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Texas Approves Conservative Curriculum

Macharius writes "Today, the Texas Board of Education approved 11-4 a social studies curriculum that will put a conservative stamp on history and economics textbooks, stressing the role of Christianity in American history and presenting Republican political philosophies in a more positive light. The article goes on to mention that Texas's textbook approvals carry less influence than they used to due to digital localization technology, but is that even measurable given how many millions of these textbooks will still be used across the country?"

999 comments

  1. digital localisation by fotoguzzi · · Score: 1

    they didn't have that when i was in school.

    --
    Their they're doing there hair.
    1. Re:digital localisation by dgatwood · · Score: 4, Funny

      Obligatory Family Guy clip.

      --

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  2. What? by Tr3vin · · Score: 5, Funny

    They have books in Texas?

    1. Re:What? by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I just finished grad school in Texas and was dumbfounded on how many arguments I got when I had to teach human evolution. Some of the most basic things that we take for granted as fact were just thrown to the wayside. Fortunately college has a way of forcefully opening your mind, but I really feel for these kids up until that point. No history book is going to be 100% objective, but it is still something that we should strive for.

      --
      "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
    2. Re:What? by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      What do you think Lee Harvey Oswald used for his sniper's nest- an easy chair?

    3. Re:What? by pitchpipe · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I, as a former conservative Christian (now an atheist), find it strange that they feel that god needs the government's help to promote his message. They're going to help GOD ALMIGHTY to get HIS message out because he's obviously having a hard time doing it himself. Kind of like how they are fucking screaming mad if you suggest taking "In God We Trust" off of the currency, meanwhile we spend just about as much as the rest of the world combined on our military.

      In God We Trust... but not with much.

      --
      Look where all this talking got us, baby.
    4. Re:What? by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      Fellow member of the unborn-again choir here. I think Tom Lehrer's song Who's Next said it best:

      Egypt's gonna get one too,
      Just to use on you-know-who,
      So Israel's getting tense,
      wants one in self-defence,
      The Lord's our shepherd says the psalm
      But just in case... we'd better get The Bomb

      --
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    5. Re:What? by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      They have books in Texas?

      What do the think the Repository was for?

    6. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The end of history" gets a whole new meaning. It's like the history of WW2 and the cold war, as even today the few in Kremlin are trying to fix their image in history by rewriting the official history, completely unnecessarily I might add (shame is a good feeling). Some years ago many (every) Chinese student where taught that the Chinese race is directly descendant of Homo erectus. I can't even imagine what kind of a history children are taught in the whole of Middle-East.
      Hopefully most history scholars are keeping high the light of the scientific rigour in interpreting evidence, so to speak, irrespective of the book they use.

    7. Re:What? by Skidborg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't think cutting every mention of God out of your history books will make a fair and balanced history lesson. Even if you don't want to admit it, religion has played a massive part in your nation's history. It's just that the text books you were raised on chose to leave out these facts... Yes. These books may cross over to being balanced in religion's favour, but you need to have somebody educated that way to argue with the fruits and nuts from California and create a real balance.

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    8. Re:What? by dan828 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I grew up in Texas, in a town that was conservative by Texas standards, and even at that I don't think any sort of "controversy" about evolution was ever brought up in high school. Most of the argument you were subjected to where probably from attitudes acquired in the home or church, not school. That said, it was much later in life, when I was living in California and working on a masters in Cellular and Molecular biology that I first had a discussion with a fundamentalist christian about evolution. The discussion ended rather abruptly after the guy pulled out an argument that was somehow supposed to show that the 2nd law of thermodynamics made evolution impossible. I'd never heard the argument (turns out it's a staple of these evolution deniers), and my response to him was basically "OK, well all that you've managed to show me is that you have absolutely no understanding of the 2nd law of thermodynamics."

    9. Re:What? by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 3, Insightful

      God

      religion

      Two very separate and very different things: One can be taught. The other is pure faith and belongs in a church, not a classroom.

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    10. Re:What? by JaneTheIgnorantSlut · · Score: 1

      They can read in Texas?

    11. Re:What? by tomhudson · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The point is that this country was founded on religious freedoms. Without those religious fundamentalists fighting and dieing for their beliefs you would still be stuck under the rule of the Anglican church.

      Like England is? Last I looked, they were a pretty secular, post-xian society

      Or you could have ended up lie - OMG - Canada. Canada didn't fight to be free of Britain, and look a them - still a British colony - except they're NOT ... and they're also a post-xian society, with universal health care.

      If you fundies brains were dynamite, you couldn't even blow your own noses. So blow it out your ear.

    12. Re:What? by timmarhy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      i think the evolution nah sayers using science is a kind of evolution in itself. they have gotten to the point where science won't let them stand on faith alone. i have no problem with someone saying the believe in something because they choose to - that's what faith is.

      what I and i think most other people object to is when they try call it science and cherry pick some facts and misrepresent the truth in schools to try trick kids into buying into their faith.

      --
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    13. Re:What? by dan828 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Something you should realize is that very large parts of California are quite conservative. Outside of LA and SF-Bay area, and some coastal counties, it's pretty much a red state. The population in those cities are what drives California to pretty much always go left-- that, and being gerrymandered to hell and back.

    14. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So I should support the influence of your church in public life because... it's the only thing that keeps me from having to deal with somebody else's church?

      You thumpers pretty much have it all figured out, don't you.

    15. Re:What? by pnewhook · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Without those religious fundamentalists fighting and dieing for their beliefs you would still be stuck under the rule of the Anglican church.

      Religious fundamentalists? You mean the Taliban?

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    16. Re:What? by dan828 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, no doubt, but we see that in blue states as well. Note the Dover, Delaware trial from a few years ago.

    17. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you think Lee Harvey Oswald used for his sniper's nest- an easy chair?

      That was an abandoned book depository. It's where they put books they hadn't burned yet, which is why it was disused!

    18. Re:What? by mdwh2 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Like England is? Last I looked, they were a pretty secular, post-xian society

      I agree that the OP is an idiot (substituting one set of religious rulers for another set is hardly an improvement), but note that we still have issues such as the bishops who get given seats in our House of Lords, or the legal requirement for Christian worship in all UK schools (including state schools - the only exception is Faith schools where they can teach myths of a different kind instead). Hell, I even have to pay £100 for insurance when buying a house, because of the medieval Chancel repair liabilities that the Church still has on thousands of properties.

      It's interesting that despite the legal grip of Christianity on the state, compared with the US's separation of church and state, the UK has a far less religious population (both in terms of raw numbers, and also in terms of fundamentalist beliefs). But that doesn't mean the UK is a secular society - I still wish I wasn't under the rule of the Anglican church.

      Though to get back to the earlier post - despite the UK still having state religion, I find it funny that at least we print Darwin on our bank notes :)

    19. Re:What? by StDoodle · · Score: 5, Funny

      Creationists always try to use the second law,
      to disprove evolution, but their theory has a flaw.
      The second law is quite precise about where it applies,
      only in a closed system must the entropy count rise.
      The earth's not a closed system, it's powered by the sun,
      so fuck the damn creationists, Doomsday get my gun!

      MC Hawking, Entropy

    20. Re:What? by mdwh2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Can you point me to where the OP suggests "cutting every mention of God out of your history books"? Thanks.

    21. Re:What? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Last time I checked, Texas was ranked 49th out of 50 in education among states.

      I guess this explains why.

      It might be time to require evangelical christianity to bear a warning label as possibly harmful to children.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    22. Re:What? by DreamsAreOkToo · · Score: 1

      In God We Trust... but not with much.

      I always figured it was an ironic statement. You know, we trust God, but nobody else at all. Especially not politicians.

    23. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

              The argument he was probably using was one of Saint Thomas Aquinas five arguments for the reasonability of the existence of a God.

      something along the lines of:

      Everything around us turns to disorder without an orderer, since infinite regress is impossible there must be some unordered orderer.

      Anyways, the arguments always seemed silly to me, I mean why is god more easily to swallow than infinite regress?

    24. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Or you could have ended up lie - OMG - Canada. Canada didn't fight to be free of Britain, and look a them - still a British colony - except they're NOT ... and they're also a post-xian society, with universal health care.

      And at the same time we Canadians have the following pre-amble for our Charter of Rights and Freedoms:

      Whereas Canada is founded upon principles that recognize the supremacy of God and the rule of law:

      http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/charter/1.html

    25. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As far as I can tell, it is organized Christians that are doing the Devil's work.

    26. Re:What? by Etcetera · · Score: 1

      Like England is? Last I looked, they were a pretty secular, post-xian society

      re: secular: Just wait 10 years.

      The problem with a post-xian society is that multicultural secularism isn't able to combat forces that are pre-post-islam.

    27. Re:What? by Neoprofin · · Score: 2, Informative

      God Save the Queen was still the national anthem until 1986. It was very nice of the UK to say yes when Canada asked for permission to modify its own constitution without expressed approval from the homeland. Their government also still officially recognizes The Crown, which although purely ceremonial at this point doesn't change the fact that Canadian taxpayers are paying monarchist appointees who have some pretty impressive job titles like governor general or viceroy. They're not a colony in a technical sense, but they're not exactly a shining example of how effective non-violent revolution is.

    28. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They have books in Texas?

      This is illegal, for being racist against Texas. This site will be shut down by tomorrow.

    29. Re:What? by catalina · · Score: 1

      ...somebody educated that way...

      Hmm - interestingly put

    30. Re:What? by xaxa · · Score: 1

      If Canadians want to become more/fully independent from the UK, the British aren't likely to stop them. We'd be a bit disappointed though (an understatement: that proves I'm English).

      The Commonwealth countries all vary in how independent they are, from full independence, to following token tradition and ceremonies, to going crazy over Prince Harry, and some (at least used to) recognise a British High Court above their own.

    31. Re:What? by GreatBunzinni · · Score: 1

      I, as a former conservative Christian (now an atheist), find it strange that they feel that god needs the government's help to promote his message.

      It won't be so strange if you start seeing those moves not as what they are made to appear, which is promoting God's message, but what they really are, which is yet another step in the continuous power grab by these cults.

      --
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    32. Re:What? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      It's not necessarily needing government's help. Many of these people base their political views on a complete and total distrust of government; federal, local, state, school boards, and dog catcher. In some sense, a total anti-authority stance for everything except God and their own interpretation of the Bible. Of course, if they manage to get some governments to side with them, then they'll treat this as just an exceptional case where some politicians finally had the common sense to agree with them.

      As far as teaching evolution goes, maybe the approach is to say "you don't need to take evolution literally or 'believe' in it, but it's a good working model to help you understand biology, and for many professional fields you will need to have a working knowledge of the principles." After all, we use a Newtonian model to understand physics, even though we know it's not accurate. I mean how can you study biology when your working premise is that no species is related to any other species?

    33. Re:What? by alexborges · · Score: 1

      "Fortunately college has a way of forcefully opening your mind, but I really feel for these kids up until that point."

      not if you go to fartwell's "liberty" university!

      --
      NO SIG
    34. Re:What? by alexborges · · Score: 1

      I dont think there is a any kind of interaction between the secularity of a state and its ability to fight armed threats against it.

      Spain, a conservative governed country (and when we talk about spanish conservatives, my friend, barring the italians or swedish whom are worse, we are talking about the jewish mothers of ALL christian conservatives), could not keep its ass in Irak and could not defend themselves of the attacks in their subway. THis is a country that recently still enforced catholic education in public schools and to this day it still tolerates it.

      Same happened in the more "liberal" britain.

      Same happened the the united states, which, believe me, to the world, has always been a very weird place religion wise because their conservatives are honcho fucked up crazy and their liberals, althought they look moderate from the outside, in a closer look, are batshit nuts as well.

      --
      NO SIG
    35. Re:What? by aaandre · · Score: 1

      Very revealing question.

      Let's not confuse the Church's conquest for influence, gold, land, slaves, and human children's innocence with logic or spirituality.

      Of course they are scared shitless and want to control their children's thinking. That's how it's been done for centuries. The main purpose of the Church is to have as many followers as possible. More than "that other" religion. Hence no birth control. Hence sending "messengers of god" to convert new people etc. etc.

      Having different gods is like having different laws of physics. Takes some suspension of belief if you know what I mean. What a masterful manipulation it is to distort the sacred relationship with divinity humans inherently possess into a tool for obedience & control.

      Go Texas! The more desperate the clowns, the more absurd the circus.

    36. Re:What? by alexborges · · Score: 1

      In soviet russia, the queen saves god.... yeah... there is a chess joke there somewhere....

      --
      NO SIG
    37. Re:What? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Like England is? Last I looked, they were a pretty secular, post-xian society

      re: secular: Just wait 10 years.

      The problem with a post-xian society is that multicultural secularism isn't able to combat forces that are pre-post-islam.

      Afghanistan seems to do okay. Not that it can't do better, but it has Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, and Sikhs. Now it was bad under the Taliban but they aren't in control anymore.

      Falcon

    38. Re:What? by alexborges · · Score: 1

      When I read religious fundamentalists yeah, i think the taliban.... and immediatly after I get an image of jerry fallwell.

      --
      NO SIG
    39. Re:What? by haruharaharu · · Score: 1

      Thank god for mississippi, huh?

      --
      Reboot macht Frei.
    40. Re:What? by commodore64_love · · Score: 0, Troll

      >>>college has a way of forcefully opening your mind

      Yeah it does. It teaches you that FDR was the savor that ended the Depression (he did not), and does not tell you about the Depression of 1920 which was actually worse in terms of drop in GDP/unemployment, but only lasted a year because the government wisely cut spending (which provided extra funds for businesses to recover). College also does not tell you about the existence of Amendments 9 and 10 in our Bill of Rights, and leads you to believe that the U.S. Congress has practically no limits on its power (obviously not true).

      It took me about 5 years to unbrainwash myself of that pro-"government is your daddy" bullshit that high school and college put into my head. Government is not your friend. Government is the enemy, as the ~100 million dead citizens of the last century can attest. They trusted their governments, and the government rounded them up, lined them up against a wall, and shot them in the head.

      Take some time and read the words from the Founding Fathers and others in the Age of Enlightenment (1600s-1700s). Why? Because college conveniently skipped over that part of history. Like this one: "The powers of the central government are few and explicitly defined, while those of the state governments are several." - Madison, author of the Constitution. Or: "It is only to protect our rights that we resort to government." - Jefferson. Or: "What is the militia? Why it is the whole of the People of course." - Patrick Henry

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    41. Re:What? by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      And the courts have already held that the preamble has ZERO - NONE - NIL - NADA legal effect. It is there as "social commentary", nothing more, and may not be cited in any legal filing.

    42. Re:What? by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      There is no longer an appeal to British courts or crown - the Canadian Supreme Court is the last stop - so Canada is legally it's own master. Maintaining some ceremonial ties is a cultural thing, same as Quebec maintains cultural ties with France. When you look at how far up Bush's rectum the Blair government was, and how Canada basically said "You're wrong - your REAL friends will tell you that ..." Canada is more independent than the British/US odd couple.

      Probably explains how the two countries with the worst housing bubbles were ... the US and Britain!!!

    43. Re:What? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      P.S.

      You guys are making a strong argument for why the government (Texas or otherwise) should not have a monopoly on Education funds. I'm surprised you are not demanding tax exemptions so you can send your kids to a private school which teaches evolution and atheism. (Yes I'm serious.)

      I know if I was a politician, I would push very hard to make children that attend private school be exempt from school tax for that one year. Why should they pay for a classroom they are not using? That's like Comcast demanding you pay for Cable TV even when you have a Dish, or Apple demanding you pay for OS X when you chose to run windows or linux instead.

      Monopolies are anti-freedom-of-choice..... it doesn't matter if the monopoly is a private company or the government. BOTH are wrong and BOTH should be broken apart whereever they happen.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    44. Re:What? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      I can buy that. People weren't hysterical about teaching evolution when I was in school, even in a relatively conservative Christian dominated small town. There was the general idea that evolution wasn't true, but no one was covering their children's ears lest they hear some blasphemy. The whole taking the Bible literally word for word hadn't taken hold yet in mainstream churches, so I suspect most were fine with the idea that 6 days of creation were not literal 24 hour periods.

      I don't think it was until the Moral Majority came on the scene that the mainstream churches got hijacked with by those with more reactionary views.

    45. Re:What? by commodore64_love · · Score: 0, Troll

      >>>God - religion - Two very separate and very different things: One can be taught. The other is pure faith and belongs in a church, not a classroom.
      >>>

      You first.

      Stop teaching that Earth is a "mother" and needs us to worship the holy beauty or we shall all surely kill her. Amen. ----- I'm all for not polluting our planet or our air (emissions controls on cars and power plants), but lately schools have been taking this stuff in a fashion where my niece sounds like she's WORSHIPING at school instead of learning bare facts.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    46. Re:What? by DesScorp · · Score: 3, Insightful

      " Like England is? Last I looked, they were a pretty secular, post-xian society"

      And? They're also increasingly being smothered by the nanny state. In government jobs, you literally have to have "stepladder" training before you can use a stepladder. Just last week, we were discussing... right here in Slashdot... about how the government of the UK was thinking about placing monitoring devices in people's garbage cans. Post-Christian societies all seem to be sliding more and more into a kind of micro-managed, hyper-PC existence. Is that a better existence?

      Don't make the mistake of thinking that eliminating religion will suddenly bring about utopia. That's hasn't been the case throughout history. Very, very few people are truly anarchists, or even independent. More than likely, toss out the religious influence that you loathe so much, and in return, you'll get rule by experts that know what's good for you, and will enforce it.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    47. Re:What? by Miseph · · Score: 1

      Because while that sounds all well and good, it isn't actually a feasible plan at all. It's one of those things that stops making sense once you apply real, finite, numbers of students and dollars to the equation.

      The real reason Conservatives are so Gung-Ho about private education is that it short circuits universal accessibility, quality control, and most of all any real public influence on the content of what is taught: the corporate overlords want their serfs to be uneducated and highly propagandized. By the way, you're a serf.

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    48. Re:What? by jvillain · · Score: 1

      No Canadian can grow up to be the leader of their country because the leader of the country is the head of the Church of England who must by definition be born in England. While I do like to bash to the south that doesn't mean we don't have things to work on up here.

    49. Re:What? by Vhyrrimyr · · Score: 1

      Yeah, no doubt, but we see that in blue states as well. Note the Dover, Pennsylvania trial from a few years ago.

      FTFY

    50. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      an argument that was somehow supposed to show that the 2nd law of thermodynamics made evolution impossible

      In case anyone's curious, this argument is basically that cells organizing themselves into complex life forms constitutes a decrease in entropy, which, as the second law tells us, is impossible in a closed system. And of course Earth's biosphere is a closed system; it's not like there's A MASSIVE SUN SUPPLYING IT WITH ENERGY.

    51. Re:What? by Reed+Solomon · · Score: 1

      If Canadians want to become more/fully independent from the UK, the British aren't likely to stop them. We'd be a bit disappointed though (an understatement: that proves I'm English).

      The Commonwealth countries all vary in how independent they are, from full independence, to following token tradition and ceremonies, to going crazy over Prince Harry, and some (at least used to) recognise a British High Court above their own.

      I don't think you'd be disappointed per se, but it would be a little sad to think we traded ceremony and historical ties for nitpicky little things like strict adherance to republican ideals.

      Besides, in Canada native treaties were made with the Queen, who is in a sense the Chief of the white people, who promises to give money and whatever else we give to the natives in return for the land we took. Without her, everything breaks down. The Governor General is the representative of the Queen, and acts on her behalf, and is appointed by the prime minister, and basically gets to do whatever she wants. Frankly its a nice check and balance to the manipulations of direct democracy. You need untouchables to keep corruption at bay.

    52. Re:What? by Reed+Solomon · · Score: 1

      Afghanistan seems to do okay. Not that it can't do better, but it has Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, and Sikhs. Now it was bad under the Taliban but they aren't in control anymore.

      Falcon

      Really? Afghanistan is your example?

      the place where the taliban destroyed those ancient buddhas carved into the mountain?

      that Afghanistan?

      really?

    53. Re:What? by tqk · · Score: 1

      Or you could have ended up lie - OMG - Canada. Canada didn't fight to be free of Britain, and look a them - still a British colony - except they're NOT ... and they're also a post-xian society, with universal health care.

      And at the same time we Canadians have the following pre-amble for our Charter of Rights and Freedoms: Whereas Canada is founded upon principles that recognize the supremacy of God and the rule of law:

      Canada was founded upon the principles of "Order, and Good Government", whatever those are.

      We (they) fought to be free of France. We (they) Brits won; France lost.

      Yes. We Canucks were eventually handed a "fait accomplis Constitution" by a French-Canadian Prime Minister. Catholicism and religion are very strong influences in that neighbourhood, so $DEITY's going to get in no matter what. We also have a national flag made up with a (Soviet style red) leaf that I've never seen growing around here (I don't live in "Upper Canada").

      May PET spin in his grave faster and faster and faster, forever. Damn, I was happy to see the last of him. What a twit he was.

      As for what we have in our "founding documents" vs. what actually happens, compare USA's FDs vs. recent history. None of that appears to mean squat anywhere these days.

      --
      "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
    54. Re:What? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      It took me about 5 years to unbrainwash myself of that pro-"government is your daddy" bullshit that high school and college put into my head.

      Despite being part of a military family I didn't have that problem. Actually in 9th grade the teacher I had for civics had us do an experiment in investing. We pretended we had $25,000 to invest. Using the newspaper's business section listings of stocks, bonds, and commodity selling prices we could invest however we wanted to. And in a math class we were taught about what compound interest can do, what future value and present value are and mean, and other things. No, the problem I had was that after a guidance counselor told me I should take algebra, he said he couldn't let me take it because I didn't know how to do square roots. For the next 3+ years I took as advanced a math class as I could without take algebra. Then after the math teacher I had ripped up my homework right in front of class I blew up and stormed to the counselor I had. I blew my stack again when she told me I would learn how to do square roots in algebra. Three prime years were wasted because of a stupid counselor.

      Falcon

    55. Re:What? by tomhudson · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Britain fell sucker to the whole "we can use technology to assist the police" thing and save money.

      The US fell into the same trap.

      So they both think that what's needed is more tech ....

      What's really needed is stronger privacy laws and more beat cops working WITH the community, not "policing it."

    56. Re:What? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      I was skeptical of your claim so I did some googling -- did you know there isn't a single Christian church in all of Afghanistan? The one church that was built in 1970 was bulldozed by Muslims in 1973.

      I guess you either didn't know that or have some very strange ideas of what "doing okay" means for minority religions.

    57. Re:What? by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      No Canadian can grow up to be the leader of their country because the leader of the country is the head of the Church of England who must by definition be born in England. While I do like to bash to the south that doesn't mean we don't have things to work on up here.

      You have to born in England to become Prime Minister of Canada?

      Yes, I know what you meant, but honestly, when was the last time the queen had any influence in Canadian affairs?

    58. Re:What? by glitch23 · · Score: 0, Troll

      I, as a former conservative Christian (now an atheist), find it strange that they feel that god needs the government's help to promote his message. They're going to help GOD ALMIGHTY to get HIS message out because he's obviously having a hard time doing it himself. Kind of like how they are fucking screaming mad if you suggest taking "In God We Trust" off of the currency, meanwhile we spend just about as much as the rest of the world combined on our military.

      We don't need the government's help to promote His message. It is nothing of the sort and would mean preaching would be in the classroom. Given the fact that liberals want to diminish or totally hide the fact that the Founding Fathers had faith and a religious background, the other side of the debate simply wants to make sure that those facets of the Founding Fathers' lives remain known. There is no reason to hide that fact unless the agenda is to try to make our country look like it was not founded on religious beliefs. So there is no message trying to be forced upon or preached to the children. It is simply a matter of not wanting to hide our history.

      As far as taking "In God We Trust" off the currency, it is for the same reason as what I stated above. There is nothing wrong with making known our history just because it has a religious foundation, except for those who hate religion. Why religion is the aspect of people's lives that shouldn't be known in history class is beyond me but that's really the topic up for debate (well, not anymore, at least in Texas). So taking that phrase off our currency means that a little more of our history is erased. It isn't for enforcing a religion; it is intended to remember our history. In both situations, those who disagree can simply do that. Just like they can disagree, if they are a student, with anything else that is taught in their respective school. It is not the law but a reflection of where we came from. Those who question that or outright deny it are also against this vote most likely. Again, what is wrong with stating what history has to say? Is there something you don't want the public to know? Is religion *that* bad? No, it isn't.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    59. Re:What? by IICV · · Score: 1

      No, the Taliban only want to blow up a couple of buildings and kill a few thousand people, to a total economic loss of a few hundred million, if that. The American Christian fundamentalists, on the other hand, want to fuck up our nation's educational system with their Iron Age mythologies, which will screw us economically in the worst way possible - a generation of children who believe that God created the Earth at some point in the past will have untold consequences on our ability to compete economically with countries that have been putting their children through reality-based curricula.

      And that's not even counting the personal, emotional harm that they cause. Do you really think that teaching God Almighty loves you and also hey, he loved Job and killed all of Job's children and family and then gave him better ones doesn't leave emotional scars? Do you really think teaching children that the Rapture is coming any day now and only the most pious will be taken up into Heaven won't cause some neuroses? Seriously, find the accounts some ex-Jehova's Witnesses have of their religion; those people live in the fucking stone age, in terms of their view of reality.

    60. Re:What? by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

      No need to be upset my Molson drinking friend. There's nothing wrong with Canada, I just think that if you're trying to illustrate your point using a country whose constitution dates back to the 1875 but who was not the supreme adjudicator of its own laws until almost 75 years later and whose constitution wasn't even the supreme legal document until a British parliamentary act in 1982 isn't the best example.

      India, for example, was left out of the 1931 act giving the dominions autonomy and through non-violent means established their own state in a relatively short amount of time.

    61. Re:What? by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow - modded "Flamebait". Really? Seems pretty insightful to me. Amazing how many people don't get this.

      It doesn't really matter what you think about the founders when viewed through the prism of today's social norms - the point is that history should be taught as it actually happened, not revised according to some new standard of belief.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    62. Re:What? by Toonol · · Score: 1

      The real reason Conservatives are so Gung-Ho about private education is that it short circuits universal accessibility, quality control, and most of all any real public influence on the content of what is taught: the corporate overlords want their serfs to be uneducated and highly propagandized. By the way, you're a serf.

      Hm. No, that's wrong. In fact, I doubt that ANY conservative feels that way, and I think you just spout nonsense like this because you immaturely like to feel better than the group you've identified as your 'enemy', and make up any arguments you feel you can get away with.

      Seriously, can you point to ANY person that supports private education for the reasons you state? Or do you somehow know what they SECRETLY MEAN despite what they ACTUALLY SAY? Grow a little intellectual honesty.

    63. Re:What? by SovBob · · Score: 4, Informative

      Where did you hear that?

      According to the National Assessment of Education Progress Texas was doing just fine.

      4th Grade Math: 242 (National Average: 237)
      4th Grade Reading: 219 (National Average: 217)

      8th Grade Math: 281 (National Average: 278)
      8th Grade Reading: 258 (National Average: 260)

    64. Re:What? by NiceGeek · · Score: 1

      "ah it does. It teaches you that FDR was the savor that ended the Depression (he did not)" - welcome to conservative-approved revised history. I was waiting for you to stop pretending to be reasonable.

    65. Re:What? by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Like England is? Last I looked, they were a pretty secular, post-xian society

      I agree that the OP is an idiot (substituting one set of religious rulers for another set is hardly an improvement),

      WTF are you kids learning in the public schools these days? You did learn the part about religious freedom, right? How the US was founded on the idea that the government should not be allowed to dictate religion to the people? Or are they now claiming that the founding fathers were nothing but a bunch of fundamentalist religious authoritarians? Because that would just be a lie.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    66. Re:What? by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Britain fell sucker to the whole "we can use technology to assist the police" thing and save money.

      The US fell into the same trap.

      So they both think that what's needed is more tech ....

      What's really needed is stronger privacy laws and more beat cops working WITH the community, not "policing it."

      Quite true. If more of the cops were beat soundly by their community, they wouldn't be so quick to fuck with people.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    67. Re:What? by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Whether you believe in God or not is not the point. The point is that this country was founded on religious freedoms. Those same freedoms that allow you to post on boards like this. Without those religious fundamentalists fighting and dieing for their beliefs you would still be stuck under the rule of the Anglican church.

      For those who didn't take 14 years of church history here is a little refresher on religious freedom. The people fleeing England weren't fleeing some oppressive conservative organization. They were mostly people who thought that religion has become to liberal.

      So they all moved to America. At which point they did the exact same thing which they were fleeing. They began enforcing their even stricter and more conservative laws upon the land. The punishments were the same as they were in Europe: execution, imprisonment and beatings. This wasn't a peace loving open minded bunch of religious extremists who just wanted to be left alone. These were Christian Taliban who thought their home nations were becoming bastions of sin.

      The people who really advocated religious freedom weren't either the Europeans or the Puritan extremists it was the Deists and the Quakers. The Quakers were tired of being persecuted by the religious extremists who founded the country and the Deists thought religion itself was unproductive and divisive. If the textbooks want to really "present the truth of this country to school children" the textbooks would clearly state that a large portion of those who wrote our constitution and advocated religious tolerance were practically atheists. Thomas Jefferson even rewrote the bible without any miracles or super natural powers... now, questioning Christ's divinity, that's heresy in any branch of modern Christianity.

      If I had to choose between being stuck under the Anglican Church (a church founded in order to liberalize church law) and the Puritans (a church founded in order to further restrict law) I'll take the Anglicans. Saying the Puritans gave us religious freedom is like saying the Taliban liberated Afghanistan from the oppressive democracy which was destroying Islam.

    68. Re:What? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and if you did hear about it in school, it was mostly in social studies or in a current events class, not in biology. Your biology class spent a day or at most a week on the subject. It's really amazing how much energy goes into such a small period of a student's life.

      --
      Qxe4
    69. Re:What? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      I was skeptical of your claim so I did some googling -- did you know there isn't a single Christian church in all of Afghanistan?

      There may not be any Christian churches but Christians are allowed to practice, women aren't required to wear head scarfs, nor are other things forced on people like they were under the Taliban.

      I guess you either didn't know that or have some very strange ideas of what "doing okay" means for minority religions.

      I guess you didn't read all of my post, because you would have read where I said: "Not that it can't do better, but it has Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, and Sikhs. Now it was bad under the Taliban but they aren't in control anymore." But then because you specifically said there were no churches there I am led to believe you're trolling.

      Falcon

    70. Re:What? by tyrione · · Score: 1

      A natural progression is to move towards Agnosticism.

    71. Re:What? by pnewhook · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I believe in God, but I'm no fundamentalist crackpot.

      Even their basic premise defies logic. God supposedly loves us unconditionally, BUT you have to be Christian and believe in God otherwise you're doomed. And you can't be gay. So much for unconditional. (I love you but your soul has to burn in hell forever, sorry. Nothing I can do - them's the rules. Please file an appeal with Satan when you see him).

      The concept that God is perfect, but created imperfect beings with sin and then expect perfection is just ridiculous. What is he really Loki the Viking trickster God? Or maybe a bitter software manager from another reality?

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    72. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know who else fought for something?

      Hitler.

    73. Re:What? by stdarg · · Score: 1

      There may not be any Christian churches but Christians are allowed to practice

      How so? Most Christian denominations revolve around churches. A country that doesn't allow Christian churches is not "doing okay" with respect to its Christian minority and arguably does not allow them to practice. I mean if you are required to only "practice" in the privacy of your own head, I guess you could say every place on earth has complete religious freedom.

      women aren't required to wear head scarfs

      Really? Maybe not legally, but socially they're required to do that and more.

      nor are other things forced on people like they were under the Taliban.

      Really, so you think blasphemy laws aren't forced on non-Muslims?

      I guess you didn't read all of my post, because you would have read where I said [slashdot.org]: "Not that it can't do better, but it has Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, and Sikhs. Now it was bad under the Taliban but they aren't in control anymore." But then because you specifically said there were no churches there I am led to believe you're trolling.

      I read your whole post, and the part you quoted just now has nothing to do with my comment on the "doing okay" part. None of the stuff you quoted supports your claim that Afghanistan is doing okay.

    74. Re:What? by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Butbutbut... WE'RE A CHRISTIAN NATION. Therefore whatever Christians want should go. Otherwise they're victims.

      That'll last until the theocrats actually gain power and start cracking down on their brother Christians who believe differently about the least thing. See also: transubstantiation.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    75. Re:What? by citizenr · · Score: 1

      Without those religious fundamentalists fighting and dieing for their beliefs you would still be stuck under the rule of the Anglican church.

      Religious fundamentalists? You mean the Taliban?

      No, Taliban marry children before raping them.

      --
      Who logs in to gdm? Not I, said the duck.
    76. Re:What? by couchslug · · Score: 1

      Thinking men should not merely tolerate religion, but view it and the superstitionist nutjobs that believe any variety of it as a dangerous threat.
      It should not be treated with respect, nor should its adherents.

      As for education, we should support school choice. The public schools are doomed, the Christian Taliban can fund its own madrassas, and the few secular, free thinkers can send their kids to decent boarding schools and escape the mob. The solution is to deliberately create an educated counterculture that can thrive outside religionist influence and understands that religionists are the enemy of science. Any religionists claiming otherwise are merely apologist liars and need not have their squalls of protest considered.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    77. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      England is post-xian? Um, they have a state church.

    78. Re:What? by Sperbels · · Score: 1

      This is such a blatant misrepresentation of both party's views that I have a hard time believing you even believe what you're saying. I have always heard the this-is-a-Christian-nation argument when conservatives are trying to force religion on the rest of us (e.g., "under God" in the Pledge, ten commandments in a courtroom, etc). You make it sound as if they're just trying to acknowledge a mere historical fact instead of justifying the imposition of Christian values on the entire nation...and shame on the liberals for trying to rewrite history. This country was founded by people who suffered religious persecution under the old European governments and came here to get away from them. Clearly it was the founding fathers intent to prevent this kind of imposition again.

    79. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Canada didn't fight to be free of Britain, and look a them - still a British colony - except they're NOT"

      i lol'd

    80. Re:What? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Hitler was also a Christian who asked the Pope to bless the troops before battle.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    81. Re:What? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      No, Taliban marry children before raping them.

      Case closed. This is the end result of fundamentalist groups interfering with school curriculum - turns them all stupid.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    82. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      No, that would be because of all the Mexican children who can't speak English.

    83. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No the reason is that Texas has the highest population of Non-English speaking students. Texas has the highest rate of English as a second language Students. That's the reason!reaspm/

    84. Re:What? by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 1

      You're really angry.

      Did they make you go to Sunday School?

    85. Re:What? by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 1

      Yes, that's part of the process of becoming a young adult.

    86. Re:What? by corndogg · · Score: 1

      I hate to break it to you but America's pilgrims were not America's revolutionary founding fathers. See most of us here on this slashdot world wide web site tube thing have been a book learnin' for quite a while now.

      What we are witnessing in Texas is a increasingly desperate grab at relevancy by the religious zealots. The want as much control of the public school system as they can possibly have but it won't work in the end.

      Whispering in children's ears that all that "science" stuff just might be a lie or that the country was founded by god-fearing conservatives is what the zealots imagine will make kids more open to their religion but it won't.

      The zealots themselves don't even bother to pay heed to their own teachings... and god help us all when they finally lash out like a rat backed into a corner

    87. Re:What? by AB_Rhialto · · Score: 1

      No Canadian can grow up to be the leader of their country because the leader of the country is the head of the Church of England who must by definition be born in England. While I do like to bash to the south that doesn't mean we don't have things to work on up here.

      I'm sorry, I'm having a heck of a time parsing this. Are you suggesting that the head of the Church of England is the leader of Canada (then I'm confused as to the role of the office of the Prime Minister and our Supreme Court)??

      I must be reading your post incredibly wrong (or, it could be the whiskey).

    88. Re:What? by AlamedaStone · · Score: 1

      No Canadian can grow up to be the leader of their country because the leader of the country is the head of the Church of England who must by definition be born in England. While I do like to bash to the south that doesn't mean we don't have things to work on up here.

      You have to born in England to become Prime Minister of Canada?

      Yes, I know what you meant, but honestly, when was the last time the queen had any influence in Canadian affairs?

      Not since they canceled Kids in the Hall.

      --
      "All these years believing you're the signified monkey, only to find out you're just a big hunk of nobody cares."
    89. Re:What? by skam240 · · Score: 1

      Your signature "Universal health care is a good thing. It's not socialist. Get over it." is just plane incorrect. While I'm a fan of universal health care I don't understand how one can not refer to it as socialism when it is the very definition of socialism. Are you being facetious and it just went over my head?

      --
      I ignore Anonymous Coward posts. If you want to discuss something, that's awesome. Log in.
    90. Re:What? by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      ... when was the last time the queen had any influence in Canadian affairs?

      When we got the constitution(charter) and she gave 'royal ascent' putting it into law as the highest law of the land. Fully and effectively abolishing any former ties to the UK in any influential form. The last time previous to that was when we got rid of the privy council.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    91. Re:What? by Shuh · · Score: 1

      Like England is? Last I looked, they were a pretty secular, post-xian society

      Yet to this very day, England continues to have an official state religion. And interestingly enough, Connecticut & Massachusetts also had state religions.

      Texas and Alaska however...

    92. Re:What? by wall0159 · · Score: 1

      I'm not American, and I'm atheistic, but there's still a lot of truth in what the GP says. Nothing happens in a vacuum: America was founded on religious freedom, and these freedoms eventually propagated into most spheres of life, and affected other countries' in turn. I really doubt we'd be living in free societies today were it not for the discovery of and subsequent colonisation of the New World (this was a huge destabiliser of the old order in Europe), and in particular the mass migration of persecuted religious minorities from England to North America. Read about (for example) the connections between the French revolution of 1788 and the inspiration they took from the U.S. declaration of independence in 1776 (which had, in turn, probably been hugely influenced by the English revolution {aka the Glorious Revolution} of 1688).

      Having said all that, I'm not defending American religion particularly, and think the U.S. would be a better country if it were more secular (that's just my opinion though).

    93. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Butbutbut... WE'RE A CHRISTIAN NATION. Therefore whatever Christians want should go. Otherwise they're victims.

      That'll last until the theocrats actually gain power and start cracking down on their brother Christians who believe differently about the least thing. See also: transubstantiation.

      I know a guy just like you. He sometimes says, "That's sarcasm just in case you didn't know." and then laughs and sighs a quiet "ahhh." afterwards.

      Just in case you didn't notice, I was pointing out what a nerd you are. Mmm.

    94. Re:What? by cheezegeezer · · Score: 1

      America is fast becoming just another Iraq or Iran a Country full of religous zealots each trying to out smart the previous one , They are very rapidly forgetting that all this religon thing is just a childrens story and a method for the very few to obtain control of the masses by tapping into their insecurities and playing on them

      get a life

      --
      What the F*** is Kharma i do got teeth i don't got no kharma
    95. Re:What? by tiqui · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your knowledge of history is shockingly bad.

      NAZI Ideology was a twisted mix of paganism and Norse mythology (with a few other dazzling bits tossed-in just to keep it confusing, as all cults do), but it was arising in the native land of Martin Luther, so Hitler and his party (decidedly non-Christian) had a policy of gradually absorbing the Christian holidays and traditions (like Christmas and Easter) and secularizing them in a slow conversion of the public. Christmas, for example, was being slowly shifted from a Christ-centered holiday to a patriotic and family-oriented holiday (there are surviving examples of the official party documents outlining all of this which you could easily study if you had any intellectual curiosity). This is well documented in their own words and you can study it in many archives. Hitler was actually introduced as God by his propagandist on several occasions (no actual Christian would ever allow his associates to introduce him this way). Much of the population was indeed culturally "Christian", but a much smaller portion of the population were seriously, personally Christian. The serious Christians were a threat to the Reich and some paid with their lives. As long as a significant portion of his population was culturally Christian, it suited Hitler to use those portions he could control or co-opt, but the plan was in place to eliminate the Christian faith in Germany and replace it with a quasi-religious racial cult of personality and devotion to the state.

      Oh, and universal healthcare is indeed socialist. Healthcare requires the work of doctors, nurses, people who make drugs and medical devices etc. Somebody must pay those people to work, pay for the raw materials, processed materials, energy used, etc. You could provide all that for free, at the point of a gun.... or you could force other people to pay those costs, again, at the point of a gun. Taxation is at the point of a gun (if you doubt it, I dare you to not pay your taxes, and then resist when the authorities show-up to take your home away... at some point in the process, a government employee will show up and aim a gun at you. Most of us hand over the tax payments long before the guns are pointed (highly recommended)) Because it involves a finite supply of resources, government-enforced "universal healthcare" always ends-up in government control (direct or indirect) of the means of production and government control of resource allocation.

      "healthcare" is not a "right" and is likely to only be "universal" when resources are unlimited. You cannot have a "right" to the fruit of another person's labor, just as nobody else as a "right" to grab the results of your labor. This is why every socialist muckraker always promises universal healthcare; it is the easiest way to trick middle class people into letting the socialist camel's nose under the tent.

    96. Re:What? by cheezegeezer · · Score: 1

      Well with a bit of luck we will be shot of these bloody idiots in may (must find a way to stop votes from leicester and areas like that ) high immigrant populations from getting their votes counted they are the ones that will keep the Labour scumballs in

      --
      What the F*** is Kharma i do got teeth i don't got no kharma
    97. Re:What? by cheezegeezer · · Score: 1

      you people still have not got it have you ok read this very carefully There Is No Such Thing or Entity Called God He /It Has Never and Never Will Exist You Are All Getting Sucked Into a Huge Mind Control Game ..

      There does that help you get a life .
       

      --
      What the F*** is Kharma i do got teeth i don't got no kharma
    98. Re:What? by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      history

      scientific rigour

      What are you talking about? All historians express nothing but their ideological prejudices when they talk about 19th-20th centuries. Add 18th century, too, if historian is American.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    99. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Canada didn't fight to be free of Britain

      Well, some of the colonists did actually. But marching down Yonge Street was dry, thirsty work, so they stopped off at a pub to wet their whistles. In typical Canuck fashion, they drank too much, got into a drunken brawl, and staggered off home to sleep it off.

    100. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you suggesting that the head of the Church of England is the leader of Canada

      Yes, that is what the poster is trying to say. The Queen of England is indeed the titular head of the Church of England (the Anglican Church). And yes, the Queen of England is also the Canadian monarch. So yes, the titular head of Canada is also the titular head of the Church of England.

      She is also the Duke of Normandy (not Duchess), the Lord of Man, the Duchess of Cornwall, the Duchess of Lancaster, the Queen of Barbados, and Queen of a lot of other places. The only one of these titles that isn't nowadays completely ceremonial is the Duchess of Lancaster.

      The Queen of England's powers and duties are linked to her role as the head of the Church of England, but as of the Constitution Act of 1982, the Queen's role as Queen of England is legally and formally entirely separate from her role as Queen of Canada (before that, the roles were entirely separate only in practice).

      And since in theory the Queen's role as titular head of Canada is mostly ceremonial, and in practice it is entirely ceremonial, who gives a fuck?

    101. Re:What? by branewalker · · Score: 2, Interesting

      First, why is this insightful, and not flamebait? Second, look at these people you hold in high regard: Socialism is increasingly the norm there. The point that these text books wish to make is that America wasn't founded on socialist ideals, it was founded on liberal (and I mean classical liberal, i.e. what we might call libertarian) ideals and high degrees of freedom with limited government intervention. I'm not a capitalist. I'm not exactly a typical conservative, either. In fact, I'd really say that this is what we get for NOT implementing the voucher plan, (see? That sword cuts both ways) and for continuing the hilariously inept system that is state-run schooling.

    102. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Canada was founded upon the principles of "Order, and Good Government",

      The British North America Act said "Peace, Order and Good Government". Get it right, eh?

      I have occasionally thought about hanging various of our prime ministers for treason for failing the constitutional requirement to provide Good Government. One can dream.

      We (they) fought to be free of France. We (they) Brits won; France lost.

      WTF are you blathering about? The colonists of the French colonies in Canada did not fight to be free of France. Britain and a lot of countries were at war against France and a lot of other countries. When the dust settled, Canada became British. The colonists living there at the time had no say in the matter.

      We Canucks were eventually handed a "fait accomplis Constitution" by a French-Canadian Prime Minister.

      Canada does not have a single document which is its Constitution. We had a Constitution before the Constitution Act of 1982. That Act added things to our Constitution and amended some other things, but it is not, in and of itself, our Constitution.

      Trudeau unilaterally repatriated the Constitution because the government of Quebec refused to participate. The Quebec government was the only holdout: the other provincial and territorial governments were in agreement.

      so $DEITY's going to get in no matter what

      The Charter of Rights guarantees freedom of religion. AFAIK, the only mention of God in any of the documents which make up our Constitution is in the preamble of the Charter, which as another poster has pointed out, being a preamble, has no force of law.

      We also have a national flag made up with a (Soviet style red) leaf that I've never seen growing around here (I don't live in "Upper Canada").

