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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/2/2012 6:35:36 AM   
Aswad


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quote:

ORIGINAL: xssve

From a pure social policy standpoint, I'd have to say that fighting for something usually results in better outcomes overall than fighting against something, which typically leads only to grief.


Nietzsche has an interesting point in this regard, which is essentially that this is one of the distinguishing elements, perhaps the main distinguishing element, between master morality and slave morality. The master says "I like this" and defines "this" as inherently good, with anything attacking good being bad, whereas the slave says "I hate this" and defines "this" as inherently evil, with anything opposing evil being good.

It's one of the problems with e.g. Ayn Rand.

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al-Aswad.


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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/2/2012 8:41:54 AM   
dharkling


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SoftBonds


quote:

ORIGINAL: GrandPoobah


quote:

ORIGINAL: Fightdirecto


Is it possible to have both freedom OF religion AND freedom FROM religion at the same time in the same country?


Yes...and no.

Within a limited definition, it is possible. Looking strictly at the practice of religion, it is possible. You can attend or not attend whatever services you wish, subject to the rules of a given institution. If you wish to be a (insert name of church here) you may need to do certain things. Those remain your choice. You may also believe, as you apparently do, that "religious values" don't require "membership." I think that's a more common situation than many people acknowledge. I know many who "grew up in a church" and carry some of the "values" with them even if they don't actively attend services now. So, you can have total freedom...to believe or not, to attend or not, and to allow others the same.

However, it is unrealistic to expect that those same values, whatever they may be, won't affect other things that you do. You may feel that killing is "inappropriate." You may feel that way because of the Ten Commandments, or simply because you feel that way for other reasons. Whether your motivation is based upon religion or not, were the matter to come to a vote, you'd likely base your decision upon your sense of values. It is unreasonable to expect you to set those aside. You might be "simply in favor" or quite determined. The same would be true of most others.

In short, our "religious" background will impact our actions, and it's unrealistic to think it won't, or it could be put aside. In the western legal systems, there is an historic religious background to many of our laws, based mostly upon the Christian and Jewish traditions. In other systems, such as Sharia, the same is true simply based upon other faiths. It is up to you to decide if the overall legal system represents an intrusion of religion in your daily life. For most people, it probably isn't much of an intrusion since they don't do something "illegal."

There are, however, obvious exceptions. In the US, marriage between whites and Negros was illegal in many states. That's pretty intrusive, but not necessarily base upon religion. Gay marriage, on the other hand, does seem to have a strongly religious background.

In any case, the answer to your question depends upon how you view that "freedom."


At the time it was a political issue, marriage between white and black citizens was considered a religious issue. "God had separated the races for a reason," and therefore interracial marriage was a violation of gods (implied) law.
Opposition to gay marriage has nothing to do with religious objections to the marriage, but rather to homosexuality itself. It is the anger/fear of allowing homosexuality to be "allowed," and treated as acceptable that causes the opposition.
Of course, when you ask these people if they eat pork, they don't even realize why you are asking...


If you think about it though, according to the separation of church and state, marriage should not be a legal matter at all. Marriage is a religious institution that has been quietly accepted as a legal one. Frankly, I think marriage as a legal institution should be done away with and EVERYONE if they so desire to legally bind themselves to another individual (or individuals, as the case may be) can do so. Legally. In a court.

And if you still want to be "married" you can do that. In whatever church you happen to attend.

If THAT were the case and gay unions were still "unacceptable", then I think your argument would be more justifiable. As it is though, there are still too many people who are able to use religion as the basis of their objection. A person's faith is one thing you really won't win against in any debate. Its so personal and so deep that people will go to war over it, will kill over it, will torture over it. As we have already witnessed.

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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/2/2012 8:44:28 AM   
Musicmystery


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quote:


Is it possible to have both freedom OF religion AND freedom FROM religion at the same time in the same country?


As you've laid out the definition in rather firebrand terms--of course.

If you want freedom from exposure to religion, of course not.

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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/2/2012 9:24:06 AM   
DaddySatyr


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quote:

ORIGINAL: dharkling

If you think about it though, according to the separation of church and state, marriage should not be a legal matter at all. Marriage is a religious institution that has been quietly accepted as a legal one. Frankly, I think marriage as a legal institution should be done away with and EVERYONE if they so desire to legally bind themselves to another individual (or individuals, as the case may be) can do so. Legally. In a court.


I have been saying this very thing for years. Stupidly, we allowed government to have a "little control" of marriage (licensing, tax breaks) and they are trying to exert complete control. Marriage is a religious ritual. Plain and simple. The law should have no standing.



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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/2/2012 2:12:27 PM   
itsSIRtou


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the real question is... Will religion actually allow it??

From all indications I personally think not.

