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Is Freedom of Religion Making Sense Fundamentally?
Lakshmi.Saevel
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By Lakshmi.Saevel 2014-05-10 02:53:11
Religion isn't the problem here it is people. The people that *** about being offended or the people that don't believe in anything. Unless someone is forcing religion on you what are we bitching about again ?
There is a very active element in the Democrat party which desires to rid the world of all forms of religion but Christianity most especially. This creates an agenda where they won't accept neutrality as an option or any form of compromise that allows people with religion to openly practice it. Their beliefs against religion are so strong that they have become the thing they most despised, fanatics.
Now I'm waiting for them to accuse me of being religion and a conservative. Poor Christian who finally realizes your religion is declining and you actually have to use proof instead of a two thousand year old book to prove a point.
*hands you a tissue*
Except I'm not a christian anymore (was raised LDS). Nor am I a conservative. I'm about as neutral and centrists as you can possibly get. This board is just so liberal that I merely seem to be a religious conservative by comparison.
I believe in all rights equally, including those who are non-atheist to be protected from discrimination from those who are atheist. I believe in your right to tell everyone you hate them, or love them, or that they can f*ck off. I believe in due process and innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt by a jury of your peers. Basically the entire bill of rights applied to everyone equally, no special people. As each team wish's to disadvantage the other team they both end up hating me equally. I can deal with that because it lets me know my beliefs are on the right track.
Lakshmi.Saevel
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By Lakshmi.Saevel 2014-05-10 03:00:47
And before you start in on the "prayer before meetings doesn't effect the outcome", it DOES. It clearly lays out that the officials would like God to somehow bless this meeting, and all the things that implies, including guiding them to make decisions in his name. Leave ALL those beliefs at the door. You and KN are arguing that all beliefs (or lack thereof) should be left at the door that aren't of the Christian majority. This is false and you should feel bad about yourself for even saying something silly like this. It also just goes to show that you haven't really read much of my posts. Ok, I admit, that particular part is more KN. You're just both taking the same side here and I lumped you together. Mea culpa. It's not even KN... All he does is say the same thing over and over which is "Why do yuo think you can make me do what you want?" or "why do I have to do this because you want me to?"
He has repeatedly spoken of the majority's rights to do as they please to the exclusion of the minority or individual. Yes, the majority.
If you don't like what the majority is doing, move. Move to somewhere where you can enjoy yourself.
Because ask yourself this: Would you rather live in a place where you are miserable, or where you are happy?
The entire bill of rights exists to prevent the tyranny of the majority. The majority can never suppress dissenting opinions, no matter how much the progressives want to, nor can they outlaw a religion. The constitutions purpose was to lay a foundation that allows for people to government themselves via electing people who will do what the people want them to do while still providing some protection against minority beliefs. The USA was not a single solid people during our founding, we were 13 different peoples with many different sets of beliefs and idea on "how things should be done". Larger and smaller states constantly bickered over policies that would advantage one over the other and so forth. The natural state of being should be constant arguing and match's of political football as a way to prevent one side from completely dominating the other.
Cerberus.Tikal
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By Cerberus.Tikal 2014-05-10 03:10:20
I might believe you if you spoke from a place of impartiality, but you don't. Saying that the Democratic party wants to rid the world of religion though, makes you sound like you can't fathom impartiality on the subject at hand. It's a preposterous presumption without a modicum of data, fueled by your own preconceptions... unless, of course, you have incredible evidence to back that incredible claim up.
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By Shiva.Onorgul 2014-05-10 05:29:29
Except I'm not a christian anymore (was raised LDS). That explains a host of things I've wondered about.
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Bahamut.Ravael
Server: Bahamut
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By Bahamut.Ravael 2014-05-10 05:46:20
Except I'm not a christian anymore (was raised LDS). That explains a host of things I've wondered about.
What exactly does that explain now?
Sylph.Shipp
Server: Sylph
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By Sylph.Shipp 2014-05-10 14:44:19
Except I'm not a christian anymore (was raised LDS). That explains a host of things I've wondered about. Jesus Christ, I couldn't agree more.
Leviathan.Chaosx
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By Leviathan.Chaosx 2014-05-23 18:48:59
I might believe you if you spoke from a place of impartiality, but you don't. Saying that the Democratic party wants to rid the world of religion though, makes you sound like you can't fathom impartiality on the subject at hand. It's a preposterous presumption without a modicum of data, fueled by your own preconceptions... unless, of course, you have incredible evidence to back that incredible claim up. The GOP is the only political party that claims to hold Christian values. So I guess by process of elimination that's why it is presumed the Democratic party would be everything else except Christianity.