      You can't blame Trudeau for the flag: it became our flag before his term in office.

      The red of our flag traces its origin to the red of the Red Ensign. Nothing to do with the Soviet Union or communism.

      The sugar maple is found in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, PEI, Quebec and Ontario. Other species of maple are found wherever in Canada deciduous forests grow.

      May PET spin in his grave faster and faster and faster, forever. Damn, I was happy to see the last of him. What a twit he was.

      Trudeau was very intelligent. He was also a pompous, arrogant son-of-a-bitch. He was charismatic. A lot of people were happy to see him go. A lot of people were sad to see him go. He was very polarizing. Trudeau was a lot of things. But he was not a twit.

      You seem woefully ignorant of your country's history and government, you hoser.

    103. Re:What? by the_womble · · Score: 1

      ]Though to get back to the earlier post - despite the UK still having state religion, I find it funny that at least we print Darwin on our bank notes

      Why? Because a small minority of Christians, whose ideas have been rejected by the major churches, have a problem with his ideas?

    104. Re:What? by makomk · · Score: 1

      That'll last until the theocrats actually gain power and start cracking down on their brother Christians who believe differently about the least thing.

      Which is, of course, exactly why America has the Establishment Clause and the seperation of church and state in the first place. Even the founders who were Christian knew that the odds were it wasn't going to be their sect of Christianity running the country and knew just how bad that would be for them.

    105. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not having an an antagonistic view of a religion is not the same thing as supporting that religion. Avoiding the mention that Pilgrims were a religious group and had a religious motive is not the same as supporting Protestantism. It is merely the mentioning of historical facts that mattered to the people. The avoidance of such mentions has been in vogue for decades. It is kind of like avoiding mention that the people the Nazis were after had a particular religion. Now that Texas is allowing such mentions should not be so alarming. As far as evolution is concerned, yes, some Christians are goofy when it comes to evolution. Most Christians have no interest in the methodology by which God did things, and take no part in that debate. In any case, none of it takes away the scientific discoveries made by other Christians.

    106. Re:What? by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      Honestly I side with the other guy and think you're trolling Falcon. Just my 2 cents.

    107. Re:What? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Do you consider the public school system socialist? Or the justice system, army, police, or firefighters?

      Don't confuse social programs paid for with public funds with socialism. They are quite different.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    108. Re:What? by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      You do realize the founding fathers replaced the libertarian articles of confederation with a constitution that established a very strong central government, right? Yes some had reservations and wrote papers about those fears, but actions speak louder than words. They adapted to the times, and what ultimately made them so great was that they were pragmatists rather than idealogues. Unfortunately Republicans these days no longer seem to understand this.

    109. Re:What? by pseudofrog · · Score: 1

      The problem with a post-xian society is that multicultural secularism isn't able to combat forces that are pre-post-islam.

      This is patently absurd.

      Terrorism is not a new phenomenon. How is it that only a Christian nation can fight it?

      You've got to at least attempt to justify your non-obvious claims.

    110. Re:What? by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      You're a complete nutcase. You have a good grasp of history it seems, but you're still crazy. No resource in this world is limited. Water is limited. Should we not guarantee everyone have access to clean water? Should we not set up public libraries? Is it a right to read books, to have access to information? The same with electricity, heating in the winter, and so on and so forth. Obfuscating the issue with terms like "human right" is just stupid and far too ideological.

      And what makes you think our healthcare industry isn't already socialized? Everything is socialized at least to some point. It's simply a matter of degrees. Have you ever heard of the AMA? If you're not a licensed physician you are not allowed to practice. You are not allowed to set up your own little "bone-setting" shop for super-cheap rates for people who get into accidents if you are not licensed. There are minimum levels of hygiene, sterilization, and quality of care required of hospitals by law. That itself is socialization as it prevents local shops from setting up. And I won't even get into what medicare, medicaid, and social security are. I'd like to see you take those away from Americans.

      What we have now is far, far from a free market. And to assume that we should even have one regarding healthcare is simply cruel. As part of a progressive society it is utterly ridiculous that we cannot take care of our own people, despite the massive stores of wealth accumulated by the upper tiers of the populace. Yet even if you were to take a pragmatist's viewpoint, our healthcare system as it is now is horrendously inefficient. A health society is a productive one, and a focus on preventative care and low-cost technology solutions to expensive problems (such as super-low magnetic granular MRI imaging machines) is the best way to efficiently allocate limited resources.

    111. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God's command to us:

      Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age. Matthew 28:19,20

      Nothing strange about that, fool.

    112. Re:What? by pnewhook · · Score: 3, Informative

      Your knowledge of history is shockingly bad.

      It's amazing how you can make such a sweeping statement from a simple seven line sentence.

      ...Hitler and his party (decidedly non-Christian)...

      No Hitler was Catholic. If he was warping Christianity to suit his own sick views of world domination, well thats not really different that a lot of leaders in power. Take a look at the following for documented evidence of his (grantedly twisted) Christian views, if you have any intellectual curiosity that is. http://www.stephenjaygould.org/ctrl/quotes_hitler.html

      Oh, and universal healthcare is indeed socialist.

      No it is not. This just means you have no idea what socialism is. Do you also consider the public school system, police, firefighters and the military to be socialist? Don't confuse socialism with social programs. They are two completely different things.

      Your healthcare is way overpriced for the services you receive. You are paying for all the accountants and administration in the background to track every little nickel and figure out how to bill for it. If this was just paid for (as in Canada) then health cost for identical service would be halved (as in Canada). This has been analyzed and documented to be true.

      It's often said that America has the best health care in the world. Well this is true but what isn't said is that the majority, upwards of 90% or more, of Americans cannot receive this type of care because they cannot afford it. The rest get good healthcare no different than say Canada, just twice as expensive. Then there is a sizeable group that cannot afford any healthcare.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    113. Re:What? by nutshell42 · · Score: 1
      If I had to choose between being stuck under the Anglican Church (a church founded in order to liberalize church law)

      By which you mean annulling Henry VIII's marriage and allowing him to appropriate church assets worth billions of (present day) pounds?

      --
      Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage
    114. Re:What? by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      What did he say? My experience with people like that is they get angry and clam up.

    115. Re:What? by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      I would go through and debunk what is basically a complete lie on your part, but it seems others have already marked you a troll, so go right on ahead and keep living in your fantasy world.

    116. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably explains how the two countries with the worst housing bubbles were ... the US and Britain!!!

      I agree with everything up to this... But the US bubble was not all that huge in the big scheme of things - the only thing that made it bad was the sheer size of the market and the no-recourse walkaways (now have a look at the mess that Spanish or Dubai property is...). The UK bubble was also not all that big, but still has the distinction of being unpricked due to politicians propping it up - somewhat like Canada.

    117. Re:What? by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      http://www.wordsoup.com/blog/Holy%20Bible.jpg And Louisiana is normally 49th after mississippi. Texas hangs around the bottom though (Interestingly though, the average texan IQ is 100! Which is obviously normal. But it says something about why they are in the bottom for educational attainment.).

    118. Re:What? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      You're oversimplifying a lot there. That was the argument used to persuade Henry VIII to create the church, but its founders (people like Thomas Cromwell) wanted it to push Luther's ideas into England and reduce the power of the church over secular affairs.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    119. Re:What? by gardyloo · · Score: 1

      I mean why is god more easily to swallow than infinite regress?

      Hey, once one is on one's knees, god goes down *smoothly*.

    120. Re:What? by bluecoat · · Score: 1

      Any monkey knows that "evolution" is theory, not fact. Last time I looked..no humans were giving birth to monkeys.

    121. Re:What? by Mikkeles · · Score: 1

      Yes, but they're cooked.

      --
      Great minds think alike; fools seldom differ.
    122. Re:What? by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 1

      Stop teaching that Earth is a "mother" and needs us to worship the holy beauty or we shall all surely kill her.

      There's a lot less of those people around than you think they are. Even more so when compared to the rump that wants us all licking God's feet, so why don't you start worrying about the dirty hippies when they're actually a problem.

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    123. Re:What? by Copley · · Score: 1

      <quote>Saying the Puritans gave us religious freedom is like saying the Taliban liberated Afghanistan from the oppressive democracy which was destroying Islam.</quote>

      Nice! You summarise well, sir.

      --
      I am bald
    124. Re:What? by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Sure they have a stte church - and everyone ignores it, except for when they get up in parliament and tell them to stop bashing the gays and lesbians.

    125. Re:What? by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      I agree with everything up to this... But the US bubble was not all that huge in the big scheme of things - the only thing that made it bad was the sheer size of the market and the no-recourse walkaways (now have a look at the mess that Spanish or Dubai property is...). The UK bubble was also not all that big, but still has the distinction of being unpricked due to politicians propping it up - somewhat like Canada.

      How are Canadian politicians "propping up housing prices"? There's not only NO income tax deduction for mortgage interests - there's a 5% federal sales tax on new houses.

    126. Re:What? by Scroatzilla · · Score: 1

      >> i have no problem with someone saying the believe in something because they choose to - that's what faith is.

      First of all, I agree with your overall sentiments. However, I think that the attitude conveyed in the above quote is actually a problem-- essentially, you are saying that you don't have a problem with people believing things that are contrary to things dictated by logic and things that the human race continues to discover through science.

      This IS a problem; brainwashing people should NOT be required to cause people to believe something. FACTS and LOGIC should be enough. Folks who are immune to FACTS and LOGIC are, at best, stupid people to stay away from; at worst, they are gun-wielding fundamentalists whose world-view gives them the right to kill you, an infidel.

      And actually, I don't even believe that anyone "chooses" to have faith. I believe that there is an ecosystem in which children are brainwashed into believing dogma, and into thinking that it's their job to spread that dogma. Further, lots of adult "rehabilitation programs" exist that pray on people at low points of their lives who may be criminals or drug addicts; instead of giving them a healthy framework to think about the choices they make, they instead teach these folks to submit their will to God.

      Is faith bad? I'm not sure. But I think that when we speak of it, we should think beyond the positive effects it has on a brainwashed automaton and ask whether or not it's really doing us, society, in this day and age, any good? When thinking about this question, also consider that "faith" is mutually exclusive to the concept of "morality," which seems to be something that the "faithful" believe they have a monopoly on.

    127. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just finished grad school in Texas and was dumbfounded on how many arguments I got when I had to teach human evolution. Some of the most basic things that we take for granted as fact were just thrown to the wayside.

      That's one thing that has always perplexed me about creationists.

      For people who don't think evolution should be taught, they sure seem to think they know a lot about the theory!

    128. Re:What? by ffflala · · Score: 1

      The point is that this country was founded on religious freedoms.

      Here's the problem: that is NOT true. The Treaty of Tripoli from 1797 (from the halls of Montezuma to the shores of, etc) which was ratified by a Congress made up of many of the actual founding fathers, and signed by president John Adams, says this:

      The Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Tripoli

      I'm guessing that that probably won't make it into Texas schoolbooks.

    129. Re:What? by dan828 · · Score: 1

      Oh, I wouldn't say he got angry. But he did get flustered and walk off.

    130. Re:What? by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>"OK, well all that you've managed to show me is that you have absolutely no understanding of the 2nd law of thermodynamics."

      If you think there's a 2nd law of thermodynamics, you're mistaken.

      It's not a law, more of a very strong statistical probability.

      In a state of maximal entropy with random motion going on, guess what happens to the entropy levels? It has to decrease.

    131. Re:What? by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>No Hitler was Catholic.

      Hitler was nominally Christian. In reality, he was an occult theosophist. I suggest you read more on the subject.

      Or not, he's a rather disturbing person.

    132. Re:What? by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      but note that we still have issues such as the bishops who get given seats in our House of Lords,

      This is (strangely) one fact that I don't mind. Whilst it's common knowledge that the CofE now more a social organisation as opposed to a religious one: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nBtDIVfhh8k it still means when the real crazies (the strange band of creationists and misogynists etc. that occasionally rear their head) start complaining the religion is being "denied a voice"\"pushed out of society"\"marginalised" etc. you can point at the bishops and remind them that actually, they're still making law. In essence I think that having the CofE as an established church has proved a bulwark against the American style religious fundies also filling the vacuum that would be left if the church was disestablished.

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    133. Re:What? by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      almost 75 years later and whose constitution wasn't even the supreme legal document until a British parliamentary act in 1982 isn't the best example.

      It's only 75 years, we've had wars go on longer than that (I'm English). The history of these isles runs back for more than two thousand years; the Canadians waiting under a hundred is like the blink of an eye from that perspective. I guess it just proves the old maxim: Americans think a hundred years is a long time; Brits think a hundred miles is a long way.

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    134. Re:What? by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      England is post-xian? Um, they have a state church.

      It may be a church, but it's not a religious organisation: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nBtDIVfhh8k

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    135. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "OK, well all that you've managed to show me is that you have absolutely no understanding of the 2nd law of thermodynamics."

      If you think there's a 2nd law of thermodynamics, you're mistaken.
      It's not a law, more of a very strong statistical probability.

      It is a principle that describes the behavior of natural phenomena, in a general and universal way. No reproducible experiment has ever contradicted it, which is why it hold the status of a law. If you think that's just the outcome of probability, feel free to publish your own theory.

      In a state of maximal entropy with random motion going on, guess what happens to the entropy levels? It has to decrease.

      Uh, no...it reaches thermodynamic equilibrium and neither increases nor decreases.

    136. Re:What? by quickOnTheUptake · · Score: 1

      How does the Church's requirement that virtually all religious take a vow of celibacy fit into this interpretation?

      --
      Mod points: Guaranteed to remove your sense of humor.
      Side effects may include gullibility and temporary retardation
    137. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Posting AC here since Slashdot refuses to like me. Next time you post a fucking link make sure you read it.

      The translation of the Treaty of Tripoli by Barlow has been found faulty, and there is doubt whether Article 11 in the version of the treaty ratified by Congress corresponds to anything of the same purport in the Arabic version.

      So looks like Congress fucked up again when they ratified a different version of a treaty than was actually written.

      I bring to you the declaration of Independence.

      We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights

      Looks like God played a part there

      appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by Authority of the good People of these Colonies

      Wonder who this Supreme Judge could be? Must be the King of England.

      Next time read your sources. And be prepared to be proved wrong.

    138. Re:What? by ffflala · · Score: 1

      Congress ratified the *English* version, jackass. Regardless of how it translated to or from Arabic, the words Congress ratified read as follows:

      The Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion.

    139. Re:What? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      I should have said that Hitler was born Catholic, and still claimed he was Catholic later in life. Anyone who commits atrocities like he did is not really a Christian despite his own claims to the contrary.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    140. Re:What? by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>I should have said that Hitler was born Catholic, and still claimed he was Catholic later in life.

      That page of quotes you, uh, quoted was biased. Hitler privately despised religion (he was a believer in the Will to Power after all). As the head of a Christian nation, though, he couldn't very well say that.

      http://www.puritanfellowship.com/2007/11/adolf-hitler-hated-christianity.html

    141. Re:What? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      And the page you quote called 'puritan fellowship' is not biased? Please.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    142. Re:What? by PracticalM · · Score: 1
      You mean like Thomas Jefferson who edited his own bible where he focuses on the teachings of Jesus and removing the supernatural? http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/JefJesu.html

      Or take a look at the list of quotes from the founding fathers on religion. http://skeptically.org/thinkersonreligion/id9.html

    143. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Posting ac again, but I am thomasw_lrd. A deist is by nature a believer in God. The 11th article of the Treaty of Tripoli is not even necesarrily in there, as was translated. And again I bring in the Declaration of Independence.

      "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights"

      "We, therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions"

      Looks kind of like they believed in God to me. Of course, now that I proved you wrong, I don't expect you to reply to me.

    144. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This comment FTW.

    145. Re:What? by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      First Google hit I got. You could also try: http://www.straightdope.com/columns/read/1699/was-hitler-a-christian

      I've researched the issue before, and stand by the statement that he paid lip service to Christianity because he was, well, a politician, but he privately hated Christianity.

    146. Re:What? by glitch23 · · Score: 1

      In this case the issue really is just teaching people about what other people believed in so yes it is about historical fact. That is different than the usual debate of teaching religion itself in schools. Why is it so bad to teach people that people in the past had a religious background? Why is all discussion about religion so bad? I just don't get it. If they suffered religious persecution in the past as you said then that should provide even more reason to teach students about the plight that those Founding Fathers had to endure so that it does not happen again. Up until this vote passed, it was questionable as to whether students would be allowed to learn about that religious persecution and the Founding Fathers' continued faith as they were founding the U.S.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    147. Re:What? by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

      To be fair so does the history of the populations of North America, which is not to say their fate is directly comparable to the Welsh, but I think it's important to note that the history of the people who currently rule and inhabit England aren't it's 2000+ year old population.

      I do like the saying though, especially as an American living in Holland who can't understand why it's a big deal have driven the distance from Madrid to Maastricht in a day though the locals find it shocking.

    148. Re:What? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      That site could not come to a definitive conclusion. Either way I could give a rats ass if he called himself Christian, atheist, satanist of Buddhist. Doesn't change anything.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    149. Re:What? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I was referring to the OP's "those religious fundamentalists fighting and dieing for their beliefs", and the idea that such a thing (whether or not it happened) would be better than the UK system. That it's not how the US was founded makes the OP's statement even more ludicrous.

    150. Re:What? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      An interesting point - but in my experience, when white male Daily Mail reading Christians bleat on about how oppressed they are, then even when you point out how privileged Christianity is in this country, that doesn't stop them going on about it.

    151. Re:What? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Because it seems to be a reasonably significant issue in the US (e.g., the attempts to teach Creationism/ID in schools).

    152. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why I added the "so to speak". It is unfortunate that the texts meant for popular consumption are often laced with the personal bias of the writer and so form a biased popular view of the history. I personally think the method should be followed no matter how offensive and bizarre the created views eventually are. There should always be a space for another interpretation as long as it is formed rationally. Politically hot topics are the grant killers, unfortunately.

    153. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've always found this quite interesting, those of our ex-colonies (I'm British) who gained for their independence more forcefully are those who seem to have the most problems with violence, religious fundamentalism and so forth (the US, Pakistan, and a plethora of African states), whilst those who took it peacefully- Australia, New Zealand, Canada are some of the most peaceful and least religious states in the world.

      I've always wondered whether there's something more to this pattern- whether states who become independent through mutual choice of both sides are often left with a better footing- a population that is more laid back and more willing to talk, whilst in contrast states who gain independence through violence or generally more forceful measures, generally do so because their population is much more oriented that way, and the religious zealotry that often comes with it is bred alongside that and used as a tool for anger.

    154. Re:What? by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Most economists now agree the FDR's actions either made the Depression worse, or did nothing at all. It ultimately did not end until 1951.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    155. Re:What? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Sure, they's great for shootin', sittin' yer beer on, and as emergency toilet paper in case yer bitch wife don't buy none down at the dollar store!!

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    156. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think that Jesus liked anal sex? If so do you think that he would have liked to be fucked in the ass by me?

      You're taking this "do unto others as you would have them do unto you" thing a little far.

  3. Hahahahahah by unity100 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    had the founding fathers of usa, each of whom were intellectuals following the age of enlightenment principles and age of reason heard this 'role of christianity in founding of usa', im sure they would laugh their asses out. but probably franklin would just prefer to open windows on both ends of the long hall in his mansion, and just sit in the middle on a stool naked, as he sometimes preferred to do.

    ill leave to you, finding which of your founding fathers was the one who said 'religion is but a useful tool to control the masses'. and if you dont know what i was talking about benji, you have loooooong reading to do.

    1. Re:Hahahahahah by hey! · · Score: 1

      but probably franklin would just prefer to open windows on both ends of the long hall in his mansion, and just sit in the middle on a stool naked, as he sometimes preferred to do.

      Gosh, he left that little detail out of all the self-improvement advice in his autobiography. The more I learn about that man the more I find to admire.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    2. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they would laugh their asses out.

      Ouch. I've never heard of someone laughing so hard they caused a distended colon.

    3. Re:Hahahahahah by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      but probably franklin would just prefer to open windows on both ends of the long hall in his mansion, and just sit in the middle on a stool naked, as he sometimes preferred to do.

      So did he exhibit this behavior before or after he got struck by lightning, while flying a kite in a thunderstorm?

      Actually, I believe that the US politicians need to return to the values of the Founding Fathers, and this provides an excellent role model. Obama could get the ball rolling with a nude cabinet meeting. I am sure the health care debates would be much more amusing if the members of Congress were required to perform in the buff.

      "With affordable health care, the Honorable Gentleman Senator of Michigan could be able to remove that hairy wart from his ass."

      "I think it is irresponsible for the US taxpayers to be required to pay to lift those sagging tits of the Honorable Lady Senator of Virginia."

      Yes, it would be definitely much more entertaining.

      "If you are serious about health care reform, shed your clothes, and belly on up to the podium.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    4. Re:Hahahahahah by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 2, Funny

      What do you think happened to Mr. Goatse?

      He heard three words from The Funniest Joke in the World.

      --

      ---
      ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
    5. Re:Hahahahahah by IICV · · Score: 5, Insightful

      FYI, they removed the requirement that students study the impact of ideas from the Enlightenment and Thomas Jefferson's role as an Enlightenment scholar. Instead, they added Saint Thomas Aquinas and John Calvin, and removed the specific reference to the Enlightenment.

      The original requirement was that students be able to:

      "explain the impact of Enlightenment ideas from John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, Voltaire, Charles de Montesquieu, Jean Jacques Rousseau, and Thomas Jefferson on political revolutions from 1750 to the present."

      It is now:

      "explain the impact of the writings of John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, Voltaire, Charles de Montesquieu, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Thomas Aquinas, John Calvin and Sir William Blackstone."

      This is, quite frankly, a travesty. The first list had an actual thrust to it (you know, Enlightenment scholars in 1750+). This one is closer to just a list of philosophers that a council of morons thought sounded good - after all, Thomas Aquinas totally proved God exists! And John Calvin came up with Protestantism! Totally what every schoolchild in Texas (and by extension, a large part of the rest of the country) needs to know!

    6. Re:Hahahahahah by Skidborg · · Score: 1

      Hello? Do you know why the Mayflower landed on your shores in the first place? "Having undertaken, for the Glory of God and advancement of the Christian Faith and Honour of our King and Country, a Voyage to plant the First Colony in the Northern Parts of Virginia, do by these presents solemnly and mutually in the presence of God and one of another..."

      --
      Supporter of the +1 Over Dramatic mod option. In memory of apk.
    7. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's funny. Our entire culture is based on Judeo-Christian traditions. As John Adams said:
      “We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge or gallantry would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes through a net. Our Constitution is designed only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate for any other.”

      People of the day knew this. There is no such thing as Separation of Church and State. It's just made up in the current context. The idea was that the Colonies would only join the Union if the Federal Government was restricted from Establishing it's own official religion - like the Church of England. Something like nine of the original thirteen colonies had official religions. They didn't want the central government to get in their way.

      And this is why the US Constitution does not mention God, but EVERY single State Constitution DOES.

      The whole issue has been twisted by Progressives/Modern Liberals.

      Texas is hopefully fixing things so kids get all of this information. Now you have it too.

    8. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Our entire culture is based on Judeo-Christian traditions.

      Really? "Jesus waterboards!" "Jesus saves - at CitiBank - so it's God's will to bail them out!" "Jesus healed the sick - so you don't need universal healthcare. You need to PRAY more."

      BTW - Jesus never said a word against gays or lesbians. Not one. So do like Jesus would - approve same-sex marriage.

    9. Re:Hahahahahah by Nimey · · Score: 3, Funny

      Because the English and the Dutch didn't want the Pilgrims, who were troublemaking Puritans.

      Really, Europe owes us a debt because we took in most of their religious nutters.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    10. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thomas Paine, Age of Reason:

              I believe in one God, and no more; and I hope for happiness beyond this life.

              I believe in the equality of man; and I believe that religious duties consist in doing justice, loving mercy, and endeavoring to make our fellow-creatures happy.

              But, lest it should be supposed that I believe in many other things in addition to these, I shall, in the progress of this work, declare the things I do not believe, and my reasons for not believing them.

              I do not believe in the creed professed by the Jewish church, by the Roman church, by the Greek church, by the Turkish church, by the Protestant church, nor by any church that I know of. My own mind is my own church.

              All national institutions of churches, whether Jewish, Christian or Turkish, appear to me no other than human inventions, set up to terrify and enslave mankind, and monopolize power and profit.

              I do not mean by this declaration to condemn those who believe otherwise; they have the same right to their belief as I have to mine. But it is necessary to the happiness of man, that he be mentally faithful to himself. Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe.

              It is impossible to calculate the moral mischief, if I may so express it, that mental lying has produced in society. When a man has so far corrupted and prostituted the chastity of his mind, as to subscribe his professional belief to things he does not believe, he has prepared himself for the commission of every other crime. He takes up the trade of a priest for the sake of gain, and in order to qualify himself for that trade, he begins with a perjury. Can we conceive any thing more destructive to morality than this?

    11. Re:Hahahahahah by Skidborg · · Score: 1

      Then the text books should reflect this instead of just sweeping all mention of religion under the carpet and pretending that the USA has been some sort of atheist utopia for its entire history.

      --
      Supporter of the +1 Over Dramatic mod option. In memory of apk.
    12. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yahweh was the waterboarding guy. Jesus lets 'ol Yahweh do all his dirty work for him. Hell, waterboarding is nothing compared to killing the first born sons of an entire people.

      If you think Christianity is all about Christ, I've got a whole different book you ought to read. Yahweh 1.0 the guy is a huge dick, killing entire group of people for little reason other than "to get the bad guys". How else do you explain killing off the entire population except one family? (ignoring Gilgamesh of course) Yahweh 2.0 he turns into a decent person (I guess a kid will do that to you).

      Depending on the sect, Christians pick and choose which Yahweh they prefer.

    13. Re:Hahahahahah by Thangodin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Ben was a regular at the salons of Paris and London; the organizer of one of these said that of the members, most were atheists, and the rest were still deciding. Franklin never came out and declared, but he probably didn't do so because he thought religion was useful rather than true. It is also interesting that at the time of foundation, about 18% of the American populace attended church regularly (Washington was one of those who gave up in disgust). This number has been growing since then, with a large spike during the Weslyan revival.

      The ignorance of history is a major factor here. The founders lived in a world where the excesses of religion wielding political power was a very present thing. Thanks to the separation of church and state, we have been afforded the luxury of forgetting this. But any ideology that deals in absolutes, whether it be secular or religious, will evoke the absolute to disdain lesser goods--and when you think you hold the absolute Truth or Good, all other goods become worthless. The perfect is not just the enemy of the good, it is the mortal enemy of all goods. Life, liberty, happiness, charity, tolerance, knowledge, reason, and anything that is not held up as absolute will be cast aside, along with all who would defend them. Billions have died, and will die, for the idols of dogma. If religion has an evolutionary advantage, it is probably in strengthening ingroup solidarity at the expense of outgroup antagonism; effective in prehistory, catastrophic in a world of globalisation. I suspect that religions will, in this century, claim at least a billion victims, and make Stalin, Hitler, and Mao look like amateurs. In the aftermath, Richard Dawkins will sound positively mild and conciliatory.

      There are almost as many Gods as there are believers, and the first thing you will discover when the state imposes religion is that the state's God is not your God. Europe is secular precisely because most European countries have entrenched state religions. The separation of church and state allowed religions to evolve and compete, and is one of the main reasons that America is so religious. If these clowns get their way, religion will be disgraced in America as well. They will do the secularists job for them. Joy is the reason, love is the method, but pain is the teacher.

      The question is, how much pain can you stand?

      One would think that the spectacle of Islamic Jihadism would be enough to remind us of what religion is when given free reign, but two hundred years of domesticated and tamed Christianity have encouraged the illusion that the creature has changed its nature. It hasn't. It's just biding its time...

    14. Re:Hahahahahah by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Having a culture based on religious traditions is an entirely different thing than having religion rule that culture.

      Separating church and state does not mean you ignore the many good lessons about morality that religion has to offer, but it DOES mean that any one religion does not get the power to decare supremacy over the religion of others.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    15. Re:Hahahahahah by belmolis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No one is suggesting anything of the kind. Every American history textbook that I have ever seen discusses the religious motivation of the Puritans and some other groups of colonists as well as the role of religion in other areas. Good histories, though, do not confuse the foundation of the US in the 1770s and 1780s with the Massachusetts of 1620. Even Massachusetts had acquired a different, less religious, more liberal, character by 1770.

    16. Re:Hahahahahah by Totenglocke · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Our entire culture is based on Judeo-Christian traditions.

      Really? "Jesus waterboards!" "Jesus saves - at CitiBank - so it's God's will to bail them out!" "Jesus healed the sick - so you don't need universal healthcare. You need to PRAY more."

      BTW - Jesus never said a word against gays or lesbians. Not one. So do like Jesus would - approve same-sex marriage.

      Amusingly, since you always hear about nutcase Republicans pushing for "Jesus would want this", I've heard many die-hard liberals using Jesus to try to claim that Jesus would support communism / socialism, so we should be communist / socialist.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    17. Re:Hahahahahah by belmolis · · Score: 1

      I've posted so I can't moderate, but if I could, I would moderate "insightful".

    18. Re:Hahahahahah by commodore64_love · · Score: 0

      It's interesting you bring that up, because Massachusetts as well as most of the original 13 Member States still had official religions in 1776. One of the founders, Thomas Jefferson, considered it his second greatest accomplishment when he finally abolished Virginia's official state-sponsored religion, and amended the VA Constitution to allow freedom of worship. ("Whether my neighbor worships on god or many gods matters not to me...")

      So did religion have a major impact on the first 50 years of this nation?

      Hell yes. ;-)

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    19. Re:Hahahahahah by Vhyrrimyr · · Score: 1

      As John Adams said:

      "The government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion"

    20. Re:Hahahahahah by Nimey · · Score: 1

      You sure those liberals aren't just twitting the evangelicals?

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    21. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, you misunderstood him. He was talking about his culture, where it's persecution if you're ostracized for hating on gays or your irrational spiritual/political beliefs. I'm not saying Jesus would approve of his culture, but he's right about its origins.

    22. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Dude, you misunderstood him. He was talking about his culture, where it's persecution if you're ostracized for hating on gays or your irrational spiritual/political beliefs. I'm not saying Jesus would approve of his culture, but he's right about its origins.

      Wrong on both counts. I'm not a "dude", and the founders made darned sure that there was a separation of church and state for a reason.

    23. Re:Hahahahahah by DesScorp · · Score: 3, Informative

      Our entire culture is based on Judeo-Christian traditions.

      Really? "Jesus waterboards!" "Jesus saves - at CitiBank - so it's God's will to bail them out!" "Jesus healed the sick - so you don't need universal healthcare. You need to PRAY more."

      So while you're being effusive in pointing out the fallibility of the people you're satirizing, do you also deny that the ideas of the individual worth of every human in western culture was influenced by Jewish and Christian scriptures? If you're going to condemn the religious for their failings, do you also deny them credit for their contributions as well? Most of the things that progressives cherish... including the notion that healthcare is a right... arose from the work of people that were influenced by the Second Great Awakening. The people that came up with the idea of things like social insurance were not just religious, but deeply religious. The genesis of the whole progressive movement, somewhat ironically, came from how a generation of believers interpreted their scripture.

      BTW - Jesus never said a word against gays or lesbians. Not one. So do like Jesus would - approve same-sex marriage.

      How do you knew Jesus of Nazareth would approve of it? He never condemned slavery either. For that matter, he never said a cross word about jaywalking or smoking or grand theft auto. But he did say that he came to fulfill the scriptures, not invalidate them. And the Hebrew scriptures were pretty clear on the subject, wouldn't you say? He also told his apostles that would they declared on Earth would also hold in heaven. And they were pretty clear on the subject as well. Altogether, a theological argument for your position probably isn't your best bet for swaying people. And it's kind of hard to condemn Christianity on one hand, then then try to use it to justify your argument on the other.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    24. Re:Hahahahahah by unity100 · · Score: 1

      your thomas paine even set up a new church of reason. devoid of all dogma of christianity.

    25. Re:Hahahahahah by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      "Remember: Mentioning Jesus in your speech: Small government. Doing what Jesus asked: Big government." - Stephen Colbert

    26. Re:Hahahahahah by stdarg · · Score: 1

      I'm intrigued by your last comment about Islamic jihadism. Have you considered that part of the reaction of Christian fundamentalists is driven by the disparity in treatment given to different religions in academic settings?

      The positive spin on non-Christian religions plays in beautifully with mainstream academic virtues like anti-imperialism/anti-colonialism and is a conscious counterbalance to years of "orientalism" which "poisoned" our thinking and caused most of the problems in the Middle East.

    27. Re:Hahahahahah by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Then the text books should reflect this instead of just sweeping all mention of religion under the carpet and pretending that the USA has been some sort of atheist utopia for its entire history.

      Christianity isn't swept under the rug, American History students are taught the Pilgrims of the Mayflower were fleeing persecution. Of course it doesn't matter that they wanted to persecute others themselves, all that mattered was that they were persecuted.

      However the nation was founded as a secular not religious nation. Many of the Founding Fathers were deists who didn't believe Jesus was the Son of God. Because Thomas Jefferson cut out all of the stuff about miracles and such to create his own Jefferson Bible, Jefferson was a Christian in that he believed Jesus was a great teacher but that's it, church leaders painted him darkly when he ran for President.

      Falcon

    28. Re:Hahahahahah by RoccamOccam · · Score: 1

      I never have understood this argument. Somehow people are confusing the concept of giving of oneself with the idea of forcing others to give of themselves.

    29. Re:Hahahahahah by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      I'm intrigued by your last comment about Islamic jihadism. Have you considered that part of the reaction of Christian fundamentalists is driven by the disparity in treatment given to different religions in academic settings?

      Have you thought stuff like this has happened throughout history? Heck right here in the US. If you haven't already I suggest you read about The Great Disappointment, before 1850. Or the Know Nothing movement in the 1840s and '50s. The Salem witch hunts weren't carried out by Muslims either. As someone previously pointed out to me the Pilgrims who came from the Old World to settle in the New World wanted to persecute those not like them.

      The positive spin on non-Christian religions plays in beautifully with mainstream academic virtues like anti-imperialism/anti-colonialism and is a conscious counterbalance to years of "orientalism" which "poisoned" our thinking and caused most of the problems in the Middle East.

      I blame almost all religions for the bad things their followers did in the religion's name. At the same tyme I applaud those leaders of a religion, such as some Mullah's, who issue statements declaring what a believer did was wrong. I would have used a Christian leader but I can't think of one right now.

      Falcon

    30. Re:Hahahahahah by kamapuaa · · Score: 1
      Europe is secular precisely because most European countries have entrenched state religions.

      Really, looking on European "secularism" as a role model! Perhaps you've heard about the genocide against Jews, or the genocide against Muslims, or widespread laws infringing on the rights of Muslims. Europe's lengthy history of religious discrimination and religious genocide is something every single nation should be working hard to avoid.

      --
      Slashdot: providing anti-social weirdos a soapbox, since 1997.
    31. Re:Hahahahahah by Epeeist · · Score: 1

      So while you're being effusive in pointing out the fallibility of the people you're satirizing, do you also deny that the ideas of the individual worth of every human in western culture was influenced by Jewish and Christian scriptures?

      It would be ridiculous to deny that Judaism and Christianity influenced Western culture. But it would be equally ridiculous to neglect the influence of the Greek philosophers (Thomas Aquinas and the rest of the scholastics based their ethics and other ideas on Aristotle and St. Augustine took ideas from the neo-Platonists), Roman culture (The Stoicism of Marcus Aurelius as a particular example). You might want to throw in the fact that Islam was both the repository and developer of many of the ideas from these cultures for a period until (arguably) theocratic dominance of their society killed this development.

    32. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me go one further for you: Christ WOULD condemn homosexuals. The Old Testament specifically stated that stoning was the penalty for homosexuality. When asked about the Old Testament laws, let's see what our good buddy Christ said:

      Matthew 5:17-19
      Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil.

      For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled.

      Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven.

      Yeah, nothing was repealed. Homos are still killed. Slaves are still kept and beaten. Christians are supposed to slay non-Christians. Great guy, that Christ fella. Wish I could have met him.

    33. Re:Hahahahahah by tuxgeek · · Score: 1

      I would imagine if the Founding Fathers had any idea what our political mis-leaders
      both sides of the isle are doing today, they would roll over in their graves.

      Texas is just leading the charge off the deep end of crazy stupid shit

      --
      "Suppose you were an idiot...and suppose you were a member of Congress...but I repeat myself." Mark Twain
    34. Re:Hahahahahah by tiqui · · Score: 1

      The ignorance of history is a major factor here.

      indeed

      The founders lived in a world where the excesses of religion wielding political power was a very present thing.

      Um, not so much. The excess was in secular leaders hijacking religion, making their own government-established versions and then using those to justify all of their secular abuses. The Church of England is a good example here, and the one our founders had most-clearly in mind

      Thanks to the separation of church and state, we have been afforded the luxury of forgetting this.

      No. Thanks to the "establishment clause" we have been spared the nightmare of a "Church of the United States" which everybody would be required to attend, fund, and submit to. The phrase "Separation of church and state" does not appear anywhere in the Declaration of Independence or the Constitution; it appears in a letter Thomas Jefferson sent to a Baptist church in which he was telling them it was safe to support the new Constitution because it guaranteed the government would never interfere in their church (a promise now routinely broken and in the eyes of many, the deal is broken if the government forces certain issues like abortion and gay "marriage" i.e. if government gets to interfere in the teachings of the churches, then the doors are open for the churches to equally interfere in government).

      But any ideology that deals in absolutes, whether it be secular or religious, will evoke the absolute to disdain lesser goods--and when you think you hold the absolute Truth or Good, all other goods become worthless. The perfect is not just the enemy of the good, it is the mortal enemy of all goods

      Those absolutist Darwinists, Atheists, Marxists, etc are the most dangerous of all

      Life, liberty, happiness, charity, tolerance, knowledge, reason,...

      Good, religious themes... and if you think "reason" and "knowledge" are not "religious" then you have not read any of the writings of numerous religious scholars. Start with the Apostle Paul for a little light reading before you move along to much more recent academic works with really big words in them

      and anything that is not held up as absolute will be cast aside, along with all who would defend them. Billions have died, and will die, for the idols of dogma.

      Millions, yes, but not billions. And the millions were all at the hands of wealth-redistributing atheists/pagans (Hitler/Stalin/Mao/PolPot...)

      If religion has an evolutionary advantage, it is probably in strengthening ingroup solidarity at the expense of outgroup antagonism; effective in prehistory, catastrophic in a world of globalisation.

      Religion generally is anti-evolutionary, as are social welfare programs, laws against rape and murder, environmental laws, etc. (Anything that helps the weak survive or limits the reproduction of the strong)

      I suspect that religions will, in this century, claim at least a billion victims, and make Stalin, Hitler, and Mao look like amateurs.

      It's an old, tired trick to lump all faiths together under the label "religions" so they can share collective blame, but that's like blaming all "political systems" for the crimes of Hitler, Stalin, and Mao. Yes, one particular religion might get the bomb and begin a nuclear holy war... but the other religions would be no more responsible than "science" or "engineering" for what happened

      n the aftermath, Richard Dawkins will sound positively mild and conciliatory.

      No, he will just keep sounding ignorant, hostile, irrational, and socially toxic

      There are almost as many Gods as there are believers, and the first thing you will discover when the state imposes religion is that the state's God is not your God.

      Indeed, this is what many conservatives learned in the decades since the left kicked God out of the schools and started re-writing all the books with a left-wing bias... The state God that has proven itself mo

    35. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He technically did. God smoked some gay guy with a bolt of lightning for wasting his seed.

    36. Re:Hahahahahah by hitmark · · Score: 1

      i could have sworn protestantism is based on luther, not calvin. If you want to talk about calvin, there is a calvinism. A take on christianity that basically made modern banking possible, and considers being rich a sign that god have a place set aside for you in heaven.

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    37. Re:Hahahahahah by hitmark · · Score: 1

      Europe is secular precisely because most European countries have entrenched state religions. The separation of church and state allowed religions to evolve and compete, and is one of the main reasons that America is so religious. If these clowns get their way, religion will be disgraced in America as well.

      not sure what your trying to say here. Would this be a good or bad thing?

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    38. Re:Hahahahahah by migla · · Score: 1

      Not to mention the fact that the whole time, he was hanging out with twelve dudes with dresses and long hair.

      --
      Some of my favourite people are from th US; Vonnegut, Chomsky, Bill Hicks.
    39. Re:Hahahahahah by makomk · · Score: 1

      Um, not so much. The excess was in secular leaders hijacking religion, making their own government-established versions and then using those to justify all of their secular abuses. The Church of England is a good example here, and the one our founders had most-clearly in mind

      Not really. The Vatican had far more power overall than any secular government - in fact, the reason the Church of England was established in the first place was to escape Vatican control. What's more, the Puritans who came to the US had far more in common with the Church of England than anything else. In fact, it was Puritans who seized power in the English civil war and ran the country right up until Cromwell's death and the restoration of the monarchy.

    40. Re:Hahahahahah by IICV · · Score: 1

      These people do not live in a reality based world. They like John Calvin because they think he was the grandfather of Protestantism, not because he actually was. Also because he was full of fire and brimstone, which is always good for bashing kids in the head with.

    41. Re:Hahahahahah by hitmark · · Score: 1

      ah, after rereading the comment again, i see that i have confused a claim attributed to the texas education board with being made by the commenter.

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    42. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry about your reading comprehension miss Tom.

    43. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      Jesus in the Bible did not get involved in politics at all. Period. John 6:15: Jesus, knowing that they intended to come and make him king by force, withdrew again to a mountain by himself. See also Luke 13:32,33 and John 18:36 (also there he condemns Christians getting involved in war)

      As to your BTW, here is the relevant quote, Matthew 19:4-6:4“Haven’t you read,” he replied, “that at the beginning the Creator ‘made them male and female,’ and said, ‘For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh’ So they are no longer two, but one. Therefore what God has joined together, let man not separate.”

      But as I said before, Jesus didn't get involved in politics. As an example, he didn't say anything about the common morals of the Romans, the secular power of the land in that time.

      Therefore, according to WWJD, (what would Jesus do?) in regard to same sex marriage, he would not have got involved, except where "christians" claimed it was ok religiously with his Father.

    44. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Learn set theory. The quote isn't exclusionary. Oh., wait a second, logic and math are "evil".

    45. Re:Hahahahahah by Thangodin · · Score: 1

      Both good and bad. If they succeed, we end up with a type of theocracy, which is disastrous for the time being, but it would cause a backlash, which could correct the problem in the long term. So, again, the question is, how much pain can you stand? The outgroup antagonism that exists now is fueling the culture wars. The backlash might eventually correct that, but the theocratic tendency would do a lot of damage in the short term.

    46. Re:Hahahahahah by Thangodin · · Score: 1

      Um, not so much. The excess was in secular leaders hijacking religion, making their own government-established versions and then using those to justify all of their secular abuses. The Church of England is a good example here, and the one our founders had most-clearly in mind

      This, of course, rests on the assumption that there is a 'pure' religion as opposed to the opportunistic use of religion for personal or political ends. But all religions have a history of exploitation for personal gain mixed with refinements which arise from genuine human moral concerns. The abolition of slavery is a good example, where both sides used their own interpretations to argue their case, and it should be remembered that slavery was a well entrenched practice which was never challenged in principle in the bible--they only occasionally disputed who should be a slave or who shouldn't be, but never the practice itself. Abolition was a 'secular' concern incorporated into Christianity. Since both motivations originate outside of the religion, you could argue that there is in fact no such thing as religion at all, only the transcendentalization of secular concerns. And you would be right. Religion is a political tool, an attempt by human beings to claim that their opinions are written in the stars, and must never be challenged. Fortunately, we do have the right to challenge them, which is why, over time, we are actually able to make some real progress. Bad ideas don't stand up to scrutiny, good ideas do.

      Secular dogmas work the same way, and have their own counterpart to God; the Marxists had historical inevitability, the fascists had their national destinies, and extreme libertarians have elevated the market to a quasi-mystical force. Marx was one of a group of philosophers called the Young Hegelians--it is interested to note that Hegel's philosophy was, more properly, a work of theology. The best thing one can say for secular dogmas is that they are falsifiable in a way that religions are not. They have to deliver their goods in this world, and when they fail, as they always do, they fall out of favour. Unfortunately, the secular dogmas had modern weaponry and industrialization at their command. Imagine the crusades with automatic rifles, artillery, and bomber squadrons, or just look at Africa and the Middle East. I never had much use for Marx, but disparaging Marxism now is just too damn easy. Even the old hippies are embarrassed by it--you can only get so far on future promises. Religion always has the afterlife, the Kingdom to Come, it always falls prey to Antony Flew's question, "What would you take as evidence that religion is false?". The worst thing that can be said about a scientific hypothesis is that it is 'not even wrong' but this can be said of the whole of theology.