....a book series then a moive called DUNE had a phrase "he who controls the "spice" controls the universe".... this is the current goal of religion just as it was during feudilstic England. They want to run the counrty through the USA's leaders the same way they ran it through the king of england to only the benefit of the church. And control the people by their sex lives ( "spice" ) and by defalt their money since the latest demand in many christian churches is to "tythe" 10% of ur income to the church whether ur of their religion or not, just like ye old england.

and actually, notice all this stuff is detracting from them talking about the bad economy (IMO) the conservative GOP is largely are responseable for?

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What would the internet be like if we couldn't say trump is a moron?

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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/2/2012 2:15:26 PM   
farglebargle


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quote:

. Marriage is a religious institution


By the Laws of New York, Marriage is, and always has been defined as a Civil Contract.



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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/2/2012 2:32:24 PM   
itsSIRtou


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quote:


If THAT were the case and gay unions were still "unacceptable", then I think your argument would be more justifiable. As it is though, there are still too many people who are able to use religion as the basis of their objection. A person's faith is one thing you really won't win against in any debate. Its so personal and so deep that people will go to war over it, will kill over it, will torture over it. As we have already witnessed.



and notice that one of the Ten commandments is "thou shall not kill" .....and in his name slaughtered millilons....

.

< Message edited by itsSIRtou -- 3/2/2012 2:35:34 PM >


_____________________________

I will allways be a knight, instead of a prince.

What would the internet be like if we couldn't say trump is a moron?

The Republican party complains government doesnt work for people, and then makes darn sure it cannot.

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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/2/2012 4:27:18 PM   
GotSteel


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Without getting into the other issues in your example I think you're argument might make more sense without the Dune quote.

Props for trying to work Dune in though




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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/2/2012 9:39:59 PM   
xssve


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quote:

ORIGINAL: dharkling


If you think about it though, according to the separation of church and state, marriage should not be a legal matter at all. Marriage is a religious institution that has been quietly accepted as a legal one. Frankly, I think marriage as a legal institution should be done away with and EVERYONE if they so desire to legally bind themselves to another individual (or individuals, as the case may be) can do so. Legally. In a court.

And if you still want to be "married" you can do that. In whatever church you happen to attend.

If THAT were the case and gay unions were still "unacceptable", then I think your argument would be more justifiable. As it is though, there are still too many people who are able to use religion as the basis of their objection. A person's faith is one thing you really won't win against in any debate. Its so personal and so deep that people will go to war over it, will kill over it, will torture over it. As we have already witnessed.
No, not really, marriage is very much a legal contract, people cohabiting do not need divorce lawyers, prenups, or private investigators, they have Joey Greco.

And that goes historically too, marriage has historically been a perq of the upper classes, a means of establishing connections between families, sealing alliances, forming truces, etc., if anything, the concept of formal matrimony is a political and economic institution with the church serving as the middleman.

Marriage among the yeomanry was a much less formal affair, jump over a broomstick or something, very much ad hoc and local customs, and Christianity itself was not the most popular religion until at least the 12th century, and they still had to spend the next 600 years killing everybody who wasn't Christian enough, or the right sort in order to claim hegemony.

There a lot of crap fostered about the institution of marriage, nuclear families, etc., people do pair bond always have always will marriage or no marriage, it's more realistic separate the legal/civil apects of it, which includes financial incorporation, inheritance, spousal treatment, etc, all very cogent legal issues, and the religious ceremonialism, which is largely a social activity with informal expectations that may have a great deal of social weight, but may or may not carry much legal weight.

In short, "religion" does not have a monopoly on marriage, any religion, from a legal and civil perspective, it's a legal and civil arrangement.

That day is done, nostalgia isn't going to bring it back. In modern terms, it's like saying Microsoft should have a monopoly on incorporation because they killed off all the competition.

It's not that way because god wanted it that way, it's that way because stockholders and speculators make more noise and pull more strings than regulators these days.

< Message edited by xssve -- 3/2/2012 9:42:29 PM >


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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/2/2012 9:50:05 PM   
xssve


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Personally, I think we're past the point when we ought to just call churches what they are nowdays: political parties.

If you're gonna campaign from the pulpit, you're not a preacher, you're a party hack.


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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/2/2012 10:17:40 PM   
GotSteel


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And even if we ignore all that and call marriage a religious institution that the government has no business being involved in that just means that nobody should be telling the Unitarian Universalists that they can't marry homosexuals.

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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/3/2012 6:03:52 AM   
xssve


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True, you're right back to square one: an atheist marriage is called a civil union, that's all - i.e., the SCOTUS has defined atheism as tantamount to a religious belief for the purposes of the establishment clause.


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RE: Is Freedom OF and FROM religion mutually possble? - 3/6/2012 8:15:08 AM   
GotSteel


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quote:

ORIGINAL: xssve
True, you're right back to square one: an atheist marriage is called a civil union, that's all - i.e., the SCOTUS has defined atheism as tantamount to a religious belief for the purposes of the establishment clause.


Hey if any church want's to be a bigot for Jesus I defend their right to not perform same sex marriage ceremonies. But we all get to use the word there's no church out there with a trademark on it. So if two atheists get married it's called marriage because we have freedom from religion.

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