Cerberus.Tikal
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By Cerberus.Tikal 2014-05-23 18:55:36
Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure Dems attempt to espouse Christian values as well.
Leviathan.Chaosx
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By Leviathan.Chaosx 2014-05-23 18:56:41
Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure Dems attempt to espouse Christian values as well. It seems only to counter GOP proclamations though.
Bismarck.Bloodrose
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By Bismarck.Bloodrose 2014-05-23 18:56:42
Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure Dems attempt to espouse Christian values as well. They try to espouse the positive, contributing values of more than just Christianity.
Server: Lakshmi
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By Lakshmi.Sparthosx 2014-05-23 18:59:07
Except no.
The Democratic party is as for religion as the Republicans, the main difference being that religion isn't up in neon lights and the sole motivation for pretty much every action they make when we aren't talking money. Dems still want national days of prayer, cite faith for their decisions, invoke God at every turn and generally do what religious people do. Being religious in this country is as much a part of getting elected as giving unions or the private sector a ***.
Republican conservatives have essentially purged the party of all but the most hyper-conservative lunatics that money and SuperPACs can buy. This has forced many into the Democratic camp that should rightfully Republican and acts as a corrosive effect upon the party as a whole.
When your party is anti-intellectual, anti-gay, anti-women, anti-min wage adjustments and anti-everything it's no surprise when the party becomes more and more monolithic. Strategists have cited this as the primary issue in breaking the Democratic agglomeration next cycle and retaking the White House.
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By Odin.Zicdeh 2014-05-23 19:52:21
Most religious president: Bill Clinton. At least if you judge religious dedication to time spent performing religious activities.
There's nothing inherently wrong necessarily with a President or political figure being of any particular faith, they just have to find a way to divorce their religious motivations from policy making. Gay Marriage is a perfect example of a simple matter befuddled by religion. You can hate homosexuals all you want based on your religion, but as a policy maker you can't cite your reason as "Traditional Marriage" founded on what's written in whatever holy book.
If nothing else, perhaps Republican zeal is driving away the typical two-party system, it may in fact become a one party system (Effectively zero party), with a better gradient and less "All or nothing" *** of the current two party system. That depends entirely on American's willingness to drop arbitrary labels like "Republican" and "Democrat" and just stick with policy itself.
Bahamut.Ravael
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By Bahamut.Ravael 2014-05-23 20:07:33
If nothing else, perhaps Republican zeal is driving away the typical two-party system, it may in fact become a one party system (Effectively zero party)
It's way too early to make such a claim. They hold the House and have a decent shot at taking the Senate. I don't like where the party is heading either, but it's naive to think they're going anywhere for a while.
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By Lakshmi.Sparthosx 2014-05-23 20:09:34
The gerrymandering and ability for elections to be outright bought through proxies is the number one issue in politics right now.
Democrat or Republican having territories chopped up so we can perpetuate a cycle of ***candidates spewing ***everywhere is a threat to what makes America.
Having people represent districts for 30+ years also bothers the *** out of me.
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Bahamut.Ravael
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By Bahamut.Ravael 2014-05-23 20:15:12
Be that as it may, it's not the only thing keeping the Republican party afloat. There is no mass exodus happening yet, as the Democrats have their own slew of problems preventing that from occurring.
Server: Lakshmi
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By Lakshmi.Sparthosx 2014-05-23 20:46:42
You mean the increased polarization that helps neither side? The Republican party has become a pasty shade of angry white guy, forcing all their potential demographics into the confused hands of Democrats. Why? Because the platform is hostile to outgroups and again this is mentioned by Republican strategists who know courting Hispanics is the path to the future along with potential Asian pockets.
Time to stop being anti-intellectual and run the numbers to avoid another Obama victory where every Republican commentator was floored when Obama won.
Winning House seats is wonderful but I assume Republicans want the White House again and you don't get it sending up softball candidates like Rubio, Cruz or Rand Paul. They're going to get rolled by Hillary and everyone knows it. If the party wants to win big again, it's time to get inclusive and stop derailing the fiscal message with *** about gay marriage, abortions, women and how some white guy feels black people should be.
I'm looking at you Rick the *** Santorum.
Cerberus.Tikal
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By Cerberus.Tikal 2014-05-23 20:52:11
I haven't seen any indication of change except for the polarizing of people's opinions. It's more like people are shoe-horning themselves into their parties, as opposed to adapting the party to them, or looking else-where; but I guess that's not too outlandish an idea in a two-party system.
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Bahamut.Ravael
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By Bahamut.Ravael 2014-05-23 20:53:28
I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you. You guys are just making it sound like the Republican party is dying and the Democrats are just sucking up all the extra votes. Reality check: They're not.