      As for absolutist Darwinists, perhaps you don't believe in evolution, which I would take as a failure on your part and a point in my favour. If you are talking about Social Darwinism, this should better be known as Social Spencerism, because it is a half baked social theory that existed before the Origin of Species was published. You also seem to take charity as a circumvention of evolution; in fact, human evolution seems to be accelerating, rather than slowing down. The main difference is that we have replaced raw natural selection with social selection. For social animals like humans, social competence is an indispensable part of the fitness criteria, and this includes altruism and mutual support. As for absolutist atheists, calling atheism a dogma is like calling bald a hair colour or not collecting stamps a hobby. If you're referring to the communists, their dogma was communism. We don't talk about absolutist afairyists, so you seem to have fallen prey to a category error.

      And if you think that radical Islam is the only source of trouble amongst religion, google Helen Ukpabio and the Liberty Gospel Church of Nigeria, or find out about the proposed anti-gay laws in Uganda. The Ugandan ministers have the support of Christian

    47. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      Learn set theory

      What is the difference between unlawful and illegal?

      Matthew 19:4-6 is the definition of marriage. Definitions are by definition exclusionary. Marriage means Husband and Wife. In this passage Jesus said both 'male and female' and 'man...united to his wife.'

      Strong's definition of Pornea or fornication is found here:Strong 4202 Note def 1a

      Jesus used that word in many places, note Mt 19:9 and Mt 15:19

      And finally what about what Jesus says at Revelation 22:15: (NIV) Outside are the dogs, those who practice magic arts, the sexually immoral, the murderers, the idolaters and everyone who loves and practices falsehood. Also Jesus' Father said this one chapter earlier:Revelation 21:8, (NIV) But the cowardly, the unbelieving, the vile, the murderers, the sexually immoral, those who practice magic arts, the idolaters and all liars–their place will be in the fiery lake of burning sulfur. This is the second death.

      If you have arguments based on the Bible, I will be willing to hear them. Note again that I am not saying you and another woman can't marry. Just that NOWHERE in the Bible does Biblical marriage include same-sex unions.

    48. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Matthew 19:4-6 is the definition of marriage. Definitions are by definition exclusionary. Marriage means Husband and Wife. In this passage Jesus said both 'male and female' and 'man...united to his wife.'

      Ah, okay. So obviously there was no definition of marriage before the book of Matthew was written. There were just males and females.

    49. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      Please read Matthew 19:4,5, I quoted it in my GGP. The relevant part says: Haven’t you read, he replied, that at the beginning the Creator ‘made them male and female, 5 and said, ‘For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh’

      He quotes Genesis 1:27 and 2:24. I guess that a more complete statement would have been 'Matthew 19:4-6 is Jesus' definition of marriage.' And that is what my point was regarding this off-topic theme of same sex marriage, namely, Jesus' view.

    50. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please read Matthew 19:4,5, I quoted it in my GGP. The relevant part says: Haven't you read, he replied, that at the beginning the Creator 'made them male and female, 5 and said, 'For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh'

      Oh, you want to point to the Old Testament? King David had six wives. King Solomon had 700 WIVES.

      Looks to me like Matthew was trying to "redefine traditional marriage!"

    51. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      Please read Matthew 19, the first 12 verses. Jesus was quoted as saying that marriage was instituted in the Garden of Eden and was between one man and one woman. Between that time and ~30-33 C.E. the definition of marriage changed to include man and wife/wives by man.

      Looks to me like Matthew was trying to "redefine traditional marriage!"

      Basically yes, Jesus did. A more accurate statement would be "Jesus defined Christian Marriage as the same as the original marriage found in Genesis 2:24."

    52. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Basically yes, Jesus did. A more accurate statement would be "Jesus defined Christian Marriage as the same as the original marriage found in Genesis 2:24."

      I notice that's in Matthew's words, not Jesus's.

      Besides, that would mean the polygamy in the Old Testament was both blessed by god (even commanded by him) and incompatible with one-man-one-woman marriage as described in Genesis, which is contradictory.

      If marriage is and was always defined as "one man, one woman" than the Bible must be in error describing David's and Solomon's mates as "wives."

    53. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      I notice that's in Matthew's words, not Jesus's.

      According to NIV, Jesus says everything in Mt 19:4-6 except for 'he replied' in vs 4. Which translation are you looking at? (Matthew 19:1 gives Jesus as 'he')

      Besides, that would mean the polygamy in the Old Testament was both blessed by god (even commanded by him) and incompatible with one-man-one-woman marriage as described in Genesis, which is contradictory.

      If marriage is and was always defined as "one man, one woman" than the Bible must be in error describing David's and Solomon's mates as "wives."

      Polygamy in OT was allowed and regulated. Sin was too. True justice in the Bible requires all sinners to die in the day of their sin. But only some sins incurred the death penalty in Mosaic Law. Polygamy was 'commanded' only in case of 'Brother in law marriage' that I can recall. But note the very interesting words of Jesus there in Mt 19:8: Jesus replied, "Moses permitted you to divorce your wives because your hearts were hard. But it was not this way from the beginning.

      Like I said in other reply, Read the whole passage. Jesus was even correcting the ideas of his apostles. Really, Christianity is different than Judaism as expounded in OT. Jesus brought something better according to Heb 7:22, Because of this oath, Jesus has become the guarantee of a better covenant.

      Put simply, Jesus was re-instituting one man one woman marriage that was the original definition.

      as a side note, Solomon broke the command for kings and wives found at Deuteronomy 17:17: He must not take many wives, or his heart will be led astray. He must not accumulate large amounts of silver and gold. And his heart was led astray.

    54. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      And nowhere in the bible does it exclude same-sex unions. That's why I said learn set theory. Jesus gave one example, a man and a woman. He never said that same-sex marriage was wrong, sinful or whatever. Also, show me the original. You can't. Nobody can - it doesn't exist.

      Just that NOWHERE in the Bible does Biblical marriage include same-sex unions.

      Nowhere in the bible does it include a good recipe for spaghetti sauce. So what?

      Same-sex marriage is not in the bible, so the bible does NOT forbid it.

      But lets go afield a bit ... what about transsexuals. A woman gets a sex change so that her body now matches her gender - female. Can she marry a man? After all, she's legally a woman. Can she marry a woman? After all, she was created a man?

      And in case you think this is far-fetched, one lesbian couple just got a California marriage license based on this. A male-to-female transsexual was able to get a marriage license to marry another woman by the simple expedient of not filing for an amended birth certificate. She legally changed her name a few years before, so her drivers license says female, but the registrar only looks at birth certs.

    55. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      That's why I said learn set theory. Jesus gave one example, a man and a woman.

      What is the difference between unlawful and illegal?

      Same-sex marriage is not in the bible, so the bible does NOT forbid it.

      Ok, for the sake of argument, lets say it would be OK with Jesus that you and your girl got married. Here is some set theory for you: Sex between two people of the same sex is always verboten in the Bible. So you could be 'married' but never have sex because the homosexual sex acts will keep you out of heaven.

      BTW, do you view yourself as Christian? It seems that only a believer in Christ would care about what he said...

    56. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, for the sake of argument, lets say it would be OK with Jesus that you and your girl got married. Here is some set theory for you: Sex between two people of the same sex is always verboten in the Bible.

      Usury is also verboten, but I don't see you out protesting credit card and mortgage lenders...

    57. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      Usury is not always verboten and neither is it a capital sin in OT or NT. I also don't see mortgage lenders on /. proclaiming what they do is just fine with Jesus. I will have a word with them if they do, just for you, OK?

    58. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      As to your question regarding transsexuals and the Bible, a careful parsing of Romans 1:26, 27 will give you the answer according to the Christian worldview. Now as to Intersex, I am not qualified to answer that question.

    59. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Usury is not always verboten and neither is it a capital sin in OT or NT.

      Naturally, that's why Jesus drove the same-sex couples out of the temple... oh, wait...

    60. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      Look, if you don't want to live life as a Christian, I am not going to threaten you with eternal torture in Hellfire, or proselytize to you here on this forum. I did neither in this whole discussion. And now you come up with this crazy argument. (I am guessing you are the same AC all the way through)

      So if you have a real question, I'll answer it, but the driving of the money changers out of the temple had nothing to do with the charging of interest. It had everything to do with profiting (or robbing) from believers inside the Temple, aka House of God.

      Now as to same sex couples in the Temple, see Deuteronomy 23:18, NIV: You must not bring the earnings of a female prostitute or of a male prostitute [a] into the house of the LORD your God to pay any vow, because the LORD your God detests them both. Footnote: [a] Deuteronomy 23:18 Hebrew of a dog

      So yet another command in the Bible against homosexuality.

    61. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look, if you don't want to live life as a Christian, I am not going to threaten you with eternal torture in Hellfire, or proselytize to you here on this forum. I did neither in this whole discussion. And now you come up with this crazy argument. (I am guessing you are the same AC all the way through)

      Okay, I'm no expert on the bible, but I left Christendom when I noticed a) there wasn't a shred of proof for any of it, b) people in other parts of the world seem to get along as well or better without it, and c) people who think they were made in the image of a moralistic asshole tend to act like moralistic assholes.

      I certainly couldn't put it better than Roy Zimmerman

    62. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Ok, for the sake of argument, lets say it would be OK with Jesus that you and your girl got married. Here is some set theory for you: Sex between two people of the same sex is always verboten in the Bible.

      And so is shopping on the sabbath, or driving a car on the sabbath, or doing laundry on the sabbath, or premarital sex, or being obese (the body is the temple and should be treated as such), or having sex while a woman is on her period, or for a woman to disobey her husband ... and it's okay to keep slaves, beat the kids (and the wives - plural, because you're allowed more than one).

      Jesus never said anything forbidding marriage between two people of the same sex. Paul may have, but Paul also admits that the apostles can and are wrong on many points - see him when he says "I withstood Peter to his face".

      It's funny - xians want to impose their views on others, but refuse to grant the same right to others. Jesus hated such hypocrites. In other words, Jesus hated today's fundies - they're the modern-day pharisees who condemn people to a slavish obedience to the law, and in so doing deny the truth.

      What would Jesus do? He'd condemn you with your own hypocrisy.

    63. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      And I would counter that the Bible clearly states that the apostles are not authoritative - Paul and Peter are a good example of where they do not agree. Same as the old testament is not authoritative.

      So if Jesus didn't say it, it's subject to human error.

      And Jesus didn't condemn it. Quite the contrary, he said "render unto Caesar that which is Caesars" - local authority has the right to legislate on same-sex marriage, same as other laws.

      Jesus said there is no marriage in heaven. So why are you people so getting your panties in a knot over something that Jesus himself said was ONLY limited to the here-and-now, and not the hereafter?

    64. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Deut 23: You're talking about prostitutes, not same-sex couples.

      And I'm sure you've broken plenty of the rules in the old testament. And so have people you know. Has any girl ever worn a man's t-shirt, or runners, or jeans? Death. Has any guy ever worn a kilt? Death. Ever put gas in your car on the sabbath? Death. Ever DRIVEN your car on the sabbath? Death. Ever done laundry on the sabbath? Death!

      Ever beaten your kid? For some reason, that's okay. Ever owned a slave? For some reason, that's okay. Ever killed someone for shopping on the sabbath? For some reason, that's okay. Ever had 300 wives and 700 personal prostitutes, like Solomon? For some reason, that's okay.

      Except it's not okay, so stop with all the old testament garbage. It's not a cafeteria line, where you can pick and choose what you believe. Either you believe Jesus and ONLY Jesus is the final authority, (and recognize that even the apostles can and were wrong) or convert to Judaism, or become an atheist.

    65. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      Look, I said from the outset, do what you want. You will never find me interfering with your life by law or physically, nor will I ever lobby for laws that enforce Christianity or it's morals on others. If Caesar says you can have same sex marriage, do what you want. You will not find me at the courthouse protesting. But remember the last half of that statement. God's things to God.

      Be careful with your logic. If you go only by Jesus' explicit laws, Pedos are just fine (as long as they marry before they abuse), so is Bestiality, as is Genocide. I mean, really I could marry a goat by your logic.

      I agree that practice of premarital sex is wrong in OT, the words of Jesus and the rest of NT. It also will keep a person out of Heaven. So will Greed, Drunkenness, and a few other things.

      The reason I brought in the OT is back up my point that homosexuality is always wrong in the whole Bible. Christians have not been bound by the Law since Jesus' death. (Jesus was bound by it though, and remember, OT!=Mosaic Law [here is some more set theory]) So even the 10 Commandments are not for Christians per se, much therein is repeated for them though.

      If I had realized from the start your heart is deeply involved with this issue, I would not have brought it up. It was not my intent to offend.

      PS. don't think you can surprise me with what's in the Bible. I have read it. I have studied it.

      PPS, Jews wore skirts back in the day, both men and women. See: Zechariah 8:23

    66. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      The reason I brought in the OT is back up my point that homosexuality is always wrong in the whole Bible.

      Extraordinary trans-friendly church practices what they preach

      At the Village Church, we believe that whether you are trans or bi, straight, lesbian or gay, you can follow Jesus. Here's what matters. Do you love God, and love your neighbor, as you love yourself? That's what is important. Love. But there are a whole lotta people in the world, good Christian people who disagree with us. I've been at this more than 20 years. I can stand firm in my truth. But some of you, have never met a preacher before who said it's ok to be gay and Christian. And so together, we're going to learn how to have the conversation with other folks. --- snip ---

      Do you know what Jesus said about homosexuality? Who can tell me? Do you know? NOTHING. He said plenty about money and greed. Said plenty about how we should forgive one another. He did not spend one minute talking about homosexuality.

      He spent plenty of time talking about love and about relationships. He said love one another. Love God. Love your neighbor as yourself. This is my greatest commandment: that you love one another as I have loved you. (John 15:12)

      Yeah, Jesus said plenty about love. Not one word about homosexuality.

      When I see two people who love God, and who love one another, and who want to be in a committed relationship with each other, for life, and when those two people want to follow Jesus together, and ask God to bless their home and their life together - I gotta think that brings God joy - regardless of whether it's two men, a man and a woman, or a man who has transitioned to become woman who is then in relationship with a man, or a woman. Two people - who love each other and love God - I think that's really all God cares about.

      --- snip ---

      So, the other day, a friend here at The Village asked me how I become such a fierce advocate for LGBT persons? I said it was really quite simple. I went from college in Abilene TX in 1985, where I really didn't consciously know any gay or lesbian folks; and I moved to the big city of Atlanta, where there were gay students at my seminary. They were wonderful folks who loved God and who were clearly called to be in ministry. Now I had grown up in a liberal family that taught me the value of working against racism. I was a feminist when I was in the 3rd grade. It was a no-brainer for me to join the cause of standing with my gay and lesbian classmates who were being denied ordination. They were gifted people, who loved God and wanted to serve God in the church just like me. I knew what it was like to be told I should not be a pastor because I was a woman - back home in West Texas. So I was sympathetic to my gay friends. My REASON and my EXPERIENCE told me these friends had just as much right to be pastors as I did, and that who they loved and who they chose to be in life-long partnerships with had nothing to do with whether or not they could be good pastors. And so I became a straight ally. An advocate. A fighter for justice.

      So, here we are today. I promised we would look at those six scriptures that people use to say you can't be gay and Christian, so let's take a look, briefly, at them.

      There's more.

      It's not a question of being offended (though thanks for the consideration) ,,, but you still haven't answered the question of who a post-op transsexual can marry, in YOU opinion. You danced around it. My point is that it highlights a serious problem - that the world is a lot more complex than it was before, and that the bible doesn't necessarily have the answers, despite peoples claims.

      So, who can a male-to-female transsexual marry without sinning?

      [_] They can only marry a man, because they are now legally a woman;
      [_] They can only marry a w

    67. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      in YOU[R] opinion.

      To follow the Christian way of life would be to follow Christ's example and his laws. If there is a question about something in today's world, then first one would look for explicit laws, failing that, principles. So Romans 1:26 (ISV) says: For this reason, God delivered them to degrading passions as their females exchanged their natural sexual function for one that is unnatural.

      Yes I am aware you are unwilling to listen to Paul, but note John 17:17-21 (NIV) (17)Sanctify them by the truth; your word is truth. (18)As you sent me into the world, I have sent them into the world. (19)For them I sanctify myself, that they too may be truly sanctified. (20)“My prayer is not for them alone. I pray also for those who will believe in me through their message, (21) that all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world may believe that you have sent me.

      Especially vs 17 and vs 20. 17 says God's (the Father) word is truth and 20 says Jesus' followers were to believe based on the message of Jesus' united disciples.

      Sure, Paul did reprimand Peter. Peter was even called Satan by Jesus. But he was to feed Jesus' little lambs. (John 21:15-17) If one would consider theirself a little lamb (follower) of Jesus, then they would accept 'food' from Peter. Food in the Bible can mean teachings or writings. Included in Peter's writings is 2 Peter 3:14-16. Note in NIV: (14)So then, dear friends, since you are looking forward to this, make every effort to be found spotless, blameless and at peace with him. (15)Bear in mind that our Lord’s patience means salvation, just as our dear brother Paul also wrote you with the wisdom that God gave him. (16)He writes the same way in all his letters, speaking in them of these matters. His letters contain some things that are hard to understand, which ignorant and unstable people distort, as they do the other Scriptures, to their own destruction.

      So Jesus said listen to Peter, and Peter said that Paul wrote from God, whose word is truth. And Paul wrote Romans. Which jives with the rest of God's words.

      So, instead of "I think" or "I feel" a Christian would remember the heart is not to be trusted for correct guidance. (not meaning the literal heart, but the figurative heart, or inner person, one's motivations) Note Matthew 15:19, 20.

      So, that being the case, I offer no opinion, but to recommend that the answer is in that verse. (Romans 1:26) Regarding the Bible, I don't deal in opinions.

      So you are correct in saying that Jesus didn't explicitly forbid same-sex marriage. But you still haven't answered my question (1) about unlawful and illegal. It's not the joke, it's a real question. And you still didn't reply about (2) Jesus condemning 'Fornication' which by all scholarly definitions would include homosexual acts. And here is one more question for you, (3) Until a same-sex marriage is obtained, wouldn't all sex in that relationship be under 'pre-marital' sex. That is also universally defined as part of fornication. And (4)your set theory about marriage would permit Bestiality and Pedophilia through marriage.

      So answer those four questions/statements and I will answer yours.

    68. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      a)universal negatives are hard to prove. Do you mean the efficacy of such things as 'Do unto others...' or 'Love thy Neighbor...' OTOH, maybe it's the Trinity or Hellfire or Christmas, or Christendom in politics or war. I'll give you a hint, all those OTOH are not in the Bible. Really, no!

      b)People in other parts of the world also live by basically the same ideals as Christianity as exemplified by Jesus, including marriage.

      c)True, you are what you worship. But even Roy Zimmerman said Jesus wasn't like that. And Jesus said he was just like his Dad. So, who does Christendom worship?

    69. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      So, that being the case, I offer no opinion, but to recommend that the answer is in that verse. (Romans 1:26) Regarding the Bible, I don't deal in opinions.

      Sure you do. The books in the bible that are currently considered canonical were selected based on opinions. These opinions by people who claim to have been guided by god are continually shown to be demonstrably fallible - see how many ordained ministers, who were "called by god" in the opinion of their congregation and their peers, turn out not to be so godly.

      What is lawful? ISTR someone saying "All things are lawful for me." At the same time, I can make an superior case that nothing is right - there is no possibility of anyone taking (or refusing to take) any action that doesn't ultimately end up harming someone somewhere. That being the case, there is no such thing as absolute good. There is no "what is lawful and what is not." Everything is relative.

      As for what is legal, I don't particularly care about what is legal and what isn't, because I recognize one fundamental rule of law - that the laws we have are just an imperfect attempt to codify what we believe is just. I care a LOT more about what is just and good, than I do about what is legal and what is not. The laws are "Justice for dummies" - good for those who cannot grok fundamental justice and rights, and so need laws to guide them.

      Example: It's illegal to beat my dogs. I don't beat my dogs, but not because it's illegal - but because I care about them. The bible says not to spare the rod, but I never hit my daughters. In this case, the bible is clearly wrong - and you'd know it if you have ever been beaten by someone who says they love you. They're lying. They love themselves and their pride and ego more - they feel they have the "right" to place their anger at a higher priority than another persons' physical safety. Spanking a kid, or assaulting an adult - they're both wrong, but the bible approves of the former, and propagates injustice.

      After all, isn't it written "teach a child how it should go when it is young, and when it is older, it shall not depart from it?" Beat the kid when he or she is young, and watch how they in turn repeat the cycle of abuse. The bible should at the very least be censored to remove all references to condoning child abuse. I've seen parents using it as an "excuse" to justify their abusive behavior, and it sickens me.

      And yet, supposedly "godly" minsters get up and preach that it's okay to beat your kids. I've sat through enough Sunday school classes, and listened to enough sermons, and enough Wednesday night bible studies, to say this isn't the exception among the fundies. I've even heard parents, when I've pointed out that their kids are afraid of them, say that their children should be afraid of them. That is just messed up!

      I only had a few simple rules:

      1. Don't tie up all three phone lines.
      2. Your room can be as messy as you want, as long as you don't leave food hanging around. It's your mess, and your problem if you can't find anything.
      3. If you're going to be late, CALL ME because I worry. As long as I know you're safe, I won't be angry.

      I didn't sweat the small stuff - you want to dye your hair? No problem - but I think purple or pink would be better than black. Black will make you look pale as a ghost (so of course she dyed it black, then had to ask me to help her change the color back when she got out of the bathroom :-). Hamsters? Sure. Just make sure they don't get loose so the dog doesn't get them (so of course they got loose, and the dog found them, caught them, and brought them to us, live and unharmed, just their little tails hanging out of his mouth).

      As for Jesus condemning fornication, I would say that nowadays there's no such thing as the "sin of fornication". Just like there's no such thing as "it's okay to beat a child." Up here we've removed all grounds for di

    70. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      1)Bible Cannon. Ok, there are many books that claim to be inspired, sure. But to take your example, Gospel of Thomas, in it 5 year old Jesus miraculously kills another child because the boy runs into Jesus. Sound anything like Jesus from the four Gospels in the Bible Cannon? Me neither. Yes, there are some bits in the four found in KJV and Textus Receptus that are generally considered not original. You know why? Those passages are not found in the oldest manuscripts. Pretty good evidence, wouldn't you say?

      2.Lawful what is allowed by law. Unlawful is everything else. Illegal is forbidden by law. I.e. in the US, the federal government is only allowed to do what the constitution says it can. Everything else is unlawful. So, which would apply to Marriage? Jesus said in Mt 19 that God created man, woman, and marriage. The marriage God created was Man and Woman. That was Lawful. He didn't create any other marriages. Man created other marriages, like multiple wives, etc. Are any other marriages lawful for Christians? Note Mt. 19:3, 'Lawful' was in the question. Note Mt 19:8, last phrase: (NIV) "But it was not this way from the beginning." Thus, the beginning creation of marriage is the only one authorized by Jesus. All else is like divorce, (other than on grounds of fornication) not authorized. IOW, if you want to be in a marriage that Jesus recognizes, it has to be in the manner of God's first marriage.

      3.

      as a society we have put away such notions as "fornication". The standard now is "two consenting adults."

      Tell that to Jesus. What is Jesus' definition of Fornication? Not modern society's. This answer concedes the original point.

      4. People have feelings. One of those things is 'gender' as you call it. Another is desire for sex. Another is anger. Are the actions of a psychotic moral because they are deeply felt? Is his/her view of himself/herself always the proper one? (note, I am not calling transsexuals or homosexuals psychotic) Some people sincerely feel that they are Jesus. The Bible says he's in heaven. People develop in a way other than natural sometimes. I agree. Neither the Bible nor Jesus allow free reign to what a person wants, just because it is deeply felt. In fact, the Bible calls that sort of thing "sin's law" and it is to be fought against. Romans 7:21-25: (NIV)(21)So I find this law at work: When I want to do good, evil is right there with me. (22)For in my inner being I delight in God’s law; (23)but I see another law at work in the members of my body, waging war against the law of my mind and making me a prisoner of the law of sin at work within my members. (24)What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body of death? (25)Thanks be to God—through Jesus Christ our Lord! So then, I myself in my mind am a slave to God’s law, but in the sinful nature a slave to the law of sin.

      5. Limits of marriage.

      Nowadays, we look at a marriage as a contract...

      More modern society views. Like your original argument, show me where Jesus explicitly condemned marrying a 2 year old.

      My answer to yours is within above points. Mainly point 4.

    71. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Actually, you did NOT answer MY questions - you answered yours.

      Here it is again: who can a male-to-female transsexual marry without sinning?

      [_] They can only marry a man, because they are now legally a woman;
      [_] They can only marry a woman, because God made them XY;
      [_] They can marry either, because they are both male and female;
      [_] They can marry neither, because they are neither male nor female.

      This is relevant because one same-sex couple has bypassed California law to get a marriage certificate by the simple expedient of the transsexual not having a revised birth certificate, even though her drivers license, etc., all show her as female. The same logic should apply to a church that looks only at birth sex.

      "Shit or get off the pot" , as my mother used to say. Say what you mean, and mean what you say. Quit the equivocating, and the hiding behind bible quotes. The bible has no legal standing, no moral or ethical basis, and no proof that it is the "word of god."

      Also, your definition of what is lawful and unlawful is flawed. Something that is not specifically stated to be unlawful is lawful - there is no law against it. According to your definition, eating spaghetti is unlawful, since it isn't specifically allowed. So is using the Internet.

      Further, Jesus does not have the authority to state what is lawful to anyone. Dead people have no vote, and he is very much dead, if he ever existed.

    72. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus said in Mt 19 that God created man, woman, and marriage. The marriage God created was Man and Woman. That was Lawful. He didn't create any other marriages. Man created other marriages, like multiple wives, etc.

      Yeah, except that Eve was made from Adam's rib and was technically a clone of him...if you believe in that sort of thing.

      There's just the slight problem that Adam and Eve are FICTIONAL. Human beings evolved as a species by diverging from an earlier species. There was no "first man" unless you arbitrarily decide that one of these bipedal primates was for some reason "human enough" to call a man. There was no marriage until it was invented by a human society, and it was impossible to exchange marriage vows before language was invented. Marriage is not a natural fact, it is a human INVENTION.

      All of this is pissing in the wind anyway--your chosen "tribe" (whom you probably share about the same number of genes with as does an Australian aborigine) decided to codify their traditions in a book which you now worship as actual history. It isn't, it's a myth like any other creation myth. Sorry to break the news to you, but nature doesn't know or care what you think "marriage" is.

    73. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      Since you don't believe in the authority of Jesus, why do you worry about sin?

      Your question is therefore a trap.

      It is not relevant because California law has nothing to do with Jesus.

      Thank you for answering whether you believe in Jesus.

      And finally, regarding unlawful vs illegal: http://grammar.quickanddirtytips.com/unlawful-versus-illegal.aspx

      And again, if you want the freedom from 'Christendom' trying to coerce you through law, use John 17:15, 16 and John 18:36. Any who do that are not actually following the example or teaching of Jesus.

    74. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      This whole discussion is not one of personal belief, but one of what the Bible says about what Jesus said or didn't say about same sex marriage. For the sake of brevity, I left out 'the Bible says/teaches/etc' or suchlike quite a few times. I am not here to promulgate Creationism. Or disparage Evolution. Although it is interesting to note that the Jesus as explained in the Bible believed in creation. Be sure to share that next time some "Christian" tells you evolution is in the Bible.

    75. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't find it a problem that the biblical basis for marriage (what Jesus himself believed) is based on a story that is not true??

      Forget fossils, forget radiometric dating - the anthropological fact of human genetic diversity and cultural adaptation to every part of the world is more than sufficient to conclude that humankind could not have started with a mere two individuals.

      So, given the fact that "Adam and Eve" were not real people, what justification is there for saying marriage must be defined in their mold?

    76. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      Please start with Mitochondrial Eve and Y-Chromosomal Adam.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitochondrial_Eve

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Y-chromosomal_Adam

      All Humans alive come from one Mom and all Men alive come from one Dad. Your basic premise is flawed.

    77. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      So you're a liar. You said you'd answer the question, and now you don't have the courage to actually answer it "because it's a trap." Boo hoo! You are SO busted! Hypocrite.

    78. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please start with Mitochondrial Eve and Y-Chromosomal Adam.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitochondrial_Eve
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Y-chromosomal_Adam
      All Humans alive come from one Mom and all Men alive come from one Dad. Your basic premise is flawed.

      These genetic facts do NOT imply that there were no women before "Mitochondrial Eve" or no men before "Y-chromosomal Adam."

      You should spend more time studying biology and anthropology, maybe even a tenth as much time as you spend studying the bible would clear up your ignorance.

    79. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > All Humans alive come from one Mom and all Men alive come from one Dad. Your basic premise is flawed.

      Obviously he means they couldn't have come from a single couple within historical times, which is what creationists believe (if they accept the Genesis story).

    80. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      But Meve and Yadam do tell us that every male alive came from one man and one woman. Genetic diversity? I think that they call that a bottleneck, or two. Same with culture. All tribes of earth now, from Zulu to Inca to Japanese have the same mom. Like I said, I am not here to argue Evolution. But don't lie and say humans living today have myriads of non-common origins.

    81. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      You never answered if it was ok with Jesus if a man married a infant. Nor did you answer about Jesus' condemnation of fornication. To both those questions you answered a question but not mine. I am still waiting for the answers to my questions.

    82. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      In Jesus' time, arranged marriages were common. Look no further than his parents. Same thing with alliances between kingdoms by arranging marriages at birth.

      As for fornication, it doesn't mean quite what you think. The original greek word is where we get our term "pornography" from. There's a big difference between consensual sex between two people in private, irrespective of their genders, and pornography. "Fornicators" would include people like King David and King Solomon (he of the 300 wives and 700 concumbines). Jesus would condemn those two, not two people in a loving and caring adult consensual relationship (which David was incapable of - look at how he murdered Uriah just so he could have Bathsheba - and then look at what happened afterwards. The guy was a total jerk).

      So, now ... no more equivocating - answer the question.

    83. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      In Jesus' time, arranged marriages were common. Look no further than his parents. Same thing with alliances between kingdoms by arranging marriages at birth.

      Still not Jesus' explicit view. Still waiting.

      You have some nice strawmen though.
      So, choices:
      [ ] Book Chapter:verse
      [ ]Jesus didn't say anything about pedophilia through marriage, thus making it not a sin.

      As for the definition of fornication. The Greek word transliterated is porneia. The book, A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, by W. Bauer, second English ed., by F. W. Gingrich and F. W. Danker, Chicago and London (1979). defines porneia as “prostitution, unchastity, fornication, of every kind of unlawful sexual intercourse.” There is that word unlawful again. We have already learned what unlawful means.
      Pornography is a strawman and your definition is not complete. Porneia in the strictest sense means to buy. As in a prostitute (and the definition is broader in reality, see above). (Even that is between two consenting adults and in private.) '-graphy' means to tell or to write, or record. Recordings of fornication. Not the same thing as fornication.

      Even the loosest modern meaning of the word is sex between unmarried persons. And we're talking about Jesus' view, not yours. (Remember your original 'Appeal to Authority')

      David and Solomon are also strawmen. Jesus explicitly said in Mt 19 that the intervening definition of marriage was no longer valid. And yes, by Jesus' definition they were fornicators.

      So, Did Jesus condemn porneia as a sin? (provide references)
      [ ] Yes
      [ ] No

      What does porneia when Jesus uses it mean? (provide references)

    84. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Sex with people of the same sex was NOT unlawful in ancient Greece. In fact, it was practiced quote a lot. Get over it. It doesn't fit into the definition of porneia, which by your own words implies money changing hands.

      Also, I never appealed to authority - I derided it. Jesus never existed. Neither does God. And the Bible is not authoritative. It is not the law now, and it was not the law then.

      I never asked YOU what anyone else's opinion (Imaginary Jesus, Imaginary God) was - I want YOUR opinion as to the question posed. Stop being such a wimp. Say what YOU think - or can you not do that?

      And no, buying a prostitute in ancient Greece was NOT necessarily private, just like it's not private nowadays - temple prostitutes back then are one example. Learn your history. It starts WAY before the jews (or the "Hibaru" - the precedents to the Hebrew) ever existed.

      Now, as to your question:

      No, Jesus did not condemn porneia as a sin, because Jesus (as in "Jesus the son of god") did not exist.

      Since Jesus (as in "Jesus the son of god") did not exist, your latter question is irrelevant.

      If God or Jesus want to join in the conversation here, let them get an account and speak for themselves. You have no authority to speak for them, if they existed. Or are you going to claim that you are doing the will of God? Prove it. AFTER you answer my question.

    85. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1

      Also, I never appealed to authority

      BTW - Jesus never said a word against gays or lesbians. Not one. So do like Jesus would - approve same-sex marriage.

      Fail

      I'm done here.

    86. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      You were toast LONG ago. It was "stick a fork in it" time right from the beginning, because, like SO many "Jeebus people", you have no ability to look at the lack of evidence, the contradictions, and the sheer stupidity of your beliefs. You have become so psychologically invested in them that to question them would literally result in the destruction of your whole universe.

      1. No proof that god exists, or wrote the bible, but insists that it is authoritative;
      2. No proof that jesus existed, or was the son of the aforementioned god, but insists that jesus is authoritative;
      3. Says we should not base our views on "feelings", and doesn't realize the HUGE GAPING GOATSE-SIZED HOLE that your own belief system is based on - "feelings", not objective proof.
      4. 100% chicken-crap hypocrite who can't even answer the ONE question I asked

      You really ARE a fail!

    87. Re:Hahahahahah by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      elomerewhythere is a chicken$h*t bible-thumping lying troll. What other sort of idiot would even think of asking if "Jesus thinks its okay for a man married an infant"?

      It wouldn't even occur to most people - just fundies who are so sexually screwed up that they come up with things like that.

      Also, the mitochondrial eve theory has been debunked. Stupid bible-thumping troll.

    88. Re:Hahahahahah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > But Meve and Yadam do tell us that every male alive came from one man and one woman.

      No, that's not what it means. Those people were not the "origin" of humanity. MEve was not the "first woman" and Y-Adam was not "the first man" - they lived in different eras. They both came from human parents and lived as part of a larger human population. And this fact still says nothing at all about the origins of marriage.

      These articles should clear up your misconceptions:
      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/mitoeve.html
      http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/mtDNA.html

    89. Re:Hahahahahah by telomerewhythere · · Score: 1
      Ok, you did help me with something. Every living person's dad's dad's dad's...dad is YcA. Every person's mom's mom's ... mom is ME
      Correct?
      So, My Mom's Dad is 'half-brothers' with my Dad
      And my Mom and my Dad's Mom are 'half-sisters'
      I think there is some more there... is there? Did I get that right? Moving back in time, As that approaches the limit, (like in calculus) how closely related (at least) are all humans alive today to each other, if 1 equals full siblings?

      I also see on the website you linked that the example of how ME could come about entailed a genetic bottleneck. Wouldn't the same apply for YcA?

      Even that website said that:

      The existence of the Mitochondrial Eve is NOT a theory; it is a mathematical fact (unless something like a multiple-origins theory of human evolution i.e. the human species arose independently in different geographically separated populations, and that the present-day ease of interbreeding is the result of a remarkable convergent evolution, is true. Few people subscribe to the multiple-origins theory, and the Mitochondrial Eve observation is a refutation of multiple-origins).

      So the commonly held view among scientists is that there is also one geographic origin for humans. Or did I misread?

      I also read in the RSOH/RAO wiki page that the consensus of scientists is that humans have Monogenesis. And the near consensus that all humans come from one group of people originating in East Africa.

      If you're the same AP, then all the genetic differences we have and all the cultural differences we have come from one pair of humans and much later, one group of humans? Do I have the correct understanding?

      So when you said (if you are same AP):

      the anthropological fact of human genetic diversity and cultural adaptation to every part of the world is more than sufficient to conclude that humankind could not have started with a mere two individuals.

      does your argument above agree with science? How so? Or do I misunderstand? I am more than willing to admit a not complete understanding of any specific scientific theory. Help me understand.

  4. Note To Self: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    Don't hire kids from Texas, they they do not have a real education

    1. Re:Note To Self: by BitHive · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It's pretty much common knowledge that Texas and is an educational wasteland: http://www.edgetech-us.com/Map/EduLvls.htm

    2. Re:Note To Self: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the clowns in San Francisco do?

      http://www.cal.org/topics/dialects/ebfillmo.html

    3. Re:Note To Self: by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      that map only shows where people move to after they get advanced degrees. It does not necessarily mean education in Texas is substandard, although I'm not saying it means the opposite either.

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    4. Re:Note To Self: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too bad the rest of the US bases its education system on what happens in Texas... Sigh...

    5. Re:Note To Self: by Bemopolis · · Score: 3, Funny

      Speaking from personal experience let me say that yes, education in Texas is substandard. Unless that standard is Mississippi.

      --
      "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
    6. Re:Note To Self: by biryokumaru · · Score: 2, Funny

      If only what happens in Texas were like what happens in Vegas.

      --
      When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
    7. Re:Note To Self: by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      The parent's comment is harsh, but when time comes to look for a job, so is the employer.

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    8. Re:Note To Self: by demonlapin · · Score: 2, Informative
      I live in Mississippi. In return for 1.5% of my home's assessed value per year in taxes, 7% sales tax on all items (including food/clothing/toiletries), and up to 5% income tax, I get
      • Awful roads
      • Schools so bad that I could not imagine sending children to them
      • Corrupt government
      • Speed traps around every corner

      Education here is terrible unless you pay through the nose for private - the cheapest around here is $4500/yr for elementary, rising to $10000/yr for jr high/high school.

    9. Re:Note To Self: by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      Much of that is for demographic reasons, though. The areas of Texas considered worse than average are heavily concentrated along the border with Mexico. That's an immigration issue, not an issue with the quality of Texas schools. The other areas where stats are similar are in central California... ground zero of winter agriculture, again, an immigration issue.... and in the southern Mississippi valley, where there is a huge population of elderly black people whose education years were pre-civil rights era, and in Appalachia, where there's a heavy concentration of poor white elderly that had almost no access to schooling pre-WWII.

      In 30 years, those two areas will look largely like the rest of the country, simply because the elderly have died off. But unless we adopt draconian immigration controls, southern Texas and central California will largely be the same.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    10. Re:Note To Self: by Nimey · · Score: 1

      {citation needed}

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    11. Re:Note To Self: by ktappe · · Score: 1

      that map only shows where people move to after they get advanced degrees.

      I fear you are guessing. The likelihood of 9th grade "graduates" not relocating (ie. staying in KY or TX) might be just as high as the college graduates staying put (take a look at the white county right in the middle of PA; that's Centre County where Penn State is located.)

      --
      "We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
    12. Re:Note To Self: by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      I'm not guessing. The map shows where people with degrees live. That's all it shows. The conclusion that this is where education is best is not unreasonable, but not a slam dunk either. I just think the map is at best an indirect indicator. I'm pretty sure that educated people tend to bring a preference and a demand for good education as well, so it seems likely that education is good where they move to, but this would be a side effect. My interpretation is that the map is also showing is where high-paying jobs and nice living conditions are, because educated people have more ability to demand such things.

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    13. Re:Note To Self: by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      that map only shows where people move to after they get advanced degrees.

      Where does it say that those education levels are only from those who move there and not the education level of people who grow up there? On the other hand immigration status isn't indicated and more Latin American immigrants may drive the educational levels down.

      Falcon

    14. Re:Note To Self: by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      Instead of "move to" I should have said "live". They might have not moved there, it's true. But they also might well have moved there, and I will claim that most did in fact move there. My reasoning: Most people go somewhere other than their birth town for advanced degrees, then they take a job somewhere and that also is likely to be somewhere other than where they grew up, so I said "moved to." And your point about Latin dudes and chicks moving in, yes, it all goes to show that the level of education of people in a certain spot is not necessarily equal to the level of education available in that spot.

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
  5. Republican political philosophies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Today, the Texas Board of Education approved 11-4 a social studies curriculum that will put a conservative stamp on history and economics textbooks, stressing the role of Christianity in American history and presenting Republican political philosophies in a more positive light."

    I wonder how they show the Republicans ending slavery in the US in a positive light?

    1. Re:Republican political philosophies? by je+ne+sais+quoi · · Score: 1

      What's ironic about your statement is that the "conservative stamp" these turkeys approved includes teaching the speeches of Jefferson Davis alongside those of Lincoln, who was a Democrat. It just goes to show you that LBJ didn't overestimate when he said "there goes the south for a decade" while passing JFK's civil rights bill. The realignment was so severe it now threatens to rewrite history, literally.

      --
      Gentlemen! You can't fight in here, this is the war room!
  6. In other news... by lordsid · · Score: 1

    In other news, today, Knowledge was drug out in the street and shot in the best interest of revisionist history.

    --
    IMAGE VERIFICATION IS EVIL!
    1. Re:In other news... by bschorr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How embarassing for Texas. Some of the comments made by these Board of Education people just demonstrate a shameful ignorance. And these people were ELECTED?

      --
      -B-
    2. Re:In other news... by garcia · · Score: 1

      School board members are elected but they aren't necessarily as dumb when you see them on the ballot (remember, most people do no research into these people). Hell, a local school board here recently wanted to ban their members from using social networking to discuss board business because it might go counter to the groupthink: http://www.lazylightning.org/isd-192-school-board-hates-twittering-members

      Seriously, watch the video. It's classic.

    3. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And these people were ELECTED?

      By the same people they and their ilk have educated over the years. It simply ensures the survival of their mindset in the general population.

    4. Re:In other news... by earthforce_1 · · Score: 1

      In other news, Eurasia has always been at war with Oceania.

      --
      My rights don't need management.
  7. Why Texas? by msauve · · Score: 2, Interesting

    California has half again the population of Texas. Is there no CA state approval for textbooks? Seems that CA and TX should balance each other out, politically.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    1. Re:Why Texas? by Lobo42 · · Score: 4, Informative

      From the NY Times:

      "California is the largest textbook market, but besides being bankrupt, it tends to be so specific about what kinds of information its students should learn that few other states follow its lead."

      http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/14/magazine/14texbooks-t.html?scp=3&sq=texas%20education&st=cse

    2. Re:Why Texas? by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      Seems that CA and TX should balance each other out, politically.

      Yeah, because having rabid right wingers and rabid left wingers results in a lovely balanced situation every time! :-P

      No, positive crazy plus negative crazy gives you a big fat zero (as opposed to a skinnier zero).

      To torture a Spinal Tap quote, if the leftists are fire and the rightists are ice, the children will get the educational equivalent of lukewarm water.

    3. Re:Why Texas? by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 1

      California has half again the population of Texas. Is there no CA state approval for textbooks? Seems that CA and TX should balance each other out, politically.

      Like matter and antimatter? So if we move one next to the other, they'll annihilate each other?

      Oh, please, oh please be true.

    4. Re:Why Texas? by Nimey · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's the conservative anti-intellectual thing, I think. In Texas any uneducated asshole can put in his two cents about educational standards, and he's given equal weight with trained, experienced teachers.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    5. Re:Why Texas? by 517714 · · Score: 1

      I think New Mexico and Arizona might object.

      Aw F_ck it it would be worth it!

      --
      The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
    6. Re:Why Texas? by bughunter · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Clearly you don't live in California. Only outside CA is the political system perceived as Liberal. Those of us who live within the state have learned that there are a few enclaves of urban liberalism, surrounded by by vast areas of rural conservatism rivaling those of Kansas or Texas.

      And then there are a number of conservative urban areas, too, like San Diego, San Bernardino, Bakersfield and Orange County.

      But the state continues to be portrayed by the rest of the country as a homogeneous liberal wasteland, populated entirely by hippies and surfers.

      In reality, NY State is more liberal than the state of CA.

      --
      I can see the fnords!
    7. Re:Why Texas? by peterofoz · · Score: 1, Funny

      California is busy vying for the title of 'Most Nanny State' with New York. That's why everything is more expensive here. Public and private space smoking bans, automobile requirements, trash sorting, micromanaged school curriculum, the list goes on and on.

      Now go brush your teeth, don't salt your food, and put air in your tires.

    8. Re:Why Texas? by bcboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      California isn't half so liberal as you apparently believe it is. While the legislature is dominated by Democrats, there is a very strong Republican political machine in the state that's able to deadlock the legislative process. They've also elected quite a few governors, Nixon, Reagan, Wilson. The state school board is rather conservative. Overall, it looks a lot like Washington does now: the Dems, though in the majority, are ineffective. The Republicans are obstructionist. The policies that are implemented are not strongly liberal.

    9. Re:Why Texas? by tigerhawkvok · · Score: 1

      I like the CA school curriculum -- it's pretty good. The problem really is that it's hard to hold those who don't do well, back. How's that, Johnny? You didn't want to do homework and failed math? Take fourth grade again. And again. And again ...

