05 1995 13:52 | 13 |
| | <<< Note 1145.52 by MKOTS3::JMARTIN "I press on toward the goal" >>>
| Surprise surprise. I believe it is the Declaration of Independence which
| states that the government will be of the people, for the people, and by the
| people.
Jack Martin, I know what it says, but I am asking you who was it that
came up with churches not paying taxes? Was it a people thing, or a government
thing.
Glen
|
1145.56 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Oct 05 1995 14:16 | 7 |
| Exactly my point. It was a people thing because the People IS the
government. The instiutional government of today can work with the
church but the government should never have a vested interest in the
church. In fact, I believe government should acquiesce more to the
church than the church should ever acquiesce to the government.
-Jack
|
1145.57 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Oct 05 1995 14:18 | 9 |
| Glen:
Just to affirm where I am coming from, I believe Corporations should
pay absolutely no taxes...never mind the churches. Fine to the payroll
taxes but that is it! The government has absolutely no business for
penalizing corporations because they have the audacity to maintain the
economy and create jobs.
-Jack
|
1145.58 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Thu Oct 05 1995 14:38 | 5 |
|
Jack, if people is the government, then when you say you want
government to leave you alone, you're really asking the people to leave you
alone, right?
|
1145.59 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Thu Oct 05 1995 14:40 | 9 |
|
I think it should be even across the board. Everyone pays taxes. Look
at the religious groups that hide behind the no tax clause. Too many are making
a fortune while paying no taxes. And they have about as much to do with
religion that a mattress would.
Glen
|
1145.60 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Oct 05 1995 14:42 | 9 |
| ZZZ I think it should be even across the board.
So you believe in the concept of state sanctioned churches. I'm quite
surprised actually.
I see your point though and believe that a church should have to fit
within the parameters of a definition.
-Jack
|
1145.61 | what did "render to Caesar" mean? | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Thu Oct 05 1995 14:56 | 25 |
| re Note 1145.57 by MKOTS3::JMARTIN:
> Just to affirm where I am coming from, I believe Corporations should
> pay absolutely no taxes...never mind the churches. Fine to the payroll
> taxes but that is it! The government has absolutely no business for
> penalizing corporations because they have the audacity to maintain the
> economy and create jobs.
I know that it is common these days to equate taxes with
"penalizing" or punishment, but please explain a few things
to me. Do you consider all taxes, by definition, to be
"penalizing" or punishment?
If the government has "absolutely no business for penalizing
corporations because they have the audacity to maintain the
economy and create jobs", is it not just as reasonable to say
that the government has "absolutely no business for
penalizing individuals because they have the audacity to earn
an income or spend money or buy imports or ..."?
And if both are reasonable, that would seem to say that there
should be no taxes; zero, zip, nada. If only one of the
above is reasonable, how do you draw the distinction?
Bob
|
1145.62 | We have met the Caesar | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Ps. 85.10 | Thu Oct 05 1995 15:03 | 9 |
| Note 1145.56
> It was a people thing because the People IS the
> government.
In other words, and as Pogo might say, "We IS Caesar."
Richard
|
1145.63 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Oct 05 1995 15:04 | 9 |
| Bob:
Corporate taxes are paid for by the patrons, the corporations take this
into account when setting prices for goods and services.
It is constitutional for the congress to levy taxes. This however is
double taxation.
-Jack
|
1145.64 | | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Thu Oct 05 1995 16:39 | 12 |
| re Note 1145.63 by MKOTS3::JMARTIN:
> Corporate taxes are paid for by the patrons, the corporations take this
> into account when setting prices for goods and services.
>
> It is constitutional for the congress to levy taxes. This however is
> double taxation.
So in your view corporations wouldn't be penalized by
taxation if individuals weren't taxed, right?
Bob
|
1145.65 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Thu Oct 05 1995 16:47 | 16 |
| My point is this.
1. Taxation of corporations stymies economic growth, stunts the ability
to expand, stunts the ability to employ, raises the price of goods and
services, ferrets money to beaurocracy instead of things like Research
and Development. The private sector is the backbone of the country.
2. Users of goods and services ultimately defray the cost of taxes by
paying higher prices for goods and services. This means less
consumption and competitively weaker in the global economy.
The government would incur higher receipts by a higher GNP. As long as
the government interferes with commerce in this way, they will not
incur the monies needed to run the country.
-Jack
|
1145.66 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Thu Oct 05 1995 17:40 | 13 |
| | <<< Note 1145.60 by MKOTS3::JMARTIN "I press on toward the goal" >>>
| ZZZ I think it should be even across the board.
| So you believe in the concept of state sanctioned churches. I'm quite
| surprised actually.
Huh? Where do you get that?
Glen
|
1145.67 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Thu Oct 05 1995 17:53 | 9 |
| | <<< Note 1145.65 by MKOTS3::JMARTIN "I press on toward the goal" >>>
| The government would incur higher receipts by a higher GNP. As long as the
| government interferes with commerce in this way, they will not incur the
| monies needed to run the country.
The country is of the people though. That must mean the people don't
want the country to have the monies needed to run it, right Jack?
|
1145.68 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Fri Oct 06 1995 10:08 | 8 |
| ZZ The country is of the people though. That must mean the people
ZZ don't want the country to have the monies needed to run it, right Jack?
Apparently; or there is always that other theory. Without a poor or
lower class, the democrats have lost a major portion of their
constituency.
-Jack
|
1145.69 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Fri Oct 06 1995 10:50 | 89 |
| re: Note 1145.50
>I don't think the problem is with public expressions, it is with government
>sponsored public expressions. Eric says it well in .42
How is passing out religious tracts in a public-owned park government
sponsored religion? How is a cross on a building a government
sponsored religion? How is teaching the truth about history in
classrooms a government sponsored religion? (the Pilgrims did NOT give
thanks to the Indians, but to God- this is just *one* example of
altering history books to exclude any and all mention of God, even
though such mention is needed for a factual representation of history)
>Or your interpretation of the first. If you look back over court decisions,
>you will see that they ebb and flow in both directions around their
>interpretations of the first amendment, and I trust they will continue to
>do so. The decisions of recent years is just another swing in the pendulum,
>it has little to do with constitutional ground to stand on.
I agree with this. However, if you really look at your statement
above, perhaps you will see the obvious problem. The First Amendment
should not be open to re-interpretation due to political/social
climate. It means what it means- its meaning does not change every few
decades. It means the very same thing now as it did when it was
written. Unfortunately, some of the words in it have varied meanings
today- more reason to look up the historical context of those words
(something I do not see happening in modern SCOTUS).
>I believe that you can also make an argument that a displayed
>cross establishes a christian religion for that building.
And if it does? So what. Let the community decide if they wish to
publically approve of Christianity. It's their building. However,
a cross is certainly not setting up any specific denomination as THE
religion of the building. Generic Christianity has been promoted since
this nation began.
Perhaps we should chisel off the scriptures carved into all the buildings
in DC? I guess those who wrote the Constitution didn't realize what
"an establishment of religion" meant, else they would certainly not have
allowed such engravings, nor crosses on buildings, nor prayer in
schools, nor Bible reading in schools, nor would they go on record as
saying that Christianity should be promoted since it is the surest
support of good government.
> Both invoke a
>particular brand of religious belief and put an official stamp of approval
>(which is *not* extended to other religions) on it.
Other religions (at least within this nation) outside Judaism have
never been looked upon as something to support/promote. Our herritage
is uniquely Christian, so this should not come as a big surprise.
However, I would more than be willing to allow other religions to put
up thier own signs on public buildings- as long as the town supports
it. This should be a local decision.
You see, unless the government forced all public (or even just all
federal) buildings to recognise a specific religion, then you have no
"establisment of religion". Localities may do what they like- the
government cannot intrude in this via the First ("Congress shall make
no law").
>I believe that your understanding of the principle of the separation of
>church and state is skewed.
I'm sure it looks that way to you. In actuality, I am portraying it as
closely as I can in original intent and meaning. I do not let
modern SCOTUS influence sway me when discussing it, nor do I succumb to
the wrongfully used "separation of church and state" doctrine of this
modern era.
I've said it before, and I'll say it again: my views are historical,
not necessarily how the Constitution is used today. I am a firm
believer in using the Constitution as written. Obviously, there are
many Constitutional issues of this day, as nearly all of our BoR is
under attack in one way or another. I believe that if we will look at
the Constitution from the proper historical context, we will see that
much of our law is at odds with the Constitution. In fact, our
government is very much out of line with this founding document.
We do a lot of lip-service about the Constitution today, but we haven't
actually followed it in long time. If we had, our government would be
1/30 its current size, we would not be in debt, nor would we be
subjects to the elite who tax us as will.
We don't even know what freedom is in this day and age.
-steve
|
1145.70 | Of the Christians, By the Christians and For the Christians? | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Fri Oct 06 1995 11:37 | 66 |
| .69
How is passing out religious tracts in a public-owned park government
sponsored religion?
It isn't. Individuals have always been free to state their views in public
places.
How is a cross on a building a government sponsored religion?
It implies a governmental seal of approval for christianity. Would you
object to a star of David? How about a pitchfork held by a certain cloven
footed joker? This *is* a religious symbol, and it has no place on a
government building.
How is teaching the truth about history in
classrooms a government sponsored religion? (the Pilgrims did NOT give
thanks to the Indians, but to God- this is just *one* example of
altering history books to exclude any and all mention of God, even
though such mention is needed for a factual representation of history)
History should be taught as history, in those places where God figured into
it he should be included. Teaching the facts, in history or evolution, is
not government sponsored religion.
About the amendments not being open to interpretation, I would agree with
you, but they were not written clearly enough allow this. You can see
different interpretations being given in the courts even while the authors
were alive, why should it be different now?
And if it does? So what. Let the community decide if they wish to
publically approve of Christianity. It's their building. However,
a cross is certainly not setting up any specific denomination as THE
religion of the building. Generic Christianity has been promoted since
this nation began.
Ah, now we get to the crux of the issue. You like the cross because you
agree with it. Look, steve, I know that you know what you are talking about
around the Constitution, look at it again. It was designed to protect
citizens from the tyranny of the majority, among other things. The framers,
during the debate around the writing of the document (along with the
history of the debates around various state constitutions, laws, etc.)
decided that religion was an issue that could not be fairly decided by the
goverment, it is a deeply personal issue. In their opinion the only fair
way was to keep the government out of it, to allow each individual citizen
to find God (or not) in their own way. You *know* that many of the early
immigrants came here fleeing religious persecution. You *know* that many of
these oppressed people then set up systems here that were even more
oppressive than those they fled. The founding fathers knew this also. They
realized that it is human nature to do so, and took steps to make it
difficult for the government to set up systems that would act in this way.
I believe that letting the government be a little bit religious is a whole
lot like being a little bit pregnant. People being what they are, it won't
stop there. A cross on a courthouse has no purpose other than for you, as a
Christian, to say "See, the government endorses MY religion above yours."
In this case it is about power, not religion. Put the crosses on the
churches, where they belong, and leave them out of the government that
represents us all, Christian, Jew, Muslim and atheist, alike.
It becomes clear, steve, that you advocate the establishment of an official
state religion, where all religions are equal, but some are more equal than
others. Where have I heard that phrase before...
To be continued...
Steve
|
1145.71 | We, the Christians, in order to form a more perfect Theocracy... | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Fri Oct 06 1995 11:54 | 63 |
| . 69
Other religions (at least within this nation) outside Judaism have
never been looked upon as something to support/promote.
So, then, are they something to repress?
Our herritage
is uniquely Christian, so this should not come as a big surprise.
Our heritage may be predominately christian, but it is hardly uniquely so.
However, I would more than be willing to allow other religions to put
up thier own signs on public buildings- as long as the town supports
it. This should be a local decision.
Gee, steve, thanks. This is a very brave thing to say when you are in the
majority. Is it also a local decision to segregate schools? Force blacks to
the back of the bus? Again, part of the Constitution is designed to protect
us from the tyranny of the majority. That is why our government was created
as a Constitutional Republic, it is NOT a democracy. Your agenda is
becoming clearer.
You see, unless the government forced all public (or even just all
federal) buildings to recognise a specific religion, then you have no
"establisment of religion".
And what is the locality that chooses the official religion for the federal
government?
Localities may do what they like- the
government cannot intrude in this via the First ("Congress shall make
no law").
No, the cannot. Actually, most state constitutions have provisions similar
to the first amendment that would prohibit this. And how does this apply to
federal buildings? Can a town declare itself Muslim and force all to pay
taxes to support that church?
I'm sure it looks that way to you. In actuality, I am portraying it as
closely as I can in original intent and meaning.
I've read a lot about the period, the authors, the debates, I believe that
you have badly missed the real meaning behind it.
the wrongfully used "separation of church and state" doctrine of this
modern era.
steve, I'm sure then that you have read the letter to the Danbury baptists
by Jefferson in which that phrase was first used. How can you so badly
misread it? (But then, I've seen some incredibly twisted interpretations of
the bible, so I guess I shouldn't be surprised).
I agree that the constitution is far too widely ignored. One of the areas
that is being ignored, however, is in the enforcement of the establishment
cause of the first amendment, based on the writings of the people of the
time that helped to create it.
