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That's not really a solution, nor is religion a purely private matter. Religious folks have every right to make their convictions a matter of public discourse as any secular individual, and the separation between church and state is not a license for the state to run roughshod and suppress religious sentiment by relegating it to private convictions.
I really don't care what you "miss", and no separation isn't a feasible solution because there is no way to exclude religious people from public life nor should it be expected of them to do so. Not allowing for the establishment of a state church is fine, as it is reasonable not to give one religion a privileged status in a pluralistic society, but demanding that religious folks separate their religion from their politics and their public life in general is an unreasonable demand and is nothing more than de facto giving a privileged status to a particular position on religion.Separation isn't a solution. I think rather it is. Keep the churches out of government. As for the "private matter", I miss the days when it was considered polite to no ask about or tell about your religion in non-religious contexts. In my days in church the only way to know which one I went to was to be in the same parish. Oddly enough, no one ever asked (including my roommates).
I misread your foe-ah-net-ticks. Maybe it was because the middle "syllable" looked like the common word for Poles where I grew up and my brain put the world "pole" there. No, apologetics isn't the first thing I think of when I think of CS Lewis (which I'd rather not do anyway), but children's literature. I was surprised several years ago when Christians kept bringing him up as I was not aware of his Christian writings.
Just like what happened to Rome when Christians were accepted. And here we are.This isn't about "tolerating other faiths", this is about recognizing a persistently beligerant "faith" that has been engaged in a campaign for totalitarian control for 1400 years, following a basic pattern set out by the originator of that faith where when small and powerless the preaching focuses on peaceful cohabitation, then when large enough to be successful agitators seeking a special status through blasphemy laws and other preferential treatment, to finally seeking outright dominance and reducing all others to a 2nd class dhimmi status that allows for all manner of abuse. To reduce it to an issue of tolerance is incredibly myopic, and likely ignorant of the history of Islam both in its inception and over the course of its existence.
That's not what separation is. SMH.I really don't care what you "miss", and no separation isn't a feasible solution because there is no way to exclude religious people from public life nor should it be expected of them to do so.
That's half of it.Not allowing for the establishment of a state church is fine, as it is reasonable not to give one religion a privileged status in a pluralistic society,
Politic how you like. I don't care.but demanding that religious folks separate their religion from their politics and their public life in general is an unreasonable demand and is nothing more than de facto giving a privileged status to a particular position on religion.
Honestly this is half of the problem. If Christians stopped trying to get people to live the way their particular religion insists Christianity wouldn’t be so controversial.That's not really a solution, nor is religion a purely private matter.
No one is asking that, and you are free to let your religious beliefs inform your political views. Christians even have the power to impose them on others, to the extent of one vote each, just like everybody else. Provided, of course, that the imposition is not such as to interfere with their Constitutional rights.I really don't care what you "miss", and no separation isn't a feasible solution because there is no way to exclude religious people from public life nor should it be expected of them to do so. Not allowing for the establishment of a state church is fine, as it is reasonable not to give one religion a privileged status in a pluralistic society, but demanding that religious folks separate their religion from their politics and their public life in general is an unreasonable demand and is nothing more than de facto giving a privileged status to a particular position on religion.
No.And have the Muslim majority of Dearborn turned that city into a theocracy?
I obviously have a bias but I think churchs (and religious institutions) should be tax excempt contingent on a couple things:The other half is that government needs to stop privileging religious organizations. A church is a private, non-profit, let it file a 990 form like all the rest. Chaplains are fine for the military posted far from their co-religionists or out at sea, but no public school or government agency or legislative body needs one.
Just because it involves religious texts? Good grief...Beyond that, your sole complaint about theocracy appears to be that it involves religious texts.
Ah, maybe the question has been answered...it seems that you'd prefer not to have a theocracy. You woudn't want believers to have 'preferential treatment'. You wouldn't want to be reduced to a 'second class' status. And because, well...it would allow 'all manner of abuse'.This isn't about "tolerating other faiths", this is about recognizing a persistently beligerant "faith" that has been engaged in a campaign for totalitarian control for 1400 years, following a basic pattern set out by the originator of that faith where when small and powerless the preaching focuses on peaceful cohabitation, then when large enough to be successful agitators seeking a special status through blasphemy laws and other preferential treatment, to finally seeking outright dominance and reducing all others to a 2nd class dhimmi status that allows for all manner of abuse. To reduce it to an issue of tolerance is incredibly myopic, and likely ignorant of the history of Islam both in its inception and over the course of its existence.
[my edit]This isn't about "tolerating other faiths", this is about recognizing a persistently beligerant "faith" that has been engaged in a campaign for totalitarian control for 1400 years, following a basic pattern...where when small and powerless the preaching focuses on peaceful cohabitation, then when large enough to be successful agitators seeking a special status through blasphemy laws and other preferential treatment, to finally seeking outright dominance and reducing all others to a 2nd class... status.
Only flattering verbiage is allowed here...[my edit]
Lol!
There are quite a few nonchristians and Aboriginal groups that would describe Christianity through that exact lens. Or frankly, FAR less flattering verbiage.
Not all theocracies are created equal. Just because I wouldn't want to live in an islamic caliphate doesn't mean I would mind living in a Society of Friends led presbyterian government, or even a Sihk or Brahminist government if I have to go with a non-Christian religion. The specific details matter, not just broad strokes categories that are barely informative.Ah, maybe the question has been answered...it seems that you'd prefer not to have a theocracy. You woudn't want believers to have 'preferential treatment'. You wouldn't want to be reduced to a 'second class' status. And because, well...it would allow 'all manner of abuse'.
Hey, we agree! Isn't it lucky that we both live in secular countries.
This isn't about miscarriages of a religion, but a pattern set by its founder.[my edit]
Lol!
There are quite a few nonchristians and Aboriginal groups that would describe Christianity through that exact lens. Or frankly, FAR less flattering verbiage.
See post #217.Just because it involves religious texts? Good grief...
It doesn't just involve religious texts. You are governed by religious texts. You have no choice in the matter. Whatever beliefs you personally hold are irrelevant. You have no recourse to change anything whatsoever. Some select few (who selects them?) will interpret the Quran, the Veda or the old Testament and you'll have to obey whatever that interpetation is. You can't change it. It is fixed.
If you you prefer that, living under what the Qur'an or Vedas or Old Testament demands rather than in a western style democracy then that's your call.
So will it be your current messy democratic republic or Sharia Law for you? As is usual, I don't ask expecting an answer but only to show that the question will be ignored.
OF course the benefactor of that miscarriage of their own religion would certainly excuse it thusly.This isn't about miscarriages of a religion, but a pattern set by its founder.