      Oh, and I certainly like the smoking ban. Smoking is not only gross, the smoke affects me strongly enough that my eyes water so hard it is hard to see. Keep that poison in your own home. Away from children and things that can't tell you to stop. Maybe an epic "sin tax", on the order of dollars per cigarette ... then at least while you commit slow, noxious, polluting suicide you can help other people.

      --
      Blog
    10. Re:Why Texas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like Texas, except that we only have one "liberal" city, Austin. Our problem is that everybody thinks we're all slack jawed yokels when really that's mostly the small hick towns in between the large urban areas. I'd equate Austin to San Francisco in how liberal it is.

    11. Re:Why Texas? by ErikZ · · Score: 1

      So it was conservatives that have prevented the building of new power plants due to environmental reasons?

      I seriously doubt CA is in a huge financial hole due to Conservatives. Maybe you're just hypersensitive to people who don't think like you.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    12. Re:Why Texas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate to break it to you, but NY is exactly the same way. The second you are more than 25 minutes from a city, everyone is just as conservative as anywhere else in this country. Where my mom grew up in a rural NY town, I could drive past 5 houses with confederate flags in the windows on any given street . Ever look at the country by county map of the US in terms of what party they voted in national elections? It is totally red, with a few spots of blue in cities.

      It is too bad that conservatism has totally created a parallel intellectual world that is totally fallacious. Conservapedia, Fox [psuedo] News network, and so on. When even your definition of science and logic is skewed, your perception of current events is totally bull, how can we expect them to possibly be brought out of such a world? Who wants to listen to someone they consider a demon?

    13. Re:Why Texas? by StopKoolaidPoliticsT · · Score: 1

      Those of us who live within the state have learned that there are a few enclaves of urban liberalism, surrounded by by vast areas of rural conservatism rivaling those of Kansas or Texas.

      In reality, NY State is more liberal than the state of CA.

      The same thing is true in NY State. If you take away the downstate region (from Albany to NYC along the Hudson corridor and Long Island), you end up with 1,237,159 Democrats, 1,276,389 Republicans, and 726,909 no affiliation in the rest of the state. The cities lean blue, though many of the counties the cities are in go red, and the rest of the state is pretty red. In statewide/national elections, the downstate region's 4,594,286 Democrats, 1,778,131 Republicans, and 1,796,785 NA give an impression that isn't really the reality for the rest of the state.

      Simple fact is, NYC and its metro region completely dominates the rest of the state. For my entire life, there have been murmurs of people wishing to split the state in two because they're tired of not having any real representation (though someone from NYC will complain that they send tax money upstate... sure, in exchange for having to follow NYC's mandates). NYC doesn't like sending money to the rest of the state, but having control over that many more people is just too enticing for the politicians to give the rest of the state up.

      --
      Stop Koolaid Politics
    14. Re:Why Texas? by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Confederate flags? In NEW YORK?! Apparently the revisionist history started a long time ago...

    15. Re:Why Texas? by value_added · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Clearly you don't live in California. Only outside CA is the political system perceived as Liberal. Those of us who live within the state have learned that there are a few enclaves of urban liberalism, surrounded by by vast areas of rural conservatism rivaling those of Kansas or Texas.

      LOL. Nice to see someone point this out for a change. And for those non-residents reading along at home, most Hollywood execs (from agents to production houses to studio heads) have political philosophies more in line with rural Kansas or Texas than those associated with our liberal enclaves. You heard it right, folks. Most of "Hollywood" is conservative. Shouldn't be a surprise, given the amount of money at stake in a given deal or project. The paeons working in the industry, on the other hand, well, creative types invariably and almost by definition espouse (often quite vocally) philosophies different from the mainstream.

      I'd even go farther. There's parts of Kansas, Texas and other states in the deep South are more hip, liberal and/or progressive than what's here in California. I'm fortunate to live in a bohemian-ish enclave, but it's surrounded by miles of working-class, blue-collar neighbourhoods with American flags flying in their front yards, and Bush/Cheney stickers on their cars and trucks. In the wealthier communities, the Bush/Cheney stickers are on SUVs.

    16. Re:Why Texas? by debrisslider · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, you could look at it as the majority party (and state populace, through propositions) passing programs that require too much funding, or the minority party blocking the new taxes being required to pay for the programs. However, the tricky thing is Proposition 13, which was passed in an anti-Tax hysteria back in the 70s, requires a two-thirds majority in the state legislature to raise taxes (to pass the yearly budget, technically) and a two-thirds majority to pass a tax through the state initiative system, while requiring only a standard majority to pass new laws that would require funding (it also keeps property taxes at lower levels than most other states, though that is quite a bit more complicated). It's pretty common for taxes to get past the 50% mark without hitting the 67% mark, so it really only takes a 34% minority to block any increase in revenue, and guess who the usual suspects are? California has only gotten by because it is one of the largest economies in the world and is able to get massive amounts of money anyway, but after 2008 lost somewhere along the lines of an entire quarter of its tax revenue from the recession, and the republicans in the legislature have been as adamantly against tax increases as those in congress are against health care, seeing this as a great opportunity to strike against all their least favorite social programs.

    17. Re:Why Texas? by Khyber · · Score: 1

      Having lived in both Tennessee and California, let me say Tennessee is more expensive.

      What I couldn't live on in TN I most certainly can in CA.

      Public smoking bans I can approve of and I'm a freight train when it comes to smoking. If the place is a place meant for smoking (hookah bars, cigar shops) let smoking exist there. Otherwise, confine it to the home or in your vehicle. Auto requirements, FUCK YES, half the shit from LA settles into our area and hangs there for a few days until either a strong sea breeze blows it away or rain comes and washes it out of the air. WE NEED MORE AUTO REGULATION. Trash sorting, I'm kinda iffy about. We have things that could easily determine/sort automatically by capacitance or conductivity, why make us do it when there's more efficient technology to do it for us? Can't speak about the curriculum (So glad I have those years behind me) and while the list goes on and on, most of the problem lies with the PEOPLE, not the state itself.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    18. Re:Why Texas? by Khyber · · Score: 1

      "And then there are a number of conservative urban areas"

      "San Bernardino,"

      I live here, and it is nowhere as conservative as you make it sound. We just had a CANNABIS CUP held here, for crying out loud! Cypress Hill, vape bags flying around, the works!

      Conservative? Only with the elected officials, and they're not going to be around much longer now that the area has tasted the money legalized and regulated medical marijuana brings in.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    19. Re:Why Texas? by peterofoz · · Score: 1

      and add to that liberals who moderate you as a Troll for having Libertarian views.

    20. Re:Why Texas? by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      You heard it right, folks. Most of "Hollywood" is conservative.

      Really? I wasn't aware that most of "Hollywood" wasn't making movies for the last 20 years. Either that or you just haven't seen many movies in the last couple of decades or heard the people making, writing, or starring in movies give interviews.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    21. Re:Why Texas? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Liberal and Conservative are not very useful labels. The conservatives from Orange County are extremely unlike the conservatives from Kern County, and they don't have similar political views except that both are opposed to liberals and thus will tend to vote similarly. One set will be voting Republican for fiscal conservatives, another set will be voting Republican for social conservatives, and another set will be voting Republican because they hate the incumbents, etc.

    22. Re:Why Texas? by Courageous · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I seriously doubt CA is in a huge financial hole due to Conservatives.

      Well. You don't understand our politics very well, then.

      A huge chunk of Calfornia's mandatory spending (more than half, if I am to understand correctly) comes from the Voter Initiative system, which is by direct democracy and cannot be over ruled by the governor or the legislature.

      One of the problems that California faces is that one of its Propositions, Proposition 13, which is famous for freezing property taxes, does a wee bit more than that. It also basically makes raising revenue through alternative mechanisms politically impractical. Prop 13 was the darling of the Right, as you might guess. So yes, conservatives are, in part, to blame for California's financial problems. The rest of it (the spending part) is to be blamed squarely on the voting public, not the politicians.

      C//

    23. Re:Why Texas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Most of 'Hollywood' is conservative."

      To clarify:

      There's a political gap between "talent" and "Hollywood." The former being the writers, actors, and directors, who espouse liberal beliefs; and the latter being the people who actually make the movies (agents, producers, financiers) who are indeed largely fiscally conservative. They want smaller government, in other words.

      Having lived in LA most of my life I'd say that fiscal conservatism is common, but on social issues we are fairly secular and liberal.

    24. Re:Why Texas? by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      Now go brush your teeth, don't salt your food, and put air in your tires.

      Good advice.

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    25. Re:Why Texas? by CronoCloud · · Score: 1, Interesting

      immigration, you get poor white trash moving from kentucky/tennessee/alabama etc, every so often. They bring their culture with them. Happened in Illinois during the great depression, which sent hordes of sharecroppers (including my Father's grandparents and mother) up north for better lives where they weren't essentially working for whatever "Judge" or "Colonel" (and their close relatives) that owned the entire county. And again in the early 70's and in the late 90's early 2000's. Then in return, our rich folks move south for the winter weather, at least temporarily. So we get poor white trash with no money and they get our folks with money for roughtly 3 or 4 months of the year.

      And the culture thing....wow. They're so fucking loud. "Scraggly goattee guy with the nascar cap" screams at "Fat girlfriend who looks a bit native american" to get his smokes, and she screams at lher little girl who looks biracial to not run around, while the girlfriends even fatter mother is screaming that she needs smokes too while carrying her youngest child which is younger than her daughters daughter. And they're all wearing socks with sandals/crocs in the middle of an Illinois winter. It's the southerners that brought that up north. Scraggly goattee guy often has Klan symbos on the vehicle and has a job as a welder/working on cars/truck driver.

      They bring their churches with them too, once enough of them are in an area they get some old building like an old fertilizer or lawn equipment dealership and put a cross on it. My dad was raised in a church that was primarily southern immigrants and he told me that they taught them all sorts of bigoted stuff that he had to unlearn as the years went by. They weren't happy when he stopped going and were even unhappier when he married my mom, who was a Presbyterian. Wanna know what old time southern evangelicals call Presbyterians? Presbyjewians It was also a church where playing cards was fine, but using dice for any reason was the devil's thing, so they had to play monopoly with a special spinner. A similar church in the same town, also comprised of southern immigrants had the exact opposite rules, no cards, but dice were okay.

    26. Re:Why Texas? by glitch23 · · Score: 1

      So conservatives are anti-intellectual? Let me guess, you are liberal and are a genius? Anyone not on your side is stupid? That isn't elitist in the least. Conservatives really are under attack based on comments from people like you.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    27. Re:Why Texas? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      How dare hoi polloi speak about what they think. Do you apply the same standard to union organizers?

    28. Re:Why Texas? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      California has a spending problem, not a revenue problem. The population is no doubt at fault for this, but Prop 13 has had a lot of salutary effects, too - people don't get forced out of their homes when neighborhoods gentrify and they can't afford new property taxes.

    29. Re:Why Texas? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      The socialists' greatest success was in coopting the name of liberalism. There are a lot of classical liberals who vote on the conservative side of the ballot because they aren't socialists. They also tend not to be opposed to MJ.

    30. Re:Why Texas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ..and for those non-residents reading along at home, most Hollywood execs (from agents to production houses to studio heads) have political philosophies more in line with rural Kansas or Texas...

      Your argument is flawed.

      Hollywood execs must be chosen. They are a chosen people. Chosen from THE chosen people. I mean really, did you think anyone but Jews were in charge of money?

    31. Re:Why Texas? by DesScorp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Clearly you don't live in California. Only outside CA is the political system perceived as Liberal. Those of us who live within the state have learned that there are a few enclaves of urban liberalism, surrounded by by vast areas of rural conservatism rivaling those of Kansas or Texas."

      True, and yet absolutely meaningless. Kansas doesn't have a San Francisco or Los Angeles. California's population has a much heavier urban concentration than either of those states, both in absolute terms and as a percentage of population. It doesn't matter if large rural areas in California are conservative when their biggest cities with the bulk of the state's population is leftist. California is a liberal state because California liberals have King Numbers on their side. The conservatives do not.

      Funny you should mention New York, as a NYC area legislator pressed to have the NYC area secede from the rest of the state. They were too conservative for his tastes. And he's right in that if you take NYC away, NY suddenly becomes a purple state that's up for grabs every election.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    32. Re:Why Texas? by Nimey · · Score: 1

      This is the adult table, kid. Run along.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    33. Re:Why Texas? by Nimey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      NEWSFLASH: Conservative tool interprets someone else's statement so he can feel like a victim, engage in circle-jerk with other conservative victims.

      You've got nothing on my brother-in-law, chum. I've seen this before.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    34. Re:Why Texas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Dems are ineffective because they need massive amounts of public money to fund their campaign promises. The money has run out and probably for quite some time.

    35. Re:Why Texas? by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      "And for those non-residents reading along at home, most Hollywood execs (from agents to production houses to studio heads) have political philosophies more in line with rural Kansas or Texas than those associated with our liberal enclaves. You heard it right, folks. Most of "Hollywood" is conservative. Shouldn't be a surprise, given the amount of money at stake in a given deal or project."

      I'm sorry, but that's laughable. While execs may not be as liberal as, say, George Clooney or Michael Moore, to say that they're like people in Kansas or Texas is silly. I'll agree that there are more people that aren't liberal than you might think in Hollywood, but that doesn't necessarily make them conservative either.

      The money issue is another thing as well. I don't see Steven Spielberg, Tom Hanks, or David Geffen giving all they own to the poor. They're quite adamant in defending their wealth. That idea that if someone is out to make money then they aren't liberal is ludicrous. Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, and Steve Jobs are all Democrats, after all.

      If this cabal of studio executives are conservatives, why are they continually greenlighting a string of anti-war movies that are hemorrhaging money? Execs may be sometimes scared of offending the bourgeois, but conservative? Uh, no.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    36. Re:Why Texas? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      I'm a native Texan. FYI, we affectionately call liberal Austinites "star children". It means a lone mind of the Lone Star of Texas. Austin = San Fran indeed!

      Now you know.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    37. Re:Why Texas? by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      "While the legislature is dominated by Democrats, there is a very strong Republican political machine in the state that's able to deadlock the legislative process."

      That has little to do with numbers of Republicans, and everything to do with the very structure of government in California.

      "They've also elected quite a few governors, Nixon, Reagan, Wilson."

      In the distant past, yes. And Wilson was a pro-choice moderate. New England was once staunchly Republican. Changing demographics and changing politics change elections.

      "The policies that are implemented are not strongly liberal."

      Really, how are you coming to this conclusion? California has their own blends of gasoline because of the state government. The state government is, by far, the largest employer in the state. Look also at individual employers. The list is also heavily dominated by state and local agencies, or institutions paid for with state tax dollars, like universities. The single fastest growing employment sector, by percentage of employment, is for government. Only Connecticut is outpacing CA in growth of government jobs vs. private sector jobs by percentage.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    38. Re:Why Texas? by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Having lived in LA most of my life I'd say that fiscal conservatism is common, but on social issues we are fairly secular and liberal.

      The laws passed by the state of California don't back up your claims. I'm a classic liberal (so fiscally conservative and socially liberal), and you couldn't pay me to live in California with all the bogus things the state government does.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    39. Re:Why Texas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was able to contract in San Jose for a few months last year. (My permanent residence was in NC.)

      I found that the people that I met between San Jose and SF were not as "liberal" as I would have imagined. Though some those who are liberal are screaamingly so. I also noticed that Raleigh is more "progressive" in matters such as recycling, land development and environmental issues-- at least that's how it appeared. (Action vs. talk anyway.)

      California is a very beautiful state.... And I am happy to have spent some time there. I had a great time.

      On the other hand, I met quite a few people who, once they knew I lived in "The South" openly assumed I was an illiterate small-town hick. "This must be quite a culture shock for you, coming from NC" was pretty common. It was *very* obvious that some people from the bay area in particular think that they are on the leading edge in all fronts. And while the bay area is known for being progressive leaders, they really are not that far ahead.

      (Interestingly, nobody noticed that I do not have a Southern accent. I am not *from* the South; I just lived there at the time.)

      On the negative side: I was pretty disappointed with the arrogance of some of my associates; they seemd to have low expectations of me and of all things outside of northern California. Even casual debate quickly led to shallow "Bay-Area progressive opinion" without any real logical argument to back it up or support it as a *conclusion.* It was a bitch to get anyone to understand that (mostly liberal) bay-area politics and California politics doesn't necessarily translate well to other parts of the country, even if they are perfectly acceptable in SF. People are are different. The values of communities across the country are different. You would think that people who are quick to promote diversity would be able to accept that there are people who disagree with them. But the recurring theme was simply that they are right, and everyone who disagreed s wrong, and probably uneducated. So I never really got a good insider explanation of why the bay area politics are the way the are. I figure it might be as simple as a group of like-minded people migrating to the area in search of like-minded people.

      In the worst cases (on-line especially), it was like trying to argue with a campus bible-thumper, except that bible-thumbers rarely make personal attacks. (Telling me I'm going to hell isn't that personal. Calling me an uneducated knuckle-dragger or "mouth breather" is personal.)

      And I'm not even conservative on social issues....

       

    40. Re:Why Texas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How would you feel about an educated asshole?

      I lived in Texas most my life. Education and all for the most part. (my 4th Grade year was in Florida)
      The School System of my area regardless didn't know how to reach the students and only those who really wanted to learn got anything out of it.
      I went to school saying, "This is just business as usual, might as well make the most of it, keep my head down since Teachers got it just as bad."

      My HS Freshmen Class was about 1000+ Students.
      Same Class by Senior Year was only just over 300.
      700 Students either falling behind or dropping out.

      It's obviously a problem in Texas. I'm not sure about else where. But it's a problem in Texas.

      That and I was able to Half-Ass it and still make it into the top 20%.
      Oh and Uni has been schooling my ass like I've never known before. It's nice to have a strong challenge.

    41. Re:Why Texas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well on the bright side for California, it'll have the only well educated high school graduates in 20 years if the rest of the country adopts TX's books....

    42. Re:Why Texas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So... in practice, reality has a conservative bias?

    43. Re:Why Texas? by Nimey · · Score: 1

      I don't understand what your argument is.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    44. Re:Why Texas? by bughunter · · Score: 1

      Revenue can't be the problem because if it were, then we might have to admit we need to raise taxes or fees.

      An intransigent, ideologically motivated party, rancorous towards anyone who suggests raising revenue has blocked all attempts in the past 6 or 7 years to solve the revenue problem by any means except cutting funding for things like food stamps, libraries, schools, and parks. The 2/3rds Prop 13 obstacle is their lever.

      Falling revenue is driven by an unemployment and recession problem, but spending is down too... you just can't cut the spending by as much as the revenue has fallen without closing entire schools, prisons, and bridges.

      It's a revenue problem as much as anything else. But it's made worse when we can't fix that part of the equation.

      --
      I can see the fnords!
    45. Re:Why Texas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because you can find some pot smoking liberals in San Berdoo doesn't mean the place, on average, isn't one step left of Sheriff Joe Arpaio. And besides, liberals aren't the only ones who toke.

      Here's a more telling demographic indicator: The only NASCAR event on the West Coast is in SB.

    46. Re:Why Texas? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Just out of curiosity, why not bump sales taxes? I've seen that credited, rightly or wrongly, as one of the reasons that Texas hasn't had the problems that California has - illegals pay sales taxes.

    47. Re:Why Texas? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Oh, and I certainly like the smoking ban. Smoking is not only gross, the smoke affects me strongly enough that my eyes water so hard it is hard to see. Keep that poison in your own home.

      Vehicles kill, let's ban vehicles. And they smoke, so they should be banned for that too. Exhaust from then have nearly blinded me and made it hard to breath while riding my bike, so they should be banned. Keep that poisonous death traps in your own home, and don't let the pollution escape.

      Falcon

    48. Re:Why Texas? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      I live here, and it is nowhere as conservative as you make it sound. We just had a CANNABIS CUP held here, for crying out loud! Cypress Hill, vape bags flying around, the works!

      Except Conservatives support the fake War on Drugs. Nixon got to pick all of the members for a presidential commission to study whether hemp, marijuana, should be legalized or not. Before the commission ever made it's decision Nixon came flat out and said he'd never agree to allow it to be legalized, which is exactly what his commission recommended. Although almost all members were drug warriors "they started talking about legalization". Two more conservatives opposed to legal drugs were Ronald and Nancy Reagan. President Reagan increased the size of the war on drugs and Nancy started the "Just Say No" campaign.

      The War on Drugs isn't a Conservative or a Socialist (I won't say liberal because most of those who call then that are not liberal) issue, they both support it.

      Falcon

    49. Re:Why Texas? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      "The policies that are implemented are not strongly liberal."

      Really, how are you coming to this conclusion? California has their own blends of gasoline because of the state government. The state government is, by far, the largest employer in the state.

      You as much as admitted California isn't liberal. Liberals are "committed to the ideal of limited government and liberty of individuals including freedom of religion, speech, press, and assembly, and free markets." That is the opposite of the state government as the biggest employer.

      Falcon

    50. Re:Why Texas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a California State Approval for Textbooks, however the textbooks that come out of California are well known to have the most ridiculously liberal bias in the nation. Therefor we turn to Texas, which is balanced out because the school board is dominated by the more liberal-minded thinkers in a conservative state.

    51. Re:Why Texas? by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Well sure, but all that is true of the country as a whole as well. Urban areas of America are liberal and contain most of the population, but most of the land area (containing the national minority of rural-dwellers) votes conservative.

    52. Re:Why Texas? by Bobb+Sledd · · Score: 1

      ...kind of like Slashdot?

      I don't understand your thinking. If I wanted to know the answer to a database question, would I ask a teacher or would I ask someone who builds and supports databases as their career? Then why would you think that a "trained teacher" is the best to ask on any other subject?

      My father, mother, wife, two cousins, and several friends are all teachers and I can tell you from observation and from their stories that the vast majority of teachers are barely competent enough to recognize the best methodologies to use when teaching, let alone have any mastery of the content they teach on.

      And it really isn't all their fault. The problem is that you have such a large and diverse level of competency in your students --- in just one classroom -- and then are told you have to make everyone pass by some criteria. You have kids that don't really want to be there, and refuse to learn, as well as kids who do. So it often de-evolves into baby-sitting more than education. And that robs the kids of their getting a good education.

      Obviously not all the time. I'm making a generalization, which has many exceptions.

      --
      "They said I probly shouldn't fly with just one eye," "I am Bender. Please insert girder."
    53. Re:Why Texas? by debrisslider · · Score: 1

      Didn't see this until days later, but in case you ever check: here in Monterey Co, CA, which has one of the highest per capita illegal populations in the state, we pay an 8.25% sales tax, already higher than Texas.

  8. Can someone explain please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I don't know much about this issue. Can someone who does tell me what the conservatives wanted in the books, what the liberals wanted in the books, and what actually happened? All I saw on the news was someone use the race card against the conservatives, which doesn't speak well of either side to me.

    1. Re:Can someone explain please by mdwh2 · · Score: 5, Informative

      You could RTFA :) It contains several of the amendments that were passed.

      To comment on a few:

      Mr. Bradley ... won approval for an amendment stressing that Germans and Italians were interned in the United States as well as the Japanese during World War II, to counter the idea that the internment of Japanese was motivated by racism.

      Yes, obviously that means it can't have been an issue of race...

      In the field of sociology, another conservative member, Barbara Cargill, won passage of an amendment requiring the teaching of the importance of personal responsibility for life choices in a section on teen suicide, dating violence, sexuality, drug use and eating disorders.

      The topic of sociology tends to blame society for everything, Ms. Cargill said.

      Wow - are they going to stop blaming images, films, porn, rock music and computer games for these things too?

    2. Re:Can someone explain please by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      They tossed out the founding fathers (who only get a light brushing in most history books to begin with) to talk about great heroes to the USA like Reagan, Rush and Bush.

    3. Re:Can someone explain please by BitHive · · Score: 5, Informative

      Here's an excerpt from: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/11/us/politics/11texas.html?src=me

      There have also been efforts among conservatives on the board to tweak the history of the civil rights movement. One amendment states that the movement created “unrealistic expectations of equal outcomes” among minorities. Another proposed change removes any reference to race, sex or religion in talking about how different groups have contributed to the national identity.

      The amendments are also intended to emphasize the unalloyed superiority of the “free-enterprise system” over others and the desirability of limited government.

      One says publishers should “describe the effects of increasing government regulation and taxation on economic development and business planning.”

      Throughout the standards, the conservatives have pushed to drop references to American “imperialism,” preferring to call it expansionism. “Country and western music” has been added to the list of cultural movements to be studied.

      References to Ralph Nader and Ross Perot are proposed to be removed, while Stonewall Jackson, the Confederate general, is to be listed as a role model for effective leadership, and the ideas in Jefferson Davis’s inaugural address are to be laid side by side with Abraham Lincoln’s speeches.

      Early in the hearing on Wednesday, Mr. McLeroy and other conservatives on the board made it clear they would offer still more planks to highlight what they see as the Christian roots of the Constitution and other founding documents.

      “To deny the Judeo-Christian values of our founding fathers is just a lie to our kids,” said Ken Mercer, a San Antonio Republican.

    4. Re:Can someone explain please by T+Murphy · · Score: 0

      I've heard claims that some schools in the south don't actually teach students who won the civil war. Given how distorted these textbooks are getting, it (sadly) sounds plausible. Anyone know for sure?

    5. Re:Can someone explain please by Bemopolis · · Score: 1

      ...Stonewall Jackson, the Confederate general, is to be listed as a role model for effective leadership.

      They get 100 percent support from me to follow that example, seeing how Jackson was shot and killed by his own troops.

      --
      "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
    6. Re:Can someone explain please by bertoelcon · · Score: 1

      Not at my high school in Texas, others may differ however.

      --
      Anything can be found funny, from a certain point of view.
    7. Re:Can someone explain please by BitHive · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You mean the war of northern aggression?

    8. Re:Can someone explain please by amilo100 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I am not American, but will comment on a few things.

      One says publishers should “describe the effects of increasing government regulation and taxation on economic development and business planning.”

      I fail to see anything wrong with that.

      References to Ralph Nader and Ross Perot are proposed to be removed,

      Both of these characters (while more recent) have actually had very little political impact (less so than Stonewall Jackson). Ralf Nader is a minor political player and Ross Perot a failed presidential candidate (there are plenty of those around, e.g. Kerry, Al Gore, Dan Quale, etc...)

      while Stonewall Jackson, the Confederate general, is to be listed as a role model for effective leadership,

      Stonewall Jackson was a very famous (and effective) general in the Civil War. Whether you dislike him or not, the fact remains that he was an honourable man and a great leader. The same could be said for Robert E. Lee.

      “Country and western music” has been added to the list of cultural movements to be studied.

      Country music is much better than the modern clap-trap that people listen to (e.g. Hip-hop, rap, etc). It also had a significant social impact. I fail to see a problem here (although it would be nice if they also learn classical music). inaugural address are to be laid side by side with Abraham Lincoln’s speeches.

      What amazes me about Americans is that they like leaders who start wars. Every leader is expected to start at least one good war. Quite a few wars have been popular in the USA and led to increased popularity of the president (e.g. Gulf War, Kosovo War, Clinton’s bombing campaigns). The only reason GWB was unpopular was because he didn’t win his wars.

      I doubt that Lincoln would be remembered if he used his skills to avoid a disastrous civil war? Probably not. Thanks to that disastrous war he is a national hero.

      “To deny the Judeo-Christian values of our founding fathers is just a lie to our kids,” said Ken Mercer, a San Antonio Republican.

      There is little doubt that Christianity had a large influence on the American politics. The founding fathers wanted a country where there is freedom of religion – not freedom from religion (as the far left portrays it).

    9. Re:Can someone explain please by Skidborg · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      What about the older founders of America? The Pilgrims weren't exactly sparkling examples of atheism, and they're one of the reasons you're not speaking Spanish right now.

      --
      Supporter of the +1 Over Dramatic mod option. In memory of apk.
    10. Re:Can someone explain please by thomasw_lrd · · Score: 0

      When I first moved north, I wondered what MLK Jr. Day was, Down in Alabama, we call it Robert E Lee Day.

      Southern by the Grace of God.

    11. Re:Can someone explain please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes, one of the hallmarks of effective leaders is that they die after being shot by their own troops

    12. Re:Can someone explain please by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 2, Informative

      References to Ralph Nader and Ross Perot are proposed to be removed,

      Both of these characters (while more recent) have actually had very little political impact (less so than Stonewall Jackson). Ralf Nader is a minor political player and Ross Perot a failed presidential candidate (there are plenty of those around, e.g. Kerry, Al Gore, Dan Quale, etc...)

      Didn't pay much attention to the 2000 election or those shenanigans in Florida, did you?

      The only reason GWB was unpopular was because he didn’t win his wars.

      Sure. The fact that he ransacked the economy, broke all spending records to double the deficit, alienated just about everybody else in the world, and was an unapologetic idiot had nothing to do with it.

      "Insightful" my ass.

      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
    13. Re:Can someone explain please by e9th · · Score: 1

      Do you believe that the officer who ordered his troops to fire on Jackson's party knew who they were?

    14. Re:Can someone explain please by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      The amendments are also intended to emphasize the unalloyed superiority of the “free-enterprise system” over others and the desirability of limited government.

      One says publishers should “describe the effects of increasing government regulation and taxation on economic development and business planning.”

      Wow, so you mean they'll actually start teaching facts again? Who gives a rats ass about the evolution or religion crap as long as kids will actually understand what happens when you give the government infinite power. It doesn't matter what people are taught about evolution or religion if they're not free to run their own lives.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    15. Re:Can someone explain please by BitHive · · Score: 1

      Oh please, show me where people are taught that the government should have infinite power and that business is bad. This whining is getting really annoying.

    16. Re:Can someone explain please by BergZ · · Score: 1

      Not teaching evolution is a symptom of moving further away from, not closer to, the facts and fact based reasoning. Why this should concern you is that people with little or no sense of fact based reasoning are known for imposing their mystical thinking on everyone else.

      --
      Warning: This sig is not thread safe. For more information see Slashdot's sig policy.
    17. Re:Can someone explain please by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with Spanish? I think it's a lovely language.

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    18. Re:Can someone explain please by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      Amusing. Republicans are so confused today. Upthread we get one stating that Abraham Lincoln was a Republican, and the Republicans should get credit for ending slavery, and here we have one calling the Civil War the "war of northern aggression". It's quite amusing. Some of you want to embrace Lincoln, and the rest of you want to say the Civil War was only about states rights. Cognitive Dissonance is alive and well in the modern conservative movement.

    19. Re:Can someone explain please by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      Stonewall Jackson was a very famous (and effective) general in the Civil War. Whether you dislike him or not, the fact remains that he was an honourable man and a great leader. The same could be said for Robert E. Lee

      An honourable man would not have taken up arms against the consititution he was sworn to defend. In fact, both men were Traitors with a capital T. Lee refused Lincoln's offer to command the Union Army and in fact commanded the Army opposing it. Had I been Lincoln, I would have had Lee executed on the spot when captured, the bastard.

      Lets put it another way. Suppose GWB had offered me the command of the Army in Afghanistan. Suppose instead I took up command of the Taliban instead. That would make me a Traitor, right?

    20. Re:Can someone explain please by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      They celebrate a traitor? One who chose to turn his back on the constitution he had sworn to protect, because he was a "Virginian first, and American second"?

      Dr. Martin Luther King was a better man than that traitorous bastard Lee ever was.

    21. Re:Can someone explain please by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Both of these characters (while more recent) have actually had very little political impact

      Try looking back a couple of decades. As a candidate Ralph Nader may have been insignificant but his consumer activism and continuing legacy in his foundations is pretty significant.

    22. Re:Can someone explain please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mr. Bradley ... won approval for an amendment stressing that Germans and Italians were interned in the United States as well as the Japanese during World War II, to counter the idea that the internment of Japanese was motivated by racism.

      Yes, obviously that means it can't have been an issue of race...

      How many Chinese, Koreans, et al were interned? Back then, "yellas were yellas". If it is true that Germans and Italians were interned, then that lends even more credence that it was about misguided protection from potentially hostile enemy agents at a time of worldwide war.

    23. Re:Can someone explain please by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Enter almost any American school and you'll see for yourself.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    24. Re:Can someone explain please by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Well first, it takes just as much faith to believe that everything randomly happened by chance (when it's statistically impossible), but that's a whole different issue. And before you rant about me being a religious nut, no, I don't think that God made everything or that I have the answers, I'm just pointing out that one myth is just as ludicrous as the next.

      On to you "point". See, you missed the point of my post - my point was that if we stop brainwashing kids into believing whatever the government says and being mindless drones, then they are free to learn on their own. It won't matter if a school teaches them that babies come from storks because they'd be free to learn on their own (and others would be free to teach them) that it isn't true. Freedom to make your own decisions makes everything else a moot point.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    25. Re:Can someone explain please by haruharaharu · · Score: 1

      or southern treason...

      --
      Reboot macht Frei.
    26. Re:Can someone explain please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To deny the Judeo-Christian values of our founding fathers is just a lie

      Wait.. _Judeo_-Christian? How are Protestants _Judeo_-Christian?

      http://www.adherents.com/gov/Founding_Fathers_Religion.html

    27. Re:Can someone explain please by amilo100 · · Score: 1

      In fact, both men were Traitors with a capital T. Lee refused Lincoln's offer to command the Union Army and in fact commanded the Army opposing it.

      Wasn't Lee loyal to his state? I always thought that the idea of the USA was that it was a Union of independent states. When Virginia seceded, Lee was no longer bounded by the constitution of the USA.

      taken up arms against the consititution he was sworn to defend.

      Lincoln at that stage was the president who broke the constitution the most. As an example, consider his suspension of habeas corpus spending money without congressional approval, etc...

    28. Re:Can someone explain please by BergZ · · Score: 1

      In order to provide anything useful to this discussion you would have to prove that children are being brainwashed by the current public school curriculum.

      --
      Warning: This sig is not thread safe. For more information see Slashdot's sig policy.
    29. Re:Can someone explain please by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      Our country was founded by those who signed the declaration of independence, fought in the revolution and wrote/ratified our constitution.

      The Pilgrims are not founders of this country.

    30. Re:Can someone explain please by QuantumRiff · · Score: 1

      Mr. Bradley ... won approval for an amendment stressing that Germans and Italians were interned in the United States as well as the Japanese during World War II, to counter the idea that the internment of Japanese was motivated by racism.

      I know this isn't the place to raise this, and that I'm preaching to the choir, but German PoW's were stationed in southern Oregon, about 2 hours from Lakeview, CA, where the Japanse were interred. (strangely enough, neither was too far from the only American deaths from the Japanese Balloon bombs.) One was built like a prison, and the other group, they got to go out onto the local farms, and help the farmers harvest crops. They even convinced my grandpa to try smoking once, and would thank him when he would sneak them some liqour, and play baseball with him and the neighbor kids.. Guess which one is which..

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    31. Re:Can someone explain please by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>Yes, obviously that means it can't have been an issue of race...

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_(cryptography)#Magic_and_United_States_Executive_Order_9066

    32. Re:Can someone explain please by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Wow, so you mean they'll actually start teaching facts again? Who gives a rats ass about the evolution or religion crap as long as kids will actually understand what happens when you give the government infinite power. It doesn't matter what people are taught about evolution or religion if they're not free to run their own lives.

      Wow. It doesn't matter much how much money you have if you live in a fantasy-land. I applaud them for including Milton Friedman and Friedrich von Hayek, but that's 1 positive to a bunch of negatives. They also want to teach myths and right out lies.

      Falcon

    33. Re:Can someone explain please by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Have you been in the public school system in the last 30 years or so? Where they teach them that government run businesses and redistributing wealth are capitalist and not socialist / communist? Where they teach that no one is responsible for their own actions and that someone else is always responsible for what you do / you're responsible for what someone else does?

      Either you're incredibly ignorant of what goes on in public schools or you're one of the ones pushing for this bullshit to be taught.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    34. Re:Can someone explain please by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Country music is much better than the modern clap-trap that people listen to (e.g. Hip-hop, rap, etc)

      That is a matter of opinion not fact.

      It also had a significant social impact.

      And according to those who want to ban rap et al. it leads people to become criminals, treat women as dirt, and so on.

      What amazes me about Americans is that they like leaders who start wars

      Utter Bullshit!

      There is little doubt that Christianity had a large influence on the American politics. The founding fathers wanted a country where there is freedom of religion - not freedom from religion (as the far left portrays it).

      Yes Christianity had an influence but the USA was not founded on Judeo-Christian values. Thomas Jefferson both wrote the Declaration of Independence, which does not contain any reference to a supreme deity, and coined the term "separation of church and state". Actually many of the Founding Fathers were Deists not Christians. TJ was one in the sense that he believed Jesus was a great teacher, but not in the sense that Jesus was the :Son Of God". As a Deist himself he believed religion "can be determined using reason and observation of the natural world alone, without the need for either faith or organized religion. Deists tend to, but do not necessarily, reject the notion that God intervenes in human affairs, for example through miracles and revelations." That is probably why the school board dropped Thomas Jefferson from the list of people who's writings will not be studied. They can't have it be taught that a Founding Father thought religion was a private matter and not something that should dictate public policy.

      Falcon

    35. Re:Can someone explain please by cjsm · · Score: 1

      Both of these characters (while more recent) have actually had very little political impact (less so than Stonewall Jackson). Ralf Nader is a minor political player

      Well, Ralph Nadar did write "Unsafe at Any Speed?", exposing how poorly designed automobiles were for safety, that and his activism, testifying before congess, etc, led to the redisigning of cars with crumple zones, seat belts as standard, etc. Ralph Nadar is almost solely responsible for launching the revolution in automoble saftey design which has saved hundreds of thousands of lives, and millions of injuries. For that alone he deverves a place in history books.

      --
      This ad space for rent.
  9. "I reject notion of separation of church and state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    “I reject the notion by the left of a constitutional separation of church and state,” said David Bradley, a conservative from Beaumont who works in real estate. “I have $1,000 for the charity of your choice if you can find it in the Constitution.”

    Oh boy.

  10. Really? by mosb1000 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Will they also emphasize the decline and perversion of Christian values in Government? How about the fact that the inclusion of Christian values in government affairs necessarily renders them un-Christian? I'm not sure how "conservatives" ever became associated with Christian values.

    1. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is that? Look at history, what have christian 'values' been over the centuries? It seems to fit the bill just fine to me.

    2. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'm not sure how "conservatives" ever became associated with Christian values.

      I believe it was a fairly well documented strategic move by the Regan administration. Or was it Bush senior? Either way, the Republicans did it to counter act the image of them being all about the rich protecting the rich and grab some extra working class votes.

      Panned out pretty well, much to the annoyance of anyone who believes in conservative economic policies, but not in Jesus.

    3. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The founding fathers were pretty Christian. The problem is, they were the wrong Christian. They were made second class citizens because of their religion. The founding fathers could have simply made a new Christian nation of their own. Instead, they made separation of church and state so that they wouldn't have the same problems their parent nation had.

      Separation of church and state in the United States was created mostly by Christians. Separation of church and state is the Christian thing to do.

    4. Re: Really? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how "conservatives" ever became associated with Christian values.

      They're associated with the term, not with the values.

      On that topic, FWIW, apparently a lot of churches / religious leaders are taking umbrage at Glenn Beck's rant against religion's traditional support for social justice.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    5. Re:Really? by bananaquackmoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Panned out pretty well, much to the annoyance of anyone who believes in conservative economic policies, but not in Jesus.

      In addition to the annoyance of those of us who believe in Christian values, but not in conservative economic policies.

    6. Re:Really? by mosb1000 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Various institutions have co-opted the name (most notably the Catholic Church, but there have been many others including the Republican Party). But just using the name doesn't make it Christian. I don't think an institution or organization can even be christian, I think that's reserved for people.

      Jesus was completely clear that we should lead by example, and not by ordering each other around, claiming moral superiority, or threat of force. That puts just about every political party and government institution outside the realm of practicing Christian values.

    7. Re:Really? by Snarkalicious · · Score: 1

      Short Version: Dixiecrats needed a place to run to when their party picked up the civil rights banner and later picked a Papist for the national ticket. They took with them with them the low information voters they'd been buying off for years in the southern states the represented. Nixon was more than happy to have those states in his camp, even though he was far to cynical to embrace their evangelism in the same way later Republican candidates did. Hence, the Party of Lincoln became something else entirely as the Military Indutrialists made nice with the worst face of modern Christianity, regardless of the deep and inherent conflicts that exist between the Mixed Testament Biblical and Lassaiez Faire Corporatist philosophies.

      Short Short Version: Politcal expedience.

    8. Re:Really? by je+ne+sais+quoi · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Heh, I'm sure somewhere you can find in one of Jesus' sermons something about tax cuts for the wealthy and how socialism is the work of the devil. Oh right, maybe not:

      Jesus spoke remarkably often about wealth and poverty. To the poor he said, "Blessed are you poor, for yours is the kingdom of God," (Luke's version). To the rich he said, "Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth," and "go, sell what you have, and give to the poor." When the rich turned away from him because they couldn't follow his command he observed, "it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God."

      I'm sure what he really meant to say is that these things are okay as long as it's not the government who is doing these things, then it's a work of the devil.

      --
      Gentlemen! You can't fight in here, this is the war room!
    9. Re:Really? by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how "conservatives" ever became associated with Christian values.

      Really? Could it be because they talk about Christianity a lot, and Democrats, not so much? I'm not saying Christian Republicans are "more Christian" than Christian Democrats, but obviously Democrats don't talk about Christian values very often. Republicans do a lot more. So people with lots of religious concerns tend to be Republicans. Isn't that obvious? Which part am I getting wrong?
      By the way, "becoming associated" is something that happens in an individual's brain, not in reality. So the association seems to be one that YOU buy into. Are you sure most people share that?

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    10. Re:Really? by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how "conservatives" ever became associated with Christian values.

      Marketing.

      Conservatives are aware that many of their policies are not supported by sufficient voters to win elections. So they needed another angle to fool people* into voting for them so that they could enact their policies. So Reagan brought the fundamentalist Christians into the Republican tent. It got him elected and Republicans/Conservatives have been relying on that ever since.

      * By 'fool people', I mean Reagan and similar Republicans would tell the fundamentalists what they want to hear, but never quite get around to enacting most of the fundamentalists's agenda. However, in recent years the fundamentalists have managed to seize enough of the Republican party to start getting their agenda implemented, much to the detriment of the Republican party.

    11. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It started way before Reagan. It's been going on at least as far back as Goldwater.

    12. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one who believes in Christian values also believe in conservative economic policies as the two are diametric opposites.

    13. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah yes, because as we all know, cognitive function strictly adheres to the principles of logic.

    14. Re:Really? by Atsjoo · · Score: 0

      There is a difference between belief and the kind of mental illness necessary to combine predatory exploitation of the poor with the biblical demands for selfless compassion. Anyone who calls himself a christian conservative, likely doesn't know the meaning of either term.

    15. Re:Really? by ppanon · · Score: 1

      That depends on your definition of conservative economic policies. If by conservative economic policies, you mean producing balanced budgets and saving money during boom times that can be used to support the economy during recessions according to Keynesian principles, then I don't see how they are incompatible. If you mean the travesty of what is currently peddled as "conservative economic policy" involving cutting taxes for everybody (but especially the rich and corporations) and increasing nepotist spending on corporate welfare, resulting in massive structural deficits, then OK, but I fail to see what is conservative about the latter.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    16. Re:Really? by Ozlanthos · · Score: 1

      Reagan did it...actually the televangelists claimed to have "conservative", "christian-AMERICAN values". Since then, the christians have tried to get rid of knowledge that most of the founding fathers were in fact "deist free-masons". They'd also like all of us to forget the native american influence on this country's founding documents.

      -Oz

    17. Re:Really? by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Well, see, then the tax system should be set up to keep the poor in their condition, the better that they may be blessed.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    18. Re:Really? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      It was all about abortion. Many christians will not vote for any candidate that supports abortion. My dad could not bring himself to vote for Obama, despite liking him and strongly disliking McCain, only because of abortion.

      --
      Qxe4
    19. Re:Really? by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      You know, Jesus was a pretty nice guy. It's all his so-called followers that give his religion such a bad reputation.

    20. Re:Really? by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      It actually began with Roosevelt with the Democrats essentially becoming two parties: Northern and Southern, kind of like how the Republican party is two parties now: Church and Country Club. The resentment just built up over the years, the Dixiecrats hated Elanor Roosevelt, and they didn't like Truman desegregating the military, but Kennedy and LBJ broke the camels back. And then as you said, Nixon was glad to have them, he needed them because there weren't enough Country Club Republicans to win elections in many places.

    21. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Side note: Jesus is telling a joke here that is missed by modern readers. The actual quote is about a rich man getting to heaven is like a camel going through The Eye of the Needle. It was an actual doorway in the wall of Jerusalem so small camels would have to kneel to get through. So he telling people, in a funny way, that a rich man needs to be humble (kneel) if he wants to get to heaven.

      Hey, it was funny stuff at the time.