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By Shiva.Onorgul 2014-05-23 21:00:31
Lakshmi.Sparthosx said: »If the party wants to win big again, it's time to get inclusive and stop derailing the fiscal message with *** about gay marriage, abortions, women and how some white guy feels black people should be. Or they could do something really crazy if they want to stick to social politics and actually take a properly conservative stance on most of those issues.
I find it very curious that the Republican Party lost its footing during the Reagan and Bush years. With the benefit of hindsight and some liberal bias, the '80s weren't really the best decade we've lived through, but at the time things seemed to be going well and the White House got rather lot of credit for it, rightly or wrongly. Nevertheless, the Religious Right and a few other fringe groups employed the kind of media savvy that they've since forgotten or lost and maneuvered to take over the GOP and twist it down some rather dark corridors. It's rather baffling, though it was similarly baffling when the Democratic Party had Barack Obama in the White House, control of Congress, and accomplished almost nothing over the course of two years.
It really would be nice if we could take the old people of the country and rattle their teeth around until they accept that we don't need to be hog-tied to the same two idiot parties that've been chasing each others' tails for 150+ years. I want to say that younger people are open to the idea of more than a two-party system, but my pessimism tells me that I'm giving far too much credit to people aged 18-35, likely as a consequence of personal bias.
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Server: Lakshmi
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By Lakshmi.Sparthosx 2014-05-23 21:14:01
I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you. You guys are just making it sound like the Republican party is dying and the Democrats are just sucking up all the extra votes. Reality check: They're not.
When people are making it a habit of saying "I'm Republican but not *that* kind of Republican" your brand is probably in shape for a fix. Seeing some racist dipshit get lifted up as 'muh freedoms' only to get disavowed when they go on bizarre rants about race is becoming a chore.
Yes, slavery was this wonderful thing for lazy foodstamp blacks and hispanics work hard and I should know, they're the ones raising my children and cleaning my yards. No one cares about asians because they don't exist except as a WWII-era caricature of love you long time and enemies of the US who perform cyberattacks before delivering up that large po' fai wai.
Ideally I'd like to see more parties in the US, especially because more parties mean the rich *** have to spread their money rather than throwing it directly into the coffers of option A or B which means better candidates and less of this red v. blue crap we've got going on. Let the Tea Party have their own organization dedicated to summoning machinegun Jesus, the moderates have their fiscal platform and the far-leftists assure us that what we need is more government everywhere. Let the people decide what we want.
But of course neither Dems or Republicans would want to have to you know, articulate a message about why we should give a *** about them. Better to play into this sports team esque craze.
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Bahamut.Ravael
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By Bahamut.Ravael 2014-05-23 21:23:13
To be fair, there are quite a few people who self-identify as liberals but refuse to call themselves Democrats. I really do hope that the widening gap between the two parties creates a new central party, if such a thing is even possible. I'm not holding my breath, though.
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Gilgamesh.Tenshibaby
Server: Gilgamesh
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By Gilgamesh.Tenshibaby 2014-05-23 22:53:49
Lakshmi.Sparthosx said: »I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you. You guys are just making it sound like the Republican party is dying and the Democrats are just sucking up all the extra votes. Reality check: They're not.
When people are making it a habit of saying "I'm Republican but not *that* kind of Republican" your brand is probably in shape for a fix. Seeing some racist dipshit get lifted up as 'muh freedoms' only to get disavowed when they go on bizarre rants about race is becoming a chore.
Yes, slavery was this wonderful thing for lazy foodstamp blacks and hispanics work hard and I should know, they're the ones raising my children and cleaning my yards. No one cares about asians because they don't exist except as a WWII-era caricature of love you long time and enemies of the US who perform cyberattacks before delivering up that large po' fai wai.
Ideally I'd like to see more parties in the US, especially because more parties mean the rich *** have to spread their money rather than throwing it directly into the coffers of option A or B which means better candidates and less of this red v. blue crap we've got going on. Let the Tea Party have their own organization dedicated to summoning machinegun Jesus, the moderates have their fiscal platform and the far-leftists assure us that what we need is more government everywhere. Let the people decide what we want.
But of course neither Dems or Republicans would want to have to you know, articulate a message about why we should give a *** about them. Better to play into this sports team esque craze.
