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Silly O'Donnell... |
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brihard
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Topic: Silly O'Donnell...Posted: 19 October 2010 at 6:41pm |
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This is just too damned sad and frightening for me to not start a political thread.
If you're going to be a prominent politician, you should probably familiarize yourself with the bill of rights...
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"Abortion is not "choice" in America. It is forced and the democrats are behind it, with the goal of eugenics at its foundation."
-FreeEnterprise, 21 April 2011. Yup, he actually said that. |
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jmac3
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 6:43pm |
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Is she wrong?
Where in the constitution is "separation of church and state"??? HMM? |
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Que pasa?
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ParielIsBack
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 6:44pm |
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You don't need a Bill of Rights, or laws, or crazy things like that, as long as you've got a Bible which you haven't read very well.
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BU Engineering 2012
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mbro
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 7:15pm |
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THEORY OF INTELLIGENT DESIGN.
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Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos. |
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Linus
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 7:22pm |
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Actually, there IS no part in the constitution that says "Seperation of church and state" and on top of that, IMO and many others as well, the courts have gone a bit too far in interpreting what the 1st admendment actually says.
Last I checked "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof" A) Technically only applies to Congress (ehh, ehh?) And B ) only pertains to laws, and not to actions. To argue differently, as many a judge has, is to fail at reading comprehension, or to succeed at pushing a loose interpretation as law. Forcing everyone to pray before they go to bed would be bad. Having people walk by a replica of a stone tablet when they go to court? Not bad. |
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brihard
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 7:33pm |
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Ah, so the entire body of American jurisprudence on the matter is wrong. Duly noted. Laws are interpreted in part based on the underlying intent that went into writing them, and it's clear that part of the intent was that religion, while very much a part of social life in the early U.S., was to be kept separated from the functions of state. I'm gonna go with a couple centuries of legal decisions by very learned jurists on this one.
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"Abortion is not "choice" in America. It is forced and the democrats are behind it, with the goal of eugenics at its foundation."
-FreeEnterprise, 21 April 2011. Yup, he actually said that. |
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agentwhale007
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 7:53pm |
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And that's not the part that people think is funny, and I would suspect wasn't the reason the crowd gasped. It was that part juuust after it. You should read it.
Is the stone tablet religious in nature, purchased by state funds or sitting on state property. Sorry, that there is an endorsement. |
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rednekk98
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 7:53pm |
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As counter to modern Judicial interpretations as I think that is, it's important to note that no matter what you think the Constitution says, all that matters is that 5 Supreme Court justices agree with your interpretation (Dred Scott) and that the other branches actually follow their rulings (Jackson V. Cherokee Nation). Based on the fact that such a large percentage of the population believes in creationism, at least familiarizing them with the theory could be beneficial, although I think comparative religions would be a much more appropriate venue since it undermines science as a whole.
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ParielIsBack
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 11:11pm |
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You don't want a period there. You want a question mark. ![]() |
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Linus
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 11:29pm |
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Sorry, but it seems as though the US Supreme Court disagrees with you there... on 2 of those points atleast. People need to quit being so butt-hurt over a stone tablet being in a courthouse. It's not like you have to pray to it. You don't even have to look at the damn thing. You can flip it the bird every single day and praise the devil every time you pass it, and no one can do anything but look at you oddly. I'd personally have no qualms with the Jewish or Islamic versions of the same idea being placed next to the 10 commandments... I guess that makes me more tolerant, doesn't it?
And that's not a legit argument... there have been legal decisions on BOTH sides of the matter, one side I'm in line with, the other you're in line with. Both by 'very learned jurists'. Only difference? Countless counter-suits, followed by a looser interpretation. Doesn't make one side or the other 'more right'. |
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agentwhale007
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 11:30pm |
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agentwhale007
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 11:43pm |
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I'm confused as to which Supreme Court cases you think agree with you here? Also, what is the difference between a stone statue and a school-sanctioned prayer exactly? Edited by agentwhale007 - 19 October 2010 at 11:44pm |
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mbro
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 11:47pm |
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Edited by mbro - 19 October 2010 at 11:47pm |
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Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos. |
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Gatyr
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 11:48pm |
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I see someone has abandoned the doctrine of original intent for a strict constructionist method of interpreting the constitution. Is there a reason we should look only at the text for the first amendment, but look at original intent for the fourteenth amendment?
It's happened before. I forget the specifics, but the SCOTUS made a ruling that had something to do with currency, and it was later deemed horribly incorrect, but the effect of the ruling had become such an engendered part of society that undoing it would be bad. I won't comment on the validity of separating church and state on the legal level, since I don't yet have my J.D., but I'll trust the American jurisprudential system as a whole until I have reason not to.
...which is generally regarded as a terrible method of interpretation. The legal document is the source of law, not the gentlemen who wrote it, and not their intent while writing it. On O'Donnel....HOW DOES SHE HAVE A FOLLOWING?!? Politics can be so frustrating. Edited by Gatyr - 19 October 2010 at 11:49pm |
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agentwhale007
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Posted: 19 October 2010 at 11:52pm |
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I should also point out the flaw in this: The fact that neither Jewish, Islamic, nor any other religion is represented there, and thus, it is an endorsement of a single religion.
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GroupB
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Posted: 20 October 2010 at 12:05am |
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It should be pointed out that Congress sets the budget, by law. If that budget is used for religious monuments, then congress has just made a law respecting an establishment of religion.
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Linus
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Posted: 20 October 2010 at 12:21am |
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Cool. Good for them. Maybe no Jews, Muslims or Hindus have attempted to do their own statue. There always has to be a first, so why is it so bad that a Christian one was first? So long as other religions aren't barred, there is nothing wrong.
Van Orden v Perry But alas, SCOTUS flip flops more than a 16 year old girl with boy troubles when it comes to 'separation'.
Nope, my view is now and always has been, a mixture. Yes, you need intent as otherwise there will be too many loopholes, OR a law will be so textual and vague that you wouldn't want it as a law anyhow. On the same token, when a law is written in plain English, you need to put more weight on that as well. And the law clearly states that congress can neither respect a religion nor prohibit religion. Nothing more, nothing less. |
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agentwhale007
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Posted: 20 October 2010 at 12:30am |
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If I recall, the basis of the decision was that the statue had historical value beyond its religious intentions.
I guess this is a good time to ask what you see the word "respect" to mean when used in the First Amendment?
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Linus
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Posted: 20 October 2010 at 12:42am |
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Ah, but it was both religious in nature AND on state grounds... yet not an endorsement as you claim.
Me personally? I take the exact definition of 'respect' and apply it to here: To not give preferential treatment to one religion over another. |
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Gatyr
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Posted: 20 October 2010 at 12:48am |
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A mixture grounded in what? |
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