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#1 |
Samurai Navy
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The dark age is coming back
The theocratic State. This is happening in America right now!
![]() Superstition in the american population is rampant. ![]() Check this out: ---> http://www.pistolwimp.com/media/51635/ ![]() Last edited by VON_CAPO; 10-27-06 at 08:19 PM. |
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#2 |
Rear Admiral
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At work right now, can't exactly watch the video.
Religion has been on an upswing here for awhile now. I don't quite understand why. Im theorizing that religious revivalism comes and goes. Problem is it takes awhile for it to go. Generally speaking i find chrisitanity in the US, as a whole, the most hipocritical "organization" known to man; and i resist their efforts and intrusions into my life whenver i can. Theres alot of freaks out there. Again, i dont understand the ferver. Some of these people make very large assumptions. LIke, "i thought such and such was a christian (insert noun here)". Just down the way where i live we had a "Christian family" move in. OHHHHH.. their christian........ The fact that they have to distinquish / seperate themselves by their beliefs is disturbing. Its tantamout.. no its worse then hyphinated Americans. Far worse. Whats shady is how they effect the system and policy change within our country. Many people i think, want the division between church and state removed. The church takes in millions (if not billions) of dollars, they pay no taxes, and they effect our goverment via their congregations who vote. Backdoor government i think. Church isnt supposed to get involved yet i've heard in some ares in one of the bush elections that the local religious chapters were advocating that people should , "vote for morals". My fear is sometime in the next decade, we wont be that much different then Iran, the only difference being, our religous organaiztions wont have an offical tie to goverment like iran does, but the tie will be just as strong and prevaliant, and the president as much as a puppet to the pulpit. |
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#3 | |
Wayfaring Stranger
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![]() Flanked by life and the funeral pyre. Putting on a show for you to see. |
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#4 |
Eternal Patrol
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Location: Aeoteroa
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I already live in the darkages
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#5 |
Samurai Navy
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Restore the "Pledge of Allegiance"
from ---> http://www.restorethepledge.com/ """ I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the republic for which it stands, one nation indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. Above is the version of the Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America first approved by the Congress in 1942. It evokes feelings of patriotism and unity, and brings together the vastly different cultures, ethnicities, languages and backgrounds that form the common experience called America. It reaffirms our commitment to the freedoms guaranteed in our Constitution, and reflects the foundation of that amazing document: that diversity is a blessing which only strengthens our nation. This is especially true concerning religion, which the Framers recognized as uniquely divisive, causing them to set forth that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion." We have done well since those first ten words of the Bill of Rights (i.e., the "Establishment Clause") were written in 1789, and generally held true to that principle. Yet, in 1954 - fueled by the Cold War and blinded by McCarthyism - Congress violated its oath. After sixty-two secular years, the Pledge - first introduced by a private magazine in 1892 - was changed. Our elected officials felt it necessary to inject religion into the Pledge, and "under God" was interlarded into that promise which had previously embraced all Americans. Currently there is a legal drive to remove those words. "God" in the Pledge has caused the divisiveness, discrimination and exclusion that the Framers specifically sought to prevent. Yes, the majority of Americans believe in God, and they nearly unanimously find no objection in the Pledge's current rendition. But that is precisely why we have a Bill of Rights - to prevent tyranny by the majority, and to protect the rights of minorities. Our Constitution forbids government from endorsing religious views, and those who choose not to believe in a deity should never be made to feel like "outsiders," as is now the case. The words are "liberty and justice for all." The Pledge should be a unifying experience for every citizen. Placing a religious ideal into its midst is not right, and serves no purpose except to alter a purely patriotic tradition into one that satisfies the religious bent of the majority. That is exactly what the First Amendment was written to preclude. """ Last edited by VON_CAPO; 10-27-06 at 10:33 PM. |
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#6 | |
Ocean Warrior
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Location: USA
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I personally don't care if they say..."God is now officially out of the pledge". I will still say "God" in it. And that's how my kids will learn it. And many Americans feel the same way. Also, "Merry Christmas" was never a problem until these agenda driven leftitsts began their quest to shape American society to their own distorted liking. A society which is antithetical to what most people want. Everything was fine until the whiners came out and started their anti-"everything" quests. You don't want a tyranny of the majority. That's fine. But we should not have a tyranny of the minority either. |
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#7 |
Wayfaring Stranger
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Two words. So what?