The fact that not all of us Republicans are proud to be Republicans^TM is a good indicator that we are not as worried about getting a victory for our team. Both sides are guilty, and the Democrats are worse. They are a loosely connected group of smaller sub-groups that would hate each other were there not a common enemy, like NCAA football - everyone else vs the SEC. Both sides have their scoundrels, but the Dems have downright @$$holes - 0bama, Hillary, Holder... How you can celebrate these clowns... only team spirit would explain it. You want the "win", not matter the cost. You seek validation achieved through narrowly won media-filtered popularity contests. If only there were a group of people who were more interested in taking us away from these bought-and-paid-for politicians... oh wait, there is one, but you have been conditioned by your trainers to mock them.
By Altimaomega 2014-05-24 00:11:12
Gilgamesh.Tenshibaby said: »Lakshmi.Sparthosx said: »I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you. You guys are just making it sound like the Republican party is dying and the Democrats are just sucking up all the extra votes. Reality check: They're not.
When people are making it a habit of saying "I'm Republican but not *that* kind of Republican" your brand is probably in shape for a fix. Seeing some racist dipshit get lifted up as 'muh freedoms' only to get disavowed when they go on bizarre rants about race is becoming a chore.
Yes, slavery was this wonderful thing for lazy foodstamp blacks and hispanics work hard and I should know, they're the ones raising my children and cleaning my yards. No one cares about asians because they don't exist except as a WWII-era caricature of love you long time and enemies of the US who perform cyberattacks before delivering up that large po' fai wai.
Ideally I'd like to see more parties in the US, especially because more parties mean the rich *** have to spread their money rather than throwing it directly into the coffers of option A or B which means better candidates and less of this red v. blue crap we've got going on. Let the Tea Party have their own organization dedicated to summoning machinegun Jesus, the moderates have their fiscal platform and the far-leftists assure us that what we need is more government everywhere. Let the people decide what we want.
But of course neither Dems or Republicans would want to have to you know, articulate a message about why we should give a *** about them. Better to play into this sports team esque craze.
The fact that not all of us Republicans are proud to be Republicans^TM is a good indicator that we are not as worried about getting a victory for our team. Both sides are guilty, and the Democrats are worse. They are a loosely connected group of smaller sub-groups that would hate each other were there not a common enemy, like NCAA football - everyone else vs the SEC. Both sides have their scoundrels, but the Dems have downright @$$holes - 0bama, Hillary, Holder... How you can celebrate these clowns... only team spirit would explain it. You want the "win", not matter the cost. You seek validation achieved through narrowly won media-filtered popularity contests. If only there were a group of people who were more interested in taking us away from these bought-and-paid-for politicians... oh wait, there is one, but you have been conditioned by your trainers to mock them.
Adding to your list of asshat clowns.. pelosi, feinstein, reid, kerry and lolbiden. Its amazing that living legal citizens vote for these people candidates. Oh wait half of them have power and it wasn't even voted on. /facepalm
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Cerberus.Tikal
Server: Cerberus
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By Cerberus.Tikal 2014-05-24 01:37:37
Gilgamesh.Tenshibaby said: »The fact that not all of us Republicans are proud to be Republicans^TM is a good indicator that we are not as worried about getting a victory for our team. Both sides are guilty, and the Democrats are worse. They are a loosely connected group of smaller sub-groups that would hate each other were there not a common enemy, like NCAA football - everyone else vs the SEC. Both sides have their scoundrels, but the Dems have downright @$$holes - 0bama, Hillary, Holder... How you can celebrate these clowns... only team spirit would explain it. You want the "win", not matter the cost. You seek validation achieved through narrowly won media-filtered popularity contests. If only there were a group of people who were more interested in taking us away from these bought-and-paid-for politicians... oh wait, there is one, but you have been conditioned by your trainers to mock them. Persecution complex so stronk.
Sparth has me imagining the Tea Party gathering up crystals to summon their own primal, MachineGun Jesus. The more they lament, the stronger he becomes.
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Server: Odin
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By Odin.Zicdeh 2014-05-24 04:32:39
To be fair, there are quite a few people who self-identify as liberals but refuse to call themselves Democrats. I really do hope that the widening gap between the two parties creates a new central party, if such a thing is even possible. I'm not holding my breath, though.
Henry Wallace tried in the 40's. It didn't end well.
Though I think his Progressive movement was more left than central, unless you consider both Democrat and Republican's as Far Right and Further Right, like I would.
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Bahamut.Ravael
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By Bahamut.Ravael 2014-05-24 05:00:19
To be fair, there are quite a few people who self-identify as liberals but refuse to call themselves Democrats. I really do hope that the widening gap between the two parties creates a new central party, if such a thing is even possible. I'm not holding my breath, though.
Henry Wallace tried in the 40's. It didn't end well.
Though I think his Progressive movement was more left than central, unless you consider both Democrat and Republican's as Far Right and Further Right, like I would.
