KitemanSA wrote:Diogenes wrote: KitemanSA wrote:Di,
Too bad you aren't as wise as your namesake
I would point out that eventually even the real Diogenes would have to learn something. He couldn't remain ignorant about everything forever.
When you claim you "know" something, you block any possibility that you may be wrong. He seems to have thought that he MIGHT know things but left the door open to being wrong, he left the door open to learning better. You don't seem to share that wisdom.
You just haven't read enough of my posts. The fact that you so seldom see me admitting i'm wrong is because it is so seldom that I am.
But I am wrong occasionally, and when that happens I say so.
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote: KitemanSA wrote: The US was formed as a statistical democatic republic (or vice versa if you wish). The "republic" part was how how governments CRAFTED law, the statistical democracy (rule by concent of the governed) was the fully informed jury. Well, the "statistical democracy" part was killed in the late 1800s by the "republic" part which has been working since that time to enslave us.
Gobbledygook that I don't have the time or inclination to decipher.
Another demonstration that you are not as wise as the man who's name you have besmirtched.
Obviously not.
I respond to the prattling of fools. Diogenes wouldn't bother.
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote: KitemanSA wrote: Those would be wrong. While it is true that the majority of the people who LIVED in these united States were some form of "Christian", most of the leaders who FORMED these united States into a nation were deist at most, agnostic in the main.
Jefferson was alleged to be a Deist; a charge which he vehemently denied. Thomas Paine was open about his Deism, and of course he was pretty much ran out of the country in fear of his life.
Which seems to be a good reason why most leaders kept their mouths shut in public!
Actually they didn't. Franklin and Washington were quite robust in their praise of God and Providence, as were others. John Adams said “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”
Now this is pretty Generic, and not indicative of a Christian bias,
but this link pretty much covers Statements of Christianity from the Founders.Let's take Jefferson for Example. Who would have thought the man who was thought to have been a Deist would have said this?
The doctrines of Jesus are simple, and tend all to the happiness of man.64
The practice of morality being necessary for the well being of society, He [God] has taken care to impress its precepts so indelibly on our hearts that they shall not be effaced by the subtleties of our brain. We all agree in the obligation of the moral principles of Jesus and nowhere will they be found delivered in greater purity than in His discourses.65
I am a Christian in the only sense in which He wished anyone to be: sincerely attached to His doctrines in preference to all others.66
I am a real Christian – that is to say, a disciple of the doctrines of Jesus Christ.67
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote:Just which of the founders are you suggesting were agnostics or Deists? I would point out that in the US Constitution they Exempted the President from working on the Sunday Sabbath and Ended the Document with a reference to Jesus.
I didn't say "totally". No shades of grey in your thought process?
One is either a Deist, or one is not. Where is there room for a shade of gray between one and the other?
KitemanSA wrote:
By the way, can you point out said "reference to "Jesus". Are you silly enough to equate the use of the term "Year of Our Lord" as a reference to "Jesus" rather than just a standard dating convention? Man, that would be an asinine stretch.
Not at all. It is indicative of just how deeply the Christian philosophy had penetrated through the conscious of that society. It is only "asinine" to you modern wits with your imagined wisdom to whom it is merely a quaint leftover of a bygone era. During that time period it was a genuine recognition of the Supremacy of a Heavenly power above that of the mundane rule by men.
The fact that everything was dated from the time of Christ ought to be a clue to you as to how thoroughly this doctrine penetrated all of European society. It doesn't resonate nowadays, and people no longer remember how things got this way, but at that time, it was the air they breathed.
I find it amusing that Courts can continuously object to Christian influence in government, while "Year of our Lord" is on countless legal documents in their archives.
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote: People misunderstand this issue a lot. The founders took it for granted the nation was "Christian" but they were very much aware that different States were composed of different Christian Denominations, such as the Quakers in Pennsylvania, the Anglicans in Virginia, the Puritans in Massachusetts, and the Catholics in Maryland. The prohibition against Congress making a law "respecting an establishment of religion" was really a practical matter to insure that the fledgling republic would not blow itself apart from Denominational conflicts. (To avoid the Denominational strife which had so rent Europe.)
It was accepted that each state had the right and authority to impose it's own state religion on the population within it's borders, and it wasn't until 1833 that the last state (Massachusetts) gave up it's official establishment of a state religion.
They were very much aware that in the main the inhabitants were some form of "Christian". They were wise to nip what Christians so often do in the bud. People mired in "Christian" thought probably wouldn't have seen the issue.
They knew that to survive as a nation at all, they would have to stick together. As Benjamin Disraeli once said:
"Said Waldershare, 'Sensible men are all of the same religion.' 'And pray what is that' ... 'Sensible men never tell."
The Founders probably all thought they were personally saved, but their good friends and comrades of a different denomination were probably going to h3ll...
KitemanSA wrote:
Diogenes wrote:
If one is arguing with a believer in Islam, it is pointless to cite scripture from the Bible. Arguments are more effective if made in the frame of reference of the recipient. MSimon has long railed about the "progressives" tampering with existing conditions and producing unfortunate results which they did not foresee.
Can I help it if his efforts remind me of theirs? From my perspective, he is behaving like just another "progressive", but with a different agenda.
A soldier acts just like a murderer but with a different agenda. Comparing the two is most questionable logic.
So why then, would you compare the two?
KitemanSA wrote:
So is comparing someone working toward morality (voluntary action) and someone working toward immorality (subjugation of the populous). But then you seem to be unable to distinguish between the two. So sad.
You may not realize this, but your position on what is or is not morality is a subjective opinion held by yourself, and is not innate in the nature of humanity.
You keep arguing "voluntary action" on the part of those who would use drugs, and I keep arguing that drugs suspend the ability to engage in voluntary action. Any phenomena which shorts circuits the pleasure center of your brain will prohibit you from making rational decisions. If you think i'm wrong about this, just try reciting the pledge of allegiance while an attractive someone is giving you a blowjob.
‘What all the wise men promised has not happened, and what all the damned fools said would happen has come to pass.’
— Lord Melbourne —