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Author Message
25 new of 236 responses total.
jerryr
response 150 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 3 22:30 UTC 2000

and now if someone would care to explain the link between the star spangled
banner and sports?
md
response 151 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 3 23:37 UTC 2000

Tradishuuuuuuuuuun
ric
response 152 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 00:20 UTC 2000

re 147 - Joe's an agnostic I think, Rane.. he doesn't much "believe" in God
or any other supernatural being, near as I can tell.
rcurl
response 153 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 02:59 UTC 2000

#145 does not sound "agnostic" - pretty direct assertions of god(s) hanging
around varous ceremonies.
gelinas
response 154 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 03:15 UTC 2000

Re #148: nope.  Congress *enacts* laws, but it is the Court that *establishes*
the law, by telling us what Congress what actually meant (no matter what the
language of the law; if the Court disagrees, the Court wins).

Well, I've only heard Twain's "War Prayer" once, but that was enough to show
that he was on the right track.  Prayer at a football game is likely to be
for a similar purpose.  Done right, though . . .
bdh3
response 155 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 04:53 UTC 2000

Given the media uproar over Lieberman, I do think we have 'demonized'
any conventional expression of religious sentiment of any kind.
rcurl
response 156 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 05:57 UTC 2000

I know Congress "enacts" laws, but I have never heard of an authority
that any agency has to "establish" laws. You must have invented this
new concept about government. All the Supreme Court does is settle
disputes over the constitutionality of laws. Are all the laws the
Supreme Court does *not* take on for consideration "unestablished" (whatever
that means).
jerryr
response 157 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 12:49 UTC 2000

perhaps you'd like to share your stash, gelinas?
remmers
response 158 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 13:20 UTC 2000

<remmers finds it odd to be reading this religious discussion
 in the "film" conference>
rcurl
response 159 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 4 17:28 UTC 2000

Simple..films are about many topics, so many topics get discussed. Or
is there a rule that one must just give the name of the movie one
saw, and say nothing else? 
ashke
response 160 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 5 01:00 UTC 2000

I rented "Any Given Sunday" on friday.  Great football movie.  Very honest
portrayl of pro football, aging, and egos.  Loved it.  Al Pachino was and is
a god.
gelinas
response 161 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 5 01:56 UTC 2000

The first definition of "establish" is "to make firm or stable," the third
is "settle", the first sub-part of the fifth is "to set on a firm basis", and
the third sub-part of that same fifth is "to gain full recognition or
acceptance of".  Sure sounds like what the Supreme Court does with the laws
that it chooses to review to me.

Oh, and the sixth definition is "to make (a church) a national institution".
Allowing prayer does NOT make any church a "national institution."
rcurl
response 162 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 5 02:20 UTC 2000

The dictionary definitions are irrelvant - only the legal definitions are
meaningful here. The constitution speaks of laws respecting the
"establishment"  of religions, but *not of laws*.

gelinas
response 163 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 5 02:23 UTC 2000

Right; the Supreme Court created that all on its own.  "Marbury", I think was
the case.
jerryr
response 164 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 5 11:22 UTC 2000

but...but...they are tasked with doing that.  that's what they do.  again,
i will ask you....what system would you prefer to make it "right?"
gelinas
response 165 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 6 01:59 UTC 2000

No, they aren't "tasked with doing that".  They claimed for themselves the
*privilege* of doing so.

I'm not willing to throw out the baby with the bath water.  The Supreme
Court often makes bad decisions.  Eventually, they (sometimes) get it
right the next time around (qv Plessy vs. Fergusson and Brown vs. Board
of Education).  I can complain about their having made a wrong decision
without wanting to discard them.  If I do it right, I'll convince enough
others that the chances of the Court getting it right, too, will increase.
scg
response 166 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 6 03:57 UTC 2000

Joe, would you mind elaborating on what part of these court decisions you
think is wrong and why?  I'm wondering which things they've banned you think
are not state sponsored religious expressions, or which particular things
they've permitted you think are, and why?  Or if you are saying that the
government should conduct official prayers, which religion you think ought
to be represented in those prayers, and why.