    22. Re:Really? by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 0

      Talk about taking a passage out of context! The quoted text instructs the rich to give voluntarily of their own possessions. It says nothing about seizing and distributing the property of others. In fact, if you really want a religious pretext for your political views you'll have to look much further back; the entire New Testament is decidedly apolitical in nature, dealing with the actions of individuals rather than nation-states or other organized groups.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    23. Re:Really? by megajason · · Score: 1

      You can get almost any religious text to support almost any idea if you take partial sentences out of context.

      To be clear, charity is when a person in need of help asks his neighbors for it and his neighbors decide that they are able to help him. Charity is also when a person with means to help asks his neighbors if they need help and helps them if he can.

      What government does is something different: The group of people with police power (government) define another group of people as "needy." They then forcibly transfer resources from other groups to the "needy" group. The motivations for doing this include, but are not limited to, actually helping the so-called "needy" group. This is not charity and it is not justice. This is called stealing or tyranny. You can tell it is tyranny because if you are in the group whose resource are being transferred to the "needy" and decide that the "needy" aren't actually needy or that the methods being used to help the "needy" won't actually help them, or that you are actually more in need of your resources than the "needy" are, and you decide not to participate in the government charity, the government sends people with guns to your house and forces you to participate regardless of the merits of your objections.

      Notice that under the government system, the "needy" don't necessarily ask for help or even necessarily approve of the methods of help.

    24. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here is the correct exegesis:

      1) "Blessed are you poor, for yours is the Kingdom of God" is from the beatitudes section of the "Sermon on the Mount." Its purpose is to contrast the suffering of the righteous with the reward they will receive in heaven. It is a reminder to the faithful to have an eternal perspective. (Obviously, this presupposes eternity and a benevolent God). It has nothing whatever to do with attaining wealth and prosperity in this life, despite what you may have heard on TV.

      2) "Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth" is only a partial quote and, therefore, misleading. It's missing: "where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal." It was not directed at the rich, but at the population in general. In fact, the consensus is that most of those who followed Jesus were poor. It follows a common Biblical theme that investing in personal possessions is a waste of effort when contrasted to earning eternal favor with God.

      3) "Go, sell what you have and give it to the poor" was told to a man who came to verify that his life of piety was sufficient to earn him a place in heaven. When Jesus gave him this command, He was testing whether the man really loved God or whether he loved possessions more. The lesson here is not that one should give everything away, but that the love of possessions can shackle a man enough to keep him out of heaven. As Jesus said, "The *love* of money is root of all sorts of evil", not the money itself.

      4) "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God" was not a jab at the rich, but at the poor. You'll notice that immediately afterward, his disciples are shocked and ask "Who then can be saved?" Back then, much like today, people believed that charitable giving guaranteed a person favor with God. The point made here is that not even the richest of people can "bribe" their way into heaven. In response to the question, Jesus answered: "With people this is impossible, but with God all things are possible." That includes heaven includes heaven for both the rich and poor.

    25. Re:Really? by tiqui · · Score: 1

      You seem to have completely missed the point of the texts you quoted. Nowhere in the New Testament is there a proclamation to send forth tax collectors to take from one person by force and give to another. You are correct that Jesus taught about the pointlessness of accumulating vast wealth for yourself while others suffer, BUT he NEVER said your wealth should be taken from you by force and handed out to those who were unwilling to work. INDIVIDUALS are responsible for giving by their own free will as they see fit to those they see as being in legitimate need.

      Indeed, you are incapable of being charitable to others if government comes and takes all that you can spare, so it can go buy the votes of the poor by handing it out and taking credit for it.

      Do not show how much you "care" for the poor by voting for some jerk who promises to "soak the rich" and give to the poor while leaving you alone...that's NOT Christian, nor is it charity. You get no moral brownie points for supporting the theft of somebody else's stuff to benefit the needy. Instead, look around for somebody in need and then sell your PS3 or XBOX360 and give the proceeds to that person in need. THAT is charity.

    26. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it's more about personal actions that assist the needy then enacting laws or establishing programs to assist the needy. The former involves a lot less pork, and requires one to actually emphasize with the unfortunate instead of mindlessly pay their 50% income tax while grumbling about those slobs living off their paycheck.

  11. oh no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what if they teach about the constitution and shit? THAT WOULD BE BAD!!!!

    1. Re:oh no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a European I've never understood why republicans are labeled red in the USA. In Europe the color red in a political context symbolizes politics leaning left (socialist) and blue is right (conservative).

      Look at the flags. China = Red, Soviet = Red.

    2. Re:oh no! by biryokumaru · · Score: 1

      Ya, in the US red is interpreted as the people who want to take away our freedoms. It makes more sense to us, because we don't have formal public education on actual political ideology.

      --
      When you're afraid to download music illegally in your own home, then the terrorists have won!
    3. Re:oh no! by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      Network tv used to use red for the incumbent/majority party, blue for the other (or maybe the other way around). At some point (possibly 2004), the colors were attached to the party/ideology rather than the incumbency or majority/minority status.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    4. Re:oh no! by arb+phd+slp · · Score: 1

      Network tv used to use red for the incumbent/majority party, blue for the other (or maybe the other way around). At some point (possibly 2004), the colors were attached to the party/ideology rather than the incumbency or majority/minority status.

      I think it was the 2000 election when, instead of the map colors being used one day every four years, they were on the screen every day for weeks while the Bush-Gore recount was underway. The terms "red state-blue state" was coined and it stuck.

      --
      There's a perfect xkcd for my sig but I'm too lazy to look it up. sudo someone go find it.
  12. It hurts reading these: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Crap, might influence more than just Texas:

    [..] influence beyond Texas because the state is one of the largest purchasers of textbooks.

    And our wannabe historians:

    “The Enlightenment was not the only philosophy on which these revolutions were based,”

    plus

    “I reject the notion by the left of a constitutional separation of church and state”

  13. Orwell Gets it Again by Avin22 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    FTFA: "They are going overboard, they are not experts, they are not historians," she said. "They are rewriting history, not only of Texas but of the United States and the world." "Who controls the past, controls the future. Who controls the present, controls the past." ---- 1984 by George Orwell

    1. Re:Orwell Gets it Again by canajin56 · · Score: 1

      Actually if you consult your new Texas-brand Textbook, you'll find that it was George W. Bush who said that ;)

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    2. Re:Orwell Gets it Again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, well in that case it is pretty much nothing to worry about, nothing he said was worth taking seriously.

      (But when people did anyway we went to war, twice.)

  14. Re:It's about time by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do you like the fire department? The public library? Public education? Guess what...you like socialism! We really need to throw away the false dichotomy between Capitalism and Socialism. There is room for the two to coexist. I am a Christian myself, but I will fight to the death to prevent a Theocracy of any kind from taking hold in the United States.

    --
    "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
  15. Metaphorical assassination by istartedi · · Score: 1

    Another shot from a school book repository. The real God has an ironic sense of humor, I think.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  16. Adding Friedman and Hayek to economics coverage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seems like econ 101 to me. They surely can't spend the entirety of the course on Keynesians.

    1. Re:Adding Friedman and Hayek to economics coverage by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Of course not. Though after 2008-2009, you would think coverage of Friedman and Hayek would be less than complimentary.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
  17. Meh by jav1231 · · Score: 1, Troll

    The fact that anyone else in the rest of the country gives a damn is an example of how eroded state's rights have become. Why should I care? I don't live in Texas. What if this were another country? Would it be our business? No. It's really not any other state's. Local decisions like this will help or harm them.

    1. Re:Meh by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      Yeah who cares if everyone else in society gets a shit education, as long as you got yours, right? It's not like your fellow countrymen can affect your life at all. You are an island!

    2. Re:Meh by jeff4747 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The fact that anyone else in the rest of the country gives a damn is an example of how eroded state's rights have become. Why should I care? I don't live in Texas.

      Because the people who print textbooks do not print a different version for every state. States with a large enough market, California and Texas get their own editions. Every other state can buy either the California or Texas editions.

      Thus, these decisions in Texas will influence the education of a very large swath of the US.

    3. Re:Meh by McBeer · · Score: 1

      The fact that anyone else in the rest of the country gives a damn is an example of how eroded state's rights have become. Why should I care? I don't live in Texas.

      People care because textbook manufacturers try to create copies that appeal to the largest markets possible. Thus when Texas, a very large market in and of itself, cooks up a crazy curriculum for itself, the textbooks used nationwide get sucked down with it.

      --
      Hikery.net - The best hiking site ever. Made by yours truly.
    4. Re:Meh by bckrispi · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Maybe we care because the curriculum that gets established in Texas often winds up being used in classrooms across the country.

      http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/14/magazine/14texbooks-t.html?pagewanted=all

      The state's $22 billion education fund is among the largest educational endowments in the country. Texas uses some of that money to buy or distribute a staggering 48 million textbooks annually -- which rather strongly inclines educational publishers to tailor their products to fit the standards dictated by the Lone Star State. California is the largest textbook market, but besides being bankrupt, it tends to be so specific about what kinds of information its students should learn that few other states follow its lead. Texas, on the other hand, was one of the first states to adopt statewide curriculum guidelines, back in 1998, and the guidelines it came up with (which are referred to as TEKS -- pronounced "teaks" -- for Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills) were clear, broad and inclusive enough that many other states used them as a model in devising their own. And while technology is changing things, textbooks -- printed or online --are still the backbone of education.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    5. Re:Meh by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Last time I checked, the 1st Amendment applies to the states as well.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    6. Re:Meh by TheSync · · Score: 1

      Thus, these decisions in Texas will influence the education of a very large swath of the US.

      Mainly influencing the socialist education systems...

    7. Re:Meh by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Well, maybe this will prod the Northeastern states into producing a unified curriculum so that the book publishers have to pay attention to them as well.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    8. Re:Meh by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      You're right. Why even have states!

  18. Inappropriate Textbooks by ChaosCon · · Score: 5, Funny

    Reminds me of the old (ooooooooooooooooolllllllllllddddddd) textbook my calculus teacher has that managed to sneak through Texas book approval. It had four graphs printed right next to each other, the first of which was a step function, the second a parabola, the third was 2 sqrt functions forming a right-facing parabola, and the last was a right facing absolute function. This was the first time the graphs had been printed in color, too, so the *ahem* naughty word really popped.

    1. Re:Inappropriate Textbooks by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of the old (ooooooooooooooooolllllllllllddddddd) textbook my calculus teacher has that managed to sneak through Texas book approval. It had four graphs printed right next to each other, the first of which was a step function, the second a parabola, the third was 2 sqrt functions forming a right-facing parabola, and the last was a right facing absolute function. This was the first time the graphs had been printed in color, too, so the *ahem* naughty word really popped.

      While that is funny; the real sad thing is I got the joke. Shades of Big Bang Theory....

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    2. Re:Inappropriate Textbooks by nanoakron · · Score: 1

      anyone care to translate for the rest of us?

      are we talking 'cock'?

    3. Re:Inappropriate Textbooks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what? No way. What was the book? I don't believe an author would put something like that in there. (Now, maybe a grad student who work on the book...)
      That sounds like an urban legend.

    4. Re:Inappropriate Textbooks by gardyloo · · Score: 1

      'fuck'. Presumably the step function was a signum function, with the x-axis forming the smaller horizontal leg of the eff.

    5. Re:Inappropriate Textbooks by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Squiggle-UCV?

  19. Not a big surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its not a big surprise that the Republicans want to change history to make themselves look good (in contrast to telling the truth). Aldlph Hitler did the same thing. I wouldn't even be surprised if the likes of Ann Coulter reviewed old Nazi propaganda films in order to get the right idea of how to change history. When they have to lie, you know they are not to be trusted, nor respected.

  20. This debate is Ridiculous! by bigjarom · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It doesn't matter which side wins in this debate in Texas. Either way young Texas children will still grow up with no idea how many provinces there are in Canada, what language they speak in Egypt, or who the president of France is.

    1. Re:This debate is Ridiculous! by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1, Funny

      Either way young Texas children will still grow up with no idea how many provinces there are in Canada

      Zero. Canada is a myth and does not exist.

      what language they speak in Egypt

      English if they know what's good for 'em, gawd durn it!

      or who the president of France is.

      Wait. There's an old rhyming mnemonic for this. I see England, I see France, I see President Underpants. Yeah, that's it!

    2. Re:This debate is Ridiculous! by T+Murphy · · Score: 1

      Given current geography knowledge, I don't think students need to learn the provinces of Canada right now. They can't find all 50 states of their own country on a map or label a few dozen countries. In high school we had to find recent news articles about non-US countries, and the teacher asked people to find the country on the map. The teacher had to help students find Iraq, and even help one student find Russia. This was in one of the better public school districts in the country, so I have no idea how depressing the national average student is.

    3. Re:This debate is Ridiculous! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Zero. Canada is a myth and does not exist.

      I thought that's where the lie-berals spawn??

      English if they know what's good for 'em, gawd durn it!

      They must be speaking Jewish, because isn't Egypt a province of Israel?

      Wait. There's an old rhyming mnemonic for this. I see England, I see France, I see President Underpants. Yeah, that's it!

      You're overcomplicating matters. TV said that France is bad because it helps Iraq. TV also said that Iraq is bad because Osama bin Laden backs it. Clearly, the president of France must be Osama bin Laden.

    4. Re:This debate is Ridiculous! by magus_melchior · · Score: 1

      Unless there's a publisher's rebellion, Texas textbook standards become the United States standards due to sheer size.

      I wish I were joking.

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
  21. Hah! by Black+Parrot · · Score: 4, Informative

    Take that, O reality with your liberal bias!

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  22. Hey Dumbass... by Xaedalus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Abraham Lincoln was a REPUBLICAN! It's about time the GOP reclaim their long-long-looooooong forgotten mantle as the party that ended slavery and created the platform for modern civil rights.

    --
    Here's to hot beer, cold women, and Glaswegian kisses for all.
    1. Re:Hey Dumbass... by wealthychef · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Screw the GOP and the DNC. How about if We the People reclaim our mantle of "government by the people?"

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    2. Re:Hey Dumbass... by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      It would be a lot easier for the GOP to do that if they hadn't spent the past 35 years embracing the "Southern Strategy".

    3. Re:Hey Dumbass... by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      The Republicans don't do more to embrace Lincoln because in Lincoln's era the Republicans were the liberal party and the Democrats were the conservative party.

      Since the parties have switched sides since then, it gets rather awkward for the modern conservatives to invoke the memory of a liberal.

    4. Re:Hey Dumbass... by nvrrobx · · Score: 1

      Hey dumbass, the Republican party of today is very different than the Republican party of Lincoln's age.

    5. Re:Hey Dumbass... by Nimey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Also, last month there was a Facebook meme going around that MLK, Jr. was a Republican and isn't the GOP awesome for always championing liberties, etc., you get the idea.

      The purveyors of this meme shut up rather quickly when it was pointed out that MLK was a liberal & as such would be unwelcome in the current GOP.

      My mind threatens to break every time I try to understand where these people are coming from.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    6. Re:Hey Dumbass... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      What's your point? Is there nothing good that has come from the Republicans in the last 130 years or so that you must hang your hat on something that happened that long ago, and wasn't even as cut-and-dry as you make it out to be? And where everyone who participated in it has died long ago?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    7. Re:Hey Dumbass... by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      It's time for the republicans to disown Lincoln. Freed the slaves? Pshaw. Lincoln was an autocrat bent on centralizing government power in order to implement his economic utopia. source

    8. Re:Hey Dumbass... by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Screw the GOP and the DNC. How about if We the People reclaim our mantle of "government by the people?"

      We're not allowed - it's not in the government's best interest for citizens to have control over the government.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    9. Re:Hey Dumbass... by Totenglocke · · Score: 0, Troll

      MLK Jr. was a known communist and as such would be welcome by both the modern DNC and most of the modern GOP. Face it, we're essentially a one party system anymore, and that one party is against the citizens of the USA.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    10. Re:Hey Dumbass... by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      Also, last month there was a Facebook meme going around that MLK, Jr. was a Republican and isn't the GOP awesome for always championing liberties, etc., you get the idea.

      The purveyors of this meme shut up rather quickly when it was pointed out that MLK was a liberal & as such would be unwelcome in the current GOP.

      My mind threatens to break every time I try to understand where these people are coming from.

      So I can expect the Democrats to stop championing Thomas Jefferson as one of their founders? The whole "government that governs best is that which governs least" thing is heavily out of step with the modern Democratic Party, after all. Or will your mind break on that too?

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    11. Re:Hey Dumbass... by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      Ah trotting out the old right-wing MLK is a communist line. You guys need to get your minds out of the 60's. Not everything is a communist plot. The same assholes that said MLK was a communist in the 60's, are the same ones that call Obama a socialist today.

    12. Re:Hey Dumbass... by Nimey · · Score: 1

      You're a moron. Where did I mention that?

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    13. Re:Hey Dumbass... by Totenglocke · · Score: 0, Troll

      MLK WAS a communist and Obama IS a socialist (actually given his own comments in interviews, he's probably a communist as well, but he knows that the US would have to transition to socialism first because the populace would never tolerate such a drastic change). Learn what you're talking about before you spout of the bullshit that people like Obama tell you to in order to try to distract you from what they're doing.

      Sadly you're one of the many who were brainwashed into thinking that government having total control of industries and redistributing wealth is somehow not socialist / communist.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    14. Re:Hey Dumbass... by StormyWeather · · Score: 1

      The problem with BOTH parties is that they both believe in equality, but (animal farm reference) some people (politicians) are just more equal than others.

    15. Re:Hey Dumbass... by j+h+woodyatt · · Score: 1

      > Screw the GOP and the DNC. How about if...

      How about you started taking U.S. politics seriously instead of pretending you live in some libertarian socialist faerieland?

      --
      jhw
    16. Re:Hey Dumbass... by Beelzebud · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're an idiot. You're trying to tell me Obama has "total control of industries" and is "redistributing wealth"? And you have the nerve to tell ME to learn what I'm talking about?

      This is the main problem with right-wingers these days. You idiots live in a fantasy world.

    17. Re:Hey Dumbass... by shrimppesto · · Score: 1

      "hey dumbass..." abe lincoln was president in the 1860s. that was 150 years ago. do today's republicans remind you of abe lincoln? do you consider rick santorum a champion of civil rights?

      LBJ and JFK also made enormous contributions to civil rights. i really don't think you can attribute modern civil rights to any single political party.

    18. Re:Hey Dumbass... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Abraham Lincoln was a racist who wrote laws in Illinois that prevented free blacks from moving there. LIncoln is the biggest myth in American History. He exiled a Congressman for disagreeing, arrested 10s of thousands, shut down newspapers, destroyed a union and replaced it with a state, and only freed slaves in southern controlled areas for the sole purpose of hoping that they'd uprise against the woman and children who were over looking the farms. There were 88 countries that abolished slavery in the 1800s and only one of them was from the result of a war.

      If you're looking for an abolisionist, don't look at Lincoln. Look at Lysander Spooner.

    19. Re:Hey Dumbass... by left00coaster · · Score: 1

      Actually, x, you're the dumb ass. Yes, the Republican party of the mid-1800s worked to end slavery. But the political philosophy espoused by those enlightened souls morphed into the Democratic party of TODAY. If you want proof, consider that Strom Thurmond, Jessi Helms and the other 'Dixiecrats' switched parties in their fight against integration in the 1960s and 70s. Their bigotry still informs the Repugs. Dumb ass.

    20. Re:Hey Dumbass... by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      "libertarian socialist faerieland?" Um, WTF? You are just stringing together words that you were taught bad people believe in and hoping one of them will stick.

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    21. Re:Hey Dumbass... by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      We're not allowed -

      Bullshit, we're lazy and not interested. We're discouraged and cynical. We're confused and demoralized. But we are allowed. And if we take that seriously, they cannot stop us.

      it's not in the government's best interest for citizens to have control over the government.

      Only true if you believe that the government interest is distinct from that of its citizens, which is an inherently corrosive viewpoint. Also, let's remember that the government is not a person, it's a group of people, so it actually does not have an interest per se. I'd say that our form of government is an experiment in letting the citizenry have a say, and if we do not participate fully then well-meaning people in the government will each do what they think is best for us, based on a guess and their own experiences.

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    22. Re:Hey Dumbass... by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      You realize that over the last 30 years, the only president to actually shrink government was a Democrat, right?

      Reagan, Bush I and Bush II all massively increased the size of government, despite their rhetoric to the contrary.

      Clinton shrunk the size of government, despite the conventional wisdom that Democrats are all about 'big government'.

      If you want smaller government, vote Democratic. The Republicans say they want smaller government, but fail to deliver when in office.

    23. Re:Hey Dumbass... by j+h+woodyatt · · Score: 1

      >You are just stringing together words that you were taught bad people believe in and hoping one of them will stick.

      No. I am not.

      There is this thing called the Internet. It might help you learn enough to understand the joke so I don't have to humiliate you with a tedious explanation.

      --
      jhw
    24. Re:Hey Dumbass... by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Actually he IS redistributing wealth, just not as much as you'd like apparently. And I never said he had total control over industries, but he WANTS it and is trying hard to get it (GM, government run health insurance, banks). But hey, why pay attention to his actions when you can make up lies and claim that he's the polar opposite of what he is.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    25. Re:Hey Dumbass... by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      Like I said, you're a moron. "But hey, why pay attention to his actions when you can make up lies and claim that he's the polar opposite of what he is." Indeed.

    26. Re:Hey Dumbass... by pnuema · · Score: 1

      He's right; you're a tool. Sorry. Exactly is is our EXECUTIVE redistributing wealth? Is he ordering the army to do it?

  23. Once I was worried. by hyperion2010 · · Score: 1

    As much as this concerns me, the underlying assumption here is that kids actually learn things from textbooks. I find that assumption lacking giving the complete failure of our educational system no matter what they are trying to teach other than that school sucks and the government gives you money.

    1. Re:Once I was worried. by bananaquackmoo · · Score: 1

      Haha, I was almost worried for Texas, but you sir raise a very good point.

    2. Re:Once I was worried. by ich1 · · Score: 1

      But the kids can't be expected to sit through 12 years of this and not pick up SOME of it.... The reason, in case anyone is too lazy to read the article, that this matters to anyone outside of Texas is that many school districts follow Texas's lead concerning which textbooks to purchase.

  24. Re:Oh Noes! by Beelzebud · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yeah because in high school that's what they teach. How totally awesome Che Guevara was!

    It's funny seeing how conservatives react to this, as if it's some sort of game of revenge.

    You set up a strawman about Che Guevara and then argue in favor of revisionist history, as long as it supports your political views.

  25. Another Chinese Import by Concern · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Frankly I'm surprised the politicization of classroom materials hasn't been more flagrant and widespread. I'm also wondering why there isn't more of a flip-flop between liberal and conservative influence on school curriculums as voting blocks swing between conservatives and liberals?

    The ping pong of history books that was dramatized in 1984 was also a reality as power shifted and people and principles went in and out of favor in Chinese and Russian totalitarian states. I imagine now we will see it here.

    Did we think we were going to make China more democratic? We are the tail and they are the dog. We are becoming more like them every day. The high castes of the conservative party long for it. They see the setup of China's ruling class - the iron grip on history - the apparently successful stifling of dissent - and salivate.

    If Thomas Jefferson can be "deemphasized" in American History and the separation of church and state can be erased from the history books, there is no longer any break on this. Freedom of ("liberal") speech is not far behind. Make no mistake, this is a bellweather for how much further our society can fall. It also suggests the way America could balkanize, as different regions of the country no longer share a common history.

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    1. Re:Another Chinese Import by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I come from a country that is in news a lot these days for all the wrong reason.

      Back home, I saw the rise of the religiosity is society to a point where it is now a demon that threatens to destroy the very society that nurtured it.

      Mark my words, if this rise of the right-wing nut jobs continues unchecked, one day it will devour your beautiful land. A society that sacrifices reason and science for religious gratification is destined to be destroyed from within.

    2. Re:Another Chinese Import by rekees · · Score: 1

      They are prodding right now. Since nothing is really standing in their way, which they are soon to find out, they'll take over no sweat. Do you have friends in Canada?

    3. Re:Another Chinese Import by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      I'm gonna take a wild guess and say the country is "Iran." There are some interesting parallels there. I doubt we'll get Mullahs storming embassies within the next ten years, but I won't hold my hand to the fire that it won't happen within my life time. There's a definite potential for progression here, and rewriting text books is a favorite way of starting that process.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    4. Re:Another Chinese Import by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Frankly I'm surprised the politicization of classroom materials hasn't been more flagrant and widespread. I'm also wondering why there isn't more of a flip-flop between liberal and conservative influence on school curriculums as voting blocks swing between conservatives and liberals?

      I think it's because the vast majority of voters really don't care. It's just a small but vocal core of people who do. In practice, most of school is not about evolution, and adding a few paragraphs about the christian background of the founding fathers makes little difference to the majority of a students education. Most people are more concerned with the general quality of schools than they are with the 'ideologies' being taught.

      --
      Qxe4
    5. Re:Another Chinese Import by danparks · · Score: 1

      > I'm also wondering why there isn't more of a flip-flop between liberal > and conservative influence on school curriculums as voting blocks swing > between conservatives and liberals? Texas requires a huge number of text books. Book publishers don't want to print multiple versions of a text. Texas votes conservative/republican, so the national trend (conservative or liberal) at any point in time doesn't matter much as far as text book publishing goes.

    6. Re:Another Chinese Import by megajason · · Score: 1
      I sort of agree with you partially, but...

      The high castes of the conservative party long for it.

      Really? Just the "conservative party." Look around. and also...

      Freedom of ("liberal") speech is not far behind.

      Really again? If I were you, I would keep an eye on the so-called "liberals" with respect to free speech.

    7. Re:Another Chinese Import by hitmark · · Score: 1

      bread and circus, as simple as that. or in US terms, supersized burgers and super bowl.

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    8. Re:Another Chinese Import by Concern · · Score: 1

      What I probably did not make clear is that I hate the liberals more than the conservatives in this.

      The liberal elites never even dreamed of what the conservatives are doing to school textbooks.

      Yes, I am aware that the conservative talking point is that they are just "correcting liberal bias" in Texas.

      Propaganda? Rewriting history? Unconstitutional restrictions on speech? Democratic party management is crooked, contemptible, and after many years in power, empty. Most liberal elites just don't have strong enough feelings about their ideology to motivate these kinds of behaviors. With more complete control over the government that either Bush ever dreamed of, they have even failed at achieving even the stupidest version of their least interesting dream - healthcare reform! (This remains true even if they pass that pathetic bill so discussed lately in the news.) Are these the people to hold up to the conservatives as rivals?

      I think if you did, you do the conservatives a grave injustice. :)

      Now that the conservatives are taking this step, the liberal elites still can't even believe it. Of the few that even grasp the significance of what's happening, most would rather flee than make a stand. I hope Canada and the remainder of the first world are as tepid towards refugees as I expect they will be. Liberal, Enlightenment America was relatively solitary in understanding the value in cultural diversity, egalitarianism, and immigration. It was they who said, "Give me your poor, your tired." When the last remnants of the liberals try to flee in earnest, they will discover this is one of the many unique things about America they should have stood to fight for.

      This is why the conservatives will dominate this country.

      And I imagine that dominance will continue for far long after they destroy it. Have no illusions. The Chinese have been under the bootheel for 60 years. This is the conservative dream: 19th century economics and the return of the de-facto class system, without the troubling problems of an informed public choosing to reject it. They have seen how it is done. They have been won over. And they are importing it.

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    9. Re:Another Chinese Import by megajason · · Score: 1

      Again, though, you're talking about how the "conservatives" are doing this to the country. The Chinese system is the progressive dream, not the conservative dream. The progressives have been been driving us toward that cliff for the past 100 years, not the conservatives. The system of education that prevents an informed public is by progressive design (and what exactly is in the textbooks is irrelevant to the effectiveness of the design). The way I see it, conservatives come along and do something of significant effect every once in a while but have otherwise been largely impotent. On the whole, progressives have dominated policy and politics for a long time and are, at this very moment, attempting to set the table so that they will continue to dominate for decades to come.

      How are "conservatives" dominating anything?

    10. Re:Another Chinese Import by megajason · · Score: 1

      Also....the reason the Democrats can't pass health care reform is that their proposals aren't health care reform. In fact, it's all secret. The "liberal elite" are not trying to reform health care, they are trying to grab power. And, though they haven't been able to pass it by the normal means, they are not content to let the democratic process prevail. Instead they are trying to find other means to pass it. The reason they haven't gotten it passed yet is that their whole elitist condescending attitude about it...they want the whole country to roll over and pass it (quickly now, quickly) without really knowing what is in it...is offensive to most people.

      On the other hand, when the great so-called conservative president George Bush was in power for eight years, with a Republican Congress for part of that time, what did they do but pass largely progressive legislation (medicare drugs, education bill, foreign aid, economic stimulus, etc). So, to reverse your question: Are these the people to hold up to the progressives as rivals?

    11. Re:Another Chinese Import by Concern · · Score: 1

      You couldn't be more wrong.

      China is essentially a neo-feudal oligarchy. They dress it up with communist rhetoric, because that's part of how you control the population. It's just an upgrade on the empire's PR. It is about as progressive as I am a three headed alien.

      Leninist Russia, for another example: the fact that Lenin called it Marxism or communism rather a monarchy was about on a par with the Nazi's murdering millions of Germans for the good of the German people. Doublethink is just one of the ingredients in that type of ideology.

      And now you have repeated one of the conservative troll's many lines about progressives - likening the enlightenment thinking of the founding fathers, about the freedom, equality and dignity of all men - and women - to the Chinese. This is just about exactly opposite from the truth. And that is the point - it is so wrong as to be confusing, even when (easily) argued against, among those not trained in rational argument.

      A brief study of history makes all this clear - but that's the point of rewriting the history books, isn't it?

      Good job on it - you'll have lots more people who believe radical conservative falsehoods in a generation, without having to home-school them all. You just won't have the most precious gift we can pass down to our children - truth about the past, that they can use to make a better life for themselves. I would be careful about taking too much satisfaction in it, though. Believe me, the spoils of the conservative victory over history are not for you.

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    12. Re:Another Chinese Import by megajason · · Score: 1
      I agree with you, except that progressivism is the root of the problem, or more precisely the type of people who are attracted to the power necessary to run a proper progressive society.

      And now you have repeated one of the conservative troll's many lines about progressives - likening the enlightenment thinking of the founding fathers, about the freedom, equality and dignity of all men - and women - to the Chinese. This is just about exactly opposite from the truth.

      I have not repeated anything of the sort. Modern progressivism, at least as implemented by modern politicians a large portion of the time has little to do with freedom, equality and dignity of all men and women except in the ways that all men and women can be forcibly controlled to behave in the way that the oligarchs deem proper (destroying liberty for progressive ends is just as bad as destroying liberty for conservative ends).

      I'm not saying that unchecked conservatism (or any other -ism) wouldn't eventually take us to the same place (just by a different path), but that fact is that progressivism runs the show here. Conservatism has been largely impotent.

      We'll have to disagree on that though, because I think we're beating a dead horse at this point.

      For the record, and to put us back into the context of the original thread, I am philosophically a libertarian and don't think that the federal government has any business running an education system. It's a conflict of interest.

    13. Re:Another Chinese Import by Concern · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, except that progressivism is the root of the problem, or more precisely the type of people who are attracted to the power necessary to run a proper progressive society.

      From my point of view, greed and corruption are part of the human condition, and the choice is between an attempt at a transparent and democratic government, or the various ways wealth and power inevitably accumulate. Strip off the propaganda, and a corporatist oligarchy, whether American or Chinese-style, or a Russian "communist" monarchy, are the same in the essentials: a small group, or even one individual, controls everything, accountable to no one.

      This is our classic recipe for human misery.

      You could argue the whole point of enlightenment philosophy was a rejection of this. Progressivism is about accountability and diffusion of power and authority. It doesn't stop men from dreaming of becoming king - only keeps them in check by constant vigilance. The PR agencies of the would-be kings make every little flaw and failing of a progressive, democratic government - of which there are many - out to be worse than the alternatives - which they are not.

      This PR can lead to a belief by some that collective action (ala democratic governments) is essentially impossible - and that no government can ever represent its people. I think this may be central to libertarianism?

      There is a reason that all the world's most sought after passports are of progressive or even socialist nations. Not only was this approach more morally sound, but those who succeeded at creating more progressive societies achieved unprecedented wealth - not just for their average citizens, but for their elites. Modern economies are ~70% consumer spending. But this can only happen when there is some redistributive mechanism that counters the natural (and deliberate) accumulation of all possible wealth and power into the hands of those already wealthy and powerful enough to seek it.

      Not every redistributive mechanism is automatically evil, as is the fad to say these days. But at least libertarians have the balls to be logically consistent about this argument, which I respect. Whereas most conservatives are too afraid to follow this to its conclusion and openly advocate for shutting down libraries, schools, state universities, museums, parks, hospitals, the FDA, the EPA, and so forth.

      I have not repeated anything of the sort.

      And I quote: "The Chinese system is the progressive dream, not the conservative dream."

      But I won't quibble if you say I have somehow misunderstood you.

      I think we can get caught in a trap between progressive ideology and democratic politicians, which I agree could not be more different.

      Even so, I prefer my freedom's chances under modern democrats rather than republicans. Yes, this is deciding whether to be eaten by the bear or the snake, but the liberals still have a constitutional tradition - there is nothing compatible with either the founding principles of the nation, or its constitution, by trying to make America a Christian nation, with all that that implies.

      Since we're off and running with generalizations, I honestly do have great respect for libertarianism, even if I don't always find myself persuaded by it. I don't know that you can have a working society without the libertarian impulse: the reality check on any attempt to build human agency where one has power over others.

      If you believe laissez faire capitalism is a good recipe for happiness, at least this is something about which we can have a rational discussion. We could, for instance, start with comparisons of societies throughout history that did, or didn't, educate their children by government spending.

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  26. Re:Anonymous Coward by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

    There is a 30 day public comment period now, but they are still expected to approve the books on a final party line vote.

  27. Re:Anonymous Coward by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

    That's rich! Zealous Republicans want to add right-wing propaganda to textbooks, and you blame liberals for it.

  28. Nice process they used by Infonaut · · Score: 3, Funny
    From the article:

    There were no historians, sociologists or economists consulted at the meetings, though some members of the conservative bloc held themselves out as experts on certain topics.

    Come on, NYT! Why on God's conservative, 10,000-year old earth would legislators consult so-called experts? F*cking New Yorkers have no common sense.

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    1. Re:Nice process they used by pavera · · Score: 1

      Thats no more than 7000 year old earth you insensitive clod!

    2. Re:Nice process they used by Infonaut · · Score: 1

      Only nutjob Ultra-New Earthist would say that. We conservative New Earthists reject your anti-Faith radicalism!

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  29. democracy can only survive with education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you indoctrinate the people early with your "education" then democracy fails. They will go and vote the way they've been programmed to believe. It's done in communism, and religion fights so hard to control education for the same reason, they can maintain power via a pretend democracy by subverting education.

  30. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by canajin56 · · Score: 1

    You might be thinking of telling him "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." and collecting on that bet. But like all Republicans who say it's not in the constitution, he'll say "I said 'Separation of church and state' and your quote doesn't mention that at all." They argue that just because they can't pass a law involving any religious institution in any way, doesn't imply they have to be separate. They can mandate all sorts of things religion-related, it just says they can't pass a law!

    --
    ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
  31. Re:It's about time by dosius · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A lot of fundies these days *don't* like the above. As a fundie I used to say, and I have heard other fundies say, that parents sending their children to public school instead of homeschooling them were shirking their parental responsibility to "train up a child in the way he should go" (Proverbs 22.6a KJV).

    I still would prefer to homeschool, if I could find materials that weren't written by and for FUNDIES! >_

    -uso.

    --
    What you hear in the ear, preach from the rooftop Matthew 10.27b
  32. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    First Amendment - "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

    1st, the very first word of the amendment is "Congress." It doesn't say anything about any of the states, but this has been normally implemented at the state level as well, by law or otherwise. 2nd, I can't see how a board of education allowing textbooks stress "the role of Christianity in American history" counts as a "law" or how it establishes a religion, or how it prohibits anyone's free exercise or any other religion, or anything else mentioned in the amendment.

    Liberals and other anti-Christians have taken the original text and intent so far out of context as to barely resemble it at all. In fact, in many many cases, the implementation of this imaginary "separation of Church and State" has in fact violated the real 1st amendment by prohibiting many people's free exercise of their religion and their freedom of speech, and their right to peaceably assemble, merely because it may have happened on some public property.

  33. Dude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever since when were history textbooks in general not biased, favoring whites, Christians, and Western civilization?

    1. Re:Dude by earthforce_1 · · Score: 1

      Let me take a wild guess...

      When they were written by non-whites, non-christians, and non-westerners?

      It's sad how so many cannot move beyond such racial/ethnic binning. Us against them. I married one of "them", and I am happier for it.

      --
      My rights don't need management.
  34. Rewriting history... by Hurricane78 · · Score: 0, Troll

    ... The fist step towards gaining control over people, is to gain control over their minds. Monkey see, monkey believe, monkey do.
    And now FOX News is becoming your history and science source.

    Please, to the majority of Americans, who are still healthy real Americans: Let Texas secede. Or throw them out. Let Mexico have them if they want. You’d do yourself something good.
    But wait Mexico, there’s more! You can also get Alabama for the low, low price, of one Taco Bell in every town! ;)

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    1. Re:Rewriting history... by jd2112 · · Score: 1

      But wait Mexico, there's more! You can also get Alabama for the low, low price, of one Taco Bell in every town! ;)

      What does Mexico have to do with Taco Bell?

      --
      Any insufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
  35. Re:It's about time by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

    Yeah, that First Amendment is for atheists and pinko liberals anyways.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  36. Re:It's about time by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 5, Informative

    Don't bother replying to that guy. All his posts have always looked like that. Real short, idiotic, and hostile.

    80-90% of them quickly sink to -1 and all the rest get 5, which probably reflects a political polarization among moderators.

  37. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Beelzebud · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Liberals and other anti-Christians"

    I hate to break it to you, pal, but the vast majority of liberals in this country are also Christians.

    It's pretty pathetic seeing the right-wing talk about 'states rights', when they only care about that concept when it suits them.

  38. Next up for the TX Board of Education . . . by StefanJ · · Score: 2, Funny

    Round down the value of Pi to three, like it is in the Bible.

    30 day unpaid suspension for teachers using European measurements like millimeters in the classroom.

    Add Red Meat Studies to curriculum.

    Found Flat Earth Research Institute. Curves of round Earth lead to unclean thoughts. Flat Earth would be easier to navigate around.

    Rewrite history so that America won its freedom from the British at the Alamo.

    Texas schools to be connected with special filtered internet which only allows access to Conservapedia, foxnews.com, and Amway.com.

    1. Re:Next up for the TX Board of Education . . . by ExploHD · · Score: 1

      Add Red Meat Studies to curriculum.

      When I grow up, I'm going to Bovine University!

  39. OK, now that my knee is done jerking... by istartedi · · Score: 4, Interesting

    OK, now that my knee is done jerking and I've at least skimmed TFA, there are some interesting tidbits.

    Dr. McLeroy pushed through a change to the teaching of the civil rights movement to ensure that students study the violent philosophy of the Black Panthers in addition to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s nonviolent approach. He also made sure that textbooks would mention the votes in Congress on civil rights legislation, which Republicans supported.

    This might not be such a bad thing if it leads students to learn more. For example, in going over materials regarding the Panthers, they might learn that group exercised 2nd ammendment rights. It was the fear of Blacks with guns that led to some of the first (the first?) gun control measures in California. The law was, IIRC, signed into law by... Ronald Reagan!

    I'd love to be there when a student raises his hand in class to ask the teacher why a Republican would sign gun control legislation, or presents this fact in an oral report about the Panthers.

    Oh, and I wasn't taught this in school. I knew nothing of it until I moved to the Bay Area and learned more about the Panthers simply because I heard they got started in this area. That caused me to become curious and read up on their history. School certainly didn't teach it.

    Hearing the adults argue about all this will probably teach the kids in ways that neither side anticipated.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    1. Re:OK, now that my knee is done jerking... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will they also teach how the FBI and Chicago police conspired to assassinate Fred Hampton?

  40. Re:It's about time by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 2, Informative

    I like my fire department. Now, I don't know about yours, but my fire department is not socialistic. See, the local fire department where I live is a private organization made up of volunteers. They operate by running fund raisers and otherwise getting donations.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  41. Re:It's about time by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

    I think any smart Christian has to agree that theocracy is a bad idea. After all, nothing guarantees that the state religion has to be the one you happen to believe in.

    --
    Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
    altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
  42. OXYMORON ALERT by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    "Republican Philosophy?"

    Philosophy is literally, the love of knowledge.

    --
    "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
    1. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ok, but philosophers mostly love hearing themselves talk

      science is for people who want to find stuff out

    2. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by commodore64_love · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I would laugh if your comment was not so insulting.

      I'm a Republican and ever since I left college I've been listening to college lectures on tape, in order to expand my knowledge of history and philosophy. The idea that I must be stupid because I have an (R) after my name is almost as insulting when Pres.Carter said I must be "racist" because I attended a Tea Party Rally last April 15.

      Stop prejudging people as groups.

      We are not groups. We are individuals which means we ALL think differently, even if we do share the same label. Not all Republicans are uneducated brutes, or racists, just as not all Democrats have altars to Marx or Mao.

      \

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    3. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Wait til I rip Dems. Then you'll gang-bang so gleefully, the new arse I rip in to their beck end.

      --
      "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
    4. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Toonol · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Assuming that a group that you disagree with are all stupid is a likely indicator that an individual is likely an idiot.

      A Republican that thinks that all Democrats are stoned out hippies that can't hold a rational thought is a moron. A Democrat who thinks that all Republicans are selfish ultra-capitalist fundamentalists is a moron. For ALL of you: Remember, there are people in the OPPOSING PARTY that are significantly SMARTER than you... REGARDLESS of which party you're in.

      Any idiot that paints all conservatives or all liberals as idiots should rightfully be considered an idiot.

    5. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by tyrione · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Proclaiming to listen to college lectures on tape doesn't tell one much. Which history? Which philosophies? Try reading before listening. You'd be amazed how much more encompassing it is than the Cliff Notes. Reading from various political persuasions indeed makes one a well-rounded human being. At it's logical conclusion it should make one an independent.

    6. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      I completely agree with you. Unfortunately, on the internet in general and /. in particular, you have to expect a certain amount of republican bashing. It's been inevitable ever since Bush Jr. (not really Jr. but let's pretend) was in office, really. It's not right and it's not fair, but neither is it surprising.

      --
      $ make available
    7. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by retchdog · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I have known uneducated and racist republicans (as well as many who are neither). Have not met a democrat with an altar to any human being at all.

      Your invalid contrast belies your request for an end of prejudice.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    8. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will continue to pre-judge you until you stop trying to claim yourself a Republican and instead call yourself what you actually are (whatever that may be).

      Seriously, you don't tell people you're a Martian and then try and redefine Martian to mean someone from [insert_home_state_here]. So why are you telling people you're a Republican, but then go on to say you're everything a Republican is not?

      Same goes for Democrats, but you specifically called yourself a Republican, so that's why it is featured predominately in my post.

    9. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not all Republicans are uneducated brutes, or racists, just as not all Democrats have altars to Marx or Mao.

      \

      I don't think any Democrats have altars to Marx or Mao. The people who admire (much less have ALTARS to) Marx and Mao don't vote for Democrats. Have you ever talked to one of those kooks? Likely not.

    10. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by crispytwo · · Score: 1

      Any idiot that paints all conservatives or all liberals as idiots should rightfully be considered an idiot.

      Nonsense! You're an idiot -- just like everyone else!

      There. I now set that straight.

    11. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by TOGSolid · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Except to willingly associate yourself with the Republican party in its current incarnation is just as bad as endorsing the Democrats in their current state. You have to be willfully ignorant to completely ignore the massive failings of our two current political parties and want to be a member. In my eyes that does make you a moron.

    12. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 2, Insightful

      He kind of meant it metaphorically.

      What he really meant was stuff like the Che T-shirt.

      Guevara was a serial killer. It's kinda like wearing a Jeffery Dalhmer t-shirt.

    13. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by AlamedaStone · · Score: 1

      Have not met a democrat with an altar to any human being at all.

      I like seeing C64's bad-faith arguments taken to task as much as the next guy, but from what I understand of biblical anthropology, a ton of Dems have altars to a real human.

      But not to Marx. That's just me.

      --
      "All these years believing you're the signified monkey, only to find out you're just a big hunk of nobody cares."
    14. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Luthair · · Score: 1

      Thats not strictly true, there is one person who for whom there is /no one/ smarter than them from either side. I'm confident it's me! ;)

    15. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by dcollins · · Score: 1

      "For ALL of you: Remember, there are people in the OPPOSING PARTY that are significantly SMARTER than you... REGARDLESS of which party you're in."

      That is a provably untrue statement. (Unless party numbers are either zero or infinity.)

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    16. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Alex+Belits · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      A Democrat who thinks that all Republicans are selfish ultra-capitalist fundamentalists is a moron.

