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| Author |
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| 25 new of 174 responses total. |
gull
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response 50 of 174:
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Sep 29 23:09 UTC 2000 |
Yup. I never actually had much desire to join the Boy Scouts, so it didn't
bother me any.
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janc
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response 51 of 174:
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Oct 1 04:55 UTC 2000 |
Actually, this is a rare example where I think everything is just
peachy. The situation couldn't be better if I'd written the script.
In my elementary school, there was no boy who was not a cub scout. It
was a small school, but if being a cub scout was optional, nobody ever
noticed. Meetings were held in the school. On some days all the boys
would come to school in their cub scout uniforms (I don't recall the
reason for this. Den meetings after school, I think.) I think I was
aware that it wasn't part of school, as such, but only barely. To be
"kicked out of cub scouts" would have been a social horror beyond
comprehension.
The case against the Boy Scouts was predicated on this kind of
experience. They had become so ubiquitous that they were kind of
effectively a public institution. The supreme court rejected this
argument. I think they were right to do so. It is a private
organization, and the government shouldn't be abridging the rights of
such organizations.
However, bringing the suit did have a good effect - it got the BSA a lot
of publicity for being firmly anti-gay. The government made it's
decision. Now its time for the public to make their's.
There has been a lot of backlash against the BSA over this, from former
scouts mailing back all their merit badges, to schools and organizations
declining to support them. Probably they'll get plenty of positive
feedback, but on the whole this is going to hurt the BSA a lot.
I've no grudge against the BSA, but if they're going to take an anti-gay
stance, then I'm glad to see them getting a backlash, and not a backlash
from nine judges and some ACLU lawyers, but a broad backlash from a lot
of people in all segments and levels of society. The BSA used to be
universally accepted as a good thing by everyone in this country. They
took a stance against gays, and lost that universal acceptance. The
message is clear - discrimination against gays is no longer acceptable
in mainstream American culture. Too bad that the BSA which has, as
Christian organizations go, been amazingly tolerant couldn't manage to
keep up with the times, but I like this change in our culture.
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jerryr
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response 52 of 174:
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Oct 1 12:00 UTC 2000 |
my bsa troop, was 98% jewish, from committeemen to tenderfoot scout. i'd
hardly call that a christian organization. we met at the public school. we
would wear our uniforms to school on days that teachers would hand out
scouting applications - membership drive days. the teachers were all jewish
except one irish guy. dunno how he got hired, but there you have it.
four of us in the troop were roman catholic. all the rest were jewish.
when we went to scout camp in the summer, we attended a kosher camp.
some christian organization.
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tod
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response 53 of 174:
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Oct 1 13:37 UTC 2000 |
No shit.
Brighn, your understanding of OT is not a Torah understanding. Sorry to
break it to you.
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happyboy
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response 54 of 174:
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Oct 1 16:05 UTC 2000 |
doncha just love pokin' it to kristers who
barf out kjv oocq's?
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albaugh
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response 55 of 174:
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Oct 1 23:07 UTC 2000 |
janc, you and the rest of your Ann Arbor liberal types can be smug about how
"all this" is going to seriously hurt BSA. You go on believing that, and have
some more granola, as willard would say. Meanwhile, BSA will continue to do
just fine, thank you.
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mcnally
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response 56 of 174:
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Oct 2 00:53 UTC 2000 |
Ummm.. OK.
You're probably right.. The BSA probably didn't *want* those charity
contributions from United Way chapters and they were probably sick of
meeting in public facilities and they're probably happy to have some
parents choosing not to direct their kids towards scouting -- those were
probably "Ann Arbor liberal"-type kids and they didn't want them anyway..
Yeah, right..
I don't think anyone's arguing that this flap will be the end of Scouting,
but I think it's undeniable that the organization has been damaged by the
controversy.
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tod
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response 57 of 174:
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Oct 2 02:06 UTC 2000 |
Hippies: 0 John Wayne: 1
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wyrefall
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response 58 of 174:
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Oct 2 03:14 UTC 2000 |
What is so incredibly difficult about people being responsible for themselves,
and letting other people live their lives. The only rolemodels kids need are
those which demonstrate acceptence, a ferver for gaining knowledge, and
responsibility. What is so hard about that????????
This is so unbelievably rediculous. What have we come to as a society?
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tod
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response 59 of 174:
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Oct 2 13:34 UTC 2000 |
Fag haters that wear scarves and beads.
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brighn
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response 60 of 174:
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Oct 2 14:11 UTC 2000 |
#53> then provide one yourself, with sources. Don't just tell me I'm wrong,
prove it. Or shut up.
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brighn
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response 61 of 174:
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Oct 2 15:01 UTC 2000 |
Let me provide a random source (this is quite literally the first thing I
found on the Web... about 30 seconds of searching. I'll do more after tod
actually ponies up).
http://www.uh.edu/campus/msa/khutbas/compwome.html
5. Adultery
Women's position, role, rights, and duties in the Quran are very different
from those found in the Bible. Let us take some examples. Adultery and
fornication are considered sins in all religions. The Bible decrees the death
sentence for both the adulterer and the adulteress (Leviticus 20:10). Islam
also equally punishes both the adulterer and the adulteress (24:2). However,
the Quranic definition of adultery is very different from the Biblical
definition. Adultery, according to the Quran, is the involvement of a married
man or a married woman in an extramarital affair. The Bible only considers
the extramarital affair of a married woman as adultery (Leviticus 20:10,
Deuteronomy 22:22, Proverbs 6:20-7:27). The extramarital affair of a married
man isn't per se a crime in the Bible. Why this dual moral standard? According
to Encyclopedia Judaica, the wife was considered to be the husband's
possession and adultery constituted a violation the husband's exclusive right
to her; the wife as the husband's possession had no such right to him [5].