Just for curiosity sake, to what degree would you like to see Christianity
intertwined with the government?
Steve
|
1145.72 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Fri Oct 06 1995 12:19 | 24 |
|
1145.69 is why I fear the religious right. More specifically, why I
fear the religious right in the form of political action groups. [Not
that Steve supports any of them, but he does share their publicly
stated sentiments.] Unsupported accusations of systemic disregard for
the Constitution, claims of wholesale religious persecution, and a
narrowly informed view of history; all hallmarks of the religious
right's "the sky is falling" religio-political lament.
Steve B. did a good job of addressing the points raised. I just want to
address the following:
> The First Amendment should not be open to re-interpretation due to
> political/social climate.
When questions arise regarding the interpretation of the Constitution,
it is subject to interpretive review by the Supreme Court. That's their
job. The Constitution was meant to be an evolving, refining document,
hence the amendments themselves. If the Constitution, including the
amendments, were not open for interpretation and modification, then
blacks would be slaves, women wouldn't vote, and I couldn't have a beer
with my pizza.
Eric
|
1145.73 | | BIGQ::SILVA | Diablo | Fri Oct 06 1995 13:26 | 4 |
|
Eric, talk about a note that says a lot. Thanks for posting it. I
couldn't agree with you more!
|
1145.74 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Fri Oct 06 1995 14:21 | 9 |
| <<< Note 1145.55 by BIGQ::SILVA "Diablo" >>>
> who was it that
>came up with churches not paying taxes? Was it a people thing, or a government
>thing.
See Ezra 7:24
And see Isaiah 33:22 for the model for our three branches of govt.
|
1145.75 | Churches should not be corporations. | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Fri Oct 06 1995 14:27 | 20 |
| <<< Note 1145.59 by BIGQ::SILVA "Diablo" >>>
> Look
>at the religious groups that hide behind the no tax clause. Too many are making
>a fortune while paying no taxes. And they have about as much to do with
>religion that a mattress would.
This I agree with 100% If they're non-profit, let them keep their
taxes.
> I think it should be even across the board. Everyone pays taxes.
Regarding corporations, in the end, Glen, you pay their taxes.
When you buy any good or service from a business, the price of
that item has already been inflated to account for their taxes.
Thus you and I and all consumers are paying the corporate taxes
in the long run anyway. IMO, it's better that all taxes be borne
directly by the consumer instead of masked from them through
corporate taxation, so that then they can see what they are
really paying.
|
1145.76 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Fri Oct 06 1995 14:31 | 11 |
| <<< Note 1145.70 by TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff "Spoon!" >>>
> How is a cross on a building a government sponsored religion?
>
>It implies a governmental seal of approval for christianity. Would you
>object to a star of David? How about a pitchfork held by a certain cloven
>footed joker? This *is* a religious symbol, and it has no place on a
>government building.
Many government building already have such things. They are called
gargoyles.
|
1145.77 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Fri Oct 06 1995 14:46 | 153 |
| re: .70
>It isn't. Individuals have always been free to state their views in public
>places.
No, they haven't, and aren't. But the pendulum is correcting this.
| How is a cross on a building a government sponsored religion?
>It implies a governmental seal of approval for christianity.
Even if I agreed with you here (and I don't), so what? As long as the
government is not forcing crosses to be put on public buildings, there is
no problem with the First. NOTHING is established, only generically
recognised.
> Would you
>object to a star of David? How about a pitchfork held by a certain cloven
>footed joker? This *is* a religious symbol, and it has no place on a
>government building.
Actually, no. It is up to the community as to what adorns their
buildings- whether it be religious or not. The federal government has
no business telling anyone what to, or what not to, adorn their
buildings with.
>History should be taught as history, in those places where God figured into
>it he should be included.
Agreed.
> Teaching the facts, in history or evolution, is
>not government sponsored religion.
Agreed. This is not the way SCOTUS looks at the "establishment" clause,
though- at least in regards to history (evolutionary doctrine is left
alone). Well, I should qualify this with: modern SCOTUS rulings.
>About the amendments not being open to interpretation, I would agree with
>you, but they were not written clearly enough allow this. You can see
>different interpretations being given in the courts even while the authors
>were alive, why should it be different now?
I've read parts of cases that made such attempts, but in general, early
SCOTUS was very consistent in their interpretations.
I disagree that they were not written clearly enough.
>Ah, now we get to the crux of the issue. You like the cross because you
>agree with it.
Actually, you have missed the mark with this comment. As I said above,
if a community wanted to erect a satanic symbol and put it on their
courthouse, they that's up to them; and I definitely disagree with
satanism. However, in truth, satanism is NOT protected by the First.
I've posted the definition of "religion" in here before- as the word
was used in the days of the FF. Satanism does not qualify as a
"religion" under the definition they used.
> Look, steve, I know that you know what you are talking about
>around the Constitution, look at it again. It was designed to protect
>citizens from the tyranny of the majority, among other things. The framers,
>during the debate around the writing of the document (along with the
>history of the debates around various state constitutions, laws, etc.)
>decided that religion was an issue that could not be fairly decided by the
>goverment, it is a deeply personal issue. In their opinion the only fair
>way was to keep the government out of it, to allow each individual citizen
>to find God (or not) in their own way.
I agree. Then explain to me how the government can tell a community
that they cannot hang a cross from their courthouse. Seems like they
are butting in where a) they don't belong, b) where there is no problem
locally, that is in need of their attention.
> You *know* that many of the early
>immigrants came here fleeing religious persecution. You *know* that many of
>these oppressed people then set up systems here that were even more
>oppressive than those they fled. The founding fathers knew this also. They
>realized that it is human nature to do so, and took steps to make it
>difficult for the government to set up systems that would act in this way.
Not that I agree with the generic "oppression" comment (it is not
important enough to go into details with, here), but the only thing the
"establishment" clause was meant to do is keep the federal government
from recognizing a specific denomination (at the time, other religions
outside of general Christianity were of no concern in this regard) as
THE GOVERNMENT SANCTIONED denomination of the United States.
>I believe that letting the government be a little bit religious is a whole
>lot like being a little bit pregnant. People being what they are, it won't
>stop there.
This is the WHOLE point of the "establishment" clause. To keep things
in check. The government is free to recognise Christianity in general-
early SCOTUS rulings go on record as saying we are a "Christian
Nation". Many of our FF go on record to say that religion and morality
should be encouraged by government, as it is the best way to support
good government.
What the government cannot do is establish any particular way of
worship as THE only way. If you want a definition of "establishment of
religion", I recommend doing a study of the Church of England during
the 17-18th centuries.
> A cross on a courthouse has no purpose other than for you, as a
>Christian, to say "See, the government endorses MY religion above yours."
Actually, the government seems to be going out of its way to endorse
atheism.
I disagree with your statement above. First of all, it is likely that
the federal government had nothing to do with the cross being put on
the building. If it had *forced* them to put a cross on the building,
then I would be with you in denouncing this. Second, I could care less
if the government endorses my religion or not.
>In this case it is about power, not religion.
You are partly right. Government has been stretching muscles that it
cannot lawfully use. If I were you, I'd be more afraid of the
government making such rulings against religion, than I would be at the
idea of a theocracy (the scare tactics in this area are amusing,
since the Constitution would not allow such a thing to happen...oh, but
wait, we don't follow it anyway, do we...hmmm)
> Put the crosses on the
>churches, where they belong, and leave them out of the government that
>represents us all, Christian, Jew, Muslim and atheist, alike.
It isn't about representation, it is about respecting our herritage.
It is about a Christian nation recognising what ideals made us the
greatest nation on earth, the ideals that are necessary to the support
of good government. It is not too amazing to me that as we get farther
and farther away from these ideals, the more government and social
problems we have.
>It becomes clear, steve, that you advocate the establishment of an official
>state religion, where all religions are equal, but some are more equal than
>others. Where have I heard that phrase before...
You need to clean off your glasses then. I'm merely parroting
historical context of the First. Obviously, intent is of little
interest in todays' agenda-laden Courts, so this is but a mental
exercise. It's a shame that you cannot see past your own biases to
understand what it is I'm really doing in this discussion. I'm not
trying to advocate anything, but merely give a bit of historical
context that I found quite enlightening (and hard to believe at first-
to say the least...hard to believe because I had a hard time believing
that SCOTUS could be so far off base in certain rulings).
-steve
|
1145.78 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Fri Oct 06 1995 15:33 | 114 |
| re: .71
>Gee, steve, thanks. This is a very brave thing to say when you are in the
>majority.
I'm a follower of Jesus. I am most definitely NOT in the majority.
From the looks of current events in this nation, I would seem to be in
a very small minority.
> Again, part of the Constitution is designed to protect
>us from the tyranny of the majority. That is why our government was created
>as a Constitutional Republic, it is NOT a democracy.
You confuse federal government with local government. Local
governments are supposed to have autonomy, not be federal lackeys. The
feds are supposed to stay out of local business unless constitutional
issues come up. Of course, this too is a historical view, and is quite
a bit off of modern reality, but it's nice to dream.
> Your agenda is becoming clearer.
I find your continual accusations in this quite curious. I have no
agenda but to reveal the Constitution in historical context. Since we
are discussing the First, religion inevitably comes into play.
If there is any agenda, it is to uphold the intent of the constitution,
and not play word games with it. If we do not wish to follow it as it
is, I suggest having a Constitutional Convention to make some changes.
Until this is done, we cannot allow reinterpretations of our BoR or the
Constitution itself (against intent) and still call ourselves a
Constitutional Republic (and in truth, we are not today, but that's
another story).
>And what is the locality that chooses the official religion for the federal
>government?
Your question is based in illogic. The federal government can have no
religion per se, which is decidedly different from *supporting*
religion (and I don't mean monetarily supporting churches and such,
either) for its own benefit and the benefit of the population.
Erecting a cross and putting it on a courthouse is hardly pinning a
religion on the federal government as a whole- it is more indictive of
showing the beliefs of the locals.
>Can a town declare itself Muslim and force all to pay
>taxes to support that church?
I think you are going to extremes now. Forced taxation to support a
church is a whole new ballgame, and would indeed be establishing a
religion- at least locally (I still would not call it establishing a
national religion, which is what "an establishment of religion" of the
First refers to).
>I've read a lot about the period, the authors, the debates, I believe that
>you have badly missed the real meaning behind it.
Well, I've read quite a lot myself, and I think you are missing some
very key points when looking at the Constitution as a whole.
There, now that we both agree that the other has badly missed the real
meaning, we can move on. 8^)
>steve, I'm sure then that you have read the letter to the Danbury baptists
>by Jefferson in which that phrase was first used. How can you so badly
>misread it? (But then, I've seen some incredibly twisted interpretations of
>the bible, so I guess I shouldn't be surprised).
Yes, as a matter of fact, I have read it. Nice of you to tell me how
badly I misread it. 8^P Of course, I have old SCOTUS on my side in my
readin of it- while you have modern SCOTUS' (mis-)interpretation of the
letter. 8^)
Yes, that's right. 1947 Everson v. Board of Education was NOT the
first attempt to misuse this letter. Let me enlighten you on another,
earlier case- Reynolds v. United States, 1878.
Basically, it was a case in which Mormons claimed that the First
Amendment's "free exercise of religion" promise and the "separation of
church and state" principle (as used in Jefferson's letter) should keep
the United States government from making laws prohibiting their
"religious" exercise of polygamy. Using Jefferson's letter, the Court
showed that while the government was NOT free to interfere with opinion
on religion, which is what frequently distinguishes one denomination
from another, it was responsible to enforce civil laws according to
general Christian standards. In other words, separation of church and
state referred pertained to denominational differences, not to basic
Christian principles. Therefore, and on that basis, the court ruled
that the Mormon practice of polygamy and bigamy was a violation of the
Constitution because it was a violation of basic Christian principles.
This is a far cry from our perspective on the Constitution today, which
is a separation of basic religious principles from public arenas-
which came about not too long after Everson v. Board of Education.
>I agree that the constitution is far too widely ignored. One of the areas
>that is being ignored, however, is in the enforcement of the establishment
>cause of the first amendment, based on the writings of the people of the
>time that helped to create it.
I strongly disagree. The Courts, for the last 30 years, have gone out
of their way to wipe all aspects of religion from public arenas- ALL
DUE TO THEIR MISUSE OF THE "ESTABLISHMENT" CLAUSE. No wonder
historical rulings and modern rulings do not compliment each other as
they should, but rather have changed the entire meaning of the First
over time.
>Just for curiosity sake, to what degree would you like to see Christianity
>intertwined with the government?
This question shows me that you misunderstand my notes entirely.
-steve
|
1145.79 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Fri Oct 06 1995 15:35 | 21 |
|
Re.70
>How is passing out religious tracts in a public-owned park
>government sponsored religion?
>It isn't. Individuals have always been free to state their views in
>public places.
Yes, and fortunately for us too!
I remember being down in Boston a while ago, on the Common with a
certain Indian friend from another continent who is also known for
being on the irreverent side, and there was this hellfire-and-
brimstone-type preacher doing his thing in a very loud voice. At
one point he mentioned something about sheep, and my friend and I
turned to each other simultaneously and went "Baaaaa!!!!"