      True. Not all Republicans are ultra-capitalist fundamentalists, some are stupid rednecks, and some are just insane.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    17. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Boronx · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Republicans believe:

      That there were WMD, but Saddam moved them to Syria.

      That their weren't WMD, but we had good evidence he did.

      That even if we didn't have evidence, Saddam said he did, and wouldn't let in inspectors.

      That we've put on more debt in 1 year under Obama than 8 years with bush.

      That the best thing to do in a recession is to balance the budget.

      That social security is in crisis.

      That Barney Frank forcing banks to loan to black people is what caused the crash of 2008.

      That tax increases on the ultra rich are class warfare, but tax increases on everyone else are fair.

      That gay marriage threatens marriage.

      That the US has the best health care in the world.

      That the most conservative, free-market based healthcare overhaul you could imagine coming from a Democrat is a dangerous socialist experiment.

      That contrary to the Democratic plan, the best way to fix health care is a combination of tort reform and letting insurance comapanies pick their favorite state to regulate them.

      That invading Iraq wasn't a war crime.

      That torturing people isn't a war crime.

      That we only tortured terrorists.

      That waterboarding isn't torture.

      That holding people without trial forever is ok.

      That an illegal, dictatorial system of counter terrorism is better than a legal one.

      That Bill Clinton was one of the most corrupt presidents.

      That Sarah Palin might make a good president.

      That Rush Limbaugh isn't a toxic zit on the ass of humanity.

      You probably don't believe *all* of these things, but any one of them is obviously false or flatly ludicrous, and if you don't believe any of them, why would you be a Republican?

    18. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by shrimppesto · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      i don't think they are idiots. i just think they are bad people. is that okay?

    19. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both Republicans and Democrats tend to be stupid, just like all people. The problem is that Republicans have a much higher chance of being stupid, misinformed, or, when those aren't the case, just plain evil/selfish. It's the party that actively encourages greed and ignorance.

    20. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      True. Not all Republicans are ultra-capitalist fundamentalists, some are stupid rednecks, and some are just insane.

      For example the Republican members of the Texas Board of Education think that capitalism is a dirty word.

      You couldn't make it up.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    21. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Got some prejudice against Marxists there?

    22. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by professionalfurryele · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm very careful about the labels I attach to myself. I wouldn't join a group which has a significant racist, homophobic or anti-intellectual component to it's ideological base.

      You may well not be racist. You may well not be a homophobe. You might well value intellectual pursuits. You have joined a political party which on the whole is functionally racist, ideologically homophobic and has numerous policies which are anti-intellectual to the core. People have to make snap judgements to get by most of the time. It is reasonable to make snap judgements about people when one does not have the time nor the duty to make a more in depth investigation of a person. If you don't like being considered a racist, a homophobe or an anti-intellectual when people are in a position that requires making snap judgements or inferences the solution is simple. Leave the Republican Party.

    23. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by lm317t · · Score: 0

      Have not met a democrat with an altar to any human being at all.

      You forgot the /sarcasm tag. Or do you not have a single friend or relative obsessed with the anointed One, Barack H. Obama? You oughta see my my grandmother 'n laws Obama shelf.

      The nightly news turned into a BHO worship service for many during the campaign. Chris Matthews Obsession culminated into an Orgasm on a live news show while speaking of Him. Thank God he kept his clothes on and his willy in his pants while his leg was tingling.

      Praise be to Obama.

      --
      EOF
    24. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said Toonol

    25. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it really does mean that you're stupid. Phenomenally stupid. You saw 8 years of increased war, increased debt, decreased stability and YOU STILL VOTE REPUBLICAN. If that's not the definition of stupid, I don't know what is. You want lower taxes and vote for the party that increases them the most. You want personal responsibility and vote for the party that takes away your rights.

      You may be an individual, you may be part of a group. But you checked the "I am stupid" box at the election, therefore you ARE stupid.

    26. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      No - there's just one really smart guy who can't decide which party he's in and keeps switching back and forth.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    27. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      I wear a Dalhmer T-shirt, you insensitive clod!

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    28. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by pitchpipe · · Score: 1

      Well said sir!

      --
      Look where all this talking got us, baby.
    29. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by commodore64_love · · Score: 0, Troll

      >>>Have not met a democrat with an altar to any human being at all.

      Then you're not looking closely enough. There are several current and former staffmembers on President's Obama's team that are avowed communists. They may not have literal altars but it's clear they have a great deal of admiration for folks like Marx or Mao. QUOTE ANITA DUNN (communications director): "My two favorite philosophers are Mother Theresa and Mao Tse Tung." She then goes on to explain why she admires mass-murderer Chairman Mao's accomplishments. VAN JONES is another communist who Obama personally selected for his staff.

      >>>prejudice.

      It's not prejudice. It's an observation about specific individuals. Which IS acceptable.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    30. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>You have to be willfully ignorant to completely ignore the massive failings of our two current political parties and want to be a member.

      So..... what now? Am I supposed to join the Libertarians or other third party??? When I was a registered Libertarian my preferred (L) candidate *never* won any races, so to continue supporting a losing team would be even more moronic.

      The Republicans may have screwed-up from 2002 to 2008 with their warhawk policy, but the rest of their history is generally towards small government. Not perfect, no, but at least they have the ability to kick out the Big government-loving Democrats. (Which is no doubt why my favorite Congressman, Ron Paul, also abandoned the L's and went R.)

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    31. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>You have joined a political party which on the whole is functionally racist, ideologically homophobic and has numerous policies which are anti-intellectual to the core
      >>>

      Yes, but that's still better than the Democratic Party alternative, which wants to give unlimited power to the central U.S. government, like a modernized version of Lenin Socialist-Communism, and treat all the citizens as too stupid to run their own lives (i.e. like serfs), therefore the government will make decisions FOR us.

      I'm choosing the lesser evil of the two, because I HATE democratic anti-freedom policies.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    32. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aww isn't that cute. A republican trying to sound intelligent.

    33. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by pnuema · · Score: 1
      Yes, but that's still better than the Democratic Party alternative, which wants to give unlimited power to the central U.S. government, like a modernized version of Lenin Socialist-Communism, and treat all the citizens as too stupid to run their own lives (i.e. like serfs), therefore the government will make decisions FOR us.

      Except none of that is true (not that you are going to let that stop you).

    34. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by TOGSolid · · Score: 1

      What's so wrong with being independent?

    35. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by Toonol · · Score: 1

      It's true if the audience I'm addressing (slashdot) doesn't contain the smartest person in either party. I'm willing to play those odds.

    36. Re:OXYMORON ALERT by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      Ignoring for a second that I would dispute many of your claims about the Democratic Party (just as I would claims that the Republicans are Nazis), at no point was I defending the shambles that is the Democratic Party. I wouldn't join them either. I certainly wouldn't self identify with their labels. You don't have to belong to either party, even if you want to help specific candidates. I see no reason for anyone to proudly sport either a (D) or and (R) after their name with the parties in their current state.

  43. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by wealthychef · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm an atheist, but he's right. The Constitution does not mention separation of Church and state -- it merely forbids the establishment of any religion. Or am I wrong here? What does it mean really to "separate Church and state?" The idea of a secular state is an excellent one, but I wish the Constitution were clearer on some of these points.

    --
    Currently hooked on AMP
  44. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're an idiot. Being against those things makes one an anarchist, not anti-socialist.

  45. Render unto Cesar. by mosb1000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would think more Christians would be for removing "In God We Trust" from the money. For one thing, it's obviously a huge lie. Also, it's really ironic if you think about it.

    If they want to put something that reflects Christian values on the money, they should use "Render unto Cesar".

    1. Re:Render unto Cesar. by AuMatar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Modern American Christians? That would never fly- they don't believe in rendering anything unto Ceasar, they think taxes are evil all the while living in states that receive more than a dollar in federal aid for every dollar taken.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    2. Re:Render unto Cesar. by falconwolf · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I would think more Christians would be for removing "In God We Trust" from the money. For one thing, it's obviously a huge lie. Also, it's really ironic if you think about it.

      The problem with some American Christians is that they believe in Manifest Destiny, where the USA is a Christian Nation and it's mission is to spread the word throughout the world. Others are Dominionists, Christian Reconstructionists, or other flavors of Christian Talibans. And like the Talibans in Afghanistan and Pakistan if they ever get the chance they've dictate to others they must live "the Christian way". They would even bring back stoning for adulatory and other sins. Here's one that even says The bible permits slavery.

      Falcon

    3. Re:Render unto Cesar. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1, Informative

      Yet another prejudiced remark/insult (stereotyping based upon their group, rather than as individuals).

      Boy you're really showing your superiority there. (Not.)

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    4. Re:Render unto Cesar. by demonlapin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've seen this argument quite a lot lately, but one thing bothers me - if it irks you so much, why don't you start voting against taxes and let them go adrift? Be realistic - most of those dollars go to programs, like Medicare, Social Security, and welfare, that are championed by the coasties. I live in a net recipient state, and I vote Republican because I don't want a 50% overall tax rate. I can't imagine any set of government services that is worth half my income year in and year out. (I don't mind outliers - for example, right now I think that extending unemployment benefits is a very important use of tax dollars, and I'm not averse to a sunsetted tax to pay for them.) If you think that a high-tax, high-government-benefit regime is best, move to NY or MA.

    5. Re:Render unto Cesar. by Toonol · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And like the Talibans in Afghanistan and Pakistan if they ever get the chance they've dictate to others they must live "the Christian way". They would even bring back stoning for adulatory and other sins. Here's one that even says The bible permits slavery.

      Is that a hundredth of one percent of American Christians, or a thousandth of one percent of them? I think probably the latter.

    6. Re:Render unto Cesar. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the ANE, kings and lords often put their mark on items to claim them. Caesar's image was on the coin, therefore, in the mind of people in the ANE, the coin belonged to Caesar.

      However, Caesar's a man, and as men, we're made in the image of God. Jesus' response here is that you should pay taxes you owe, just as you should give to God that which is owed. Which, being made in His image, is everything. There's quite honestly so much more to that passage, but it could fill papers and books, not just a /. comment.

      Btw (to the article), presenting both a Christian/Conservative/Republican viewpoint alongside an Atheist/Liberal/Democratic viewpoint is good. Shouldn't we be taught both views and decide for ourselves?

    7. Re:Render unto Cesar. by tyrione · · Score: 1

      Modern American Christians most likely have never read a single word about any Caesar.

    8. Re:Render unto Cesar. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except it's not stereotyping at all. Stereotyping would be saying all Africans like fried chicken and watermelon, or all Asians are good at math. Saying that someone thinks a particular way because of the group that they freely chose to associate with is not stereotyping.

      "I'm a Taiwanese ballet dancer. Oh, but it doesn't mean what you think it means. I'm using Taiwanese ballet dancer to refer to basement-dwelling nerd."

      No, I'm sorry, it doesn't work that way, and you have no right to be upset when someone calls you what a Republican is instead of using the term Republican.

    9. Re:Render unto Cesar. by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Is that a hundredth of one percent of American Christians, or a thousandth of one percent of them? I think probably the latter.

      More like about 20%-30% of American Christians. It certainly describes *all* of the fundie nutjobs I had the misfortune of growing up around. Maybe it's about one hundredth of a percent of Christians in *civilized* parts of the US, but in the Deep South, it's about 80%-90% of Christians. They really are that crazy. I know. I grew up there. If you are anything other than a fundie nutjob, they will call you a "practicing Satanist" as various Catholic, Hindu and Atheist friends of mine were called.

    10. Re:Render unto Cesar. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then they should read their bibles more. Hint: Mark 12

    11. Re:Render unto Cesar. by couchslug · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Yet another prejudiced remark/insult (stereotyping based upon their group, rather than as individuals)."

      They don't act or vote as individuals. The prejudice is completely deserved as anyone who is not a religionist can easily see, and as anyone who IS a religionist (and thus not capable of considering anything that conflicts with their supersititious ideal) can never see.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    12. Re:Render unto Cesar. by couchslug · · Score: 1

      "Shouldn't we be taught both views and decide for ourselves?"

      Why teach fantasy that has zero proof to support it? Prove your God exists or fuck off. No faith, no games. Put up or shut up.

      I defy you to prove "God" exists. Now. Without equivocation, and in a manner proof to all counterargument. No semantic games, proof!

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    13. Re:Render unto Cesar. by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 1

      Double-down isn't gonna win you anything.

      Grow up. I mean, really.

    14. Re:Render unto Cesar. by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 1

      Your religion is Materialism. And really, it's only about 200 years old. Not a very old religion at all.

      That you seem to think you've 'arrived' at some point of enlightenment that nobody could have possibly ever reached, say, 500 years ago, is just sad.

      But continue on. Maybe someday you'll get a clue. The Humanities are not just some obsolete hoax.

    15. Re:Render unto Cesar. by AuMatar · · Score: 0, Troll

      Because I'm a decent human being, and while their hypocrisy annoys me I'm not going to destroy their lives to punish them for it? That doesn't stop it from being hypocrisy though- if you're against taxes, you ought to refuse them on principle at all opportunities. I don't see any of you doing that. On the stimulus you made some noise about it- then started campaigning on those very same projects.

      Although trust me, if I could vote for the South to be kicked out of the union, I would in a heartbeat. The coasts would finally get much needed health care, be sanely governed, and the south would become even more of a hellhole than it already is.

      I don't object to the taxes. I should be paying *at least* twice what I currently do in taxes- I make 6 figures and pay almost the same amount as my sister who makes less than half that. All inclusive of federal, state, real estate, and sales I paid less than 20K, and with no deductions other than mortgage interest. There needs to be a social safety net. People have a right to health insurance. We have to have public transit, roads, fire, police, parks, etc. We have a massive debt that needs to be paid off at some point. That costs money. Large amounts of it. There are places without all those things if you don't like taxes- I hear Somalia is nice this time of year.

      BTW, unless you're making 250K+ a year there's no way in hell you're paying anywhere near 50% in taxes. And if you are- quite frankly I don't give a fuck, you're well enough off that you ought to be. Until world hunger and homelessness are solved you have no right to more of the world's resources than that.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    16. Re:Render unto Cesar. by AlamedaStone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yet another prejudiced remark/insult (stereotyping based upon their group, rather than as individuals).

      Boy you're really showing your superiority there. (Not.)

      AuMatar seemed to be suggesting that Christian fundamentalists overwhelmingly favor lower taxes for the purpose of reducing government, despite relying heavily on government programs, services, and pork.

      You blithely call him a bigot with no supporting evidence. Most of Slashdot is familiar with hand-wringing, think-of-the-children arguments. This is why people often ask for factual evidence.

      Prove him wrong with something other than outrage.

      --
      "All these years believing you're the signified monkey, only to find out you're just a big hunk of nobody cares."
    17. Re:Render unto Cesar. by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      The Humanities are not just some obsolete hoax.

      Religion, on the other hand...

    18. Re:Render unto Cesar. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a pretty liberal guy (certainly by American standards), and that's absurd. The only thing you can say for sure about every self-proclaimed Republican (assuming none are lying) is that they vote or support the Republican party. That's it. You can speculate that they're conservative, and that's a reasonable speculation. But they might just as easily be "Republicans" because they don't really think about who they're voting for, and they're just voting the way they always have. Or maybe they have one issue they really care about that the Republicans support (let's say immigration control), but are otherwise in complete agreement with the official stance of the Democrats. Or maybe they're confused; perhaps they were raised in a fiercely pro-Republican/anti-Democrat household (and think the Democrats are some kind of monster), but when asked for their opinions on issues, always have an opinion which differs to that of the Republican party.

      To make an analogy, it's like a Taiwanese ballet dancer being white, extremely butch, clumsy and not at all artistically gifted. Such a being is easily possible, all that is required is for that person to be a Taiwanese ballet dancer is for them to be a citizen of Taiwan and to have either plans or the ability to perform ballet to some extent. commodore64_love (who I absolutely loathe - I hope he loses his job and all his money and finds out how hard it really is to "pull myself up by the bootstraps") is right on this count. Your idea of what being a "Republican" is wrong (although it's reasonable speculation).

    19. Re:Render unto Cesar. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't let the truth get in the way of a bit of political correctness.

    20. Re:Render unto Cesar. by the_womble · · Score: 1

      [quote]If they want to put something that reflects Christian values on the money, they should use "Render unto Cesar".[/quote]

      As a Chritian, I agree that would be an improvement, but Jesus key teaching about money were:

      "it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of the needle, than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven"

      and

      "give all you have to the poor"

      A REAL Christian country would have one of those two on its money.

    21. Re:Render unto Cesar. by sonicmerlin · · Score: 2

      I like your Christ, I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ. -Mohandas Gandhi

      Gandhi and Reverend Andrews, a Presbyterian missionary, were walking together in South Africa. “The two suddenly find their way blocked by young thugs. Reverend Andrews takes one look at the menacing gangsters and decides to run for it. Gandhi stops him. ‘Doesn’t the New Testament say if an enemy strikes you on the right cheek you should offer him the left?’ Andrews mumbles that he thought the phrase was used metaphorically. ‘I’m not so sure,’ Gandhi replies. ‘I suspect he meant you must show courage - be willing to take a blow, several blows, to show you will not strike back nor will you be turned aside. And when you do that it calls on something in human nature, something that makes his hatred decrease and his respect increase. I think Christ grasped that and I have seen it work.’”

      I believe this quote and anecdote properly illustrates the nature of religion in the West, and those who claim to follow those religions. It does not denote *everyone*, and in fact there are many good religious people, but 1% of a large number is itself a large number..

    22. Re:Render unto Cesar. by orzetto · · Score: 1

      They would even bring back stoning for adulatory [...]

      Why, this is the most intelligent and insightful idea I have ever seen! You must be indeed a person of exceptional intellect for *OUCH* *AARGH* Stop it by Jehovah! *gets stoned to death*

      --
      Victims of 9/11: <3000. Traffic in the US: >30,000/y
    23. Re:Render unto Cesar. by mpe · · Score: 1

      AuMatar seemed to be suggesting that Christian fundamentalists overwhelmingly favor lower taxes for the purpose of reducing government, despite relying heavily on government programs, services, and pork.

      Given that these people often stress the Old Testament over the New you'd expect them to be against pork :)

    24. Re:Render unto Cesar. by demonlapin · · Score: 1
      I do make more than $250k a year. Of course, that started this year. I didn't go through a nice career progression; I went from $40k/yr to over $250k, so I haven't gotten to enjoy the life of being just a little rich. I'm 35 years old, and my net worth is STILL well below zero. I couldn't afford to contribute to an IRA through my entire 20s because I was a student. You want to tax wealth, tax wealth. But don't confuse income and wealth.

      Until world hunger and homelessness are solved you have no right to more of the world's resources than that.

      Yeah, that's pretty much why I can't stand socialists. I've gone out and worked hard for a long time to get to the position I'm in. It's not your money, it's mine.

      I hear Somalia

      Please find a different straw man for limited government.

      Finally, would somebody please mod him up? I disagree with just about every political thought this guy has, but he definitely isn't trolling.

    25. Re:Render unto Cesar. by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And like the Talibans in Afghanistan and Pakistan if they ever get the chance they've dictate to others they must live "the Christian way". They would even bring back stoning for adulatory and other sins. Here's one that even says The bible permits slavery.

      Is that a hundredth of one percent of American Christians, or a thousandth of one percent of them? I think probably the latter.

      It doesn't matter how many there are, what matters is that there are some in the US who like the Taliban would dictate to everyone how they will live, even when the people are not harming anyone else.

      Falcon

    26. Re:Render unto Cesar. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I've seen this argument quite a lot lately, but one thing bothers me - if it irks you so much, why don't you start voting against taxes and let them go adrift? Be realistic - most of those dollars go to programs, like Medicare, Social Security, and welfare, that are championed by the coasties.

      FALSE. Most of it goes to military spending and military pensions. Less than one third is spent on social services, which is not "most" no matter how you slice it. You are a liar.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    27. Re:Render unto Cesar. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd rather my tax money go to defending this great nation of ours and taking care of those who selflessly served, than to thousands of lazy slackers who sell their food stamps to buy cigarettes and alcohol and continue to pump out babies out of wedlock.

    28. Re:Render unto Cesar. by BraksDad · · Score: 1

      "Render unto Cesar THAT WHICH IS CEASARS." Not all of it.

      --
      Slowly waving my hand - "This is not the sig you are looking for."
    29. Re:Render unto Cesar. by theascended · · Score: 2, Informative

      One might question whether you read the sources you cited, as opposed to simply linking terms you heard a convincing speaker use one day.

      Manifest destiny has little to do with Christians spreading the word across the world. While the idea existed that it was ordained by the Christian God, Manifest Destiny was the idea that Americans were charged with expanding capitalism, democracy, and even the American government to all of North and Latin America.

      "Christian Talibans" is a lovely buzz word... but wholly inappropriate as Taliban is neither an adjective or common noun. It is instead a proper noun describing a terroristic dictatorship that was formerly the ruling body of Iraq and had strong control over Afghanistan and is currently engaging in guerrilla and terrorist assaults to prevent the peoples of those regions from asserting their own power. The Taliban is 100% radicalize Islam in origin and operation. Associating Christians in this way is simply disingenuous. If you want a true analogy, try the Irish Republican Army.

      Further, dominionists don't say in any way that they want to forcefully convert any one or that they intend to mass murder any people who will not believe in their exact form of Christianity. Reconstructionists have nothing to do with government or militant attitudes. They're basically the root of the protestant movement away from the control of the Holy See (the pope). Reconstructionism was in fact a break from religious control and not an instantiation of it.

      Finally, using a blog to support a radical opinion is about as useful as using a tissue to clean up hurricane Katrina. However, reading it, you'll notice all references to slavery and the law of God are from the Old Testament. If you know anything about modern day apologetics and theism, its been generally accepted for several centuries that the coming of Christ eliminated the "old law" and brought His own based entirely around the premise of John 14:6, "I am the way, the truth and the life. None shall come to the father except through me." Which can in no way be interpreted as Christians enslaving other men.

      After all that, I leave you with this: http://xkcd.com/386/

    30. Re:Render unto Cesar. by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Let me know when you recover the ability to read a chart.

    31. Re:Render unto Cesar. by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      I know, bad form to reply to self, but haven't you and I had a particularly fun flame war before?

    32. Re:Render unto Cesar. by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      One might question whether you read the sources you cited, as opposed to simply linking terms you heard a convincing speaker use one day.

      Fortunately that's not true. In high school history we learned about Manifest Destiny.

      Manifest destiny has little to do with Christians spreading the word across the world. While the idea existed that it was ordained by the Christian God, Manifest Destiny was the idea that Americans were charged with expanding capitalism, democracy, and even the American government to all of North and Latin America.

      You left out "the idea that 'uncivilized' peoples could be improved by exposure to the Christian, democratic values of the United States." Or Native Americans and Christianity:
      "White Attitudes. Among whites there were two common religiously based attitudes toward Native Americans. One was expressed in the notion of Manifest Destiny, the idea that white Christians had a God-given mission to expand their civilization and its ideals of liberty and democracy across the entire North American continent. From this point of view Indians who occupied valuable lands could be removed or even exterminated with few moral qualms. A second point of view held that the Indians did not have to be seen as a hindrance to white progress. Rather, they were simply ignorant heathens who could become part of American society if they were allowed to benefit from the civilizing instruction of whites. The first step toward civilization was believed to be conversion to Christianity. Although earlier missionaries to the Indians had produced few converts and much antagonism, the revivals of the early nineteenth century brought new impetus to the missionary movement. Most Protestant denominations as well as the Roman Catholic Church sent men and women to Indian tribes across the country, where they preached, distributed Bibles, and established schools."

      "Christian Talibans" is a lovely buzz word... but wholly inappropriate as Taliban is neither an adjective

      adjective: "noun: the word class that qualifies nouns.
      verb: add a modifier to a constituent.
      "Taliban" modifies "Christian".

      t is instead a proper noun describing a terroristic dictatorship that was formerly the ruling body of Iraq and had strong control over Afghanistan and is currently engaging in guerrilla and terrorist assaults to prevent the peoples of those regions from asserting their own power.

      And Christian Talibans such as those I already linked to would do the same thing. The difference is the religion, and the sect of the religion. Seeing as how either you can't be bothered to see that Dominionists and other Reconstructionists would do the same thing, that "civil government should be controlled by Christians alone and conducted according to Biblical law", I am left thinking you're trolling. All that's changed is the religion and the holy book.

      And if you don't think stoning, which is what they plan, isn't terrorism then I don't want to live in your world. Even associates of the Rev. Jerry Falwell said theologian Rousas John (R.J.) Rushdoony positions on stoning were scary.
      "In a world run by Rushdoony followers, sots would escape capital punishment--which would make them happy exceptions indeed. Those who would face execution include not only gays but a very long list of others: blasphemers, heretics, apostate Christians, people who cursed or struck their parents, females guilty of "unchastity before marriage," "incorrigible" juvenile delinquents, adulterers, and (probably) telephone psychics. And that's to say nothing of murderers and those guilty of raping married women or

    33. Re:Render unto Cesar. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Getting this out of the way first. Only using Republican because OP called themself a Republican. Any other political party works just as well.

      Ok, I'll admit the Taiwanese ballet dancer wasn't a good analogy, or even fit the comparison at all. The point is that people are not born Republican. People calling themselves Republicans made a conscience decision to do so, and whether it's because they believe in the Republican party, or as you pointed out are simply voting like they and/or mommy and daddy always have and don't really think about who they are voting for (which, IMO, is worse than someone voting for Republicans because they do actually believe in them), they have no justification for getting upset when someone calls them what a Republican is instead of using the label of Republican. If you don't like it, use a different fucking label for yourself.

    34. Re:Render unto Cesar. by FlyingBishop · · Score: 1

      No, it's stereotyping. If you actually went around and talked to Christians (instead of talking out of your ass) you would discover that not only are many of them not Republicans, but many of the ones that are do not have a belief system that aligns with the reactionary idiots you think of when you think of Christians.

    35. Re:Render unto Cesar. by Dr.+Hellno · · Score: 1

      ["Taliban"] is instead a proper noun describing a terroristic dictatorship that was formerly the ruling body of Iraq and had strong control over Afghanistan

      The Taliban never ruled Iraq. You're probably thinking of Afghanistan, which they did rule from 1996 until they were overthrown in 2001 (according to wikipedia). They also operate in Pakistan. I know this is offtopic but it's an important distinction. The invasion of Iraq had nothing to do with the Taliban.

    36. Re:Render unto Cesar. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except for the fact that it isn't.

      Not quite sure how we started talking about Christians, but why are they calling themselves Christians if they aren't really Christian? If they'd like to redefine the label, well, more power to them. But they have no justification for getting upset when someone calls them by the current description of the label they chose.

    37. Re:Render unto Cesar. by magus_melchior · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's worse than that-- many Christians believe that they can scoff at government critics when their guy is in power (e.g., Reagan and Bush 43), but they are among the first to protest and invoke fire and brimstone sermons about how they're doomed when a Democrat is elected. In other words, it's a convenient use of Romans 13, where Paul tells the church to obey the government in power. In this case they value the Republican alliance between Christian evangelicals and conservatives more than they claim to value the Bible's teachings.

      There's tons of other examples, such as the parallels between the Pharisees' treatment of lepers and the treatment of homosexuals and minorities by today's church, as well as foaming at the mouth over abortions when they say or do nothing about the mother's health or the children's poverty, or insisting on no government assistance to the less fortunate when they spend millions on mega-churches rather than their communities. I wouldn't be surprised that there were just as many preachers shouting "Amen!" as those who called for a boycott when Glenn Beck called to Christians to abandon social justice efforts.

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
    38. Re:Render unto Cesar. by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      BTW, unless you're making 250K+ a year there's no way in hell you're paying anywhere near 50% in taxes. And if you are- quite frankly I don't give a fuck, you're well enough off that you ought to be. Until world hunger and homelessness are solved you have no right to more of the world's resources than that.

      This is probably the biggest point of contention between you and the people who push for lower taxes.

      You imply that world hunger and homelessness can be solved by more money. They don't think so.
      You imply that solving "world hunger" is a good use of our money. They think (probably?) it's a good use of donations, certainly a terrible allocation of tax dollars.
      I would guess that most of them are in favor of a minimum social safety net, IE, limited unemployment benefits for folks "down on their luck," but they also don't want to subsidize the lazy . Nor do they want to give to those who think they're entitled to a handout. Separating those two groups is pretty tricky.

  46. Damn intarweb! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google has failed me!

    which of your founding fathers was the one who said 'religion is but a useful tool to control the masses'.

    OK. I can't find it and I really don't want to go on a reading-all-the -founding-father-letters-notes-books-etc... binge.

    I'm guessing Franklin. Jefferson could have said it too.

    I'll shit in my pants if it was Adams, so let me know before I shower and change.

    Washington....nah.

    1. Re:Damn intarweb! by eepok · · Score: 5, Informative

      http://www.aynrand.org/site/News2?id=6177 is good for general quotes from the Founding Fathers regarding religion. I like:

      "The government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion." - John Adams

      "...Thirteen governments [of the original states] thus founded on the natural authority of the people alone, without a pretence of miracle or mystery, and which are destined to spread over the northern part of that whole quarter of the globe, are a great point gained in favor of the rights of mankind." - John Adams

      "...an amendment was proposed by inserting the words, 'Jesus Christ...the holy author of our religion,' which was rejected 'By a great majority in proof that they meant to comprehend, within the mantle of its protection, the Jew and the Gentile, the Christian and the Mohammedan, the Hindoo and the Infidel of every denomination.'" - Thomas Jefferson

      "Our civil rights have no dependence on our religious opinions, more than on our opinions in physics and geometry....The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg." - Thomas Jefferson

      "Religious bondage shackles and debilitates the mind and unfits it for every noble enterprise....During almost fifteen centuries has the legal establishment of Christianity been on trial. What have been its fruits? More or less, in all places, pride and indolence in the clergy; ignorance and servility in laity; in both, superstition, bigotry, and persecution." - James Madison

      "All natural institutions of churches, whether Jewish, Christian, or Turkish, appear to me no other than human inventions, set up to terrify and enslave mankind, and monopolize power and profit." - Thomas Paine

    2. Re:Damn intarweb! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      [aynrand.org] is good for general quotes from the Founding Fathers regarding religion

      Huh. Apparently they're actually good for something.

    3. Re:Damn intarweb! by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      A voice of informative reason in a sea of discord. Mod parent up, please.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    4. Re:Damn intarweb! by eepok · · Score: 1

      Ayn Rand? Ya... it stung a bit to reference the site...

    5. Re:Damn intarweb! by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Damn those hedonistic heathens! No wonder the Texas School board took pains to reduce the importance of Thomas Jefferson.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    6. Re:Damn intarweb! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 3, Interesting

      They're working on it. From TFA:

      Cynthia Dunbar, a lawyer from Richmond who is a strict constitutionalist and thinks the nation was founded on Christian beliefs, managed to cut Thomas Jefferson from a list of figures whose writings inspired revolutions in the late 18th century and 19th century, replacing him with St. Thomas Aquinas, John Calvin and William Blackstone. (Jefferson is not well liked among conservatives on the board because he coined the term “separation between church and state.”)

      “The Enlightenment was not the only philosophy on which these revolutions were based,” Ms. Dunbar said.

    7. Re:Damn intarweb! by countertrolling · · Score: 1

      It works better if your read the page out loud with a thick Russian accent.. while using a ridiculously long cigarette holder.

      Now we catch moose and squirrel..

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    8. Re:Damn intarweb! by glitch23 · · Score: 1

      "The government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion." - John Adams

      First, that doesn't mean it wasn't founded on any religion whatsoever.

      Second, how do you explain "Creator" and "Nature's God" used in the Declaration of Independence?

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    9. Re:Damn intarweb! by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      Those terms, particularly 'Nature's God' are deist terms. Not Christian at all.

      T

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    10. Re:Damn intarweb! by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Several of the founders were Deists - they believed in a creator god who set the universe in motion, but thereafter had no influence on its affairs. Not Christians.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    11. Re:Damn intarweb! by slapout · · Score: 1

      What about:

      "We, therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions"

      and

      "And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor."

      --
      Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
    12. Re:Damn intarweb! by grasshoppa · · Score: 1

      Of interest is that it doesn't say "God", or make any specific reference to the christian god. In fact, separating it out in such a manner would seem to indicate there is a separate entity, at least in the minds of the framers.

      Interesting things pop up when you listen objectively.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    13. Re:Damn intarweb! by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>"The government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion." - John Adams

      If you're going to blindly quote people, you should at least know what you're talking about. This was in a treaty to the (Muslim) Barbary Pirates in Tripoli, and was writing this as a sort of diplomatic goodwill.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Tripoli

      What you probably don't know was that he got into deep shit for it, because the people at the time did in fact believe America was founded on the Christian religion.

      But don't let me challenge your dogma.

    14. Re:Damn intarweb! by eepok · · Score: 1

      Again, they profess a supreme creator, but say nothing about the establishment upon Christian beliefs.

    15. Re:Damn intarweb! by eepok · · Score: 1

      And at the time, the people were wrong. They're still wrong, too.

  47. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Bemopolis · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Well, then you can say to him that the Constitution says nothing about the right to own guns. He might be thinking of telling you about the Second Amendment says "...the right to bear arms shall not be infringed", but you could just respond that that is ambiguous, as it doesn't specify whether they mean "arms" as in weapons, or "arms" as in the upper extremities. Maybe Madison was just concerned about the government chopping them off, as he may have heard that they do in Muslim lands. Then perhaps that jagoff will resort to references of those coeval extra-constitutional writings, wherein the phrase "separation of church and state" can also be found.

    Ah, the joys of willful ignorance.

    --
    "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
  48. Futher evidence... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...that the USA should secede from Texas.

  49. Re:It's about time by pitchpipe · · Score: 1

    It's about time we got back to good, old-fashioned American, Christian values

    Now I know that the Mormons claim that Jesus visited North America after he was "resurrected," but I wasn't aware that they actually converted. It's like the person that said they only used the King James version of the bible, because if "[Middle English] was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for me!"

    --
    Look where all this talking got us, baby.
  50. Nice trolling! by spun · · Score: 1

    Honestly, I don't believe that you believe what you are writing for a second, but I love a good troll, so I'll play along.

    You really don't think through the consequences of your ideology, do you? What would happen if the fire department were privatized? It would fail. If you don't put out a fire blazing in a building that is not covered, what happens? Does the fire just go out on its own? Or does it spread to the buildings of those covered, as well?

    Fighting fires is a public good. Putting out your neighbor's fire helps you, as well. The free market can not efficiently allocate resources in the case where there are externalities, either public goods like fire fighting, public libraries, public schools, and roads; or public bads like pollution. To illustrate: an educated populace creates more value than an uneducated one. If everyone were forced to pay for their own education, we would have a less educated populace, as fewer people would be able to afford it, or would consider it valuable. We would have a less educated populace, creating less value, and we would be worse off overall.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    1. Re:Nice trolling! by Darkness404 · · Score: 0, Troll

      If everyone were forced to pay for their own education, we would have a less educated populace, as fewer people would be able to afford it, or would consider it valuable. We would have a less educated populace, creating less value, and we would be worse off overall.

      We would be better off honestly. Think about it this way, how many people in your high school were complete idiots yet managed to pass? Right there we reduced the value of a high school education. Now think back to your college education, how many people there had no clue yet still got a bachelors degree? We just cheapened that degree. Add in colleges where you basically just pay money and get a degree and we have a system where no one can get ahead unless they pay -a lot- of money.

      We now have a situation where you have to pay for more education than you would have with a private school (not to mention you still pay taxes even when you and your family don't use public education...) and "waste" a lot of time in school.

      How many classes have -really- been of use to you in life? How many classes (especially in elementary/secondary/high school) have been ruined because some people who have no interest in the subject were simply there taking up space and disrupting the class?

      In a pre-internet world and in a caste system world, public education paid by all was a good argument, we had classes to teach -thinking-, today? We don't even have them in university level. The point of education isn't to make everyone be educated but rather to make sure that the best people end up with the best roles. That a shepherd who was great at science could become a scientist, not that the shepherd who was great at raising sheep -had- to be the scientist which he was terribly poor at, which is what we have today.

      When we have near universal access to the internet in the western world, there will be nearly no need to continue public education, all the information is there. If we taught thinking in school, there might be an argument to save it, but with the way that it is now? The sooner it dies the better for all.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    2. Re:Nice trolling! by haruharaharu · · Score: 1

      What would happen if the fire department were privatized? It would fail. If you don't put out a fire blazing in a building that is not covered, what happens? Does the fire just go out on its own? Or does it spread to the buildings of those covered, as well?

      No, the fire department would come out and wet the buildings that had fire insurance so they didn't burn. Shoulda bought insurance.

      --
      Reboot macht Frei.
    3. Re:Nice trolling! by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      No, the fire department would come out and wet the buildings that had fire insurance so they didn't burn. Shoulda bought insurance

      Of course the wouldn't; they only get paid for putting out fires, so they'd actually be incentiveized to cause more fires. It's the insurance companies that would want to stop fires.

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    4. Re:Nice trolling! by haruharaharu · · Score: 1

      Don't be daft - I'm describing how it actually operates where fire insurance is sold.

      --
      Reboot macht Frei.
    5. Re:Nice trolling! by spun · · Score: 1

      I doubt that would work with the same efficiency as simply putting out the fire. Some customers would still get burned.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  51. Gov. Rick Perry supports succession. by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

    I say we give him what he wants.

    1. Re:Gov. Rick Perry supports succession. by dlawson · · Score: 1

      And seal the border.

      --
      dot-sig.
    2. Re:Gov. Rick Perry supports succession. by PPH · · Score: 1

      Its back to Mexico for them then.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    3. Re:Gov. Rick Perry supports succession. by publiclurker · · Score: 1

      After we invade them for their oil of course.

    4. Re:Gov. Rick Perry supports succession. by j+h+woodyatt · · Score: 1

      Give him succession? Really? I don't think that word means what you think it means.

      --
      jhw
  52. Re:Anonymous Coward by Romancer · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Take a stand or shut up.

    I hold every single person responsible if they turn a blind eye or stay silent when their principles are trampled.
    If possible, even more so, if it's their job to stand and be counted on issues they have been elected to represent.

    Every side is entitled to try and promote their viewpoint. To let them get a vote like that by leaving is certainly an emotional statement but completely lacks the realization that; the vote was held, the tally counted, and voluntary absent to make a statement still means factual defeat.

    --


    ) Human Kind Vs Human Creation
    ) It'd be interesting to see how many humans would survive to serve us.
  53. Re:It's about time by Zen+Hash · · Score: 1

    The left-wing cooks have been trying to spread their socialism and atheism through schools for a long time. It's about time we got back to good, old-fashioned American, Christian values

    Wow, and all of this time I thought the idea behind cheap school lunches was simply to ensure that all of the students were fed.

    --
    Here I sit, all broken hearted.
    Came to poop, but only farted.
  54. Give primary sources by Darkness404 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We could really eliminate any bias if we would have schools which would teach from the source materials. Want to learn about communism? Read The Communist Manifesto along with statistics about communist nations. Want to learn about capitalism? Read The Wealth of Nations and read statistics. Want to learn about evolution? Read the Origin of Species along with contemporary news.

    The point is, when we give editors power over the source, we end up with bias one way or the other. Rather than having people -tell- us about things, why not read them ourselves?

    --
    Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    1. Re:Give primary sources by fermion · · Score: 1
      I have to agree with this. Textbooks make sense only if one are trying to control information. If one is teaching, then a wide variety of sources makes more sense. In the past this was not feasible. Today it is. Consider that a school will pay not only huge upfront costs for a text book, but also recurring storage, administrative, and shrinkage costs. These costs can not usually be recouped by the student, but must be paid by the public purse.

      Look at it this way. A medium sized school can be equipped with computers with high speed printers, in every classroom, for under 2 million dollars. The 10 year cost for supplying a single student with a text book is 10-15K range. If no text books were ordered, ever, and schools invested in computer based primary sources, money would be saved. We would still have consumables, but dealing with companies that would provide electronic consumables rather than paper consumables would save money, and resources.

      If trained, kids will use computers in ways that they will never use textbooks. If allowed, they will find interesting things. We needs literature, and some printer resources, but by and large textbook, and the time we spend developing them, at least for non-college work, are a waste of money.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    2. Re:Give primary sources by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Exactly, plus how much more learning will the students get from actually -reading- Aristotle, Plato, Chaucer, Voltaire, Kant, and Smith rather than reading -about- those people?

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    3. Re:Give primary sources by quantaman · · Score: 1

      Going to have them read Mein Kampf when they learn about Nazism? What about the diaries of Ann Frank?

      My guess is everyone reading Mein Kampf may create some Nazi sympathizers, everyone reading Ann Frank will de-convert some Nazi sympathizers.

      Have them read the Selfish Gene in biology? What about an ID book? Do you really expect them to have the expertise to tell which one is science and which is BS?

      Primary sources work when you have a lot of time to perform a thorough survey and become an expert in the subject. For HS students they only have time to read one, maybe two primary sources, and they don't have the background to evaluate anything complicated.

      It's much much tougher to eliminate bias in your selection of primary sources than it is to write a bias free textbook.

      --
      I stole this Sig
    4. Re:Give primary sources by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      It's much much tougher to eliminate bias in your selection of primary sources than it is to write a bias free textbook.

      Show me one. Throughout all my education I have not found a bias-free textbook.

      Do you really expect them to have the expertise to tell which one is science and which is BS?

      The thing is, no one knows exactly. The great thing is you encourage -thinking- if you only read the Diary of Anne Frank you are using an unreliable, biased source. Same thing with only reading Mein Kampf. If you read Mein Kampf you quickly realize Hitler was a terrible author and really outlines his arguments poorly. But, if you don't teach both sides to a story you can lead to things like the Neo-Nazi movement where in the propaganda movement of post-WWII you have things being exaggerated and the entire German army being vilified, which naturally, leads to sympathizers. If we teach both sides its easy to tell which side has the more outlandish arguments. For example, take this strange argument that quite honestly doesn't hold up.

      If today all further Aryan influence on Japan should stop, assuming that Europe and America should perish, Japan's present rise in science and technology might continue for a short time; but even in a few years the well would dry up, the Japanese special character would gain, but the present culture would freeze and sink back into the slumber from which it was awakened seven decades ago by the wave of Aryan culture.

      Even a basic student would look at this statement and wonder how this would hold up, considering that Japan is doing quite well without the instruction of Hitler's Aryan race of blond haired, blue eyed Nordic people.

      The point being, its impossible to write a bias free textbook, and by reading primary sources it is quite easy to figure out which ideology is better.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    5. Re:Give primary sources by xaxa · · Score: 1

      Sounds pretty much like what I read at school. A lot of the textbook was just statistics, or reprinted primary sources.

      It's still easy to teach to an agenda if you choose to. Or, a decent teacher can still teach properly in Texas by using other material (or maybe I'm being naive -- perhaps external pressures wouldn't allow this. I've recently come across a news article where Americans were pretending to be Christian because it's unacceptable otherwise, which is incredible and awful).

      It's been 10 years since I read a history text book, but IIRC from when I was about 14 much of the book was primary/secondary sources, clearly labelled and cited, with some background information to put it in context, and sample questions like "compare the Protestant and Catholic attitudes to the king's decree" (or any other comparison -- rich/poor, British/German, rural/urban etc).

    6. Re:Give primary sources by xaxa · · Score: 1

      "Old" stuff is really cheap anyway. I remember losing The Odyssey and being required to replace it. Cost: £1.50.

      (Having said that, most actual text books were in the £10-15 range, so the ten year cost is what, £30-50 if you expect them to last 3+ years? I don't see where the $10k comes from.)

    7. Re:Give primary sources by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Well, you must have had better textbooks than what I had. Most of my books (from about 5 years ago) were pure unsourced editorials. It contained almost no information beyond what the victors had to say. For example, the American Civil War section barely even touched on the Confederacy, it failed to mention any conflict beyond the black-and-white slavery vs abolition of slavery. There was nothing on the fact that many of the people of the south owned no slaves, or the state's rights that caused part of it.

      Same thing with World War II, the entire war was caused because Hitler wanted to kill all the Jews and that was the only reason for the war, right?

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    8. Re:Give primary sources by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Not cheap, but rather free. Get a computer and and have access to just about every text pre-1910-ish via the internet. The only downside is you generally get crappy translations of classic works when compared to modern editions, but such is life.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    9. Re:Give primary sources by spiffmastercow · · Score: 0, Troll

      The point is, when we give editors power over the source, we end up with bias one way or the other. Rather than having people -tell- us about things, why not read them ourselves?

      Imagine you're 5 years old, and you ask a professor and a redneck what causes rain. The professor spends hours telling you about weather patterns, condensation, etc., while the redneck tells you the rain is caused by God taking a piss.