The New Testament echoes the same attitude in Matthew 5:31-32, where it is
attributed to Jesus to have said," I tell you that anyone who divorces his
wife, except for marital unfaithfulness, causes her to become an adulteress,
and anyone who marries the divorced woman commits adultery." Why didn't he
label the man who divorces his wife and marries another woman as adulterer?
To the present day in Israel, if a married man indulges in an extramarital
affair with a woman, his children by that woman are considered legitimate.
But, if a married woman has an affair with another man, her children by that
man are not only illegitimate but are forbidden to marry any other Jews except
converts and other bastards. This ban is handed down to the child's
descendants for 10 generations until the taint of adultery is presumably
weakened [6].
The Quran, on the other hand, never considers any woman to be the possession
of any man. The Quran eloquently describes the relationship between the
spouses by saying," And among His signs is that He created for you mates from
among yourselves, that you may dwell in tranquility with them and He has put
love and mercy between your hearts: verily in that are signs for those who
reflect" (30:21) This is Quranic conception of marriage: love, mercy, and
tranquility, not possession and double standards.
So, I stand corrected on the general comment that Jewish men have more
strictures than Jewish women, but stand firm on the conviction that, in
Judaism (at least, in the torah), "adultery" is only relevant when one of the
people involved is married t, and not to everyone else involved.
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jazz
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response 62 of 174:
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Oct 2 15:19 UTC 2000 |
You're arguing on different planes, Paul, "facts" and "rhetoric". Try
snappy-sounding quotes like "Pagans who know Biblical law better than you 1,
Ignorance 0".
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brighn
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response 63 of 174:
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Oct 2 16:19 UTC 2000 |
That's why I only spent 30 seconds getting that, John.
I'll spend more if he actually comes up with something sound.
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brighn
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response 64 of 174:
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Oct 2 17:21 UTC 2000 |
As a side note, John (thread? What thread?) -- I've noticed that, given ten
Neopagans and ten Christians selected at random, the biblical knowledge among
the Neopagans will be much higher. I suspect that's true of Neopagans vs.
Jews, though much less pronounced (since most Neopagans are recovering
Christians, and their knowledge of Judaism -- like mine -- is secondhand).
I've wondered why that is, and earlier I think I found a major motivator.
<set smarm = on>
the Neopagans are Neopagans BECAUSE they know more about Christianity.
<set smarm = off>
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tod
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response 65 of 174:
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Oct 2 19:38 UTC 2000 |
Yes, your knowledge is secondhand.
*yawn*
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brighn
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response 66 of 174:
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Oct 2 20:08 UTC 2000 |
Was #65 a quotation from the Pentateuch, or the Talmud?
Or perhaps an expert Rabbinical opinion?
I'm afraid I didn't recognize it. Could you provide the citation, so I could
look up the context?
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jerryr
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response 67 of 174:
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Oct 2 20:17 UTC 2000 |
i would venture to say that most religious jews know more about the bible they
use than any roman catholic does about theirs. the ones i grew up with
anyway. we were told not to read the bible because we would mis-interpret
it. if we had questions we were supposed to ask a priest.
consequently, when i watch jeopardy or play trivial pursuit i always bomb big
time on bible questions.
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jazz
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response 68 of 174:
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Oct 2 20:27 UTC 2000 |
Given, and given that many religious and not-so-religious people are
a bit ignorant of their professed religion, and that it's not productive to
speculate as to who is and who isn't, let's stick to the facts at hand.
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brighn
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response 69 of 174:
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Oct 2 20:49 UTC 2000 |
Yes. Given that credentials alone don't guarantee knowledge or ignorance.
Hence citations and such of other people, until the bulk of such citation
leads to what may be termed "majority opinion."
And so forth.
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jazz
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response 70 of 174:
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Oct 2 20:53 UTC 2000 |
Or, since we're talking about exegesis, you might really go out on a
limb and support your opinions with scriptural quotes.
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brighn
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response 71 of 174:
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Oct 2 22:28 UTC 2000 |
I've got some of those ready, personally...
Waiting for Rabbi Tod to do something other than yawn...
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tod
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response 72 of 174:
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Oct 3 00:13 UTC 2000 |
*covers mouth while yawning*
Shanah Tovah
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brighn
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response 73 of 174:
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Oct 3 02:50 UTC 2000 |
Good morning, tod.
You were having a wonderful dream in which you knew what you were talking
about. Please, let us lolligagging not keep you from the pleasance of your
reverie.
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jazz
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response 74 of 174:
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Oct 3 14:23 UTC 2000 |
Paul, have you had a chance to see the Canal film _Ridicule_? I do
believe you'd enjoy and appreciate it. :)
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