You kinda had to be there, I guess...(;^)
Cindy
|
1145.80 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Fri Oct 06 1995 15:53 | 77 |
| re: .72
> 1145.69 is why I fear the religious right. More specifically, why I
> fear the religious right in the form of political action groups. [Not
> that Steve supports any of them, but he does share their publicly
> stated sentiments.]
Perhaps you aren't reading my note neutrally?
> Unsupported accusations of systemic disregard for
> the Constitution,
This is a given, my friend. If you cannot see Constitutional abuses
far and wide, you need to open your eyes. What kind of examples would
you like me to post? I'll be happy to substanciate my claims, though I
admit I did not think that the general claims really needed to be
explained.
> claims of wholesale religious persecution,
Wrong. Claims of misinterpreting the First, definitely.
> and a narrowly informed view of history;
Of course, since I do not support your view, I must be uninformed.
Sigh.
> all hallmarks of the religious
> right's "the sky is falling" religio-political lament.
I suppose you feel everything is fine and dandy? FWIW, I'm only
participating in this discussion as an exercise. I fully realise that
we are not going back to the intent behind the Constitution, and that
what I post does not resemble modern reality or mentality.
> > The First Amendment should not be open to re-interpretation due to
> > political/social climate.
> When questions arise regarding the interpretation of the Constitution,
> it is subject to interpretive review by the Supreme Court. That's their
> job. The Constitution was meant to be an evolving, refining document,
The Constitution was NOT meant to be "an evolving, refining document".
It was meant to be an outline for government, and more importantly, a
LIMITUS to government power. However, the option of amending it was
left open for unforseen future issues. This in no way means that
SCOTUS is given the power to re-define or re-interpret the
Constitution. The intent was to remain the same, the only thing SCOTUS
could do was interpret law, using the Constitution as the interpreting
filter.
> hence the amendments themselves. If the Constitution, including the
> amendments, were not open for interpretation and modification, then
> blacks would be slaves,
Nonsense. The Constitution is silent on the issue of slavery. It was
an Amendment that officially freed the slaves- not a re-interpretation
of the Constitution itself.
> women wouldn't vote,
Same as above.
> and I couldn't have a beer with my pizza.
Actually, prohibition came via an Amendment (which should have never
passed Constitutional muster, IMO). It was repealed, and rightly so.
It was, however, NOT re-interpreted.
Are you for re-interpreting the BoR? Do you understand that the BoR
have nothing to do with our freedoms? The freedoms are inalienable,
and are not bestowed upon us by any human doctrine. All the BoR do is
tell uncle sam to keep his hand off...and we can see just how well that
is working today.
-steve
|
1145.81 | | ravel.amt.tay1.dec.com::SCHULER | Greg, DTN 227-4165 | Fri Oct 06 1995 16:28 | 19 |
| > Using Jefferson's letter, the Court showed that while the government
> was NOT free to interfere with opinion on religion, which is what
> frequently distinguishes one denomination
> from another, it was responsible to enforce civil laws according to
> general Christian standards. In other words, separation of church
> and state referred pertained to denominational differences, not to
> basic Christian principles. Therefore, and on that basis, the court
> ruled that the Mormon practice of polygamy and bigamy was a violation of
> the Constitution because it was a violation of basic Christian
> principles.
Who's version of "general Christian standards" and "basic Christian
principles" are the justices of today to follow?
What if the justice isn't Christian?
Does it matter?
/Greg
|
1145.82 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Fri Oct 06 1995 17:22 | 36 |
|
> Perhaps you aren't reading my note neutrally?
Because I think it overstates the social/political situation? I take it
that to be 'neutral' means to agree with your views.
Gasps of amazement, and incredulous remarks, about my 'blindness' do
not dissuade me from my belief that you exaggerate the constitutional
crisis.
>> claims of wholesale religious persecution,
> Wrong. Claims of misinterpreting the First, definitely.
...which results in the persecution of religion, as you described.
I apologize for saying you were narrowly informed. I meant to say that
you narrowly interpret original intent.
> I suppose you feel everything is fine and dandy?
I do not operate in a binary universe. I do not understand the idea
that there are only two options: the sky is falling, and find and
dandy.
Rather than get into a lengthy debate regarding interpretation versus
re-interpretation and Supreme Court rulings versus amendments, let me
just say that over time we have re-interpreted the particulars of the
Constitution in an effort to keep with the spirit of the Constitution
in an evolving society. We have re-interpreted the "life or limb" test
for double jeopardy. We have re-interpreted what is considered "cruel
and unusual" punishment. So to, I think, we need to re-examine the term
"establish" when used with religion-state issues, as we see a greater
diversity in the religious base of our citizenry.
Eric
|
1145.83 | your 200-year rollback | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Mon Oct 09 1995 10:01 | 155 |
| re Note 1145.77 by CSOA1::LEECH:
> re: .70
> ...
> > Would you
> >object to a star of David? How about a pitchfork held by a certain cloven
> >footed joker? This *is* a religious symbol, and it has no place on a
> >government building.
>
> Actually, no. It is up to the community as to what adorns their
> buildings- whether it be religious or not. The federal government has
> no business telling anyone what to, or what not to, adorn their
> buildings with.
This kind of thing scares it -- if thins kind of logic is
followed, it is clear that there will be sizable groups of
people in the coming century who live in this country, and
are even citizens, yet will feel that large parts of the
country are truly alien to them. Will it go even farther,
will they find that activities that they quite legitimately
do in one area will get them into legal trouble in another?
Yes, I know that you could say that this is the way things
appear today to many people. The difference is government
sponsorship of the wedge that divides, of the difference that
makes other Americans feel like aliens.
> >About the amendments not being open to interpretation, I would agree with
> >you, but they were not written clearly enough allow this. You can see
> >different interpretations being given in the courts even while the authors
> >were alive, why should it be different now?
>
> I've read parts of cases that made such attempts, but in general, early
> SCOTUS was very consistent in their interpretations.
>
> I disagree that they were not written clearly enough.
Then there is disagreement about those amendments -- case
closed! (You can never win an argument about a claim that
there is no disagreement by disagreeing!!)
> Actually, you have missed the mark with this comment. As I said above,
> if a community wanted to erect a satanic symbol and put it on their
> courthouse, they that's up to them; and I definitely disagree with
> satanism. However, in truth, satanism is NOT protected by the First.
> I've posted the definition of "religion" in here before- as the word
> was used in the days of the FF. Satanism does not qualify as a
> "religion" under the definition they used.
I wonder if Christianity would qualify -- after all, you can
quote many proponents of Christianity who say that
"Christianity is not a religion, but a relationship". My
point is that if you start narrowing the definition of what
is protected (or widening the definition of what government
activities are allowed) even (some, at least) Christians will
run into trouble sooner or later. (Perhaps just Catholics
-- after all, our country was founded on discrimination
against Catholics, right?)
> I agree. Then explain to me how the government can tell a community
> that they cannot hang a cross from their courthouse. Seems like they
> are butting in where a) they don't belong, b) where there is no problem
> locally, that is in need of their attention.
See the above. A local community, by how it does things and
treats people within its borders, can indeed change the
meaning of American citizenship at large by how it treats
other American citizens traveling within or moving into its
borders.
Besides, it isn't the "government" telling a local community
what to do, it is the representative of the people of the
entire nation telling the local community. I really do
believe that this is a government of the people.
> This is the WHOLE point of the "establishment" clause. To keep things
> in check. The government is free to recognise Christianity in general-
> early SCOTUS rulings go on record as saying we are a "Christian
> Nation". Many of our FF go on record to say that religion and morality
> should be encouraged by government, as it is the best way to support
> good government.
>
> What the government cannot do is establish any particular way of
> worship as THE only way. If you want a definition of "establishment of
> religion", I recommend doing a study of the Church of England during
> the 17-18th centuries.
You know, Steve, that there are times that I'm tempted to
agree with you that the early founders may have had as
limited a vision as yours, that religious freedom is
established merely by not establishing a state church. I'm
sure that at least some of the contemporaries of the true
visionaries who established our nation had an understanding
as limited as yours.
But I do not consider them to be the only founders of this
nation or of our constitutional form of government. There
are founders in every generation (for example, the supreme
court of Brown vs. Board of Education) whose vision continues
to seek the ideals of the first founders while having the
benefit of seeing how things are working out and what
challenges are now faced.
I have very little to say, and I certainly wouldn't want to
try to convince, people like you who would repeal the last
200 years. Religious freedom is MUCH, MUCH more than simply
the absence of a state-sanctioned church.
> > Put the crosses on the
> >churches, where they belong, and leave them out of the government that
> >represents us all, Christian, Jew, Muslim and atheist, alike.
>
> It isn't about representation, it is about respecting our herritage.
I believe that government's role in "respecting our
heritage" is to let citizens, individually and collectively,
be free to "respect our heritage" in the way they see fit.
There are aspects of heritage in the south, for example,
which black groups might wish to respect differently than
white groups. Should the local government simply take a poll
and see whose view of what is important in heritage should be
officially respected? Or should the local government simply
try to officially respect all the views, even if in
fundamental conflict? Or should government just stay out of
it, and fix the roads and investigate crimes?
> It is about a Christian nation recognising what ideals made us the
> greatest nation on earth, the ideals that are necessary to the support
> of good government. It is not too amazing to me that as we get farther
> and farther away from these ideals, the more government and social
> problems we have.
I think that the fundamental conservative lie is that the
nation has more problems, and more lawlessness, now than at
some point in the not too distant past. There were
incredible problems of discrimination, on sex, race, and
religion. There were great abuses of corporate power, and
arrogant disregard for the harm done to the general welfare
by the actions of individuals and industry.
The great fear that people like me have of people like you
taking power is that your 200-year (or even 50-year) rollback
would bring all those problems back.
I'd rather see us fixing the problems that we now have than
simply saying that the way to fix the remaining problems is
just to stop fixing the ones we've already begun to fix!
Bob
|
1145.84 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Mon Oct 09 1995 10:12 | 33 |
| re: .82
You are agreeing with me and you don't even realise it. 8^)
We HAVE reinterpreted the Constitution as you say. This is the whole
point. If you can reinterpret one part of it, who's to say that pretty
soon the whole thing will be changed? If you can change definitions at
will, what's to keep us from reinterpreting the Second (oops, bad
example there, we've already pretty much killed that one)...err, First
(wait, that one has changed too)....uhm, I mean the Fourth (oh no, that
one has been under reconstruction as well)...how about the uhm Tenth
(never mind, that one has been ignored for decades)....uhm, I give up.
[do you see where this is going?]
The difference between you and I, is that I feel that in order to
continue as a Constitutional Republic, that we have to follow the
intended meaning of our founding document. Start playing around with
it and you end up with a lot of problems- like erosion of our rights,
for one example.
If we want to change the document (and I'm not talking Amendments,
either, as Amendments should not contradict the intent of the
Constitution), then I suggest we stop the pretense of following it and
have a Constitutional Convention. At least this would be intellectually
honest. However, I would expect such a move would only seal off any
opportunity to get government back under control (the fact that we have
lost control of the government points to some pretty grave
Constitutional difficulties in itself).
-steve
|
1145.85 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Mon Oct 09 1995 11:52 | 203 |
| re: .83
> This kind of thing scares it -- if thins kind of logic is
> followed, it is clear that there will be sizable groups of
> people in the coming century who live in this country, and
> are even citizens, yet will feel that large parts of the
> country are truly alien to them.
We are looking at things from different perspectives here. I'm looking at
the perspective from a historical view, while you are looking at it from a
modern view. While you are placing sensitivities on par with Amendments
(there is not Amendment that states "everyone must feel welcome everywhere
in the nation- all rights are dependent upon every group feeling welcome and
valued"), I do no such thing. I also do not share your opinion as
stated above.
> Yes, I know that you could say that this is the way things
> appear today to many people. The difference is government
> sponsorship of the wedge that divides, of the difference that
> makes other Americans feel like aliens.
Once again you are forgetting my perspective. In order to understand
what I'm trying to get across, you have to look at things from a
different angle. You are too caught up in the sensitivies argument of
our modern era. Support of Christian values does not equate to
"government sponsorship of the wedge that divides", and quite frankly,
had we been founded by those who subscribed to a different general
religion, it is doubtful that we would have begun as a free nation
which allows freedom of worship.
|> I disagree that they were not written clearly enough.
> Then there is disagreement about those amendments -- case
> closed! (You can never win an argument about a claim that
> there is no disagreement by disagreeing!!)
Stop playing silly logic games with me. If you do a historical study
of the BoR, you will find that there is a clear meaning to each
Amendment. You can't see this because you have been indoctrinated into
the "varying interpretation" and "living document" trap. This
mentality tells you that it is okay that the SCOTUS has re-interpreted
(by rulings) pretty much the whole BoR (rather than allow historical
intent to guide thier rulings), because we are a growing changing
society. If you will just follow this logic to the end conclusion, you
may be able to detect the problems inherant in this philosophy.
In effect, this is rule by judicial fiat.
> I wonder if Christianity would qualify -- after all, you can
> quote many proponents of Christianity who say that
> "Christianity is not a religion, but a relationship".
