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I'm merely acknowledging that someone is getting discriminated against (based on your definition of discrimination) in every instance, so we have to make a value judgement on who should or shouldn't be discriminated against. You see yourself as taking neutral stances and I'm merely trying to show you that you are still discriminating, and you don't seem to care. My sole focus is to shatter your illusion of neutrality. I think I've succeeded
Believe it or not, I'm not advocating for anything like a theocracy. I think you and I agree in many ways on how the government should operate in a diverse population. The problem is you don't see how it is discriminating against all religions equally but is not in any way discriminating against secular materialism. It is by default allowing material secularism to have the prominent position in policy making, and you don't recognize that your view is given pride of place. The standard right now is you should leave your faith at home and assume a faithless position in the public square. Anytime a Christian view is invoked, all of sudden we're imposing morality, completely ignoring that the non-Christian side was already attempting to impose a moral position. Right now, your view is the beneficiary of our discrimination. Agnosticism and atheism should be equally discriminated against, no? They're just another answer to the question of "Is there a God?", but they get treated as the default neutral from the government's perspective. Do you disagree?
You should be able to identify this by the way you sidestepped my (in my opinion) very reasonable view on school vouchers. If you want your dollars to go to a materialist education, then do that. But something tells me you'd object when I want my dollars to go to a religious education because that would cause a separation of church and state problem. I'm offering as close to your neutral as you can get in this one microcosm of government. If government is going to mandate schools, then mandate they be secular, then you have a leg up on 100% of religious people.. You get the education you want for your kids at the cost of taxes, while to provide the education for their kids that religious want comes at the cost of taxes + tuition. We're discriminated against at the benefit of your worldview being taught, yet you see it as neutral.
You make it sound like some great victory that you got me stop using the term neutrality to describe a government position. Nevermind the fact that I immediately conceded (8 pages ago) to my descriptor as being technically incorrect. And for the last 8 pages I have been advocating for government policy 'closer' to neutral . . . since absolute neutrality doesn't exist. But yeah, you got me on a technicality.
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The problem is you don't see how it is discriminating against all religions equally but is not in any way discriminating against secular materialism.
Secularism by itself is not a set of values. At most you can say it is a statement about the value of the role of religious belief in government, but nothing more. Secularism is not a position on gay marriage, abortion, contraception, the death penalty, or any of the items we are talking about here. It is simply the idea that government should not be an extension of the church.
You can certainly say that secular humanism is a set of values that touches on these items. But, I'm not asking that the government take a formal position on the morality of any of these items based on the superiority of my beliefs. People can vote on positions for those issues. I don't have to like the results of the vote, but in most cases, I can accept the will of the people and I can continue advocating for the things I think should or should not be implemented. Every society requires compromise between citizens for it to function.
The argument that if laws permit something or the argument that not teaching that something is moral or immoral is equivalent to an endorsement of one side leads to nonsense. Its on par with saying that anything that cannot be disproven is therefore true. For example, the government does not forbid me from worshipping Satan. Does that mean our government endorses Satanic worship? And my school when I was a kid and my kid's current school never talk about the morality of necrophilia. I guess that means public schools are promoting necrophilia, right?
Now, you can say that a city painting its crosswalks as a rainbow is a violation of my rule - and I'd agree. And then I'd say that Christmas trees on public land is equally a violation. It would be an exhausting task to demand that we completely scrub all symbolism from public land and I think most people are okay with it within reason. I don't put Satanic goat statues in the public land in front of your church. You don't put the monuments to religious law in front of a courthouse, and we're all good. Or we can go the harder way and if you demand rainbows be removed from a crosswalk, then I'm going to demand we get rid of 'In God We Trust', the use of the Bible in government oaths, Christmas trees on public land, etc.
The problem I have here is that too many Christians view any discrimination against Christianity as some great injustice while any discrimination against anyone else is . . .. well, who gives a ****, they're wrong so who cares, right? You want all the respect in the world, but aren't willing to give any back in return. Because you're right and I'm wrong. And you know that you're right because you just do.
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The standard right now is you should leave your faith at home and assume a faithless position in the public square. Anytime a Christian view is invoked, all of sudden we're imposing morality, completely ignoring that the non-Christian side was already attempting to impose a moral position.