    10. Re:Give primary sources by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      ...And the 5 year old may believe it for a time, then question it, and then forget it in a week. Few people are going to believe anything the first time they hear it and it will stick with them.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    11. Re:Give primary sources by rochberg · · Score: 1

      Are you serious? You do understand that all of those subjects have evolved extensively since the publication of those books. Reading Marx & Engels, Smith, and Darwin gives you a start, but you cannot possibly grasp the nuances of these systems without learning about Lenin, Trotsky, Keynes, Friedman, Mendel, Watson & Crick, etc.

      Yes, editors do have power to introduce bias. But conscientious editors strive for objectivity. Furthermore, most textbooks involve some element of peer review where the editors invite colleagues to read and critique the material.

      There simply is too much material on any one of these topics to read all of the original sources ever produced.

    12. Re:Give primary sources by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We could really eliminate any bias if we would have schools which would teach from the source materials."

      You are incorrect. You would merely shift the bias to a different source. Bias CANNOT be eliminated. In the case of many standards, BIAS IS DELIBERATE.

      Textbooks are summaries. How good a summary depends upon the content editors and the state standards they are written to. Your proposal is a great idea. But you do realize that it would be rejected in a state like Texas? Bias in textbooks is NOT A MISTAKE. I won't even mention the outcry from the parents and students from having to work...

    13. Re:Give primary sources by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

      I think you have way too much faith in humanity.

    14. Re:Give primary sources by quantaman · · Score: 1

      It's much much tougher to eliminate bias in your selection of primary sources than it is to write a bias free textbook.

      Show me one. Throughout all my education I have not found a bias-free textbook.

      I should have phrased that better, you obviously can't omit bias completely, but it's easier to give a balanced synopsis or overview than to choose a selection of primary sources in a fair manner.

      Do you really expect them to have the expertise to tell which one is science and which is BS?

      The thing is, no one knows exactly. The great thing is you encourage -thinking- if you only read the Diary of Anne Frank you are using an unreliable, biased source. Same thing with only reading Mein Kampf. If you read Mein Kampf you quickly realize Hitler was a terrible author and really outlines his arguments poorly. But, if you don't teach both sides to a story you can lead to things like the Neo-Nazi movement where in the propaganda movement of post-WWII you have things being exaggerated and the entire German army being vilified, which naturally, leads to sympathizers. If we teach both sides its easy to tell which side has the more outlandish arguments. For example, take this strange argument that quite honestly doesn't hold up.

      Well in the case of evolution and ID it is pretty clear which is BS, but the average student doesn't necessarily have the background to see the problems in the ID argument.

      As for teaching both sides I have no problem with that, nor do I have a problem reading excerpts of certain books or perhaps an editorial penned by a Nazi.

      But not all bad ideas are poorly presented. Marx managed to convince several nations that communism worked on the basis of his writing, and there are probably people here who would vigorously defend Ayn Rand's vision. I think Rand is a great example because I believe we make arguments by telling stories. I tell my story of how reality works, than give a solution that fits my story, you do the same.

      A lot of these bad systems fall apart not because they're internally inconsistent, but because the stories they tell don't conform to reality. Communism fails not because it's poorly designed, but because people are a lot less altruistic and a lot more self-motivated than the people in its story. Ayn Rand's vision falls apart because people are more altruistic and less self-motivated than her characters. The problem with children in particular is that they don't have the life experience to know that a story is wrong, so they don't see why the argument is bad.

      If today all further Aryan influence on Japan should stop, assuming that Europe and America should perish, Japan's present rise in science and technology might continue for a short time; but even in a few years the well would dry up, the Japanese special character would gain, but the present culture would freeze and sink back into the slumber from which it was awakened seven decades ago by the wave of Aryan culture.

      Even a basic student would look at this statement and wonder how this would hold up, considering that Japan is doing quite well without the instruction of Hitler's Aryan race of blond haired, blue eyed Nordic people.

      The point being, its impossible to write a bias free textbook, and by reading primary sources it is quite easy to figure out which ideology is better.

      If that's the case why didn't the German's figure it out until they lost the war?

      Why did the USSR last for so long? Sure there was a dictatorship effect, but there were also a lot of Russians who saw both sides of the argument and still though communism worked better, and there were a lot of dedicated Nazi's who thought Hitler was the good guy.

      --
      I stole this Sig
    15. Re:Give primary sources by xaxa · · Score: 1

      Same thing with World War II, the entire war was caused because Hitler wanted to kill all the Jews and that was the only reason for the war, right?

      The BBC's website was recommended by loads of my teachers for revision (although, since it's 8 years since I was doing GCSE revision there are probably more options now). Here's the Road to World War 2.
      "In January 1933, Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany and immediately began to challenge the Treaty of Versailles and adapt an aggressive foreign policy, which led to war. Some historians argue that Britain and France were to blame for the Second World War because they did not stand up to Hitler."

      I don't remember the name of any textbooks we used, unfortunately. This review of one sounds about right: "What makes this book fantastic, however, is its enormous use of sources. Each page has, on average, 5 or more sources, both primary and secondary and when coupled with a good teacher, this book will teach students to evaluate and use sources." -- we spent loads of time analysing sources for bias and reliability etc. (e.g. see here). Since that was examined, it was best for the teacher to always provide material as a primary/secondary source if practical.

    16. Re:Give primary sources by xaxa · · Score: 1

      Computers can be distracting for the kids though, and anyway aren't so easy to read from (until we get e-ink screens, anyway). There are advantages of course, but when it's only £30 for a set of books that don't go out of date... well, they'll probably be the last to turn electronic.

    17. Re:Give primary sources by xaxa · · Score: 1

      Well in the case of evolution and ID it is pretty clear which is BS, but the average student doesn't necessarily have the background to see the problems in the ID argument.

      That's what the teacher is for.

      I was taught about various creation myths in religious studies lessons. The Christianity lesson went something like this.
      The only mention of ID in science lessons was when the teacher ridiculed a school board in Kansas one day. (It'd been in the news.)

      A lot of these bad systems

      I think you're bringing your own politics into this.

      There's no problem teaching about communism, or reading stuff by Marx. If you want to show it's a bad idea pick some other sources. I'd suggest photographs and first-hand accounts from any European communist country in the mid-late 20th century. I'd also suggest looking some American media from that time, it'll probably be good practise for spotting bias.

      I've posted this elsewhere in this discussion, but it's more relevant here: analysing sources.

    18. Re:Give primary sources by quantaman · · Score: 1

      Well in the case of evolution and ID it is pretty clear which is BS, but the average student doesn't necessarily have the background to see the problems in the ID argument.

      That's what the teacher is for.

      I was taught about various creation myths in religious studies lessons. The Christianity lesson went something like this.
      The only mention of ID in science lessons was when the teacher ridiculed a school board in Kansas one day. (It'd been in the news.)

      But I don't see why you couldn't mention it in a textbook as well, particularly as not all teachers may have the knowledge to debunk it. (note I think it's a bad idea to mention ID in class at all because it's more distraction than it's worth).

      A lot of these bad systems

      I think you're bringing your own politics into this.

      There's no problem teaching about communism, or reading stuff by Marx. If you want to show it's a bad idea pick some other sources. I'd suggest photographs and first-hand accounts from any European communist country in the mid-late 20th century. I'd also suggest looking some American media from that time, it'll probably be good practise for spotting bias.

      I've posted this elsewhere in this discussion, but it's more relevant here: analysing sources.

      You actually just kind of made my point (which suggests I didn't communicate very well since you felt you had to make it!)

      If you're giving students primary sources, which are heavily biased, than your selection of sources becomes absolutely critical.

      That was the original origin of the discussion, the OP saying to use original sources so they make up their own mind and me pointing out that there's a ton of bias in this.

      I don't argue that it's good to use some primary sources, including some biased ones to learn about analysing sources. But I was trying to point out that the idea of a course as a reading list of primary sources is a bad idea.

      --
      I stole this Sig
    19. Re:Give primary sources by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>Why did the USSR last for so long?

      There were a series of popular uprisings against the USSR, especially in the satellite states. They were all brutally suppressed. Tanks before teatime and all that.

      Then Gorby said that the USSR would no longer slaughter everyone that protested, and the whole thing unraveled nearly overnight.

      That makes a pretty strong case for why/how the USSR held together.

  55. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The socialism conservatives have a problem with is the socialism that currently exists where money is taken from people who work hard and given to the lazy. The socialism where those who are far more productive than others are punished and the fruits of their labor are handed out to slackers with nothing better to do than do drugs and pump out babies.

    You've fallen for the false notion that saying you're against socialism means you are against anything that even resembles it which is so far from the truth.

    I work hard and make decent money and I have no problem paying taxes for things that make our society great, like police and fire, but it makes me madder than hell when I hear some woman with 6 kids complain that her welfare check isn't big enough while filling her cart with alcohol and cigarettes.

    You really should try and understand the issues and opinions that exist in real life instead of the propaganda that's spread in an effort to help politicians gain even more power and control over the people through screwed up socialist programs.

  56. Thank God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At least it is better than the rewriting history to appease the liberals. Taking Boone out of the Alamo was just plain stupid on the part of the liberals. What is wrong with leaving history alone and just teaching it.

    1. Re:Thank God by Beelzebud · · Score: 0, Troll

      Cognitive Dissonance is an amazing thing.

      Without it, you couldn't write one sentence thanking god for conservative bias in textbooks, and in the next asking what is wrong with just teaching historical fact.

  57. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > I have news for you atheists, you will all be "under god" as you are burning in hell.

    Surely you cry yourself to sleep at night, knowing that those Jesus tells you to love will suffer for eternity.

  58. It's always good to comment, but... by Finsterwald+P+Ogleth · · Score: 1

    ...sometimes it helps to know the issues on which you are commenting.

    Granted, some of the points may have been distateful, but a majority of them had to do with watering down American history...to the point that history before 1900 was close to being irrelevant.

    * Dropping out the "discovery" of America by Chris Columbus (I know, it's really the "West Indies" on which he landed)
    * Removing references to "Christmas" as the celebration of Jesus' birth, BUT adding the Hindu holiday of "Diwali"
    * Citizens of the US no longer...texts would talk of "global citizenry"
    * Free Enterprise" = BAD ; "Capitalism" = BAD ; BAD = "Imperialism"
    "Social Justice" = GOOD ; "Political Correctness" = GOOD

    Yeah, many of us may not like all of the changes that were passed, but some of US history may have been salvaged.

    Whatever you may think of the process or the results, our history, and that history of the founders of the US, is just as important as knowing how many provinces and territories make up Canada, or the complete lineage of Queen Elizabeth II, back to Harold himself. Every country has it's history, and that's important, but not any more important than retaining the history of the U.S.A.

    1. Re:It's always good to comment, but... by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Your argument would make sense if they hadn't stripped Thomas Jefferson out of the history curriculum.

  59. Texas History is a required subject by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I lived in Texas for 8th-12th grade. The one thing that I found absolutely amazing, is that there is a required course for all students that is solely Texas History.

    1. Re:Texas History is a required subject by ccandreva · · Score: 1

      Every state has a required course in that state's history.

    2. Re:Texas History is a required subject by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      No, they don't. Illinois doesn't.

    3. Re:Texas History is a required subject by adewolf · · Score: 1

      Not in Colorado or Massachuettes

      --
      "The Brady Bunch is back...working homicide"
  60. It was the answer to an important question. by copponex · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In the late 80s, the republican base was slipping. Bush I barely won against Dukakis. Keep in mind, Bush was at the center of political power his whole life, headed the CIA, and had just completed 8 years as Vice President. His campaign had to resort to a racist attack ad about Willie Horton.

    In 1992, Bush lost to Clinton, and many believe it was because he refused to identify himself as a "born again" Christian. Most evangelicals had been uninvolved in politics, until they were discovered by the dying Republican movement. As long as you professed to be evangelical and pro-life, you'd have local preachers pushing their followers to vote for you. Bush II toed the line, and got elected twice for it. The only problem is now the evangelical movements want one of their own in the White House - Sarah Palin - and that's something the ruling business party cannot allow. They brought her in for the VP job, but she couldn't pull the moderate record of McCain. Palin could have been the sideshow, but the business party is greedy, not crazy, and they'll never let her within ten miles of the big red button.

    The evangelicals are an enormous and active voting bloc. They do exactly as their pastor or preacher tells them, and nearly half of them are in church every single sunday. Now they are being used up by two seats of power: Republicans and their own church leaders. The Republicans get a voting bloc that will campaign against their own interests, and the church leaders get access to power and a fanatical flock that now worships money, and gives them a bunch of it.

    Just try to imagine Christ at a Tea Party rally, protesting tax dollars spent on the ill and the needy, and then signing up to join the Army the next day. The evangelicals have no idea which way is north. They don't even have a coherent set of values left. They are just following orders.

    1. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The evangelicals have no idea which way is north. They don't even have a coherent set of values left. They are just following orders."

      The great irony is that most christians have never been christians if you measured it against the bibles own claims.

    2. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by pcfixup4ua · · Score: 0

      Modern Fundamentalist Christianity was born in the south after the civil war. The biggest similarity with it's more progressive counterpart in the North was its support of prohibition. The movement had a strong following with the southerners who were alive during the Civil War. The movement was dormant from the Great Depression until the start of the Civil Rights Movement. The Stonewall riots in New York and Roe V. Wade set a lot of alarms off with the elite who realized that white people were no longer reproducing at a sustainable rate, and would soon no longer be the majority in America. The Fundamentalist movement is so concerned with the feminist and gay rights movements because Europeans (particularly Northern Europeans like English and Dutch) have a higher percentage of homosexuals than other races, and have fewer children per family. White fundamentalist christans are by and large unable to convert African Americans and Hispanics. Churches grow through birth, conversion and conquest.

    3. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by StopKoolaidPoliticsT · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Bush I barely won against Dukakis.

      48,886,597 Bush to 41,809,476. 426 electoral votes to 111. That's "barely won" to you? It was one of the most lopsided victories in electoral history.

      In 1992, Bush lost to Clinton, and many believe it was because he refused to identify himself as a "born again" Christian.

      Read my lips, you can't ignore a key principle that you campaign on, that your base vehemently supports, and maintain the base's happiness, especially when you have a well funded third party spearheading a campaign directly on that point. Bush promised not to raise taxes and did anyway, which prompted fiscal conservatives to move to Perot. That provided the opportunity for Clinton take the victory and, he too, famously went after Bush on "the economy, stupid."

      --
      Stop Koolaid Politics
    4. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Legion303 · · Score: 0

      "Bush promised not to raise taxes and did anyway"

      IIRC, he promised not to introduce new taxes, and again IIRC, he did not. He did have to raise the rate of some existing taxes, but I'd say he kept his campaign promise to the letter if not to the spirit.

    5. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by ajlisows · · Score: 1

      George H.W. Bush "barely won" against Dukakis? That is a dubious statement at best. He tallied 8% more of the popular vote (over 7 Million votes), carried 40 states to Dukakis' 11 (with DC), and tallied 426 electoral votes to Dukakis' 111. Now, this wasn't a Reagan vs. Mondale class drubbing, but that is a pretty sound defeat. No president after him (5 elections) has reached his percentage of popular votes...although the Clinton elections are skewed by the Ross Perot numbers.

      In the 4 elections I have been old enough for, I did note vote for a Republican President once. I am not trying to trump up George H.W. Bush. But seriously, lets not skew facts.

    6. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by copponex · · Score: 1

      53 to 46% is a modern landslide, sure. However, the previous election, Reagan and Bush won with 60% of the popular vote and 525 electoral votes.

      The Democrats picked up 8 seats in the Senate and 5 seats in the house in 86. In 1988 they picked up 2 more seats in the House and one in the Senate. If Dukakis hadn't been such terrible candidate, and Atwater had a little more integrity, I don't doubt he would have had a fight on his hands. The resort to such vile attack ads seems to support that belief.

    7. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by copponex · · Score: 2, Informative

      As late as the middle of May Dukakis was leading 49 to 37 in the NYT poll.

      http://www.nytimes.com/1988/05/17/us/poll-shows-dukakis-leads-bush-many-reagan-backers-shift-sides.html?pagewanted=1

      * Only 32 percent of registered voters said the Reagan Administration has done a good job handling the budget deficit; 60 percent said it has not.

      * On the problem of illegal drugs, 36 percent said the Administration was doing a good job; 55 percent said it was not.

      * On dealing with the conflicts in Central America, 35 percent rated the Administration as having done well; 52 percent said it had not. ...

      Moreover, when voters were asked which party would do best at handling whatever they identified as the nation's most important problem - a question poll takers regard as a key leading indicator of voting decision - 40 percent said the Democrats and 29 percent said the Republicans. Democrats have never enjoyed such an advantage since the Times/CBS News Poll first asked the question in 1980, when indeed the Republicans had that big a margin before Mr. Reagan's first victory.

    8. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just try to imagine Christ at a Tea Party rally, protesting tax dollars spent on the ill and the needy, and then signing up to join the Army the next day.

      In no place does Christ endorse forced wealth redistribution. Christian's objections perhaps could be better heard if they were accompanied by a demonstrated, consistent and reliable ability to lay hands on the sick and have them recover.

    9. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bush II toed the line, and got elected twice for it.

      Except of course that Bush II was never actually elected. He lost to Gore the first time, and Diebold rigged the results in Ohio the second time*.

      *How else can we explain a gap between the exit polls and reported results greater than the one which sparked the Ukrainian October Revolution; a gap greater than ever recorded in US elections; a gap which defies all logic and reason?

    10. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by DesScorp · · Score: 1, Insightful

      " Just try to imagine Christ at a Tea Party rally, protesting tax dollars spent on the ill and the needy, and then signing up to join the Army the next day. The evangelicals have no idea which way is north. They don't even have a coherent set of values left. They are just following orders.
      "

      Funny, conservatives... including religious conservatives... say the same thing about liberals. "They just take orders from their leaders". Not only is that silly, but GOP strategists probably hope that you really believe that, and that you trumpet it loudly. It makes their jobs much easier when its time to try and motivate voters.

      They're not mindless, not in any way. Sounds like you're irked because, if anything, they are more organized and dedicated that you'd like. But if you can't counter their efforts with your own, then that's your problem, not theirs.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    11. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was a fundie baptist until the week before the election where Clinton became president-elect. In my church that weekend prior (the largest in the state at the time, and probably still so) the deacons passed out brochures to everyone while the pastor stated it was "our God-given DUTY to vote these Christian men and women into office and bring Glory to God." It was blatently stated that anyone who strayed from the contents of the brochure "an unforgivable sinner". Conveniently every one of the candidates in the brochure were Republican. I quickly came to my senses and my delusion about what was the Southern Baptist church came crashing down into reality.

      It is wholly blasphemous to threaten one's salvation based on their voting patterns, not to mention illegal and unethical on many levels. I don't want government in my church, and I don't want my church in my government either.

      I have not attended that church (or any other baptist service) since. Closer study of the baptist traditions at arm's length changed me forever. They are a money machine that cares more about their tithes than their flock. Look at Pat Robertson for an excellent example of that twisted theology. Those whom I maintain ties with from my baptist days still hold him up as a positive example of God's power and grace. Today I consider myself agnostic bordering on atheist.

    12. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, I'll bite. I'm not evangelical, rather of the Catholic tradition that certain strains of evangelicals are fond of consider to be non-Christian. That said, the Republican party is not as cut and dried as you describe it. The evangelicals, are largely social conservatives, but they also have some fiscal conservatism in the sense of opposing government handouts. This may not be in their own fiscal interests when viewed as a social class, but does accord with their largely blue collar views that a man should support himself. They also (correctly in my opinion) belive that tax dollars are not charity. As a group, evangelicals are quite generous in their charitable givings, but prefer to do so locally or at least privately. I know a number of churches that took up special collections for Haiti for instance and many soup kitchens survive on the volunteer efforts and donations of these groups. One reason they prefer the smaller programs is that they facilitate efforts to truly rehabilitate in body and spirit rather than simply perpetuating the cycle of poverty. The salvation army for instance has historically had better results per dollar than government programs.

      True, their pastors are quite influential in their voting habits, but this is largely due to their seeking to vote their values rather than their self interest, an altruistic act on their part, but one that they believe will benefit the nation as a whole by, for instance, outlawing abortion, which they perceive as murder by another name or the forced recognition of acts they perceive as sinful (gay rights issues). You are free to disagree with their views and values, but voting based on those does not itself make them the ignorant sheep you describe.

      I can't quite imagine Christ at a Tea Party rally himself, but only because he was more concerned with faith than politics, almost the same way most evangelicals were pre-Bush II. That said, I also cannot really picture him taking the Tea Partiers to task for their actions. True, he might admonish them that helping the poor directly to show that government was not the answer, but nothing in the Bible indicates that he felt the Roman Empire should have been helping widows and children. The army as it existed at that time is too different from our own to really project what his attitudes would be towards it - the Roman army was that of the conqueror of his people, not its own army and even then he was more welcoming of them than society at large at the time. He even accepted the anointing with expensive oils rather than selling them and giving the proceeds to the poor, admitting that "the poor will be with you always".

    13. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by copponex · · Score: 2, Interesting

      They're not mindless, not in any way.

      They literally believe that if the Bible said Noah put "two of each kind" on a boat, then it happened. Now, I'm sorry, but once you've started digesting that as truth, there's not much chance of me introducing logic into the equation. Have you ever tried arguing with people who believe that they are the only ones who know the will of God? There's no way to put rational thought between the voices in their brain and their brain. It's like talking to a conspiracy theorist who "knows" the Apollo was faked. Every piece of evidence will be discarded in order to save their worldview.

      Sounds like you're irked because, if anything, they are more organized and dedicated that you'd like.

      I hold no particular attachment to the incidental place of my birth. If the knowledge fearing wing of the Tea Party does manage to dismantle the foundations of the Enlightenment that we've all benefited from, I have the will and the means to leave, without any regrets - I'm actually touring Central America this summer. There are lots of poorer places in the world, but very few that hold ignorance in such high esteem.

    14. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just try to imagine Christ at a Tea Party rally

      It is interesting that there is this huge highly public effort to connect the Tea Party with conservative Christians. Yes, there is a lot of overlap with regards to fiscal policy. But there are many Tea Party supporters who could give a crap about Jesus or the Bible, or social conservatism in general.

      I don't go to the rallys, buy I am happy that they exist. Because to me it means that people are looking past the Democrat party and the Republican party.Yes, the Republicans are trying to capitalize on Tea Party protests. But they are not Tea partiers. They are Republicans. And where the Democrats could be trying to woo on-the-fence Republicans and Independents, they are *really* coming on strong with broad negative generalizations and insults directed at tea partiers. It's pretty shallow. And it leads independents like me to think again about why I would support democrats.

      For the record: I support the Tea Party in some of their efforts. And like many other Tea Party supporters, I have no problem with taxes. I have no problems with spending tax dollars on the "ill and the needy" -- in contrast with your attempt to villify the *entire party*. What I do not support is having to pay *more* in taxes knowing how much of the money is wasted-- knowing how much of the money is not really going to the "ill and needy." Hell, if the federal government could reliably and honestly show that their spending was cost effective, I would not object to higher taxes.

      Why would *anyone* accept having to pay more for any product or service that is probably not going to improve? Would you pay a higher price for a 2008 model car with zero miles now that it is 2010? Would you pay significantly more to send your kids to school knowing that they are not learning any more than they would in a school that had no computers and a higher student/teacher ratio? (Like my schools way back...) Is the government going to start consistently hiring the best-and-brightest across the board in its neverending expansion?

      If you could put 50%-100% of your tax liability in the hands of the people that need it, wouldn't that be more efficient way of supporting those who *need* it, while bypassing the red-tape and layers of administration of the government and IRS? Why is this kind of thinking deemed evil, or conservative, or otherwise from the mind of a someone with no values? I think Jesus would see it as an improvement.

      For a given tax liability, I see there being a lot more "moral value" in tax payers being able to direct a percentage their tax dollars to whatever they would like to see money spent on than to have the goverment simply seize it and spend it on whatever buys votes.

      But a meaningful change like that would require some sort of organized effort to push tax reform....

       

    15. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by tiqui · · Score: 1

      Your entire post is drivel

      First, the Willie Horton attack originated in the primary, and was launched by Democrat Al Gore, who lacked the guts to use Horton's name...he attacked the Dukakis program for which "Willie" was the ideal "poster child". When the TV ad naming Horton ran, it was aired by an independent group and all the left-wing protests aside, that level of insulation is the same as the insulation between many Democrat campaigns and many liberal groups

      Secondly, most non-black churches in the USA are terrified of bringing-up politics. Approx 20 years ago when an abortion issue was hot a bunch of churches allowed outside "pro-life" groups to hand-out flyers in the parking lots listing candidate positions on abortion No rallies, no speeches, nothing inside the churches... just permission for an outside group to hand-out papers, and as a result liberals attacked with lawsuits and complaints to the federal government and churches had their tax-exempt status threatened. As a result, you do not find politics from the pulpit in white churches. Black churches get more of a pass because no Republicans have the guts to threaten them with legal action and Democrats take advantage of that and openly campaign and collect money there. The so-called evangelical vote in the USA does not vote in such a predictable way because a bunch of preachers are telling them who to vote for... they vote the way they do for the same reason other blocks vote in the ways that they do: groups with common beliefs and values will tend to make similar choices

      Did you miss the part where a follower of Jesus complains to him that a woman has wasted resources on Jesus that could have been spent on the poor... and Jesus replies that the woman has done the right thing and that the poor will be with us always? Yeah... all those who worship the poor and use the poor as justification for bizarre robin hood schemes seem to miss that one... just a coincidence I'm sure.

      You also hit another note that frustrates the extreme left... the idea that conservative voters are SO DUMB they get talked into voting against their own interests! {GASP!} The simple fact is that SOME people value certain things more than money... Social conservatives will often vote for something because it is the right thing even though voting the other way would benefit them financially. This is NOT dumb, it is admirable, and it's not because they are programmed robots but rather because they have thought about things on more than just a simple money level. Those evangelical you disdain so freely have the most-consistent set of principled positions of any voting block in the country, and they do not shift their positions with the shifting winds because the positions are anchored in principles.

      Your post makes as much sense as I would make if I said that people who believe in evolution are all a bunch of mindless morons who believe anything Stephan Jay Gould told them to believe. Dumb and simplistic.

    16. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by drinkypoo · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I'm actually touring Central America this summer.

      I just went to Panama and a smidge of Costa Rica, see my blog. Parts of Panama are quite nice. Seriously thinking about moving near Santa Fe in Veraguas.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    17. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Just try to imagine Christ at a Tea Party rally, protesting tax dollars spent on the ill and the needy, and then signing up to join the Army the next day. The evangelicals have no idea which way is north. They don't even have a coherent set of values left. They are just following orders.

      This says more about you than it does about the "Tea Party" thing. As I see it, the Tea Party people simply want a reduction in taxation. While that can mean a reduction in government spending to the ill and needy, it's far more likely to mean a reduction in entitlements to wasteful sources like universal entitlements, corporate welfare, and other pathologies of modern government spending. And the Army serves a useful role whether you choose to recognize it or not even though defense spending is way too much (that's a belief we probably share with Tea Partiers incidentally).

    18. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by copponex · · Score: 1

      Did you miss the part where a follower of Jesus complains to him that a woman has wasted resources on Jesus that could have been spent on the poor... and Jesus replies that the woman has done the right thing and that the poor will be with us always? Yeah... all those who worship the poor and use the poor as justification for bizarre robin hood schemes seem to miss that one... just a coincidence I'm sure.

      I think you may want to read the scriptures for guidance on this issue. Good lucky allying yourselves with the rich against the poor. Sounds like there's some rewards for such behavior in the eyes of who you pretend to believe in...

      If one of your countrymen becomes poor and sells some of his property, his nearest relative is to come and redeem what his countryman has sold... If one of your countrymen becomes poor and is unable to support himself among you, help him as you would an alien or a temporary resident, so he can continue to live among you... If one of your countrymen becomes poor among you and sells himself to you, do not make him work as a slave. Leviticus 25:25

      Defend the cause of the weak and fatherless; maintain the rights of the poor and oppressed. Rescue the weak and needy; deliver them from the hand of the wicked. Psalm 82:3-4

      He who despises his neighbor sins, but blessed is he who is kind to the needy. Proverbs 14:21

      The righteous care about justice for the poor, but the wicked have no such concern. Proverbs 29:7

      The LORD enters into judgment against the elders and leaders of his people: It is you who have ruined my vineyard; the plunder from the poor is in your houses. What do you mean by crushing my people and grinding the faces of the poor?' declares the Lord, the LORD Almighty. Isaiah 3:14-15

      Jesus answered, If you want to be perfect, go, sell your possessions and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me. Matthew 19:21

      They devour widows' houses and for a show make lengthy prayers. Such men will be punished most severely. Mark 12:40

      Suppose a man comes into your meeting wearing a gold ring and fine clothes, and a poor man in shabby clothes also comes in. If you show special attention to the man wearing fine clothes and say, 'Here's a good seat for you,' but say to the poor man, 'You stand there' or 'Sit on the floor by my feet,' have you not discriminated among yourselves and becomes judges with evil thoughts? Listen, my dear brothers: Has not God chosen those who are poor in the eyes of the world to be rich in faith and to inherit the kingdom He promised those who love Him? But you have insulted the poor. Is it not the rich who are exploiting you? Are they not the ones who are dragging you into court? James 2:2-6

      If anyone has material possessions and sees his brother in need but has no pity on him, how can the love of God be in him? Dear children, let us not love with words or tongue but with actions and in truth. 1 John 3:17-18

    19. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As much as people complain about Gore losing the 2000 election because of Nader splitting liberal voting population, Bush lost the 1992 election because of Perot splitting the fiscal conservative and social conservatives base. Per the wiki article on the 1992 election.

      Clinton 43%
      Bush: 37.5%
      Perot 18.9%

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election,_1992

      But don't let facts get in the way of your rant. Carry on.

    20. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by gillbates · · Score: 1

      Jesus Christ at a Tea Party?

      As if it wasn't already strange enough. I'm thinking there's a chance He'd berate the Left for striving to give *someone else's* money to the poor, rather than their own (ever hear the story of the Widow's mite?), and doing a bad job at that (for every dollar spent on social programs, the recipient only receives a quarter's worth of aid).

      Not to belabor the point, but the difference between Conservatives and Liberals is not so much in their attitude toward the poor, but rather, the manner in which it is done. The Conservative position - relying on individual responsibility - holds *every* citizen responsible for the plight of the less fortunate. It is centered around personal charity, which has the added benefit of uniting diverse racial, socioeconomic, and ethnic groups, and building stronger communities. The Liberal position - that the poor are the responsibility of the Government - removes personal responsibility and charity from the individual, and instead results in a class of people dependent upon their government, rather than each other. Furthermore, the increased taxation necessary to support such programs often leaves citizens without the means of supporting their fellow Americans, only further deepening the divide along racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic boundaries.

      The problem, though, is that most Republicans are no longer Conservative, and cannot articulate how lower taxes help America. Instead, they seem to be fascinated with stirring up hatred toward the Left, rather than building a vision for a better tomorrow.

      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    21. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by copponex · · Score: 1

      The Conservative position - relying on individual responsibility - holds *every* citizen responsible for the plight of the less fortunate.

      This is the dumbest argument in the world. Do you want a doctor waiting for you at the hospital, or a bunch of nice people who will pray for you? If I want kidney dialysis, should I just run up to the nearest megachurch and ask around? Last time I attended, all they wanted was my credit card number for their automatic tithing program. Right now the solution is for me to wait until I'm unconscious, have an ambulance drag me to the hospital, have them revive me at great cost, and receive dialysis until I'm kicked out of the hospital in a few days.

      Social services are a form of infrastructure that lead to lower poverty rates and happier citizens. The government exists for the express purpose of carrying out the will of it's citizens. If a majority of your neighbors decide health care and education are infrastructure just as the post office and roads are, then make your argument clearly heard, and hope for the best.

      The conservatives ran the show for eight years, and emptied the treasury by cutting taxes for the ultra wealthy and the very wealthy while simultaneously fighting two wars. Now they don't want to face the music, and are trying to blame the situation on "entitlements" by "welfare queens" and other code words for poor people. Well, we've spent trillions in the naughties on war and low taxes for the wealthy. Let's try billions for universal health care, investment in education and infrastructure, and a sane tax code to boot.

    22. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I coulda sworn Bush I lost cause of that whole "Read my lips, no new taxes" and then adding taxes.

    23. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by gillbates · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with just accepting responsibility for your own health? Do you honestly believe it would be any less costly with a government program in place? If so, why? Do you really believe your needed kidney dialysis would be less costly if the government paid for it?

      Granted, there will always be some people at the edges of society. They are, generally speaking, the exceptions, rather than the rule. When you have an entire class of people, a sizable portion of the population, who cannot afford healthcare despite being actively employed, you have a much different situation. The donors at the church can handle housing and feeding the homeless. They can't, however, provide healthcare for the entire town.

      During the past two decades, liberals have strived to create a country where morality was separated from government. They feared some conservatives would, "force their version of morality" on the rest of the country. Instead, they let greed run rampant in the health care industry, and, not surprisingly, the very people liberals claim to represent can no longer afford health care.

      Which, of course, is mighty convenient for someone whose political platform includes "free" health care.

      Do you really expect the people who created the crisis, and whose political livelihoods depend on said crisis, to solve it? That would be like the Republicans ending abortion!

      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    24. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We should ban the collection of tithes that's a theoretical 10% of your income there that you can spend on supporting the people who really need your help. Or hell even just simply tax the tithes that are collected religious organizations have so much money tied up in real estate etc. it's mind boggling. A church group near me has a thrift store, they make over $1M annually in profit and none of that is taxable, they are exempt. So tax the churches like everybody else and I'll cry a little less loudly when they want to have a non-secular say in the way things are run.

    25. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      As if it wasn't already strange enough. I'm thinking there's a chance He'd berate the Left for striving to give *someone else's* money to the poor, rather than their own (ever hear the story of the Widow's mite?), and doing a bad job at that (for every dollar spent on social programs, the recipient only receives a quarter's worth of aid).

      About as good a chance as you winning the Powerball, or as they say in the eTrade ad, being mauled by a grizzly bear and a polar bear in the same day. Doonsbery had a nice strip a few weeks ago pointing out the one time Jesus ever got pissed off about anything: with the moneychangers.

      So it's funny that you don't see Operation Rescue trying to shut down CitiGroup with massive protests, or assassinating payday loan providers.

    26. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with accepting responsibility for your own national defense and travel? If you want to drive to another state, just build your own road.

      Do you honestly believe it would be any less costly with a government program in place? If so, why?

      Because every other industrialized nation does it, while providing better care at half the cost? The fact that we already have single payer health care in this country, in the VA and Medicare - which have 2% overheads compared to 20%-30% for the insurance industry? Not to mention the fact that with single payer you actually get what you pay for - health care. Whereas with insurance companies, they actively work to let you die on the streets rather than pay out claims.

      Granted, there will always be some people at the edges of society. They are, generally speaking, the exceptions, rather than the rule.

      Half of all kids in the U.S. will be on food stamps at some point of their lives. And a 10% unemployment rate is a rather large "edge".

      During the past two decades, liberals have strived to create a country where morality was separated from government.

      What are you even talking about.

      Which, of course, is mighty convenient for someone whose political platform includes "free" health care.

      It's free to use. Same as it's free to use a public library, use a public sidewalk, use a public highway.

    27. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Except your link doesn't say what you think it says. Perot took votes from Clinton as well, you know? And in fact exit polls showed that if Perot wasn't in the race, Clinton still would have won.

      But don't let facts get in the way of your storyline.

    28. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      As I see it, the Tea Party people simply want a reduction in taxation.

      Then they would have been cheering for Obama for reducing their taxes.

    29. Re:It was the answer to an important question. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      Did you miss the part where a follower of Jesus complains to him that a woman has wasted resources on Jesus that could have been spent on the poor... and Jesus replies that the woman has done the right thing and that the poor will be with us always? Yeah... all those who worship the poor and use the poor as justification for bizarre robin hood schemes seem to miss that one... just a coincidence I'm sure.

      BTW, if you aren't aware, you should read this passage in it's context in John:

      But Judas Iscariot, one of his disciples (he who was about to betray him), said, "Why was this ointment not sold for three hundred denarii and given to the poor?" He said this, not because he cared about the poor, but because he was a thief, and having charge of the moneybag he used to help himself to what was put into it. Jesus said, "Leave her alone, so that she may keep it for the day of my burial. For the poor you always have with you, but you do not always have me."

      This verse always comes to my mind when someone is complaining about how someone else is spending their time and resources. Surely, a selfless person would not be concerned with such matters.

  61. Good by Ice+Station+Zebra · · Score: 1

    The only thing I learned in school was 1. Trust Science and Math and 2. Most non-science/math text books are full of shit. If you want to learn history start with Howard Zinn and use the book the school gives you for doodling practice.

  62. Re:Anonymous Coward by jeff4747 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Take a stand or shut up.

    They did. They walked out of the meeting in protest, because they are in the minority on the board. Would you prefer they stay in the meeting and still lose the vote?

    Instead, they created a big enough fuss to gain a lot of media attention, and the conservative board members are actually having electoral troubles.

  63. Frankly, who cares about textbooks? by rwade · · Score: 1

    Hear me out on this.

    I would suggest that the contents of a high school government or history textbook are unlikely to guide the development of political ideas within the minds of youths. Most people develop political ideas similar to those around them that they trust -- friends, family.

    Another way political ideas are developed are through personal experiences -- for example, someone in their 30s still paying off the $50,000 in student loans they ran up at age 18-22 may be more likely to support free public higher education or someone that lost their job (and health care) and then discovered cancer may be inclined to support publicly-funded health care. Someone that experienced an IRS audit or witnessed a bungled federal program first-hand may be less likely to support generous support of public institutions.

    In my experience, I have spoken to few people that have reasoned their way to a political view, which would be the process by which such a textbook would impact political leanings. Just a thought...

    I also want to note that high school kids are cynical as hell and are not unwilling to call bullshit on things that don't pass the smell test.

    1. Re:Frankly, who cares about textbooks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      someone that lost their job (and health care) and then discovered cancer may be inclined to support publicly-funded health care.

      While true, politicians realize full well that that person probably will vote at most one more time. Also, when the county is heavily biased towards conservative religious fundamentalists, you can probably even convince them (even the immediate family!) that the person with cancer deserved it and it was a punishment from God. There is no arguing with that level of callousness.

      I also want to note that high school kids are cynical as hell and are not unwilling to call bullshit on things that don't pass the smell test.

      Unless those students have decent teachers without an agenda (in Texas?), that's more likely to get the students a demerit or a bad grade and discourage them from continuing their education. The reverse should be less common because liberals (at least in theory) should be more open to Socratic discussion than conservatives who typically have an authoritarian bent.

    2. Re:Frankly, who cares about textbooks? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      someone that lost their job (and health care) and then discovered cancer may be inclined to support publicly-funded health care.

      Some maybe but not all. Though not in that exact position, I am in a situation similar to it. In an accident I survived an injury and am now disabled. Having paid into Social Security I now get Social Security Income, SSI. I also get Medicare, with my Medicare premium taken out of my SSI. That doesn't leave me enough to pay all my bills. Luckily because my sister owns the apartment building I live in, as well as handles most of my finances, I haven't been evicted. Anyway, despite "needing" welfare I hate it. To lower health care costs the federal government should allow a freer market in insurance. You know those ads that said in some states only a couple of companies sold insurance? Know why? States say who can and can not sell insurance in the state. Using the interstate commerce clause of the USA Constitution the federal government can tell states they have to allow interstate commerce. If insurance is cheaper in another state I should be able to buy the cheaper insurance. Then allow those who buy their own insurance to deduct the cost of insurance just like employers do. When those two things happen watch while millions of people look for insurance insurance companies lower the cost of insurance. Then if it doesn't work out, and only then, government can give people say $4000 to pay for insurance. What they could do is go into the market place to see what insurance policy they want, and sign up for it. The insurance issuer then enters that into a database where the government sees it and pays the issuer the money. If the policy costs more than what the government will cover then the person is responsible for the rest.

      Falcon

  64. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by nschubach · · Score: 1

    Actually, I kind of fear states rights when it comes to religion... Take for example the Ohio Constitution:

    http://www.legislature.state.oh.us/constitution.cfm?Part=1&Section=07

    All men have a natural and indefeasible right to worship Almighty God according to the dictates of their own conscience. ...
    Religion, morality, and knowledge, however, being essential to good government, it shall be the duty of the general assembly to pass suitable laws to protect every religious denomination in the peaceable enjoyment of its own mode of public worship, and to encourage schools and the means of instruction.

    I assume being an Atheist makes me less moral knowledgeable than the men who flew those planes into the World Trade Center. After all, they were religious and believed in an almighty god.

    --
    Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
  65. Re:Anonymous Coward by eepok · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The school board yesterday and prior has been discussing and weighing the topics and having open discussion.

    It's not an open discussion if you think with a closed mind.

  66. Re:Anonymous Coward by IICV · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hey here's something the "lazy democrats" tried to pass, but failed:

    12:28 - Board member Mavis Knight offers the following amendment: "examine the reasons the Founding Fathers protected religious freedom in America by barring government from promoting or disfavoring any particular religion over all others." Knight points out that students should understand that the Founders believed religious freedom was so important that they insisted on separation of church and state.

    12:32 - Board member Cynthia Dunbar argues that the Founders didn't intend for separation of church and state in America. And she's off on a long lecture about why the Founders intended to promote religion. She calls this amendment "not historically accurate."

    12:35 - Knight's amendment fails on a straight party-line vote, 5-10. Republicans vote no, Democrats vote yes.

    12:38 - Let the word go out here: The Texas State Board of Education today refused to require that students learn that the Constitution prevents the U.S. government from promoting one religion over all others. They voted to lie to students by omission.

  67. The only reason this is an issue... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only reason this is an issue is because it's *government* school.

    You want government to control aspects of your life... you're going to have to put up with fighting others for what you want. If you support majority rules or representative governments this is what you have to deal with.

    Enjoy.

  68. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

    How can you be Liberal and Christian? Aren't Jesus' words about leadership contradictory to the idea of using a political office to help the poor?

  69. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by nschubach · · Score: 1

    There is already an establishment of a particular branch of religions in including God though...

    --
    Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
  70. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by iPhr0stByt3 · · Score: 0

    Hate to break it to ya pal, but going to church once a year does not make you christian. However, standing up against abortionists might be an indication that you actually have a personal relationship with God. Also, you have the states' rights bit the wrong away around. Any politician, republican or democrat, will inform you that democrats favor federal government more than republicans.

  71. Texas textbooks. by dlawson · · Score: 0, Troll

    Why is this a problem for anyone not living in Texas?

    If an employer wants a candidate with a full, rounded education, they need only look to where the individual got their education.

    If it's Texas, no problem, automatic social Darwinism, and on to the next candidate.

    For others, a real interview (with someone intelligent enough to understand the nature of the qualifications) may be in order. If they've been educated with a Texas textbook, that's easily discernible.

    They've just condemned themselves to second-class citizenship, unless Texas secedes from the Union. Then, they're foreign.

    --
    dot-sig.
    1. Re:Texas textbooks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Texas textbooks often set the standard nation-wide, so yes. It is a problem for all of us.

    2. Re:Texas textbooks. by jjohnson · · Score: 2, Informative

      To clarify the AC's point below mine, Texas' market for textbooks is large enough that publishers write the textbooks to Texas standards and then sell them nationwide. West Virginia's (or South Carolina's, or Maine's, or Illinois') standards don't get considered.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
  72. Republicans are stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And so are all the other political parties. Is it too much to ask for text books to stick to the facts and not drown kids in their parents stupid political ideologies and long term party strategery?

    Its enough to describe economic philosophy without asserting which ones are better than the others.

    Its enough to describe what happened in history without cherry picking events to highlight a political interpretation. STICK TO THE FACTS.

    I have friends who think the world is 6000 years old and Jesus was white. I think their stupid. The only way to win WRT politics is not to play.

    1. Re:Republicans are stupid by ppanon · · Score: 1

      I have friends who think the world is 6000 years old and Jesus was white. I think they're stupid.

      Dang it. I basically agree with you but, when you write something like that, you really need to proof-read to make sure you don't make that kind of mistake. As for politics, not playing is the sure way to lose. The only way to win WRT politics is to not get into stupid arguments and instead research who the candidates are before heading to the voting booth.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
  73. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Well, then you can say to him that the Constitution says nothing about the right to own guns. He might be thinking of telling you about the Second Amendment says "...the right to bear arms shall not be infringed", but you could just respond that that is ambiguous, as it doesn't specify whether they mean "arms" as in weapons, or "arms" as in the upper extremities.

    Even if it refers to weapons, who knows what kind of weapons they meant? I doubt they would agree everyone should be able to own a nuclear bomb, so it's obvious that 'arms' doesn't mean ALL arms. In fact, one might argue it refers only to weapons invented before the introduction of the second amendment, or weapons with compareable firepower.

  74. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think any smart Christian has to agree that theocracy is a bad idea. After all, nothing guarantees that the state religion has to be the one you happen to believe in.