Decide for yourself. I've reposted the definition from the first
Webster's dictionary, below:
RELIGION. Includes a belief in the being and perfections of God, in
the revelation of his will to man, and in man's obligation to obey his
commands, in a state of reward and punishment, and in man's
accountableness to God; and also true godliness or piety of life, with
with the practice of all moral duties...The practice of moral duties
without a belief in a divine lawgiver, and without reference to his
will or commands, is not religion.
> My point is that if you start narrowing the definition of what
> is protected
That's just it, I'm not narrowing ANYTHING. This is the original
definition of religion, as our FF used the term. It is our modern
society that has expanded what encompasses religion. By merely
redefining the term, we have established special protections for ALL
religions- some of which were condemned by our FF (like Satanism).
> See the above. A local community, by how it does things and
> treats people within its borders, can indeed change the
> meaning of American citizenship at large by how it treats
> other American citizens traveling within or moving into its
> borders.
Change the meaning of American citizenship?? You are back on your
sensitivities bandwagon, here. I'm not interested (for the sake of
this discussion) in sensitivity arguments (and I'm not saying there is
no merit to them). We are discussing the First Amendment, which is not
about sensitivities in the least- it is about LIMITATIONS ON
GOVERNMENT.
The entire Bill of Rights is about what the (federal) GOVERNMENT may not do
("Congress shall make no law..."), not about what citizens or
communities may not do. By erecting a cross on a government building,
the citizens of that community are not denying anyone else practice of
religion, merely acknowledging generic Christianity- just as our FF
did, just as early government did, just as SCOTUS did up into the early
20th century.
If a community was denying, by law or fiat, others of varying religions
the freedom to practice their religion, THEN the federal government
could step in and do something.
> Besides, it isn't the "government" telling a local community
> what to do, it is the representative of the people of the
> entire nation telling the local community. I really do
> believe that this is a government of the people.
The FF did not share your view in this matter. In fact, this was one
of the things that they feared most- a federal government that would
perpetually butt in and tell the locals how to run their affairs, when
no one's rights are being infringed.
> You know, Steve, that there are times that I'm tempted to
> agree with you that the early founders may have had as
> limited a vision as yours, that religious freedom is
> established merely by not establishing a state church.
First things first. This is not MY vision. I'm merely telling you how
it was, as closely as I can relate from my studies of this era-
particularly of the Constitution.
Second, I fail to see why you find this as being a "limited vision".
Quite simply, less government intrusion equals more freedom. More
government intrusion equals less freedom. Simplistic perhaps, but this
is generally true.
Third, the First Amendment does not establish nor define religious
freedom, it merely recognizes it as being one inalienable freedom/right
THAT GOVERNMENT MUST NOT INFRINGE UPON.
> I have very little to say, and I certainly wouldn't want to
> try to convince, people like you who would repeal the last
> 200 years. Religious freedom is MUCH, MUCH more than simply
> the absence of a state-sanctioned church.
You read too much into the First. You have to keep in mind that the
BoR is all about limitations on (federal) GOVERNMENT. It is not
unintentional that the First begins with "Congress shall make no law..".
Tell me how this applies to a cross on a government building. If
Congress had made a law that all public building must have a cross,
then I'd agree that this is unconstitutional, but there is no such law.
It takes a LAW to establish a government religion.
The best way to insure freedom of religion (as our FF well knew) was to
keep the government from making any laws concerning it.
> I believe that government's role in "respecting our
> heritage" is to let citizens, individually and collectively,
> be free to "respect our heritage" in the way they see fit.
Then you agree with me that the cross should be allowed to stay, then.
> There are aspects of heritage in the south, for example,
> which black groups might wish to respect differently than
> white groups. Should the local government simply take a poll
> and see whose view of what is important in heritage should be
> officially respected? Or should the local government simply
> try to officially respect all the views, even if in
> fundamental conflict? Or should government just stay out of
> it, and fix the roads and investigate crimes?
The federal government should stay out of it entirely- UNLESS there are
issues in which some people's Constitutional rights are being infringed
by local government.
> I think that the fundamental conservative lie is that the
> nation has more problems, and more lawlessness, now than at
> some point in the not too distant past.
I think this can be demonstrated with statistics very convincingly-
even taking for granted that statistics do not tell the whole story.
Of course, this depends on which problems you concentrate on.
However, limiting this back to the subject at hand (Constitution), I
feel that we have many more problems in the latter half of this
century, than there was in the first half.
> The great fear that people like me have of people like you
> taking power is that your 200-year (or even 50-year) rollback
> would bring all those problems back.
Oh boy! I am a feared individual. {insert diabolical laughter}
This is illogical. Why must we ignore the real advances we've
made over the last 50 years? Why does reintroducing things that DID
work well 50 years ago equate to bringing back all the bad luggage as
well?
> I'd rather see us fixing the problems that we now have than
> simply saying that the way to fix the remaining problems is
> just to stop fixing the ones we've already begun to fix!
Ignoring the fact that my parse-o-meter just broke... 8^)
I'd like to fix our problems, too, so I agree with you. What I don't
agree with you about is ignoring things that have already proven to be
effective at reducing the very problems we wish to fix.
To be honest, I see some of our supposed fixes as only making things
worse. I think we need a different approach than simply reintroducing
failed concepts over and over again.
-steve
|
1145.86 | Gargoyles as a symbol of religion | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Mon Oct 09 1995 12:13 | 7 |
| .76
Gargoyles are a religious symbol? Not according to my dictionary and probably
not according to 95% of the people on the street, neither of which can be said
for the Cross.
Steve
|
1145.87 | | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Mon Oct 09 1995 13:56 | 124 |
| .77 Leech
>It isn't. Individuals have always been free to state their views in
public
>places.
No, they haven't, and aren't. But the pendulum is correcting this.
There will always be isolated incidents of suppression, as well as
incidents of blatant state support. Are you maintaining that there is a
systematic attempt by the state to deny freedom of speech based on
religion?
================
| How is a cross on a building a government sponsored religion?
>It implies a governmental seal of approval for christianity.
Even if I agreed with you here (and I don't), so what? As long as the
government is not forcing crosses to be put on public buildings, there
is no problem with the First. NOTHING is established, only generically
recognised.
You just don't get it. Our government is NOT a democracy. The majority
does NOT rule in all cases. The idea is to allow all citizens, regardless
of
their belief, to participate in the government and to protect them from
the tyranny of the majority. Religious freedom is a cornerstone of this
country. When the government recognizes a religion by placing a symbol on
a governmental building, or whatever, it disenfranchises (to some extent)
those that do not practice that religion. The only reason to push for your
symbol on a public building is as a power play, to have the government
validate *your* religion, it has NO other effect.
Steve, if the local government is allowed to recognize a given sect as the
official religion for an area, how long would it be before the country
divides itself into christian, mormon, muslim, jewish, black, white, etc.
towns? This is a recipe for the disintegration of the U.S. in general.
However, in truth, satanism is NOT protected by the First.
I've posted the definition of "religion" in here before- as the word
was used in the days of the FF. Satanism does not qualify as a
"religion" under the definition they used.
I see. Would you please supply a pointer to your definition? Interesting
strategy, yell loudly about freedom of religion, and then come up with a
definition that includes only yours. I've read about a very similar
strategy in 'Animal Farm'.
I agree. Then explain to me how the government can tell a community
I have. In the same way that they cannot hang a no blacks allowed banner.
It is obvious that as long as your agenda is pushed, you don't much care
whose rights you trample.
from recognizing a specific denomination (at the time, other religions
outside of general Christianity were of no concern in this regard) as
THE GOVERNMENT SANCTIONED denomination of the United States.
This implies, then, that you believe that the government is completely
free to recognize christianity as the one true religion, just not a
particular sect, correct?
This is the WHOLE point of the "establishment" clause. To keep things
in check. The government is free to recognise Christianity in
general-
early SCOTUS rulings go on record as saying we are a "Christian
Nation". Many of our FF go on record to say that religion and
morality
should be encouraged by government, as it is the best way to support
good government.
There is also an officially recognized treaty that states, specifically,
that we are *NOT* a christian nation.
What the government cannot do is establish any particular way of
worship as THE only way.
But it can specify a 'preferred' way?
Actually, the government seems to be going out of its way to endorse
atheism.
Really? I hadn't noticed. What do you have that backs this up? I must
still 'swear on a bible' in court, my money says that I trust in god, my
pledge of allegience includes my pledge to god, etc.
I disagree with your statement above. First of all, it is likely that
the federal government had nothing to do with the cross being put on
the building.
Then how did it get there? Did god make it appear? (Actually, if that
happened I would need to rethink some things).
You are partly right. Government has been stretching muscles that it
cannot lawfully use. If I were you, I'd be more afraid of the
government making such rulings against religion, than I would be at
I am alarmed by governmental excess in all areas, including any cases of
religious repression.
It isn't about representation, it is about respecting our herritage.
It is about a Christian nation recognising what ideals made us the
greatest nation on earth, the ideals that are necessary to the support
of good government.
It is about pushing your own views on other people. Our heritage is that
our government does not push a particular religion. Placing religious
symbols on government buildings sullies that heritage.
exercise. It's a shame that you cannot see past your own biases to
understand what it is I'm really doing in this discussion. I'm not
trying to advocate anything, but merely give a bit of historical
context that I found quite enlightening (and hard to believe at first-
to say the least...hard to believe because I had a hard time believing
that SCOTUS could be so far off base in certain rulings).
I've also read the history, and have reached a different conclusion.
Granted, we all pass things through our personal filter. What you appear
to be doing in this discussion is to promote the view that the founding
fathers founded an officially christian nation. Have you read extensively
of Madison and Jefferson? I would be real interested in how you have
reached your conclusions based on their writings.
Steve
|
1145.88 | | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Mon Oct 09 1995 14:33 | 48 |
| .78
I'm a follower of Jesus. I am most definitely NOT in the majority.
From the looks of current events in this nation, I would seem to be in
a very small minority.
I wish you guys would make up your minds. In one note you tell me 95% of
the country is Christian, in the next you say that you are a very small
minority.
You confuse federal government with local government. Local
governments are supposed to have autonomy, not be federal lackeys. The
feds are supposed to stay out of local business unless constitutional
issues come up.
Exactly. We are discussing a constitutional issue.
If there is any agenda, it is to uphold the intent of the constitution,
and not play word games with it.
Agreed. Can you begin to understand, though, that not everybody agrees with
your reading of the document?
Your question is based in illogic. The federal government can have no
religion per se, which is decidedly different from *supporting*
religion (and I don't mean monetarily supporting churches and such,
either) for its own benefit and the benefit of the population.
Then in your view the government can support religion (can it support only
specific religions) as long as it isn't religious?
religion- at least locally (I still would not call it establishing a
national religion, which is what "an establishment of religion" of the
First refers to).
So in your opinion this would be legal, as long as it is local?
Yes, that's right. 1947 Everson v. Board of Education was NOT the
first attempt to misuse this letter. Let me enlighten you on another,
earlier case- Reynolds v. United States, 1878.
I'm familiar with Reynolds, many scholars see this ruling as an aberration
based on abhorence of the religious practices of the Mormons.
Interestingly, I believe that the if the case came up today it would fail
the guidelines in the RFRA. I have trouble seeing polygamy as infringing on
a 'compelling governmental interest'. It was also in one the middle of one
of the pendulums swings towards a non secular government.
Steve
|
1145.89 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Mon Oct 09 1995 14:57 | 17 |
| <<< Note 1145.83 by LGP30::FLEISCHER "without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8)" >>>
> it is clear that there will be sizable groups of
> people in the coming century who live in this country, and
> are even citizens, yet will feel that large parts of the
> country are truly alien to them.
Large parts of this country are alien to me right now. In
particular much of the urbanized areas on both coasts. The
change in that direction is what encouraged me to consider
my relocation to Colorado 7 years ago.
Also the tenor of this society truly would be alien to someone
transported here from the 1800's. I'm not talking about the
techniligical changes, but the moral, legal and ethical changes.
I'd bet that someone from the past as recent as our grandparents
would be astonded.
|
1145.90 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Mon Oct 09 1995 15:06 | 23 |
| <<< Note 1145.86 by TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff "Spoon!" >>>
>Gargoyles are a religious symbol? Not according to my dictionary and probably
>not according to 95% of the people on the street, neither of which can be said
>for the Cross.
No, I didn't say that they were necessarily religious symbols.
But they often are cloven-hoofed creatures as you asked about.
And I think that you overestimate the religious symbolism of
the cross. Ask the Madonna generation about it.
And if the cross really is a religious symbol of 95% of the
population, I don't see why that significant majority cannot
therefore benefit from it being displayed on a public building.
Spare me the lame argument about tyranny of the majority.
Public purging of Christian decorations amounts to tyranny
of the minority. We can allow public funding of the DESECRATION
of the cross -- and not just a cross as a nice geometric design
but a deliberate depiction of the crucifix with Christ hanging
on it -- if we can allow for such desecration, doesn't that
amount to the opposite of the establishment of religion? Dosn't
that equally violate the fabled separation of Church and State?
|
1145.91 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | nothing's going to bring him back | Mon Oct 09 1995 15:20 | 15 |
|
Joe,
It is indeed disenheartening to watch a place you grew up in become
alien to you. The changes in Colorado in general, and C Springs in
particular from a tolerant stew to the "new Bible belt" as one church
is now calling the Springs are definitely not conducive to the
live-and-let-live attitudes of the west I grew up in.
