Dixie - In Memoriam
New member
What happened is exceedingly rare. You make it sound as though, people are gunning folks down in the streets because there is no prayer in schools.
It happened back when, and it happens now. The difference is the coverage of the events. Charles Whitman went to a christian school and he still climbed into that clock tower and murdered 14 people and injured more than that.
No telling what the deal was with Charles Whitman, he is one example you have named, who you claim went to christian school... I don't know, maybe his parents were wacko nutbags? Maybe he was molested by his father or mother as a child? Maybe sending him to christian school was some sick perverted way for his parents to deal with their guilt of what they did to him? These are just things we don't really know or understand, and besides... I have not said that christian upbringing ensures against someone being a fruitcake when they grow up! That continues to be an argument you would like to twist my words into, but it is just plain factually dishonest.
I am not bowing up and taking any atheistic stand. Why is it that a person has to either want religion in schools or they are an atheist hell-bent on destroying paradise? That sort of black & white thinking is ridiculous.
Yes you are! Repeatedly, you take the same anti-religious, anti-God stand, and make no bones about it! Then you come off trying to sound like you have some kind of personal relationship with God, and don't profess to be an Atheist yourself! You sure as fuck carry their water a lot, not to be one of them, that's all I can say!
Who is ripping, tearing, or snorting at religion? I am not against religion. I am against forced religion. And it was not generic prayer or meditation back in the day. It was the Lord's Prayer. That is solely a christian prayer. Nothing wrong with that in church. In fact, I will fight for your right to recite it in church. But not in public schools.
What the fuck is wrong with the Lord's Prayer? What the fuck difference does it make if it was a Christian prayer? Why shouldn't we expect our children to respect the religion of others, and respect something greater than self?
Our Father which art in Heaven, Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in Heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil: For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever. Amen.
Now what is so fucking threatening or "wrong" about that message? It seems to me, it's a fairly innocuous and benign statement, giving honor and thanks to God and offering forgiveness to our fellow man. It doesn't say... yea be unto you, ye shall all be a Christian by force or you will burn in hell!
You have become so hypersensitive to anything related to Christianity, you've completely lost sight of what Christianity teaches. The basic values and lessons are life lessons, they aren't "religion specific" things, which only apply to Christians! They are lessons we can all follow, whether we are Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, or even Atheist, if we have any level of moral human decency! I am not Christian, I am a Spiritualist, I don't profess to agree with all Christian dogma, and I don't worship the same version of God as people of the Christian or Jewish faith, but I have a great deal of respect for those people, and their faith. It doesn't bother me to say a Christian prayer, or to bow my head when someone else says one... my skin isn't going to fall off my bones, I am not going to keel over and die because it was said in my presence, and to pretend that such a prayer is somehow "forcing" religion on someone, is stupid beyond belief. Of ALL religions, Christianity is the LEAST likely to be "forced" on anyone, because it is a religion of acceptance! You must accept that Jesus Christ died for your sins on the cross, otherwise, you can not claim to be a Christian! It simply CAN'T BE forced on you against your will... it's IMPOSSIBLE!
And there is a profound difference between representing a single religion (as in what Roy Moore did) and representing a variety of beliefs and historical figures. You are smart enough to know that, but too stubborn to admit it.
Again.... You said yourself, the 10 Commandments are part of TWO religions, and I added, they are closely aligned with the Code of Hammurabi, which is much older than Christianity or Judaism. So, no "single" religion was represented, and the monument's intent was NOT to represent a religion! But... so fucking what if they were? The Constitution says Congress can make no law respecting the establishment of religion, and a frickin' marble monument is NOT an establishment of a religion in any way! Furthermore, the Constitution goes on to say, Congress can't prohibit the free exercise of religion, which displaying the monument supposedly was, according to you!