Meh, I've heard so many interpretations of where the parties lie on the political spectrum that it's practically pointless to even talk about it anymore. All that really matters is whether or not it'd be possible to fit another party in-between them. I don't think it would work, but if it got enough popularity to at least shake up the establishment a bit then it might be worth the attempt.
Leviathan.Chaosx
Server: Leviathan
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By Leviathan.Chaosx 2014-05-24 06:20:16
To be fair, there are quite a few people who self-identify as liberals but refuse to call themselves Democrats. I really do hope that the widening gap between the two parties creates a new central party, if such a thing is even possible. I'm not holding my breath, though.
Henry Wallace tried in the 40's. It didn't end well.
Though I think his Progressive movement was more left than central, unless you consider both Democrat and Republican's as Far Right and Further Right, like I would. Today both parties are extremely far right.
As indicated by the political spectrum:
EDIT: Ignore the You one, it was just an image search.
Bahamut.Ravael
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By Bahamut.Ravael 2014-05-24 06:50:19
Gee, that's not subjective at all. You can tell because it's a graph, and graphs are always forged of pure science.
Leviathan.Chaosx
Server: Leviathan
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By Leviathan.Chaosx 2014-05-24 14:00:13
It's only been the most widely used and accepted way of classifying political positions since the late 1700s.
Server: Odin
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By Odin.Zicdeh 2014-05-24 15:26:36
Gee, that's not subjective at all. You can tell because it's a graph, and graphs are always forged of pure science.
Political ideals and affiliation is largely based on subjective judgement calls, so I don't see how this is an invalid approach to classification.
The bigger issue is again, sticking with arbitrary labels instead of just core ideals.
The supreme court has ruled that prayers during a local government meeting are perfectly valid as long as they do not denigrate non-Christians or try to win converts according to the recent decision.
Quote: A very interesting ruling in the Supreme Court took place yesterday. For awhile now, religious display have been slowly taken down in various government facilities. However, the actual right to say a prayer during a government meeting has just been upheld. Source
Quote: A narrowly divided Supreme Court upheld decidedly Christian prayers at the start of local council meetings on Monday, declaring them in line with long national traditions though the country has grown more religiously diverse.
The content of the prayers is not significant as long as they do not denigrate non-Christians or try to win converts, the court said in a 5-4 decision backed by its conservative majority.
Though the decision split the court along ideological lines, the Obama administration backed the winning side, the town of Greece, N.Y., outside of Rochester.
The outcome relied heavily on a 1983 decision in which the court upheld an opening prayer in the Nebraska Legislature and said prayer is part of the nation's fabric, not a violation of the First Amendment's guarantee of freedom of religion. Source
Quote: In her dissent, Kagan said the council meeting prayers are unlike those said to open sessions of Congress and state legislatures, where the elected officials are the intended audience. In Greece, "the prayers there are directed squarely at the citizens," she said.
Kagan also noted what she described as the meetings' intimate setting, with 10 or so people sitting in front of the town's elected and top appointed officials. Children and teenagers are likely to be present, she said.
Kennedy and his four colleagues in the majority all are Catholic. They are: Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Samuel Alito, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas.
Kagan was joined by Justices Stephen Breyer, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor. Of the four, three are Jewish and Sotomayor is Catholic.
Senior counsel David Cortman of the Alliance Defense Freedom, which represented the town, applauded the court for affirming "that Americans are free to pray." Source
Quote: No one seems to have wanted to address the issue of praying in itself, no matter what religion the prayer is from, is apart of the nation’s fabric. While a seemingly insignificant point at first glance, this actually means a lot.
Basically put, the act of praying is not only a part of the nation’s fabric, but it leaves the impression that you have to pray in some sort of fashion no matter where the prayer itself comes from. Does this mean you can make up your own prayers? Would you also have to explain what faith those self made prayer derive from as well?
Once again the simple fact that chanting any prayer is not addressed and completely disregards the secular community’s desire to put all the superstitions of religion behind society and move forward to more practical things like running a decent government.
Freedom of religion therefore implies that the act of praying is fine, but don’t you dare display any visual representation of this fact. Or is this just a way to comprise between all sides of the argument, thereby leaving a perplexing set of rules that ideologically seem to contradict one another? Source
The main questions here involve the act of praying and whether or not prayer should be considered apart of nation's fabric? Even if it was a common thing many years ago, should it still be or shall we as a nation start tackling contradictory notions such as this?
Another factor to consider is why only the audience of a prayer was used as the main argument and not the act of praying itself? Does not a prayer derived from any religion infer that said religion has been chosen publicly chosen over others?
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