All I can hope for is that the altitude will affect the attitudes in
the next generation and things can get back to quiet tolerance of one's
neighbor, no matter how outlandish their belief structures.
meg
|
1145.92 | | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Mon Oct 09 1995 16:07 | 12 |
| .85
Stop playing silly logic games with me. If you do a historical study
of the BoR, you will find that there is a clear meaning to each
Amendment. You can't see this because you have been indoctrinated into
the "varying interpretation" and "living document" trap. This
O.K. steve, show me the support for your assertions in the words of those
that wrote them, Jefferson in this case. I'll make it easier, you can limit
your support to the only the establishment clause of the first.
Steve
|
1145.93 | | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Mon Oct 09 1995 16:30 | 50 |
| .90
And I think that you overestimate the religious symbolism of
the cross. Ask the Madonna generation about it.
My point is that 95% of the population recognize the cross as a symbol of
Christianity.
And if the cross really is a religious symbol of 95% of the
population, I don't see why that significant majority cannot
therefore benefit from it being displayed on a public building.
I didn't say it was a symbol of 95%, only that 95% would recognize it.
What benefit do you get from it's display, Joe, other than the smugness
that goes with having your viewpoint in a highly personal matter being
officially recognized by the State?
Spare me the lame argument about tyranny of the majority.
It's only considered lame by the tyrants. Ask the slaves how lame it is.
Ask women before the vote how lame it is.
Public purging of Christian decorations amounts to tyranny
of the minority. We can allow public funding of the DESECRATION
What public purging are you talking about? You can go more that 2 blocks in
this town without running into a cross. On private property there is no
problem. It is only the tacit raising of one religion above the others, by
the State, that is at issue here.
We can allow public funding of the DESECRATION
of the cross -- and not just a cross as a nice geometric design
but a deliberate depiction of the crucifix with Christ hanging
on it -- if we can allow for such desecration, doesn't that
amount to the opposite of the establishment of religion?
For the record, I also object to the use of public funds for that type of
exhibit.
Dosn't that equally violate the fabled separation of Church and
State?
Yes, because I see it as a publically funded display of a religious
opinion. It should be stopped just as surely as the crosses on publically
funded buildings. BTW, Jefferson (amoung others) would object to your
calling the separation a fable, he devoted large periods of his life to the
principle.
Steve
|
1145.94 | | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Mon Oct 09 1995 16:31 | 7 |
| .91
meg,
I hope for the same, but I'm not holding my breath...
Steve
|
1145.95 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 09 1995 16:41 | 11 |
| Steve:
ZZ Yes, because I see it as a publically funded display of a religious
ZZ opinion. It should be stopped just as surely as the crosses on
ZZ publically funded buildings.
I brought this up in another conference so what the heck. The
Washington Monument is a clear religious symbol of a phallyce, used in
Baal Worship in Babylon. Should we tear it down?
-Jack
|
1145.96 | Jefferson and "establishment" | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Mon Oct 09 1995 16:42 | 54 |
|
From the Supreme Court decision Everson v. Board of Education,
1947. But Steve L. already discredited this court as
constitutional ninnies.
---------------------------------------------------------
The movement toward this end reached its dramatic climax in
Virginia in 1785-86 when the Virginia legislative body was about
to renew Virginia's tax levy for the support of the established
church. Thomas Jeffer- [*12] son and James Madison led the fight
against this tax. Madison wrote his great Memorial and
Remonstrance against the law.(11) In it, he eloquently argued that
a true religion did not need the support of law; that no person,
either believer or non-believer, should be taxed to support a
religious institution of any kind; that the best interest of a
society required that the minds of men always be wholly free; and
that cruel persecutions were the inevitable result of
government-established religions. Madison's Remonstrance received
strong support throughout Virginia,(12) and the Assembly postponed
consideration of the proposed tax measure until its next session.
When the proposal came up for consideration at that session, it
not only died in committee, but the Assembly enacted the famous
"Virginia Bill for Religious Liberty" originally written by Thomas
Jefferson.(13) The preamble to that Bill stated among other things
that
"Almighty God hath created the mind free; that all
attempts to influence it by temporal punishments or
burthens, or by civil incapacitations, tend only to
beget habits of hypocrisy and meanness, and are [*13] a
departure from the plan of the Holy author of our
religion, who being Lord both of body and mind, yet
chose not to propagate it by coercions on either . . .;
that to compel a man to furnish contribution of money
for the propagation of opinions which he dis-believes,
is sinful and tyrannical; that even the forcing him to
support this or that teacher of his own religious
persuasion, is depriving him of the comfortable liberty
of giving his contributions to the particular pastor,
whose morals he would make his pattern . . . ."
And the statute itself enacted
"That no man shall be compelled to frequent or support
any religious worship, place, or ministry whatsoever,
nor shall be enforced, restrained, molested, or
burthened in his body or goods, nor shall otherwise
suffer on account of his religious opinions or belief .
. . ."(14)
----------------------------------------------------------
I believe this shows Jefferson supported a much broader
understanding of estabishment 210 years ago, than Steve Leech does
today.
|
1145.97 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | nothing's going to bring him back | Mon Oct 09 1995 16:46 | 6 |
| and Jefferson was the first, although by no means the last,
presidential candidate where certain people tried to proclaim the end
of the earth and god forsaking the country if he were elected, simply
because of this belief.
meg
|
1145.98 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Mon Oct 09 1995 17:02 | 17 |
|
> The Washington Monument is a clear religious symbol of a phallyce, used
> in Baal Worship in Babylon. Should we tear it down?
... or cover it with a giant fig leaf. :^)
Speaking personally, and pragmatically, I do not support the defacement
of destruction of architecturally historic constructions that bear
religious symbols. However, calling the Washington Monument a
Babylonian religious symbol is like calling a four-way intersection a
Christian symbol... pure phallusy, er fallacy.
There are symbols that are both religious and secular -- the dove as a
symbol of peace, for example. I'd throw in gargoyles and obelisks as
well.
Eric
|
1145.99 | | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Mon Oct 09 1995 17:14 | 7 |
| re Note 1145.90 by CSC32::J_OPPELT:
> Spare me the lame argument about tyranny of the majority.
It's a lame argument only to those who would practice it.
Bob
|
1145.100 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 09 1995 17:16 | 1 |
| Faithless Snarf!
|
1145.101 | | TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff | Spoon! | Mon Oct 09 1995 17:27 | 18 |
| .95
Jack,
No, I doubt many would recognize it as such. I even looked up phallyce,
being unfamiliar with the word, but could not find it in my dictionary.
I would not advocate the tearing down of anything, including State
buildings with crosses or other religious symbols on them, Eric says it
will in .98.
---------------------------------------
.100
Faithless Snarf!
What is Snarf, and what does it mean for it to be faithless?
Steve
|
1145.102 | :-} | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Mon Oct 09 1995 17:31 | 9 |
| re Note 1145.101 by TINCUP::inwo.cxo.dec.com::Bittrolff:
> No, I doubt many would recognize it as such. I even looked up phallyce,
> being unfamiliar with the word, but could not find it in my dictionary.
You're probably using one of those modern, revisionist
dictionaries (published during the past 200 years).
Bob
|
1145.103 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Mon Oct 09 1995 17:55 | 7 |
|
> You're probably using one of those modern, revisionist dictionaries
> (published during the past 200 years).
... or relying on Jack to spell naughty words correctly. :^)
It's phallus
|
1145.104 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 09 1995 17:56 | 2 |
| A Phallyce is a term to mean the male anatony or member. Those
Babylonians were a veril lot!! :-)
|
1145.105 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Mon Oct 09 1995 17:57 | 1 |
| Actually, the spelling might be wrong!!!!
|
1145.106 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Mon Oct 09 1995 18:28 | 1 |
| and I thought it was fallic.
|
1145.107 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Mon Oct 09 1995 18:58 | 165 |
| re: .87
>Our government is NOT a democracy. The majority
>does NOT rule in all cases.
You are confusing federal government with local government. Local
governments are very close to a democracy. We all can vote on local
issues, the majority winning out in all cases. While it isn't a true
democracy in all aspects, it is much closer to one than the federal
government.
> The idea is to allow all citizens, regardless
>of their belief, to participate in the government and to protect them from
>the tyranny of the majority.
So now we have a tyranny of the minority. See what happens when we
forget how things are supposed to work?
> Religious freedom is a cornerstone of this
>country. When the government recognizes a religion by placing a symbol on
>a governmental building,
The government did not place the symbol there, nor did it say a symbol
must be put there. Those who built it (that community) decided to put
it there. They do not need federal approval for this, nor should the
federal government be allowed to force its will on this community in
this particular case- especially since there is NO PROBLEM being
created (not that this gives them the right, it just underlines to me
how silly the whole thing is).
> or whatever, it disenfranchises (to some extent)
>those that do not practice that religion.
Tough noogies. If you are so easily offended, move elsewhere. I
realize this is very blunt, but I grow weary of this nation's
super-sensitivity on such silly issues. There is nothing in the
Constitution about neutering everything so's not to offend anyone of
one of the thousands of variations of faiths.
> The only reason to push for your
>symbol on a public building is as a power play, to have the government
>validate *your* religion, it has NO other effect.
You start with a failed premise, here. NO ONE IS PUSHING this. The
cross was there already. It had been there for quite a while, from
what I gather. All the "pushing" is being done from the other side of
the issue. The "pushing" is to remove all things remotely religious
from public arenas.
May as well tear down all those buildings in DC that have Bible
passages engraved on them, eh? Hope you have a lot of demolition
equipment, because there's more than a few.
>Steve, if the local government is allowed to recognize a given sect as the
>official religion for an area, how long would it be before the country
>divides itself into christian, mormon, muslim, jewish, black, white, etc.
>towns? This is a recipe for the disintegration of the U.S. in general.
One word: multiculturalism. I see the very things mentioned above
happening, not due to silent symbols on a building, but due to the
multicultural PC agenda. This segregation that is government sponsored in
many ways.
>I see. Would you please supply a pointer to your definition? Interesting
>strategy, yell loudly about freedom of religion, and then come up with a
>definition that includes only yours. I've read about a very similar
>strategy in 'Animal Farm'.
If you haven't read the definition, how do you know it only includes my
religion? (see my last entry a few notes back)
>I have. In the same way that they cannot hang a no blacks allowed banner.
Nope, this don't cut it. We have an Amendment that makes blacks
citizens, so the Constitution does not allow such segregation.
Try again.
>It is obvious that as long as your agenda is pushed, you don't much care
>whose rights you trample.
I've said more than once that this discussion is a mental exercise to
me. The only agenda I have is to inform people the best I can of
original Constitutional intent. Do with it as you like.
If you wish to spin it as my agenda to trample people's rights, then
perhaps I should end this exercise. I do not wish to offend, nor do I
wish to constantly correct misrepresentations of my view, it takes too
much time and effort away from the meat of this discussion.
>This implies, then, that you believe that the government is completely
>free to recognize christianity as the one true religion, just not a
>particular sect, correct?
Correct, for the most part. It can recognise Christianity- whether it
can say that this is the ONE TRUE religion...well, I think that's
taking what I said to the other extreme. As far as "establishment of
religion" goes, what you say above about not being able to establish
one sect as THE nationally recognised sect; that much is true.
>There is also an officially recognized treaty that states, specifically,
>that we are *NOT* a christian nation.
Early SCOTUS disagrees with you here, but I'm open for new information.
What treaty do you speak of?
>But it can specify a 'preferred' way?
Government cannot dictate or specify a way to worship, if this is what
you are getting at. Congress can make no law regarding religion (the
reason this is so confusing these days is the way we define "religion"
today, vs. how it was defined in the days that the BoR was penned).
>Really? I hadn't noticed. What do you have that backs this up? I must
>still 'swear on a bible' in court, my money says that I trust in god, my
>pledge of allegience includes my pledge to god, etc.
We no longer have the pledge of allegience anymore. 'Swear on the
Bible' is a tradition from another time...a time when this was enough
to get people to tell the truth in court. Swearing on the Bible was
not something to be taken lightly. Today, it is relatively meaningless
for most (judgeing by how much lying is going on in courts of law).
This actually backs up my argument, if you will think about it.
As far as becoming an atheistic nation...well, that would take a bit of
time to answer. Let's just say that we are moving this way by default.
Since we no longer have a firm grasp on the First, we end up with quite
a nice mess on our hands (prayer in schools, Bible reading in schools,
hanging the ten commendments in schools, crosses on public buildings,
etc.). The end result is that we do away with all religion (well, all
the obvious ones anyway) in public arenas- wala, atheistic nation.
There is no such thing as being free of religion. Even atheism is
considered a religion by SCOTUS, as is secular humanism.
>It is about pushing your own views on other people.
How so, unless government itself forces a particular religion on you?
> Our heritage is that
>our government does not push a particular religion. Placing religious
>symbols on government buildings sullies that heritage.
Tell that to those who built many government buildings in DC (you know,
the old ones with all the scriptures on them).
Government doesn't push anything (except atheism by default in modern
America). It cannot Consitutionally push anything, nor deny free
expression (crosses on buildings) that harms no one, and recognises our
herritage.