Congress has begun every session since George Washingtons time with a prayer. "In God we trust" adorns our money. US Presidents swear to uphold and defend the constitution "so help me God" when they take the oath of office. Christmas is a national holiday. In the US Senate Chamber, over east doorway are written the words "Annuit coeptis" (God has favored our undertakings), over south entrance: "In God we trust". In the Prayer room (yes there is such a room in the Capitol building) "Preserve me, O God: for in thee do I put my trust.", in the Congressional complexes corridors: "America! God shed his grace on Thee, and crown thy good with brotherhood from sea to shining sea!" The word "God" appears in the preamble in eight state constitutions. In four states, the "Supreme Ruler of the Universe" is used instead. By far, the most popular divine reference in a preamble is "Almighty God." This appears in the preamble of 30 state constitutions. Given all that i hardly see where two words added to the Pledge of Allegience over 50 years ago indicate some kind of heinous shift to religious tolitarianism.
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![]() Flanked by life and the funeral pyre. Putting on a show for you to see. Last edited by August; 10-27-06 at 11:22 PM. |
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#8 |
Admiral
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There was an interesting poll some months ago, you need to Google for it, stating that just as many Americans believed in God as Iranians.
The difference was: Americans feared God and thought to be on his bad boy list while Iranians believed God to be on their side and on his approval list.
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"Tout ce qui est exagéré est insignifiant." ("All that is exaggerated is insignificant.") - Talleyrand Last edited by TteFAboB; 10-27-06 at 09:17 PM. |
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#9 |
Admiral
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So this is about Newdow? I didn't recognized his voice. This is the guy who said he was raped by the mother of his daughter then went on and pledged in the name of his daughter, saying she was uncomfortable with the oath at school untill she and her mother came to public to state that they were Christians, had no problem with the oath and wanted to maintain it? In other words, a liar?
Google links: Funny one here. Since Obi-Wan is mentioned: who's the more foolish, the fool or the fool who follows him? http://www.opinionet.com/article.php?id=398 More serious one here. www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=28160 And this one is full of quotes from American politicians displaying all their totalitarian, theocratic and tyrant views: http://michaelnewdow.com/ Check out this one VON_CAPO, seems like America is a theocracy since 1974, we're three decades late here: "Without God there could be no American form of government, nor an American way of life. Recognition of the Supreme Being is the first - the most basic - expression of Americanism. Thus the founding fathers of America saw it, and thus with God's help, it will continue to be." Gerald Ford - December 5, 1974. Anyway, finally had the time to watch the video. He equated Islam with Christendom. Good one. When equating the unequal, the worst is benefitted. In this case, Christianity is thrown to the pile of religoiusly motivated terrorism and Islam is spared from being specified, if any Muslim commits an act of terror, he's only a generic religiously motivated fanatic. Jihad has nothing to do with it. How many Christian terror attacks do we have on a daily basis again? And since 9/11? ![]() I wonder, since the Vatican has been a theocracy from birth, why aren't they impaling the atheists over there? Could it be that the principles of the Catholic Church are superior to the intolerant men and thus outlived their reign? Where is it safer for an atheist to live: the Vatican or Kabul? Nothing can be more false. I don't know who's been been following Abdul Rahman's case, but when you reject Islam in the Muslim World you are sentenced to death. Apparently there isn't any other theocracy in the world as benevolent and tolerant as the USA, unless Newdow has been recently sentenced to death and had to seek asylum in Italy and I missed it. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul_Rahman_(convert)
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"Tout ce qui est exagéré est insignifiant." ("All that is exaggerated is insignificant.") - Talleyrand Last edited by TteFAboB; 10-28-06 at 01:04 AM. |
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#10 |
A-ganger
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As an atheist, I certainly don't think the U.S. is turning into a theocracy. I do believe that religious groups are becoming more vocal, but this is matched by more vocal atheist groups. There are some things many atheists whine about that are really not important, like the "merry Christmas" things. What the hell is their problem? Keep in mind that while people in religious groups can be associated with their religious, the only way that atheists are associated with is lack of something, so atheists themselves are quite varied.