It's a rather weak argument to say that the court is wrong and leave it at
that.
gelinas
response 167 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 6 04:32 UTC 2000

Well, the Court has held that any public prayer, other than in a church,
is in and of itself an establishment of religion, a making a religion
an instrument of the state.  I disagree with that view: the people at
any given gathering *can* pray together *without* that prayer being an
expression of government, governance or the state.  Further, if allowing
such prayer is an establishment of religion, forbidding it is *also*
an establishment of religion, and, even worse if you accept the Court's
view, a specific religion: Atheism.

Bluntly, the Court has carved out an untenable and unsupportable position.
Any way you cut it, They Are Wrong.
scg
response 168 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 6 04:48 UTC 2000

Which specific case are you talking about?

I'm not aware of any court case saying that a group of people cannot decide
to pray together while not in church.  In the cases I'm aware of, the courts
have said that the leaders of government sponsored gatherings cannot lead
their audience in a prayer, and that they can't permit a specific prayer while
banning other speech.  If there were a gathering where people were just
talking freely, saying whatever they wanted, and they were prevented from
praying, I'm sure the court would have a problem with that as well.  

I fail to see how this is an enforcement of atheism.  I've talked to you in
person, and I don't think you suddenly became an atheist during those
conversations.  And yet, you were somehow able to have a conversation without
interrupting it for a prayer.  Likewise, if everybody at a school function
were required to listen to a school official give a speech about there not
being a god, I very much doubt the court would look kindly on that.
rcurl
response 169 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 6 05:55 UTC 2000

Atheism is not a religion. A (not) - theism (god-ism). 
gelinas
response 170 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 6 06:05 UTC 2000

Just as the Court found the "right to privacy" (on which it decided
Roe vs.  Wade) in the "penumbra" of the Bill of Rights, so too is its
position on the establishment of Atheism as the official religion of the
United States found in the penumbra of its decisions on the matter: the
apparent goal is not neutrality on the question but rather denial that there
even is a question: there can be no mention of God (or even gods).  No one
case sums it up, but each adds to the load that leads to the breaking of
the camel's back.  Take the most recent decision, on the football game
in Texas (and I've not read the decision, merely the reporting of it
in the news): students were, in that case, forbidden to lead a prayer.
Or so it has been reported.

(I rather liked the comment on the matter in tonight's AA News; he said
much to agree with.  I don't feel like going upstairs, or I'd identify
the writer.  A syndicated columnist, anyway.)

I understand the Court has not yet rendered a decision on Ohio's motto,
nor on the attempt to put the United States' motto on some school walls.
I do not expect it to affirm either action, *based on how it is has
decided all similar questions since 1964* (or thereabouts).

The United States is not, nor should it be, a Christian nation.  (I don't
believe such to be possible, either.)  However, neither is it, nor should
it be, atheistic.

BTW, some would say that the law that admitted Utah to the Union is
unconstitutional: it required the banning of a specific practice of a
specific religion.  On the face of it, that was a prohibited interference
with the free practice of that religion.
gelinas
response 171 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 6 06:07 UTC 2000

Yes, it is, Rane: it is the belief that there is no god.  Its only cultus
may be self-reliance, but that doesn't disqualify it.
mdw
response 172 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 6 06:23 UTC 2000

I'm not an athiest, but I still think that it's perfectly appropriate
and best for government to separate itself from religious practice, and
if that means no prayers before school football, that's just fine.  In
some religions, an appropriate pre-football religious ceremony might
involve the sacrifice of a chicken or small goat - I wonder how many of
these "pro-school-prayer" groups would be willing to tolerate that? And,
for the "bible is the truth" folks, I'd like to point out the old
testament has quite a bit of information on the kinds of animal
sacrifice that will please God the most.  Personally, I'd like to see
the "In God We Trust" disappear off of US currency as well.  It wasn't
there before 1864, and doesn't need to be there today.  I'd also like to
see the "under god" disappear out of the pledge of allegiance.  It
wasn't there originally, and there are plenty of religious folks in the
US today who believe in more than one god.
gelinas
response 173 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 6 06:33 UTC 2000

I can only speak for myself: if you need to sacrifice a chicken, that's fine.
Wellhausen pointed out that the ancient Hebrew word for "sacrifice" meant
"butcher for food": one didn't eat unless sharing with one's god.
bdh3
response 174 of 236: Mark Unseen   Sep 6 07:02 UTC 2000

Yep, no more kosher ballpark franks at Cubs games, thats what it
means...
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