I've also read the history, and have reached a different conclusion.
Granted, we all pass things through our personal filter. What you appear
to be doing in this discussion is to promote the view that the founding
fathers founded an officially christian nation.
Officially? Officially, the government itself has no religion. This
does not mean that government did not recognise that we were founded on
Christian principles and that support of these principles were
essential to good government and happiness of the people.
-steve
|
1145.108 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Mon Oct 09 1995 21:42 | 3 |
|
Gentle reminder - conference etiquette states that notes should be kept
to under 100 lines.
|
1145.109 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Mon Oct 09 1995 23:26 | 8 |
| re .91
I contend that you weren't paying attention when you thought
it was a "tolerant stew". Or if it ever was such a stew
for a while, it was only a temporary anomaly from the traditional
character of this place. We are recapturing the moral backbone
that defined our history. Sorry if you are unable to deal
with that.
|
1145.110 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Mon Oct 09 1995 23:27 | 5 |
| re .96
This was the very first time that the Supreme Court chose
to interpret things in this manner. It was the beginning
of the slide that continues today.
|
1145.111 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Mon Oct 09 1995 23:28 | 8 |
| <<< Note 1145.99 by LGP30::FLEISCHER "without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8)" >>>
>> Spare me the lame argument about tyranny of the majority.
>
> It's a lame argument only to those who would practice it.
It is a being practiced only per your assertion.
|
1145.112 | | HURON::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Tue Oct 10 1995 00:31 | 8 |
|
> This was the very first time that the Supreme Court chose to interpret
> things in this manner.
This case cited earlier decisions to buttress its judgment, so I'm not
sure your statement is exactly true. Even so, so what?
Eric
|
1145.113 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Tue Oct 10 1995 10:12 | 66 |
| re: .88
>I wish you guys would make up your minds. In one note you tell me 95% of
>the country is Christian, in the next you say that you are a very small
>minority.
You are mistaken. I have never used such a figure in this, or any
other, forum. Besides, you missed my qualifier.
FWIW, many claim to be Christian, but not all who claim His namesake
are His followers.
>Agreed. Can you begin to understand, though, that not everybody agrees with
>your reading of the document?
This is all too obvious. In fact, I said earlier that my views are
historical in intent, and that we have reinterpreted it from said
original intent. This is what this entire string has been about,
actually.
>Then in your view the government can support religion (can it support only
>specific religions) as long as it isn't religious?
From a historical perspective, we *were* a Christian nation. Not 100%
of the population was Christian, but most of it. From this
perspective, what religion do you think government supported?
Much of the confusion come from two very simple things. One,
"religion" is much more encompasing a term today, than in the time of
the FF. Two, there is much more diversity of religion today.
>I'm familiar with Reynolds, many scholars see this ruling as an aberration
>based on abhorence of the religious practices of the Mormons.
It was a case study on the mindset of early SCOTUS, as to what exactly
they felt was protected by the First. I look at the earlier SCOTUS
rulings because I'm looking at things from historical eyes- which is
the best way to find original intent. By today's definitions and
Constitutional opinion, yes, this case was an aberration. In its day,
it does not stand alone- many similar rulings can be found (I can list
one or two others, if you like).
Whether you or I agree with the original intent (most of us would not,
as we grow up believing differently) is not the issue. The issue is
WHAT IS the original intent...and that is all I'm trying to point out,
to the best of my knowledge.
>Interestingly, I believe that the if the case came up today it would fail
>the guidelines in the RFRA.
Today it might. But today's Constitutional views is not the issue I am
discussing.
> I have trouble seeing polygamy as infringing on
>a 'compelling governmental interest'.
I disagree. Redefining what makes a "family" is most definitely a
governmental interest from more than one reason. You have tax laws,
which is the first problem that comes to mind, as well as divorce and
custody laws, etc.
In fact, there is much more reason for the government to get involved
in your example, than in the cross issue.
-steve
|
1145.114 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Tue Oct 10 1995 10:23 | 3 |
| re: .96
I fail to see how you arrived at your conclusion.
|
1145.115 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | nothing's going to bring him back | Tue Oct 10 1995 11:01 | 13 |
| Joe,
Since you migrated here from another state, it doesn't surprise me that
you are less than familiar with the history of this state. Yes I am
aware that Palmer was a strict Methodist, but even so, he was also a
far more tolerant person than the organizations moving in purport to
be. This was one of the first states to grant sufferage to women, now
t appears to be in the forefront of people trying to remove rights from
identifiable groups. What a shame.
meg
|
1145.116 | some backing for my claims. | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Tue Oct 10 1995 11:02 | 88 |
| Here's a few interesting drafts of the First that give a general idea
of the consistent direction, as well as more insight to the meaning of
the First- particularly the "establishment" clause. Keep in mind the
definition of "religion" I supplied earlier- it is supported here. It
will also shed a bit of light on their intent.
June 8 (1789). Initial proposals of James Madison.
"The civil rights of none shall be abridged on account or religious
belief or worship, nor shall any national religion be established, nor
shall the full and equal rights of conscience be in any manner, or on
any pretext infringed."
August 15. House Select Committee.
"No religion shall be established by law, nor shall the equal rights of
conscience be infringed."
August 20. Fisher AMes of MAss. moved that the following language be
adopted by the House, and it was agreed:
"Congress shall make no law establishing religion, or to prevent the
free exercise thereof, or to infringe the rights of conscience."
Septempber 3. Several versions proposed...
"Congress shall not make any law infringing the rights of conscience,
or establishing any religious sect or society."
"Congress shall make no law establishing any particular denomination or
religion in preference ot another, or prohibiting the free exercise
thereof, nor shall the rights of conscience be infringed."
"Congress shall make no law establishing one religious society in
preference to others, or to infringe on the rights of conscience."
"Congress shall make no law establishing religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof."
September 9.
"Congress shall make no law establishing articles of faith or a mode of
worship, or prohibiting the free exercise of religion."
As you see, "religion" is used interchangably with "religious sect",
"religious society" and "particular denomination".
When drafting the First Amendment, members of Congress looked to
precedent in their own state's constitution. Here are a few examples:
Massachusetts, 1780. Part I, Article II.
It is the right, as well as duty, of all men in society, publicly, an
dat stated seasons, to worship the Supreme Being, the Great Creator and
Preserver of the Universe. And no subject shall be hurt, molested, or
restrained, in his person, liberty, or estate, for worshiping God in
the manner and season, most agreable to the dictates of his own
conscience.
Article III.
And every denomination of Christians demeaning themselves peacably, and
as good subjects of the commonwealth, shall be equally under the
protection of the law: And no subordination of any one sect or
denomination to another, shall ever be established by law.
New Hampshire, 1783, 1792. Part One. Article I, Section V.
Every individual has a natural and unalienable right to worship God
according to the dictates of his own conscience, and reason...
ArticleI, Section VI.
And every denomination of Christians demeaning themselves quietly, and
as good subjects of the state, shall be equally under the protection of
the law: And no subordination of any one sect or denomination to
another, shall ever be established by law.
South Carolina, 1778. Article XXXVIII.
That all persons and religious societies, who acknowledge that there is
one God, and a future state of rewards and punishment, and that God is
publicly to be worshipped, shall be freely tolerated... That all
denominations of Christian..in this state, demeaning themselves
peacably and faithfully, shall enjoy equal religious and civil
privileges.
|
1145.117 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Tue Oct 10 1995 11:04 | 6 |
| re: .115
>... remove rights from identifiable groups ...
????
|
1145.118 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Tue Oct 10 1995 11:12 | 7 |
| For example, a woman who is a police officer in Colorado was demoted
when her boss found out she was a lesbian. Is this what you believe
"No" to Ammendment 2 will prevent?
Again, just add sexual orientation to the current EEOC law!
|
1145.119 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Oct 10 1995 12:32 | 7 |
|
"We hold these truths to be self evident - that all men are created
equal."
But this didn't apply to women, children, and African Americans.
Cindy
|
1145.120 | | POWDML::FLANAGAN | let your light shine | Tue Oct 10 1995 12:51 | 16 |
| "We hold these truths to be self evindent - that all men are created
equal."
But some are more equal than others!
One of the paradoxes of American History is that the man who penned
those wonderful words was a slave owner.
Another piece of historic trivia, is that Abigail Adams, sitting at
home taking charge of running the household in the absence of her
husband John, sent a letter to John Adams reminding him to
"Not forget the ladies"
Patricia
|
1145.121 | | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Tue Oct 10 1995 13:02 | 4 |
|
Never heard that one about Abigail before - thanks Patricia! (;^)
Cindy
|
1145.122 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | I press on toward the goal | Tue Oct 10 1995 13:09 | 9 |
| ZZZ But some are more equal than others!
Not to rathole but it appears our society in regards to reproductive
matters (abortion) fall into the same trap as our forefathers.
Apparently certain persons aren't afforded the same rights simply
because they aren't mentioned in the Constitution.
-Jack
|
1145.123 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Tue Oct 10 1995 13:24 | 33 |
| <<< Note 1145.112 by HURON::MYERS "He literally meant it figuratively" >>>
> > This was the very first time that the Supreme Court chose to interpret
> > things in this manner.
>
> This case cited earlier decisions to buttress its judgment, so I'm not
> sure your statement is exactly true. Even so, so what?
The 1947 Everson vs Board of Education ruling was the very first
time that the Supreme Court declared that the "wall" was intended
to "protect" Government from religion. They stated: "The first
amendment has erected a wall between church and state. That wall
must be kept high and impregnable."
Until this ruling the word from the Supreme Court was consistently
of the nature, "The wall is to protect church from government, but
Christian principles are never to be separated from Government"
(Reynolds vs U.S 1878. In that ruling they quoted Jefferson's
famous letter in its entirety, so there is little room for arguing
that they were misquoting him or taking him out of context.)
I repeat. Everson vs BoE 1947 was the first time that the Supreme
Court chose to interpret the First Amendment this way.
Here is another SCOTUS ruling to mull over:
Our laws and out institutions must necessarily be based upon and
embody the teachings of the Redeemer of mankind. It is impossible
that it should be otherwise; and in theis sense and to this extent
our civilization and our institutions are emphatically Christian.
Church of the Holy Trinity vs U.S. 1892, in which they quoted 87
historical precedents to support this statement.
|
1145.124 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Tue Oct 10 1995 13:29 | 21 |
| <<< Note 1145.115 by CSC32::M_EVANS "nothing's going to bring him back" >>>
> Joe,
>
> Since you migrated here from another state, it doesn't surprise me that
> you are less than familiar with the history of this state. Yes I am
> aware that Palmer was a strict Methodist, but even so, he was also a
> far more tolerant person than the organizations moving in purport to
> be.
The history of this state did not start at your birth (if you are
claiming to be a native.) Relative to the founding of this state
-- and specifically this city -- your first-hand history here is
as limited as mine. Your interpretation of Palmer's "tolerance"
is mere wishful thinking.
> This was one of the first states to grant sufferage to women, now
> t appears to be in the forefront of people trying to remove rights from
> identifiable groups. What a shame.
Again, more wishful interpretation.
|
1145.125 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Tue Oct 10 1995 13:30 | 6 |
| re .123
Thanks for the elaboration, Joe. Your earlier one sentence quip didn't
make it clear.
Eric
|
1145.126 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Tue Oct 10 1995 13:33 | 6 |
| Re: .123 Joe
Thank goodness the Supreme Court finally saw the light in 1947. I'm glad
I'm not living in the 19th century.
-- Bob
|
1145.127 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Tue Oct 10 1995 13:43 | 12 |
|
> "We hold these truths to be self evident - that all men are created
> equal."
These words are from that great piece of rhetoric called the
Declaration of Independence and have no bearing in law. Eleven years
later when the Constitution was established, you'll note that gender
has been removed and the word 'person' is used and not man or men.
Of course slavery is implicitly accepted, African or otherwise...
Eric
|
1145.128 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Tue Oct 10 1995 13:48 | 10 |
|
Re the "wall"
It's interesting to note that the influx of Catholics in the late 19
and early 20 centuries was perhaps the what brought this whole
church/state thing to a head. The wall protected Protestants from what
they called "Popery," and Catholics from institutionalized anti
catholic sentiments.
Eric
|
1145.129 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Tue Oct 10 1995 13:52 | 24 |
| re .126
Right Bob. The light.
Now the light that they see says, "If portions of the the New
Testament were read, they could be, and have been, psychologically
harmful to the child." (Stated without precedent in Abington vs
Schempp, 1963.)
Or, "It is unconstitutional for a student to pray aloud."
(Reed vs Van Hoven, 1965)
More "light" says, "If posted copies of the 10 Commandments are
to have any effect at all, it will be to induce the school
children to read, meditate upon, perhaps to venerate and obey,
the commandments. This is not a permissible objective."
(Stone vs Graham, 1980)
Heaven forbid that kids follow the 10 Commandments! This is not
a permissible objective!
Yes, now we see the light!
|
1145.130 | :-} | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO2-3/E8) | Tue Oct 10 1995 13:54 | 12 |
| re Note 1145.124 by CSC32::J_OPPELT:
> The history of this state did not start at your birth (if you are
> claiming to be a native.) Relative to the founding of this state
> -- and specifically this city -- your first-hand history here is
> as limited as mine.