Others things mentioned such as the pledge are not too critical either. I don't see where it is "required" to say the full pledge. Cannot an atheist can simply pledge alliegance to the country during a pledge, instead of our country under god? Some things are worrying, however, such as the increased "creation science" in school curriculums, which have no basis in actual science, and are quite, shall we say, misrepresentative of many science aspects. Also a legitimate grievance mentioned in the movie was the fact that in some states, atheists can't hold public office or testify in court (I think these were the things, though I was eating when watching, so I might have misread something). Isn't this unconstitutional? What happened to "no taxation without representation"? Of course, this isn't to say atheists would actually be elected to anything beyond the local level, at least not anytime soon. The court testimony ban strikes me as "red flag", however. Even in the most religious of states, there are a fair number of atheists. It is extremely likely that many of these have been called to court over the years. Have their testimonies really been rejected, or is this another archaeic, non-enforced law? Finally, a few other comments: Why must people continually refer to the founding fathers and their intent when dealing with many things such as religion? There are often many arguements and quotes to both sides, but they don't add up to anything. It is the constitution itself that actually matters. Unfortunately, the constitution is often unclear, and the supreme court uses this alot, which I would think is somewhat beyond what they should be. Unclear things should be really clarified by wording amendments, unless we "like" playing the interpretation game, which seems retarded. I noted in the video that the main referances to violant religion were to Islam, which is satisfactory as it produces the most religious violance by a great margin. Finally, I would like to reaffirm that while many atheists are stinking hippies, many are also regular people! Please focus critisism on the damn hippies. They are actually alot worse then you think! You imagine the horror of solstice celebrations, or mindlessly repetitive nature camps. I have seen these! But you do not acknowledge your own worst enemy, yourselves! By being anti-atheist, you force atheists to combine together, preventing other good atheists from properly dealing with the hippies from within! Okay, sorry for that paragraph. I accidently started the Ur-Quan theme, so I had to write something relevant... ![]()
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Neutrino 123 |
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#11 | |||||||||||
Ocean Warrior
![]() Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Norway
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Richard Dawkins eat you all for breakfast.
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Just that something has been widely accepted for a long time does not justify it. Quote:
![]() ![]() Fallacies are cute ![]() Quote:
And, of course, America's a multi-ethnic country. When government institutions use the term "Merry Christmas", it shows that they favour Christians, in stark contrast of what they're supposed to do. There's this document called the "US Constitution". Read it some day. Quote:
Another fallacy. Oh, almost forgot: Appeal to Common Practice, Popularity, and Tradition! Silly me. Quote:
![]() How many Church leaders publicly stood up to distance their Church from Timothy McVeigh or Paul Hill's acts of terrorism? None that I ever heard of. How many were even asked to? I'm not aware of any. Quote:
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In reality? Plenty (<-- clickie!). Look into the militant groups in Africa. Look into the militant groups in India. Look into the abortion clinic bombings. The courthouse bombing in Oklahoma. And, of course, while not all examples of terrorism, Bush's many policies during his adventure in the White House ought to be mentioned as well: Torture, white phosphorous over Fallujah, starting a war based on lies, and attacking homosexuality. And more. Quote:
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Re' movie: Bah, it's still illegal for stores in Norway to be open on Sundays. Can you believe it? Fantastic film. Quote:
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*Pictures courtesy of the late WinAce.
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Last edited by Safe-Keeper; 10-28-06 at 06:30 AM. |
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#12 | |
Samurai Navy
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#13 |
Ocean Warrior
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![]() ![]() It's a good programme, though. There's one thing to learn from mythology, though: It's far better to have an open outlook on death (as many religious people do) than to hide it and declare it a taboo (as many atheists do). Followers of mythology may be wrong in my eyes as to what happens when you die, but at least they discuss it. Death and dealing with it is such a taboo to atheists that it's scary.
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Last edited by Safe-Keeper; 10-28-06 at 10:02 AM. |
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#14 | |
Wayfaring Stranger
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First off McVeighs reasons for his actions had to do with his belief in government tyranny, not religion, so including him in your argument is a red herring. Secondly, it took all of 60 seconds to find these links from the pro-life movement condemning the actions of Paul Hill. http://www.mttu.com/Wetzel%20-%20The...Master%202.htm http://www.streetpreachersfellowship.com/hill.asp http://www.covenantnews.com/north030905.htm http://www.operationsaveamerica.org/...ill_9_2_03.htm http://www.cnsnews.com/Nation/archiv...20030904b.html
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#15 |
Wayfaring Stranger
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America the Beautiful
Oh beautiful, for spacious skies, For amber waves of grain, For purple mountain majesties Above the fruited plain! America! America! God shed his grace on thee, And crown thy good with brotherhood, from sea to shining sea. O beautiful for pilgrim feet Whose stern impassion'd stress A thoroughfare for freedom beat Across the wilderness. America! America! God mend thine ev'ry flaw, Confirm thy soul in self-control, Thy liberty in law. O beautiful for heroes prov'd In liberating strife, Who more than self their country loved, And mercy more than life. America! America! May God thy gold refine Till all success be nobleness, And ev'ry gain divine. O beautiful for patriot dream That sees beyond the years Thine alabaster cities gleam Undimmed by human tears. America! America! God shed His grace on thee, And crown thy good with brotherhood From sea to shining sea.
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