I think it depends on the situation. In a lot of cases, I think you are drawing a false equivalence between imposing a belief that someone should be oppressed and imposing a belief that someone should not be oppressed. For example, lets say that one lawmaker says we should make practicing Islam illegal and throw all Muslims in jail and another said we should allow people to practice Islam. Both are trying to impose a moral position. But, lets not pretend there is any other similarity between the two positions beyond the fact that they are both technically value statements. Now, I recognize that no one is calling for all Muslims to be jailed. . . . But, I have yet to convince anyone to acknowledge a difference between a restrictive law and a protective law.
With that said, what is the display of your faith that is being excluded in the public square. Is the concern for the general public? Or is it in the realm of public policy? If the Christian view in question is that another group should have their rights restricted because they have the wrong religion or values, I'm not going to be very sympathetic to you.
But, there may be places where I am sympathetic. And if you have zero sympathy for where I feel I'm being excluded from the public square, why should I feel inclined to act on my sympathy. Again, Christians pretend that they are the only group in this country facing discrimination. If you want to be heard, you might need to be quiet long enough to hear someone else.
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Agnosticism and atheism should be equally discriminated against, no? They're just another answer to the question of "Is there a God?", but they get treated as the default neutral from the government's perspective. Do you disagree?
Again, agnosticism and atheism are not a set of values and so this is not the right comparison.
Should secular humanism being equally discriminated against. 100%. Yes.
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You should be able to identify this by the way you sidestepped my (in my opinion) very reasonable view on school vouchers.
Not intentional. I remember you mentioning vouchers and having thoughts and then not putting them down. Yes, vouchers is a reasonable attempt to deal with the problem we are discussing. In theory, I don't have any issues with it. As it has been proposed or implemented in some areas still has plenty of issues, but in theory, I think its fine.
I don't think it completely solves the issue. To say that it does I think assumes that people all fall into a few neat boxes. All you have to do is image a situation where you have a small town with 200 school age kids which include some mixture of Catholics, Baptists, Jews, Methodists, Muslims, Hindus, Atheists, etc. Its not reasonable to build a school for every group. A voucher system may permit parents to choose a school closer to their values, but there is still going to be compromise and acceptance of public funds being used to teach your child something you disagree with.
The other thing I think it has the potential for is further isolating us from one another. Maybe you don't live near a school that you like, so you move to a place with like minded people. And everyone else does the same and we're left with a segregated society. This is just a personal belief, but I think exposure to other beliefs and value systems helps us grow and helps us understand one another. if your child goes 18 years before meeting someone with a different faith. . . . I think thats a huge disservice. Again, personal opinion.
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Objective morality is objective. It's not mine or yours. While we may understand objective morality (like an objective law against speeding) by divine revelation, natural law, etc., the application of it (what speed in which areas) are topics of debate, and yes, compromise. It may surprise you to hear that St Thomas Aquinas made a potential concession for prostitution. Did he say it was objectively evil? YES and clearly. But he also said that there could be issues where civil reasons would merit leaving the evil in place FOR A TIME and phased out as it could reasonably be done. The objective is the objective. How to get there is subjective.
If we all agreed on what objective morality was and just disagreed on application, I think that I would agree with you.
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I think compromise in government is very important. But how do you define compromise? Look at the way you responded to my pushback on gay marriage. Your response, from my perspective, can be summarized as: "sit down, shut up and stop complaining. It's not a big deal. You lost and the other side won, and any issue you have with it are personal issues." Nevermind all the downstream affects that you assume aren't there, and will downplay once brought to light.
I hope my responses was not 'sit down, shut up, and stop complaining'.
But, lets talk about compromise as it relates to gay marriage. The position that same sex persons should not have equal rights to others is not compromise. What compromise are you willing to allow here?
And who determines if the downstream affects are good or bad? There are 340 million people in this country and I say we all get 1 / 340,000,000 of a say. Christians don't get a bigger say. Atheists don't get a bigger say. We all get the same say.
I often don't like what I see in society. But, my response is not to want to make it legal to repress the things I don't like. My response is to use my 1/340,000,000 say to encourage things toward what I think is a better way. And I succeed or I don't. What I'm not going to do is be sad that some people don't agree with me. I'd rather have people disagree with me than be forced to agree with me.