Perhaps she watches "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman"? (Although,
as a native of Massachusetts, Dr. Quinn is immediately
suspect. :-)
Bob
|
1145.131 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Tue Oct 10 1995 14:17 | 7 |
| Joe,
I certainly do think it should be unconstitutional to post a copy of the
ten commandments in a public school. Commandment one: "You shall have no
other gods before me." Sounds like establishment of religion to me!
-- Bob
|
1145.132 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Tue Oct 10 1995 14:20 | 6 |
| Gee, Bob, that sounds like rule #1 for just about any religion!
So which religion is being established by that?
Why should this historic piece of literature be denied in our
educational institutions?
|
1145.133 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Tue Oct 10 1995 14:54 | 17 |
| Re: .132 Joe
> So which religion is being established by that?
If we were living in Israel I'd say that Judaism was being established,
but since this is the United States I think it's clear that Christianity is
the religion that is being established.
> Why should this historic piece of literature be denied in our
> educational institutions?
If it were presented purely as literature, without an implied endorsement
by the school, I wouldn't have a problem with it. For example, in a
comparative religion class it might appear along with texts from other
religions.
-- Bob
|
1145.134 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | nothing's going to bring him back | Tue Oct 10 1995 15:07 | 25 |
| Joe,
I am well awarte of the history of this State. It was required
reading, both in School and with my parents. Yes I am painfully aware
of the destruction of the Arapaho, the near destruction of the Cheyenne
and the impoverishment and attempted genocide regarding the Utes, both
Mountain and Southern tribes, by people who claimed to be Christyian
god-fearing men.
Women's suffereage was one of the articles in the constitution of this
state, beginning only with school-board elections and working up from
there.
Colorado was one of the first states to accept the Nissai when other
states were "interring" them in awful concentration camps. Colorado
even tolerated the influx of Irish and Chinese from the railroads,
unlike our neighbor to the north, (interesting massacre up there) The
state had successfully integrated several southwaestern culture in the
process of growing into a fine state, unfortunately a fine enough one
that some outsiders wish to bring their ideas of what the state should
be and force that mold onto the rest of us.
Dr. Quinn is neither historically, nor locationally correct, but I
don't expect much better from hollywood, give me "All Creatures Great
and Small" any Saturday night.
|
1145.135 | snippets of skeletons | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Tue Oct 10 1995 15:20 | 2 |
| Sounds like a real "tolerant stew" that you were previously
extolling...
|
1145.136 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Tue Oct 10 1995 16:03 | 17 |
| re: .126
So, all previous SCOTUS rulings on this issue were wrong? All 82 precedents
(there are probably more), dating back to the days of the FF? I guess
those guys who lived in that very era just didn't understand the
Consitution.
I've got a question for you. Why do courts use precedent in cases? If
you answer this honestly, you will realize how silly your statement sounds.
"Seeing the light" is a very interesting use of verbiage- especially
since, in this case, it means "inventing a new meaning the First Amendment"
(as well as Jefferson's letter).
-steve
|
1145.137 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Tue Oct 10 1995 16:06 | 9 |
| re: .127
You are incorrect. The Declaration of Independence DOES indeed have a
bearing in law. Our FF go on record as stating that it is a
co-founding document- the very intent and reason (even conscience)
behind the Constitution.
-steve
|
1145.138 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Tue Oct 10 1995 17:10 | 34 |
| Re: .136 Steve
> So, all previous SCOTUS rulings on this issue were wrong?
> All 82 precedents
> (there are probably more), dating back to the days of the FF? I guess
> those guys who lived in that very era just didn't understand the
> Consitution.
I don't think the precendents were wrong, just misguided. They were
enforcing a less enlightened view of the Constitution.
Many infamous ruling of the Supreme Court, such as the Dredd Scott
decision, Plessy vs. Ferguson, etc. were perfectly valid in terms of
interpreting the original intent of the Founding Fathers and in upholding
precendent. They just happened to be immoral by present day standards.
> I've got a question for you. Why do courts use precedent in cases?
In order to provide a stable base of law, so that courts render consistent
verdicts.
There is a lot to be said for upholding precendents, so that people know
what to expect from the court system. But when the precendent is a bad
one, upholding it becomes an impediment to progress. That's when it
becomes time for the Court to break with precedent by writing a landmark
decision, such as Brown vs. Board of Education.
If the Court never broke with precedent the Constitution would become an
instrument of oppression, chaining us to the morality of the 18th and 19th
centuries, and eventually it would become necessary for us to throw it away
and write a new one. But by changing with the times the Constitution has
survived, and with it the Republic.
-- Bob
|
1145.139 | | APACHE::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Tue Oct 10 1995 17:33 | 8 |
|
re .137
Nonetheless, it is not legislation. You cannot bring litigation based
on a violation of your Declaration of Independence rights. It is
rhetoric and not law, no matter how special or foundational it is.
Eric
|
1145.140 | Just and interesting Jefferson quote | HURON::MYERS | He literally meant it figuratively | Tue Oct 10 1995 23:57 | 10 |
|
Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there
be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason, than that of
blind-folded fear.
Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826),
U.S. president. Letter, 10 Aug. 1787.
|
1145.141 | (;^) | TNPUBS::PAINTER | Planet Crayon | Wed Oct 11 1995 00:02 | 2 |
|
Good one, Eric!
|
1145.142 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Wed Oct 11 1995 11:49 | 107 |
| re: .138 (Bob)
>I don't think the precendents were wrong, just misguided. They were
>enforcing a less enlightened view of the Constitution.
Less enlightened? They enforced ORIGINAL INTENT. Modern courts have
clearly interpreted the First in ways never intended- THIS IS WRONG!
If you wish to make changes to the Constitution, you do not do this by
a rule of 9 (Judicial fiat), you do so with a new Amendment.
The SC had no right to completely ignore intent, which they are bound
by law to uphold.
>Many infamous ruling of the Supreme Court, such as the Dredd Scott
>decision, Plessy vs. Ferguson, etc. were perfectly valid in terms of
>interpreting the original intent of the Founding Fathers and in upholding
>precendent. They just happened to be immoral by present day standards.
I beg to differ. Dredd Scott was not an example of a good ruling- with
regards to intent. Separate but equal was not the intent behind the
Fourteenth Amendment. This was more of a social ruling, IMO, just like
Everson v. Board of Education.
As with anything else, SCOTUS is not perfect. They have their bad
examples, too. However, off-handedly dismissing 82 (probably more)
precedents stretching 150 years of SCOTUS history (all complementing
each other) is another thing altogether. We have bad examples of
SCOTUS ruling before 1947, to be sure, but they are rather isolated
(with regards to having precedent for such a ruling) and
are usually overturned at a later date.
>In order to provide a stable base of law, so that courts render consistent
>verdicts.
Right. And by ignoring all precedent, what is the court doing when it
makes a ruling? How about if it not only ignores much precedent, but
actually rules the exact opposite of all that precedent?
>There is a lot to be said for upholding precendents, so that people know
>what to expect from the court system. But when the precendent is a bad
>one, upholding it becomes an impediment to progress.
If you are dealing with 150 years of consistent precedent in a given
constitutional interpretation, I wonder how such precedent can be
considered 'bad'. I would say that it is consistent in interpreting
the original intent, and that overturning/ignoring it is wrong.
If problems arise due to original intent, then this is grounds for
looking at a new Amendment to expand upon the original; there are never
grounds to ignore the original intent and reinterpret it due to social
change. By doing this, you end up with no consistency in law, which
is THE cause of all of our current First Amendment problems.
> That's when it
>becomes time for the Court to break with precedent by writing a landmark
>decision, such as Brown vs. Board of Education.
No, this is never acceptable. This is the lie that we have been
conditioned to swallow, though. The SC cannot reinterpret Amendments
or the text of the Constitution. The SC can only make a ruling BASED
ON THE INTENT AND MEANING (which is clarified via consistent
precedent- if not clear, then perhaps a landmark ruling is in order-
I'll give you that much) OF THE CONSTITUTION.
Slavery was abolished via Amendment, not by reinterpreting another part
of the Constitution. Women were given the right to vote by Amendment,
not by reinterpretation of the Constitution. When the Constitution is
silent, or existing Amendments do not cover what is needed, this is
grounds for a new Amendment.
When an existing Amendment is not silent, and has clear and numerous
precedent backing up its intent, it cannot be ignored by SCOTUS- the
intent must filter the ruling, not vice-versa.
By allowing the SC to reinterpret Amendments, we give them far more
power than they were ever intended to have. Basically, you have a
very small group of non-elected officials creating law by
reinterpreting the Consitution. Creating law is solely the job of
Congress (I realize that they do not 'create' legislation, but the end
result is the same).
>If the Court never broke with precedent the Constitution would become an
>instrument of oppression, chaining us to the morality of the 18th and 19th
>centuries,
The Constitution is not a document that is used *against* the people-
it *cannot* be a tool for oppression, if its intent is followed. The BoR
is a statement of what GOVERNMENT CANNOT DO- it has nothing to
do with the people, nothing! It is a guarantee that government will
not usurp specific rights deemed important enough to list (many thought
that listing any specific rights in this way was asking for a
limitation on unalienable rights not listed).
> and eventually it would become necessary for us to throw it away
>and write a new one. But by changing with the times the Constitution has
>survived, and with it the Republic.
The way to change the Constitution is with Amendments. This option was
left open by our FF to cover future issues that the Constitution was
silent on. I repeat (again and again, since I feel this is a very
important point), you cannot change the Constitution by reinterpreting
it! You can only legally change it by amending it (not that this
little fact has stopped SCOTUS from doing so).
-steve
|
1145.143 | | GRIM::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Wed Oct 11 1995 13:02 | 55 |
| Re: .142 Steve
>>I don't think the precendents were wrong, just misguided. They were
>>enforcing a less enlightened view of the Constitution.
>
> Less enlightened? They enforced ORIGINAL INTENT.
I realize that you believe that the Constitution should be interpreted
based on Original Intent, but this is *not* what I believe. I do not wish
to be governed according to the political philosophy of the 18th century,
which allowed white men to enslave black men, which allowed men to
dominate women, which allowed rich men to dominate poor men.
I believe the Constitution should be interpreted in the light of present
day conceptions of liberty and justice.
> Right. And by ignoring all precedent, what is the court doing when it
> makes a ruling? How about if it not only ignores much precedent, but
> actually rules the exact opposite of all that precedent?
When the court rules exactly the opposite of a bad precedent, it's called
"progress".
>> That's when it
>>becomes time for the Court to break with precedent by writing a landmark
>>decision, such as Brown vs. Board of Education.
>
> No, this is never acceptable. This is the lie that we have been
> conditioned to swallow, though.
That's where we disagree, Steve.
> The Constitution is not a document that is used *against* the people-
> it *cannot* be a tool for oppression, if its intent is followed.
The Constitution allowed the white man to continue to enslave the black
man. That was its intent. Even after slavery was abolished and the 14th
amendment supposedly guaranteed all citizens the equal protection of the
law, it allowed the white man to continue to discriminate against and
subjugate the black man. That was the original intent of the 14th
amendment. Fortunately, the present day Supreme Court doesn't consider
itself bound to interpret the 14th amendment in accordance with its original
intent.
> I repeat (again and again, since I feel this is a very
> important point), you cannot change the Constitution by reinterpreting
> it! You can only legally change it by amending it (not that this
> little fact has stopped SCOTUS from doing so).
Again, this is where we disagree. The Supreme Court has been given the
power to interpret the Constitution, and fortunately it has used this
power to reinterpret the Constitution to allow us to progress from the
political philosophies of the 18th and 19th centuries.
-- Bob
|
1145.145 | | ravel.amt.tay1.dec.com::SCHULER | Greg, DTN 227-4165 | Wed Oct 11 1995 17:11 | 58 |
| I've commented in here before on the issue of original intent.
I consider the "doctrine" a dangerous fiction.
First of all, I don't believe it is possible to know with precision the
intent of the Framers. We have the private letters of many delegates
to the Constitutional convention. I think it is sheer lunacy to
attempt to derive from these letters the *inferred* intent of ONE Framer
(based on present day understanding of that period in history) and claim
it as ironclad proof a constitutional issue ought to be interpreted in one
way or another.
We have the public writings of a subset of these men and we have extensive
documents from only a handful. From these documents we can see that
the Framers themselves disagreed on many important points such as the
meaning of the ex post facto clause and whether the Congress could
establish a National Bank. How are judges of today to derive the original
intent of a general Constitutional provision that never commanded unanimity
among the very people who wrote it? Never mind the general public who
probably didn't even understand it!
There was NO OFFICIAL RECORD of the convention itself. The most extensive
notes we have were Madison's, and they weren't even published until 1840.
If the Framers wanted posterity to interpret their work in light
of their original intent, why did they not provide us with what must
have been the most compelling arguments in support of their points of
view? Those made while the document itself was being drafted?
For fifty three years, SCOTUS has NO public record of the convention
to turn to for an understanding of what the Framers wanted.
Finally, I find this talk about looking at things from "a historical
perspective" highly amusing. Just who's historical perspective does
one use? That of a child? A mother? A landed merchant, sailor,
slave, prostitute, King or preacher? Where does this arrogant belief
that we can *KNOW* the generic reality of a past age (or, for that
matter, our own age) come from? People seem to think they can look at
the world through the astoundingly narrow and limited means at their
disposal (how much TV, radio and news can you *REALLY* absorb - and how
much of that is representative?) and make sweeping statements about common
ideas and thoughts and standards of behavior. I find it a ridiculous
notion. The world we do not observe directly (which is itself colored
heavily by our own experience and education) is reported to us by a tiny
fragment of society. A fragment that is surprising homogeneous. Our
history is presented to us by an even smaller fragment.
This is not to say that history should be ignored, that sociological
studies are worthless or that polls are a waste of time. However I
would submit that no one in this debate here in this notesfile is
sufficiently acquainted with either 18th Century American History or
Constitutional Law to patronize us with "historical" accounts of the
"intent" of the Framers or the revolutionary public at large.
|
1145.146 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Wed Oct 11 1995 17:31 | 111 |
| re: .143 (Bob)
>I realize that you believe that the Constitution should be interpreted
>based on Original Intent, but this is *not* what I believe. I do not wish
>to be governed according to the political philosophy of the 18th century,
>which allowed white men to enslave black men, which allowed men to
>dominate women, which allowed rich men to dominate poor men.
The Constitution did not allow, nor did it forbid such things. The
Thirteenth Amendment freed the slaves- it was brought on by social
change. The Ninteenth Amendment recognised the rights of women to vote
in elections- it was brought on by social change.
When the Constitution was written, slavery had been a reality for some
time; and the right to vote was reserved for free men only. This was
the social climate of the time, and was so ingrained that it took
Amendments to the Consitution to change things (and to change the
meaning of the wording of the Constitution from "free men" to citizen-
with regards to voting, and recognision of rights and civil liberties).
Social change brought on these Amendments- and good Amendments they
are. However, the Constitution itself is not to blame for these past
ills. It was created to be amendable for such future changes.
This is a far cry from changing the Constitution's intent by judicial
fiat, rather than properly altering it via amendment.
>I believe the Constitution should be interpreted in the light of present
>day conceptions of liberty and justice.
I disagree. If you wish to change the meaning, you need to properly
amend it. You simply cannot have consistent law any other way.
>> Right. And by ignoring all precedent, what is the court doing when it
>> makes a ruling? How about if it not only ignores much precedent, but
>> actually rules the exact opposite of all that precedent?
>When the court rules exactly the opposite of a bad precedent, it's called
>"progress".
You call it 'progress', I call it 'unconstitutional'- it is ignoring
the most basic precepts of the Consitution. Without realizing it, you
are supporting rule by judiciary (since you allow them to filter their
own social agenda into the Constitution, rather than letting the
Constitution filter their ruling).
>The Constitution allowed the white man to continue to enslave the black
>man. That was its intent.
You are wrong. The Constitution is rather silent on this, other than
to state that voting was restricted to 'free men'.
It was the social climate of that day that allowed slavery to continue.
The Constitution was made amendable, and if they had *wanted* to amend
it to free the slaves, they could have done so. Freeing the slaves
could not happen until the social climate was right for such an
amendment to pass.
To blame the Constitution for slavery is rather simplistic. There's no
doubt that many at the time (maybe most) wanted to insure that
"property rights" (which included slaves) were not infringed by
government. In general, I agree with them (however, their definition
of property extends farther than mine- to include people), but to broad
brush the Consitution as a cause or insurace to slavery is quite
revisionistic.
> Even after slavery was abolished and the 14th
>amendment supposedly guaranteed all citizens the equal protection of the
>law, it allowed the white man to continue to discriminate against and
>subjugate the black man. That was the original intent of the 14th
>amendment. Fortunately, the present day Supreme Court doesn't consider
>itself bound to interpret the 14th amendment in accordance with its original
>intent.
I'm not sure where to even start on this one. You seem to start out
okay (equal protection), but then you jump to the 14th *allowing*
discrimination. The 14th did not *allow* discrimination- it is written
very plainly regarding "equal protection under the law".
Discrimination was allowed by the social structure, which could not change
over night. Even Amendments can only do so much when social climate is
leaning towards the opposite direction (a good example is how the Second
Amendment is being ignored by Congress, who is writing unconstitutional
limitations on the Second into law).
>Again, this is where we disagree. The Supreme Court has been given the
>power to interpret the Constitution, and fortunately it has used this
>power to reinterpret the Constitution to allow us to progress from the
>political philosophies of the 18th and 19th centuries.
The Supreme Court has no such power. Read Article III of the
Constitution (which is the outline of the powers of the judicial
branch). You will find no such granted power.
Its rulings are to be based on the Constitution, as written. They DO NOT
have the freedom to reinterpret it at will.
As a final comment, the philosophies of the 18th and 19th centuries,
though not perfect, certainly left us with the best form of government
in the world. Because the philosophy was not perfect, you seem to be
willing to toss the whole thing (throwing out the baby with the
bathwater syndrome) in favor of 'free judicial interpretation'.
The Constitution is a balanced document. You cannot allow the balance
of powers to be thrown so completely out of whack and expect things to
run smoothly. Our First Amendment problems of today are only the tip
of the iceberg, and it is all due to this very imbalance.
-steve
|
1145.147 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Wed Oct 11 1995 17:43 | 23 |
| re: .145
You believe that original intent cannot be known. I disagree. If it
cannot be known, why bother with the Consitution at all?
You have a defeatist attitude, IMO. Though we may not be able to pin
down each and every facet to the Nth degree of accuracy, in most cases
regarding the BoR, we have A LOT of precedent to go on. This is the
very reason why Courts use precedent- TO KNOW BETTER THE INTENT OF SAID
LAW (no yelling- this is for emphasis).
What we are discussing in this string is not some vague law that could
go one way or the other. We are talking about an Amendment which has
been consistently interpreted for 150 years; then, out of the blue, it
is reinterpreted 180 degrees, ignoring 82+ (possibly hundreds) previous
rulings. This is wrong. This is not how the balance of powes works.
This is not a judicial power. This is not constitutional. People
don't seem to get the big picture, here, nor do they seem to understand
the consequences.
-steve
|
1145.148 | | ravel.amt.tay1.dec.com::SCHULER | Greg, DTN 227-4165 | Wed Oct 11 1995 18:59 | 43 |
| RE: .147
> If it cannot be known, why bother with the Constitution at all?
We don't need to invent an original intent in order to interpret
the words in the Constitution as they are understood today. In
fact, the debates that rage today on Constitutional matters should
be proof enough of the fallacy of understanding an *original* intent.
I do not suggest precedent be ignored. On the contrary, I think the
role of precedent is disregarded in many cases by the very people
supporting original intent doctrine. They whine about "legislating
from the bench" when that is precisely what judges have done for
centuries, using precedent along the way to establish a sense of
continuity and maintain a reasonably stable legal environment.
However, this does not preclude the judiciary from responding to
the needs of the society it serves. Consider a theoretical mistake
of the court in a world in which original intent is known. The
unconstitutional mistake has only a minor impact at first but over
the years a huge edifice is constructed around it. Jump to present
day. You and your original intent cohorts get their way and the
court agrees to obey O.I. doctrine. Someone challenges the mistake
made in years past. Now the court has a choice. Overturn the
mistake and topple the edifice, causing panic and disaster across
the land, or fall under the influence of the current state of
affairs and make a political decision that upholding the past
decision is in the best interests of the nation.
The edifice I speak of could be paper money in the U.S. Some believe
its existence is in violation of the original intent of the Framers.
It might interest you to know the Supreme Court has declared
Unconstitutional fewer than 100 acts of Congress. The court does
not ignore precedent and the Constitution when it makes decisions.
It *has* clearly made mistakes and handed down bad decisions, but I
firmly reject the notion the correct path is to grasp at some Grand
past understanding (which I infer from your arguments would lead us
into a legal, ethical and moral Eden).
/Greg
|
1145.149 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Thu Oct 12 1995 12:13 | 116 |
| re: .148
> We don't need to invent an original intent in order to interpret
> the words in the Constitution as they are understood today. In
> fact, the debates that rage today on Constitutional matters should
> be proof enough of the fallacy of understanding an *original* intent.
If I am right, and original intent (in the case of the First) has been
ignored for 50 years, then your example above has little bearing on
this issue, and offers no "proof" or support for your claim.
When original intent is a variable, it is no wonder that debates
continually rage on- there is simply nothing concrete to grasp.
> I do not suggest precedent be ignored.
Then explain why you agree with Everson v. Board of Education. They
ignored ALL precedent completely, their ruling was 180 degrees off of
all previous rulings. And we are not talking one or two questionable
previous rulings, we are talking about many consistent rulings (82 was
a number given earlier in this string- and that was just backing for a
ruling in the late 1800's, which also used the Jefferson letter).
> However, this does not preclude the judiciary from responding to
> the needs of the society it serves.
The judiciary has one job- to make rulings based on the *intent* of the
Constitution. They must filter their ruling with the Constitution, not
the other way around. This is very basic stuff.
> Consider a theoretical mistake
> of the court in a world in which original intent is known. The
> unconstitutional mistake has only a minor impact at first but over
> the years a huge edifice is constructed around it. Jump to present
> day. You and your original intent cohorts get their way and the
> court agrees to obey O.I. doctrine. Someone challenges the mistake
> made in years past. Now the court has a choice. Overturn the
> mistake and topple the edifice, causing panic and disaster across
> the land, or fall under the influence of the current state of
> affairs and make a political decision that upholding the past
> decision is in the best interests of the nation.
I disagree. You suggest that perpetrating a lie is a proper course of
action. You are using an extremist edge ("causing panic and disaster
across the land") to rationalize using situational ethics. In the big
picture, this is the VERY thing that has crippled our freedoms by
allowing government to become the monstrosity it is today.
Look at New Deal (ruled unconstitutional by SCOTUS before being
eventually passed -- which is another story). Rather than looking at
the Constitutional limitations of government, SCOTUS ruled to set aside
such limitations (a power they do no have, but that's yet another subject)
and pass unconstitutional programs- all in the name of "emergency".
The irony is that New Deal was not the big help it was supposed to be,
it was WWII that got us out of the depression, not social programs.
The legacy continues on today, boosted by Great Society and similar
government enlarging programs.
I cannot support ANY unconstitutional programs/rulings for reasons of
"emergency", and I will continue to condemn past SCOTUS (and Congress)
for unconstitutional legislation/rulings.
> The edifice I speak of could be paper money in the U.S. Some believe
> its existence is in violation of the original intent of the Framers.
The entire banking system today, is scam and in violation of everything
the FF stood for. Lincoln was very outspoken in denouncing the idea of a
centralized banking structure. Many FF went on record as stating that
a centralized bank would be a very BAD idea (what did they fear?).
It isn't a matter of paper money, it was a matter of who controls the
banking structure. The government, and only the government, has the
constitutional power to coin money. They do not, however, have the
power to control the banking system of America (and in actuality, they
do not- the Federal Rerserve does, and it is not a governmental
authority). When talking paper money, I think the issue is what
*backs* said money (yet another subject 8^)).
We could get into the federal reserve act and such, but that's fodder
for another topic. The federal reserve system, however, is the answer
to what the FF and Abe Lincoln feared could happen.
> It might interest you to know the Supreme Court has declared
> Unconstitutional fewer than 100 acts of Congress. The court does
> not ignore precedent and the Constitution when it makes decisions.
Not all the time, no.
But for the record, in regards to modern rulings on the "establishment"
clause of the First (after 1947), all the SCOTUS rulings I've looked at
do not go back farther than the 1947 Everson v. Board of Education in
precedent. So while, in this instance, they are not ignoring *some*
precedent, they are still ignoring a great majority of it, and are
missing the intent.
> It *has* clearly made mistakes and handed down bad decisions, but I
> firmly reject the notion the correct path is to grasp at some Grand
> past understanding
If you care about the Constitution, then you have to understand its
intent. If you wish to rule on it properly, you have to know what it
means. I submit to you that if you allow original intent to be changed
by the bench, rather than changed via amendment, then you are doing the
document, and this nation, a big disservice. Not only that, but you
open the courts up to "varied" interpretations syndrome (which we are
experiencing today)- which can only end up with a Constitution that has
no teeth, and is no longer a solid document on which to base
government.
If not original intent, who's word shall we take on it? Who is going
to rule? The bench? (9 unelected, unaccountable officials) In this
situation, the people no longer have any power. Anything they try to
accomplish via Congress can be ruled down at will by SCOTUS. This is
NOT the balance of power Created by our FF.
-steve
|
1145.150 | | nand.amt.tay1.dec.com::SCHULER | Greg, DTN 227-4165 | Thu Oct 12 1995 18:14 | 16 |
| This seems nearly pointless....
Who's original intent do we follow?
Jefferson's? Madison's?
Do you honestly believe there was one, dominant view for
each and every point in the Constitution? What of all the
dissenting voices? What of the huge percentage of the population
that was never heard from because non-whites, non-Christians and
women were not included in the deliberations?
How can you possibly want to defer to 18th century concepts of
justice and equality?
/Greg
|
1145.151 | | CSOA1::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Fri Oct 13 1995 12:16 | 1 |
| <--- this has already been answered.
|