    I'd like to generalize that by noting that if you happen to agree with everything your government does, you must be its dictator.

  75. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mr Bradley was kind enough to provide contact information so we can inform him of his and his fellow American's first amendment rights. I just sent him an email with the First as the body... :-P

    David Bradley (R)
    2165 North Street
    Beaumont, TX 77701
    (409) 835-3808
    sboesupport@tea.state.tx.us

  76. Re:Anonymous Coward by gad_zuki! · · Score: 2, Informative

    When a system is broken, like this ultra-politicized textbook process, its justifiable to give up on it. Some people take principled stands in life. Sometimes you just need to walk away from a game that's impossible to win.

    Id also walk out if a room full of fundies told me that the best compromise is "making sure to list evolution as an untested theory full of flaws and we'll consider mentioning that man and dinosaurs didnt live together, but we're not budging on Christian values forming America."

    Its these bullshit compromises that have lead to the US being mocked by other western governments for its pitiful education system.

    Oh well, a small percentage of them will go away to college away from their right-wing monoculture and be exposed to different ideas. Lets just ignore this headline then: Texas graduation rate worst in nation, again. Theyre up to 69.2 percent now, err, I guess thats progress.

    Godless liberal countries with universal healthcare like Canada and Finland have the best graduation rates in the world. Sorry Texas conservsatives, youre on the losing side of history.

  77. Re:Anonymous Coward by timmarhy · · Score: 1

    typical. this is WHY conservatives win all the time, because you idealists can't stick to your guns and are too lazy to take the fight to them.

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
  78. Re:Anonymous Coward by jeff4747 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Once again, what would you prefer they have done?

    The Conservatives were going to have 11 'yes' votes. The liberals were going to have less than 11 'no' votes. The liberals have been arguing against this for about a year now.

    What, exactly, should they have done?

  79. Re:But Seriously: Bad news for TX high school grad by dlawson · · Score: 1

    Possibly. That means, if an applicant wishes to apply to a school outside the Texas education system, they'll have to present a cogent, well presented argument as to why they are qualified. They may actually bump a few self-entitled nitwits off the accepted lists by doing so.

    All 'round, not a bad way to go.

    --
    dot-sig.
  80. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As modern humans progress through genuine scientific enlightenment, magic-believing, frightened and sadly deluded tribes of holdbacks such as yours are destined for extinction. That's how natural selection works.

    But do keep carving your primitive glyphs of your feeble cognitions into your cave walls. In time, they will become the sole reminder of your primitive existence.

    Goodbye from the future of mankind! Sorry to hear that you were so deluded you couldn't make the trip.

  81. It's the Adjective that matters by gryf · · Score: 1
    I've yet to see any proposed change that doesn't undo some unnecessary change made in the past twenty years. Was there a hue and cry when the textbook interpretation of the civil rights movement went from being a color blind society to being an ethnically obsessed and divisive movement?

    If someone can point to an article in the NY Times or Washington Post about how CA or some similar state put a liberal stamp on the nation's textbooks, then I'll begin assuming this article might be something more than an idiotic culture war volley.

    --

    #-#
    Ad Astra Per Aspera
    A rough road leads to the stars
    1. Re:It's the Adjective that matters by Mephistro · · Score: 1

      ... the textbook interpretation of the civil rights movement went from being a color blind society to being an ethnically obsessed and divisive movement?

      Color blind? Is that a synonymous of 'segregation'? I mean, you can't possibly be color blind and mandating black people to travel in the back of the bus or attending different schools, can you?

  82. Re:BACKLASH against unchecked liberalism by jjohnson · · Score: 1

    Bwahahahah!

    Good luck with that. The Conservative Ascendancy, such as it is, isn't driven by the libertarian wing of the Republicans, it's driven by the Apocalypse-mongering religious conservatives who want Creationism taught in school and anti-communist fanatics like Joe McCarthy rehabilitated. Your kids will be praying in school and will learn about sex in the back seat of a Ford rather than from a textbook that tells them how to avoid pregnancy and STDs. Vibrators will be illegal nationwide, not just in Alabama. The Federal budget will be 100% Defense, and the streets of every city with more than 5,000 people will be full of the homeless panhandling since Welfare, Medicare, and Social Security were privatized. And the U.S. will be occupying the entire Middle East to provide a buffer zone for Israel's sake.

    --
    Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
  83. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It also goes farther than "forbid[ing] the establishment of any religion." "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." The government cannot establish an official state religion AND it cannot prohibit the free exercise of any religion.

  84. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm going to be shouted down by all you rabid libs, but what the heck...
    Read what you quoted:
    "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion"
        this means not establishing an official state religion. See Saudi Arabia to see what that is.
    "or prohibiting the free exercise thereof"
        clearly a textbook does not prohibit anything.
    And the rest of it does not mention religion at all.

    "Separation of church and state" is a term coined by a supreme court justice Hugo Black in 1947 (long after the founding fathers were all dead). This current bastardization that it cannot be mentioned that the founders were Christians, or having a White House Christmas Tree is ridiculous and potentially violates the "or prohibiting the free exercise thereof" clause of the first amendment far more than teaching someone history.

    If the schools start teaching your kids to believe in God, then by all means, scream to your heart's content, for you will have every reason to do so. But attempting to teach kids history without explaining to them the context of the individuals involved (their philosophy, religion, etc) is a waste of time where you memorize places and dates without really understanding anything. Or is that the goal?

  85. Re:Anonymous Coward by GasparGMSwordsman · · Score: 2, Informative

    Every side is entitled to try and promote their viewpoint. To let them get a vote like that by leaving is certainly an emotional statement but completely lacks the realization that; the vote was held, the tally counted, and voluntary absent to make a statement still means factual defeat.

    There are 15 members of the board. All 15 voted. All 15 votes were counted. Exactly what is your point?

    On top of that, when you have a majority of votes already publicly declared, the other side has lost. The anonymous coward OP is just spewing FUD because it is obvious that uninformed and biased non-educators have done something publicly shamming to us all and wants to defend them.

    For Gods sake, the new rules state that Thomas Jefferson's writings were not important to the revolution. You know him, the AUTHOR of the DECELERATION OF INDEPENDENCE.

  86. Woah! by quickpick · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hey guys, relax! If this isn't the kind of change you were hoping for go make changes yourself! It's still a free country! Just some questions to ask yourself:
    Why are you wanting people to kill themselves?
    Why do you dislike these people so much?
    Do you dislike them because they are promoting Christian values?
    If you do, do you dislike that they believe that God so loved the world that he sent his only Son so that who ever believes in Him will not perish but have eternal life?
    Do you dislike them because they try to live like Christ but recognize that when they fail, which they inevitably do, they go back to God and ask for forgiveness?
    Do you dislike them because they believe in a God that you don't believe exists?
    Or do you dislike them because simply because you do not like others who don't believe in what you believe?

    1. Re:Woah! by PPH · · Score: 0, Redundant

      I believe that science should be taught in a science class, history in a history class. And mythology in a mythology class.

      If you ae going to teach Christian values, don't forget about the Inquisition, the Crusades, or the Holocaust.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    2. Re:Woah! by whistlingtony · · Score: 1

      Why are you wanting people to kill themselves?
      Huh? Who said that?

      Why do you dislike these people so much?
      Because they push their values on me.

      Do you dislike them because they are promoting Christian values?
      Don't lie, don't steal, don't kill, honor your parents, etc... These are Christian values, yes... but they're pretty much every religion's values. They're pretty much HUMAN values. Christianity doesn't own them. I dislike Christians because they tell me that the meek shall inherit the earth and that god loves everyone and then in the same sentence they tell me that God is going to send homosexuals to hell for all eternity and the poor can go !@#$ themselves.

      If you do, do you dislike that they believe that God so loved the world that he sent his only Son so that who ever believes in Him will not perish but have eternal life?
      Uhm... whatever.

      Do you dislike them because they try to live like Christ but recognize that when they fail, which they inevitably do, they go back to God and ask for forgiveness?
      Dude, if they had that kind of humility, I'd like them a LOT more. And I've met some who do, and they are AWESOME people.

      Do you dislike them because they believe in a God that you don't believe exists?
      Worship the family cat for all I care. Just keep it on your side of the fence.

      Or do you dislike them because simply because you do not like others who don't believe in what you believe?
      I don't care what someone believes, as long as they keep it to themselves. The beauty of a liberal society is that you're free to be as conservative as you want. If you decide you must wear a funny hat to hide your head from God... Hey, no worries. Have at it. Everyone wins. Now if we flip it, I get stoned for existing..... !@#$ that.

      -Tony

    3. Re:Woah! by jjohnson · · Score: 5, Informative

      I dislike them because:

      For all their vaunted Christian morals and breastbeating on the importance of marriage, they have a higher divorce rate than the national average, and even 50% higher than the atheists and agnostics they despise.

      After they fail and ask God for forgiveness, they go right back to the hookers with whom they got caught (c.f., Jimmy Swaggart).

      They embezzle millions from their mega-churches, which makes me think they're in it for the money more than the God (c.f., Jim Baker).

      They extort millions from their followers by claiming God will kill them if the sheep don't pay up (c.f., Oral Roberts).

      They spend their Christian lives doing everything they can to make homosexuals suffer, only to get busted offering to pay guys at truck stops to receive blowjobs from them (c.f., Bob Allen), or tapping their foot in an airport restroom (c.f., Larry Craig), or using their ministry's travel budget to fund methamphetamine and gay sex party weekends (c.f., Ted Haggard).

      In other words, I dislike them because they're hypocrites who claim they're better than everyone else when in fact, they're usually worse, but they're very happy to try to force their morals on me through laws and textbooks.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    4. Re:Woah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dislike them because:

      They are FUCKING IDIOTS!!!

    5. Re:Woah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Just which morals are being forced on you?

      Are you being required to pray?

      Have you been rousted from your house in the middle of the night because of homosexual conduct?

      Were you forced to get a divorce?

      Did they deny you cult members because they all signed up with Oral Roberts first?

      Wow, you're just a victim.

    6. Re:Woah! by DigiShaman · · Score: 0, Troll

      I see how it is. Don't set yourself up for a fall, and all will be forgiven. In other words, in your view we shouldn't even *try* to live a christian life! Never mind the fact most (more than 50%) don't have the fortitude and perseverance to do so. Riiighhhtt..

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    7. Re:Woah! by the_raptor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Any "Christian" who says they are better than a non-Christian isn't a Christian. The fundamental divergence between Judaism and Christianity is that Christians believe that following moral laws doesn't save you. Even St Paul who had a massive influence on early Christianity decried himself as the worst of all sinners. Everyone is a sinner, any Christian who says they aren't or holds themselves as being morally superior is even further from God than Richard Dawkins.

      The reason for the massive screw ups in American "Christianity" is because people want to be superior and giving them a way to work towards it (and constantly fail because they are sinners) is a great way to extract lots of money from them. L. Ron. Hubbard probably would have never figured this out if he had been born in another country.

      --

      ========
      CINC, 4th Penguin Legion
    8. Re:Woah! by ProfanityHead · · Score: 1

      Well now! Nice post! Couldn't have said it better myself.

    9. Re:Woah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Atheistic socialists are just as happy to force their values on everyone.

    10. Re:Woah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you dislike them because they are promoting Christian values?

      I dislike the fact that they don't recognize their own necessarily imperfect understanding of the divine, and are trying to impose that imperfect understanding as if it were perfect, to the detriment of future generations.

      “Were you the first person ever born?
      Were you born before the hills were made?
      Were you listening at God’s secret council?
      Do you have a monopoly on wisdom?

      -Job 15:7-8

    11. Re:Woah! by jjohnson · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Any "Christian" who says they are better than a non-Christian isn't a Christian

      Look up the "No True Scotsman" fallacy.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    12. Re:Woah! by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      Good thing I'm not one them, then!

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    13. Re:Woah! by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you talking about? Where did I say we shouldn't try to live good lives?

      What I want from Christians is for them to not try to get laws enacted and textbooks rewritten to make *me* a Christian in fact, if not belief. I have no problem with Christians falling short of their moral ideals. It's the hectoring me about how I'm falling short of their ideals that gets tiresome.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    14. Re:Woah! by quickpick · · Score: 1

      I dislike them because:

      For all their vaunted Christian morals and breastbeating on the importance of marriage, they have a higher divorce rate than the national average, and even 50% higher than the atheists and agnostics they despise.

      You're right about the divorce rate and guess what, God agrees with you! he HATES divorce! Also you're mostly right about the despising attitude towards atheists and agnostics, the truth is Christians, like Atheists and Agnostics, are human and therefore similar in their behavior towards those who don't share the same views. I can tell you that while I don't agree with their views I do not despise them. Some may despise them but this is more a human trait, as a Christian is called to 'love your neighbor as yourself."

      After they fail and ask God for forgiveness, they go right back to the hookers with whom they got caught (c.f., Jimmy Swaggart).

      This is also true, but then if we fail once, try again, and fail again should we give up anyway? Edison wouldn't have given us the light bulb should we give up so easily!

      They embezzle millions from their mega-churches, which makes me think they're in it for the money more than the God (c.f., Jim Baker).

      This is also true but the Bible does say "You shall not steal" and Jim Bakers theft from his church is sad, but stealing isn't limited to Christians and the idea that stealing is bad isn't limited to non-Christians as you have proved by finding it just as detestable. Did you know Jesus shared your view?

      They extort millions from their followers by claiming God will kill them if the sheep don't pay up (c.f., Oral Roberts).

      This I do not agree with (not your comment but Oral Roberts behavior) and you're right this is extortion. However when I give to my church I give because I want to, not because I'm compelled to. As far as claiming God will kill them, he won't. He will pass judgement upon them and especially to the leaders who do misrepresent what God says.

      They spend their Christian lives doing everything they can to make homosexuals suffer, only to get busted offering to pay guys at truck stops to receive blowjobs from them (c.f., Bob Allen), or tapping their foot in an airport restroom (c.f., Larry Craig), or using their ministry's travel budget to fund methamphetamine and gay sex party weekends (c.f., Ted Haggard).

      You're right about these supposed leaders of the Faith, they are a disgrace but no more so than anyone of any other belief whether its religious, philosophical, or ideological who fails miserably. Tiger Woods, Kobe Bryant, and Michael Phelps come to mind. As far as making homosexuals 'suffer' I do not see what you mean, if you are saying that by believing homosexual behavior is immoral and voting based on that belief then you do not respect the democratic right for someone to disagree with you. If by suffer you mean we tar and feather them you would be correct and I'd agree that we do make them suffer, but that wouldn't be what Jesus had called us to do.

      In other words, I dislike them because they're hypocrites who claim they're better than everyone else when in fact, they're usually worse, but they're very happy to try to force their morals on me through laws and textbooks

    15. Re:Woah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dislike them because the views they have to force on others are extremely dangerous to the country and the world.

    16. Re:Woah! by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      I could have saved you a lot of typing by mentioning that I know that the objectionable behaviour I cite is not what Jesus taught, and that many Christians I know personally aren't guilty of the behaviour I mention above. It seems to have more to do with certain communities and the way that a group of people will work themselves up into a self-righteous frenzy. And I agree that if the same people were atheist, they'd be the same jerks.

      It's not hypocritical to hold a certain standard of behaviour, and then fail to meet that standard on occasion. Humans are fallible, but that doesn't mean that you stop trying. What's hypocritical is holding a higher standard and loudly proclaiming that you do, and then doing worse at following it than everyone else. It's like a gambler decrying the evils of gambling while on his way to the casino. At a certain point you start to think that loud lip service to the ideal is an excuse for failing that ideal--it's moral tokenism. Trying to live up to a standard means actually trying to live up to it, not pointing out the motes in others eyes to distract from the beam in yours. It's like holding the ideal is sufficient to make them good people, so they don't have to bother with actually living it.

      Not coincidentally, I think, the Christians I've known whose faith impressed me as a source of strength and guidance for them, were the quietest Christians, the ones who understood that walking the walk is more important than talking the talk. They were the least judgmental of others and the least willing to condemn.

      if you are saying that by believing homosexual behavior is immoral and voting based on that belief then you do not respect the democratic right for someone to disagree with you.

      In the particular case of voting to block gay marriage, Christians did much more than just vote against it. They campaigned against it with outright, demonstrable lies. They told people that children would be taught to be homosexual in schools. They told people that churches would be closed if they refused to perform gay weddings. They told people that society would collapse. They said they were okay with granting the various protections of marriage to gay couples, and then when they won the vote, they voted against bills introduced to grant those specific protections (Utah), and started rolling them back where they could (Virginia). They talked about the sanctity of the institution of marriage while getting divorced in record numbers, and while the leaders of the communities were having affairs and pursuing secret gay lives.

      That's not being fallible and human. That's the biblical definition of hypocrisy.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
    17. Re:Woah! by magus_melchior · · Score: 1

      Why are you wanting people to kill themselves?

      Straw man. Show us, please, where critics of the Texas school board are asking people to kill themselves. Blog/forum comments don't count.

      Why do you dislike these people so much?

      Red herring. This has nothing to do with like or dislike, it has everything to do with good or poor public policy, especially concerning public education.

      Full disclosure: I'm a Christian. I believe that I've sinned before a righteous and holy God, and that only the blood sacrifice of his Son can and has saved me. I also believe that Jesus is the penultimate example and instructor, who consistently told his followers to seek justice, especially for those who were politically disadvantaged and/or maligned (lepers, the disabled, the poor, tax collectors, prostitutes), and that those who raised the standards for labor, civil rights, and social support in government were the ones who heeded this message. So the irony that the very people who distrust government, who wish to pay fewer taxes (despite Jesus' command to "render unto Caesar"), who decry the expansion of government, and who panic that their freedom to worship is threatened despite zero evidence, would seek to rewrite history for the entire nation's children, is not lost on me. It seems to me that too many American Christians feel they are entitled to impose through any means, whatever policy they deem fit on the rest of the country, even if the Constitution itself opposes them. I feel that's childish, self-centered, and entirely un-Christ-like, and I am ashamed that so many in this country who call themselves Christian have this sense of entitlement.

      Did Jesus ever go and lobby the Jewish Sanhedrin, let alone the Roman government, to lower taxes? Did he complain that his listeners weren't getting a "balanced view"? Did he complain that the historians of his day were "too liberal"?

      Why are today's Christians blindly following conservative creeds as zealously as they should follow their Bibles? Where are the Christians decrying the huge wealth gap in this country, and the efforts of the wealthy to keep expanding that gap?

      The rest of the rebuttal is trivial:

      Do you dislike them because they are promoting Christian values?
      If you do, do you dislike that they believe that God so loved the world that he sent his only Son so that who ever believes in Him will not perish but have eternal life?

      Both are straw men. There are very few people who detest Christians for this very reason, but Jesus said those who hate Christians "hate me also". If you need to ask this question, either you don't know your Bible as well as you should, or you're grandstanding.

      Do you dislike them because they try to live like Christ but recognize that when they fail, which they inevitably do, they go back to God and ask for forgiveness?

      You've set up another silly argument, and one which Paul already answered: Even if you are forgiven and stumble, you're still responsible for stumbling. Otherwise, why not do whatever you want, since God considers all of your sin-- past present and future-- forgiven?

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
    18. Re:Woah! by Bobb+Sledd · · Score: 1

      Ok, that isn't fair.

      Yes, there are people and churches who did that. There are probably people and churches who ARE doing that right now.

      But you're throwing everything together and giving it a disgusting label.

      MY church is a large church in Texas. No one is extorting anything. Our budget is open and members can critique, meet, and change it. In our budget, (other than the salaries), our music/worship team gets exactly $0. We rely solely on specific donations from individuals for equipment and music. Those donations have a distinct purpose, and that purpose only. None of the instrumentalists or singers are paid. And as I said, we are a large church.

      My church has never told anyone how to vote nor does it get involved in any politics whatsoever. In fact, we're forbidden by law to do it and you could lose your non-profit status if you do. The only thing I have ever seen was a 3rd party newspaper in the lobby that listed all the candidates for a governor race, and an objective list for how they were voting on an array of issues (some religiously controversial, some not at all). And even I think that is pushing it.

      So what does my church do with the money? First, salaries of church employees (which is published). Second, pay the light bill. And the rest goes to missions.

      We fund people in all sorts of capacities to help out humanity, whether it be our homeless ministry, or foreign country ministries. When we send people to go downtown and distribute coats and blankets to the homeless people under the bridge, or when our youth go to Mexico to paint a church, or send a family to Africa to help build water wells, well I'm sorry but those actions ARE making a real and tangible difference. And it simply would not get done if we didn't have a corporate church body to collectively fund from.

      I'm not telling you we send our money to another group that then does those things. I'm saying that we have people in our congregation that individually do all of those things with the money we fund them with, and these are good people I know personally.

      You can dislike those that have done wrong as you stated, if you wish; I'm with you on that. And I understand how that stuff leaves a rotten taste in your mouth. But don't associate us with them, simply because they were called Christians also.

      --
      "They said I probly shouldn't fly with just one eye," "I am Bender. Please insert girder."
    19. Re:Woah! by jjohnson · · Score: 1

      It sounds like a really good church, one that I would support, if not attend for lack of Christian beliefs. And I do understand that the examples I cited aren't strictly true of all Christians and churches.

      --
      Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
  87. Re:Anonymous Coward by GasparGMSwordsman · · Score: 1

    They also voted BEFORE walking out.

  88. Great, keep up the good work! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The rest of the world loves it when the US shoots itself in Texas, er, the ass, I mean foot.

    Another lost generation of Red Necks? You Betcha! ;^)

  89. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by CyberBill · · Score: 2, Informative

    It says:

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof

    The key word here is "respecting". They cannot make a law that RESPECTS an establishment of religion. Some people try and claim that the Constitution prohibits the ESTABLISHMENT of a religion, but that is obviously not the case. To understand why, simply change the first part of the sentence to something like:

    Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of a religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof

    Notice now that what this sentence prohibits the establishment of a state religion AND laws that prohibit the free exercise of state religions.... but that doesn't make sense, because why would you make sure that people have free exercise of a religion that can't exist because of the first statement?

    It is clear what the founders meant in their papers and notes, as well. The first amendment establishes a clear and complete separation between church and state, for the mutual benefit of both.

    --
    -Bill
  90. Re:Anonymous Coward by GasparGMSwordsman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As I have just pointed out, the new rules state that Thomas Jefferson's writings were not important to the Revolution. As everyone today knows, he was the primary author of the Deceleration of Independence. But school children taught under the new rules will NOT know that.

    It is one thing to disagree with a belief or have a political view and want to support it. It is another thing entirely to re-write history with absolutely no regard for the truth. This is simply shameful.

  91. Regarding economics... by TheSync · · Score: 3, Interesting

    TFA says: In economics, the revisions add Milton Friedman and Friedrich von Hayek, two champions of free-market economic theory, among the usual list of economists to be studied, like Adam Smith, Karl Marx and John Maynard Keynes.

    First of all, good going on Milton Friedman who was important in ending the draft in the US, co-author of one of the best economic histories of the Great Depression, and has been very influential around the world. Also good for adding F.A. Hayek, the most influential members of the Austrian School of economics.

    But in truth, I was never taught anything about Adam Smith or John Maynard Keynes in public school (in one of the best public school systems in the country). Did anyone on Slashdot learn about these guys in public school?

    What you really need to know about Hayek and Keynes is in this rap video.

    Karl Marx was mentioned, but in a more political way regarding the growth of Communism.

    1. Re:Regarding economics... by lee1 · · Score: 1

      Did anyone on Slashdot learn about these guys in public school? Stuyvesant (public) high school, New York City: one semester of economics required, and we did indeed hear about these guys.

    2. Re:Regarding economics... by linguae · · Score: 2, Interesting

      In the school district that my charter school was part of (regarded as one of the best school districts in my area), all high school students had to take a one-semester economics course. I learned about Adam Smith, communism, and Keynesian economics in that class (I also learned about Marxism from a philosophy elective that I took that same semester), as well as mercantilism. We even learned about supply-side economics, too. Interestingly enough, my economics teacher was the wife of a businessman who was running for congress as a Republican that semester (he ended up losing, though; he was running in a place in California where the Democrat usually gets elected by a wide margin). We did not learn about Chicago School or Austrian School economics, but my textbook did have sections featuring Milton Friedman and Walter Williams. I learned about the Chicago School and about the Austrian School from reading Slashdot postings from libertarians and by subsequently reading books and articles from Milton Friedman, Ludwig von Mises, Murray Rothbard, and other similar economists.

    3. Re:Regarding economics... by magus_melchior · · Score: 1

      I don't recall Adam Smith, but there was discussion of Keynes and Keynesian economics in AP US History 14 years ago. I don't know if that was taught in the Honors or college prep levels, though.

      And this was in conservative stronghold Orange County, CA. There were students who were conservative activists, who, if they knew enough about Keynes, would surely have objected to him being taught (good thing the teacher was a competitive type and a stickler for the AP test requirements). I'm sure there are a bunch there who love the new Texas standards, unless the percentage of Latinos increased.

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
    4. Re:Regarding economics... by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      First of all, good going on Milton Friedman who was important in ending the draft in the US, co-author of one of the best economic histories of the Great Depression, and has been very influential around the world.

      And the implementation of his theories have helped cripple the middle class and blow up the world economy.

      Also good for adding F.A. Hayek, the most influential members of the Make Shit Up School of economics.

      Fixed that for you.

  92. Re:It's about time by game+kid · · Score: 1

    That, and the "Homepage" is a giveaway.

    --
    You can hold down the "B" button for continuous firing.
  93. Re:It's about time by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

    Indeed, and let's not forget the military - funny how the people who whine most about "socialism" seem to be all in favour of a socialised military...

  94. Texas BOE Removes Jefferson From History Standard by BitHive · · Score: 4, Informative

    emphasis added

    The Texas Freedom Network continues to live blog the Texas State Board of Education hearings where the collection of ignorant dolts on that board debate and amend the social studies standards. And it's getting downright surreal. They actually removed Thomas Jefferson and the Enlightenment from the history standards. Seriously.

    9:27 - The board is taking up remaining amendments on the high school world history course.

    9:30 - Board member Cynthia Dunbar wants to change a standard having students study the impact of Enlightenment ideas on political revolutions from 1750 to the present. She wants to drop the reference to Enlightenment ideas (replacing with "the writings of") and to Thomas Jefferson. She adds Thomas Aquinas and others. Jefferson's ideas, she argues, were based on other political philosophers listed in the standards. We don't buy her argument at all. Board member Bob Craig of Lubbock points out that the curriculum writers clearly wanted to students to study Enlightenment ideas and Jefferson. Could Dunbar's problem be that Jefferson was a Deist? The board approves the amendment, taking Thomas Jefferson OUT of the world history standards.

    9:40 - We're just picking ourselves up off the floor. The board's far-right faction has spent months now proclaiming the importance of emphasizing America's exceptionalism in social studies classrooms. But today they voted to remove one of the greatest of America's Founders, Thomas Jefferson, from a standard about the influence of great political philosophers on political revolutions from 1750 to today.

    9:45 - Here's the amendment Dunbar changed: "explain the impact of Enlightenment ideas from John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, Voltaire, Charles de Montesquieu, Jean Jacques Rousseau, and Thomas Jefferson on political revolutions from 1750 to the present." Here's Dunbar's replacement standard, which passed: "explain the impact of the writings of John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, Voltaire, Charles de Montesquieu, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Thomas Aquinas, John Calvin and Sir William Blackstone." Not only does Dunbar's amendment completely change the thrust of the standard. It also appalling drops one of the most influential political philosophers in American history -- Thomas Jefferson.

    9:51 - Dunbar's amendment striking Jefferson passed with the votes of the board's far-right members and board member Geraldine "Tincy" Miller of Dallas.

    The standard was about the Enlightenment and political revolutions that led to modern liberal democracy. So they removed the Enlightenment references and Thomas Jefferson, who played a key role in the two most prominent revolutions in the history of the Western world, and replaced them with Thomas Aquinas, who lived 500 years before the Enlightenment, and John Calvin, who lived 200 years before the Enlightenment and was a major figure in an entirely different period of history, the Reformation, which preceded the Enlightenment.

    Yes, you should, in fact, be mouthing the words "what the fuck" right about now.

    And the stupidity continues:

    11:21 - Board member Barbara Cargill wants to insert a discussion of the right to bear arms in a standard that focuses on First Amendment rights and the expression of various points of view. This is absurd. If they want students to study the right to bear arms, at least try to find an appropriate place in the standards for it. This is yet another example of politicians destroying the coherence of a curriculum document for no reason other than promoting ideological pet causes. Republican board member Bob Craig of Lubbock is suggesting a better place for such a standard. But the amendment passes anyway. The board's far-right faction is simply impervious to logic.

    11:30 - Board member Pat Hardy notes that elsewhere the standards already require students to study each of the freedoms and rights guaranteed by the Bill of Rights. No one seems to care.

    11:33 - Bob Craig tries, once again, to talk some sense into these

  95. Thanks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It also saddens me on how far downhill we have gone.

    At least I don't have to change my underwear.

  96. I went to highschool in Texas by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    Very very conservative. Had two teachers who were democrats who taught political science and debate the rest were republican. My english and history teachers worked for Nixon, and a few republican legislatures before becoming teachers. One even mentioned during a creative writing assignment that we should write something we are passionate about like Bob Dole.

    My dad was shocked as I turned super conservative thanks to my view of teachers including one who was saying how Reagan saved America. The curriculum was at least supposed to be neutral even though the teachers mentioned their own conservative philosophy they at least taught the other side ... a little.

    I do not mind conservative curriculum if liberal is taught beside it so people can think for themselves. I do not get how these extremist feel threatened with anyone who does not think like them. I at least understand how other people and maybe thats what makes me different. Some people think ignorance is a bliss.

  97. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by careysub · · Score: 1

    Hate to break it to ya pal, but going to church once a year does not make you christian...

    Indeed.

    Attending church services is not required at all to be a Christian. Not does attending a Christian church every single day make you a Christian.

    It is solely a matter of faith in the fundamental Christian doctrine of salvation though belief in and acceptance of Jesus and his teachings.

    There is no political test for Christianity, nor any other doctrinal test.

    --
    Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
  98. Re:It's about time by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

    Public schools should be eliminated and replaced with a voucher system so kids can get a quality, Christian education.

    Great, at least in a privatised school system, I could send my children to one where they can learn about socialism[*] and atheism, and not be subject to the stupid changes discussed in the article!

    [*] Actually overall I favour capitalism to socialism, but the arguments you make are too funny.

    I have news for you atheists, you will all be "under god" as you are burning in hell.

    Yes, but at least I'll have a socialised fire service to put it out.

  99. You're just begging for it (duck) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do the think the (book) Repository was for?

    Stashing place before they're burned?

  100. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Facts are not welcome in this discussion.

  101. Re:It's about time by riverat1 · · Score: 1

    Do they refuse to put out fires for people in the district that don't help support the volunteer fire department then?

  102. Re:It's about time by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

    So tell that to all the idiots who whine about national healthcare, falsely calling it "socialism".

  103. Re:It's about time by Paul+Jakma · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Look at the hint in their user-profile, then look at your keyboard, reikk == troll

    --
    I use Friend/Foe + mod-point modifiers as a karma/reputation system.
  104. Which is, of course,... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why CA has such a wide array of "liberal" state laws (emissions, marijuana, firearm regulations, etc.)

    Please.

  105. Re:Anonymous Coward by riverat1 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I thought that Jefferson and the other founding fathers were in favor of acceleration of independence not deceleration.

  106. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    You've fallen for the false notion that people with obscenely disproportionate amounts of wealth and income earned it by "working hard" and contributing value to society as opposed to just gaming the system, and that the poor are only poor because they're "lazy". It's hilarious seeing so many Americans fall for corporatist propaganda and vote against their own interests, making the rich richer, the poor (read: anyone not filthy stinking rich; enjoy your shrinking middle class!) poorer, and their little corner of the world overall a shittier place to live. Have fun running your country into the ground though, I'm certainly having fun watching it.

  107. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    I think the finding fore fathers were thinking of the Catholic Church to influence American politics or at least have some other church like the King's Anglican Church. That is it and I agree with the religious right that if senators want a prayer meeting in an office in a government building then they should. Its to just make sure a religious organizations do not pull the puppet strings of the leaders.

  108. Re:BACKLASH against unchecked liberalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're snide, you think you can be dismissive as always? Another silly fool, your whole comment says fear.

    We libertarians are holding the ball! You must see that the Republican party has already gone over the cliff because they failed to coopt our agenda. We're chomping away at them from within. Power is shifting to us because we simply have the mojo and the message (and the money.)

    And excuse me, but most of our wars (and occupations) can be credited to liberal, big government Democrats and not conservative Republicans. So, first learn your damn history. What, I ask you, is the purest expression of big government? Why, it's running a war, the bigger the better! If anything, Republicans historically should be accused of xenophobia, and isolationism, and protectionism, (also bad things, gah!)

    The Bushes, well, they're a historical anomaly. But, watered down Conservatism in the form of "compassionate conservatism" is really not Conservative at all. Real conservatives are about individualism, and respect of rights, and tough love. Bush, another disappointment - we sure can pick 'em. So, Republicans got deluded into promoting a populist, but then maybe they were trying to beat the Democrats at the liberal game, who knows?

    What I do know is, around the time that Bush put in his unfunded prescription drug program was when government (especially Federal) got too huge. Since then, the pressure cooker has been boiling. Barry is just pouring gasoline on the stove at this point, and he's (and it sounds like you) are in for a surprise.

    So again, kthxbye.

  109. If true... by msauve · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why can't the exact same thing be said to be true for Texas?

    i.e. "Texas is the second largest textbook market, but it tends to be so specific about what kinds of information its students should learn that few other states follow its lead."

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    1. Re:If true... by Lobo42 · · Score: 1

      I don't know, maybe it can. It would depend on how much more/less "specific" California's textbook guidelines are than Texas'. It sounds like Texas' guidelines just got more specific - maybe that means it will also have less influence over the choice of textbooks available to other states?

    2. Re:If true... by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Because as wacko as Texas is, it's still closer to how the majority of the country thinks than California or New York.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
  110. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You've fallen for the false notion that saying you're against socialism means you are against anything that even resembles it which is so far from the truth.

    Considering what we've heard the "socialist" accusation applied to in the last two years, there's plenty of backing to that "false notion".

  111. Re:Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The liberals could have stuck around and voted though! I'm sure liberals enjoy at least a 50% representation in the great state of Texas, right? ... right? ......... guys?

  112. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    With clarity, I mean the catholic church in the old days picked kings and made them sign covenants to serve the church. France and Italy for example had hand selected leaders by the pope. In England the king or queen is hte head of state with its anglican church too.

    The seperation merely means government is government and church is church.

  113. Re:It's about time by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 1

    So... how many fire fighting gigs do they budget for?

  114. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

    By proscribing the establishment of an official national religion, the Constitution implies that no single religion may be favored by the government over other religions. Generally this is interpreted as meaning you are free to practice the religion of your choice, but the government cannot coerce you into practicing any specific religion. Have atheists taken this too far in arguing against prayer or any kind of religious symbols in school? Yes.

    --
    I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
  115. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like my fire department. Now, I don't know about yours, but my fire department is not socialistic. See, the local fire department where I live is a private organization made up of volunteers. They operate by running fund raisers and otherwise getting donations.

    Congratulations! My fire department is socialistic. It's one of the top-rated fire and rescue services in the country, but it seems that it takes more than Bake Sales and Turkey Shoots to support it. It has its volunteers, and some of the outlying, less populated stations are even all-volunteer. But the bulk of the system is staffed by full-time professionals. Paid for with my tax money.

  116. Franklin Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "When a religion is good, I conceive it will support itself; and when it does not do so, and God chooses not to do so, so that its professors are obliged to call for the help of the civil power, 'tis a sign, I apprehend, of its being a bad one." -- Benjamin Franklin

  117. Re:BACKLASH against unchecked liberalism by jjohnson · · Score: 0, Troll

    You know, I would actually welcome a proper libertarian government. I wouldn't be happy about about the government withdrawing from areas where I think it should go, but at least I could look forward to a robust economy.

    But you're deluding yourself if you think that it's not the social conservatives manning the grassroots barricades. They're the ones fighting gay marriage, they're the ones primarying weak, centrist Republicans, and they're the ones rewriting textbooks in Texas so that the next generation of Americans think that Thomas Jefferson didn't exist. Good luck getting an abortion if they succeed.

    Unless, of course, you mean actual libertarians, not just the libertarian wing of the Republican party, in which case, you're a fucking joke. How's Ron Paul working out for you? Back on the gold standard yet?

    --
    Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
  118. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Absolutely. Let's have an Allah prayer in every school at the beginning of class.

  119. Re:Anonymous Coward by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

    Hey braintrust - The liberals did vote. No one abstained from voting.

  120. Re:Anonymous Coward by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

    Well that's simple. They should sling assault rifles over their shoulders as they go to these meetings. It's a valid form of protest now, according to modern conservatives.

  121. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

    If you want to go there, fine. How can a conservative be a christian when Jesus preached about helping the poor?

  122. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

    Oh so now conservatives get to judge who the "real christians" are.

    For the record I'm and atheist, and you're validating much of what I hate about organized religion, and the right-wing's usurpation of a religion for their political goals.

  123. Re:Anonymous Coward by GasparGMSwordsman · · Score: 1

    =P Its a little known fact that they wanted really, REALLY slow independence. Like being free in molasses.

  124. Conservative California by Pfhorrest · · Score: 3, Informative

    Clearly you don't live in California. Only outside CA is the political system perceived as Liberal. Those of us who live within the state have learned that there are a few enclaves of urban liberalism, surrounded by by vast areas of rural conservatism rivaling those of Kansas or Texas.

    And then there are a number of conservative urban areas, too, like San Diego, San Bernardino, Bakersfield and Orange County.

    Case in point: look at the county by county results for proposition 8 (banning gay marriage). Outside Alpine, Mono, and Santa Barbara counties, and the greater Bay Area (a shoe-in), the entire state voted "yes" to ban gay marriage. Honestly I'm rather surprised by Alpine and Mono, being some of the most inland counties, where inland is traditionally more conservative.

    --
    -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
    "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
  125. Do you know what "respect" means? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here, the word "respect" means "concerning."

    It's not the same respect as in, "I have a lot of respect for that guy."

    Feel free to consult a dictionary.

  126. Re:Anonymous Coward by bzipitidoo · · Score: 1

    I live in Texas, and when it comes to voting, my top priority is to find out who is a fundamentalist whack job, and vote against them. When in doubt, vote Democratic. These fundamentalist weasels are always trying to catch the electorate sleeping.

    I know of this McLeroy character mentioned in the article. The man is a creationist, though he's learned to be slick about it. I'm hoping he loses in the election, and am doing my part to help that result along.

    --
    Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
  127. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by dbrower · · Score: 1

    “I reject the notion by the left of a constitutional separation of church and state,” said David Bradley, a conservative from Beaumont who works in real estate. “I have $1,000 for the charity of your choice if you can find it in the Constitution.”

    Oh boy.

    He is probably pulling the "amendments aren't part of the constitution" gambit, by which the validity of the Equal Protection clause and the Income Tax is also "refuted." -dB

    --
    "It if was easy to do, we'd find someone cheaper than you to do it."
  128. MC Hawkings is right... by skinlayers · · Score: 1

    WHAT WE NEED MORE OF IS SCIENCE!

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=89jt7zJzkNQ

  129. college by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    I just finished grad school in Texas and was dumbfounded on how many arguments I got when I had to teach human evolution. Some of the most basic things that we take for granted as fact were just thrown to the wayside. Fortunately college has a way of forcefully opening your mind, but I really feel for these kids up until that point.

    Unfortunately Texas students may not be ready for college, and if they do go to college they may need to take remedial classes.

    The only thing I saw I liked was the inclusion of Milton Friedman and Friedrich von Hayek in economics.

    Falcon

  130. "I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.

    The key word here is "respecting". They cannot make a law that RESPECTS an establishment of religion. Some people try and claim that the Constitution prohibits the ESTABLISHMENT of a religion, but that is obviously not the case.

    The word 'respecting' as used in the above context of the US Constitution means 'considering' or 'in view of.' Consider, "Congress shall make no law considering an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof" and "Congress shall make no law in view of an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." This is quite different than your interpretation of the word 'respect.'

    1. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      He can't, obviously.

    2. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by riverat1 · · Score: 3, Informative

      "Respecting" is used in the sense of concerning or referring to, not in the sense of esteem. And establishment is used in the sense of an existing institution, not creating a new one.

    3. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Jawn98685 · · Score: 1

      It's a trick question. Bradley knows full well that words the specifically say that, are not in The Constitution itself. Oh, they are a matter of record, and yes, in just so many words. Just not in that particular document. That's what Bradley and his ilk bank on - ignorance. They know that that the drooling dittoheads they play to are disinclined, if not incapable, of reading for themselves and learning what the framers of The Constitution had in mind when the drafted that great work.

    4. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by riverat1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The question I have for you is if you have schools that includes Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, etc. what kind of prayer or religious symbols would you allow in the school. Allowing a dominant Christian culture to take over may be intimidating to members of other religions and the non-religious, something the Federal Government is required to protect you against in public life.

    5. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      At least he's braver than some AC. (Not that I don't occasionally post AC myself).

    6. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by jayveekay · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It is clear what the founders meant in their papers and notes, as well.

      But their papers and notes are not in the Constitution and thus superceded by the debatable wording of the Constitution itself.

      For more tortured constitutional phrasing see:
      "No person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President;"
      With the positioning of the commas in that sentence it says that you had to be alive at the time the Constutitution was adopted (circa 1787) in order to be eligible to be president.

    7. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The key word here is "respecting". They cannot make a law that RESPECTS an establishment of religion.

      That's not how I read it. It has nothing to do with "respect" in the sense of deferring or honoring. Rather, they mean "respecting" in the sense of "pertaining to" or "regarding."

    8. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      His e-mail is: sboesupport@tea.state.tx.us

      The part of the constitution he would be looking for would be the first ammendment.
      "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof"

      And the charity I asked him to support is: Americans United for Separation of Church and State

      I hope many of you join me in e-mailing him.

    9. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps Madison just wanted to make sure Americans could possess as many bear extremities as they want.

      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
    10. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Orgasmatron · · Score: 1

      I guess the sorry state of education in this country is to blame.

      Several of the original states (colonies) had established churches (official state churches, like the Church of England) at the time the constitution was being written. The establishment clause was specifically intended to protect those state churches by forbidding the federal government from legislating them away. It is really an anti-dis-establishment clause.

      It really helps to understand that "establishment of religion" is being used as a noun here, and not as a verb.

      --
      See that "Preview" button?
    11. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      That's the problem with that bet, because you can just redefine what you think "separate of Church and state" means and not have to pay up. Basically though I do think the Christian right is probably closer to matching the views of most of the founding fathers than those advocating for a complete divorce from all concepts of religion by governments. Though these issues were present from the very first congress of the US (the draft oath of office included the word "God" which was later removed before becoming law). What the founding fathers overtly intended was to prevent having a national church or religion, which was essential in what at the time was a society with many fundamentally different religious ideas and institutions (including Quakers and Unitarians).

      Objectively, it is a bit hard to see a difference between someone who sues the school district because they teach evolution and someone who sues the school district because a teacher leads a prayer. Both views come down to "how dare they expose my children to ideas I don't want them exposed to!"

    12. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Courageous · · Score: 1

      The more fun one is asking how you can be gay and be a christian. I mean, really, mon. The bible expressly tells all the people you are hanging out with that, ah, if you act on your natural impulses that they have to KILL YOU.

      C//

    13. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Vhyrrimyr · · Score: 1

      "Separation of church and state" is a term coined by a supreme court justice Hugo Black in 1947 (long after the founding fathers were all dead).

      The phrase was first used by Thomas Jefferson in a letter to the Danbury Baptist Association.

    14. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

      There is no separation of church and state in the constitution. That's why we need an amendment.

    15. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      Hmm, and I guess that, since the constitution doesn't expressly allow laws regarding the separation of church and state, it would be unconstitutional to pass such laws.

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    16. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by iPhr0stByt3 · · Score: 1

      mods are rediculously anti-christian (or liberal). Look at my post compared to the parent - exactly the same, but mine is modded down and his is up ;-P

    17. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by iPhr0stByt3 · · Score: 1

      No, God does. His Bible does. His value of human life does. And if any christian wants to argue the issue of abortion, be my guest. I simply find it impossible to support abortionists (democrats) as a Christian, regardless of (relatively) petty economic or foreign policies.

    18. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Separation of church and state" is a term coined by a supreme court justice Hugo Black in 1947 (long after the founding fathers were all dead).>

      Try again. Black was quoting Thomas Jefferson. http://www.usconstitution.net/jeffwall.html

      Had you RTFAed, you would have known that...

    19. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      How about working on Sundays and being Christian? How about eating shellfish and being Christian?

      Why Can't I Own a Canadian?

    20. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      Referring to Democrats as abortionists is absolutely retarded. Do you have a hard time supporting Republicans as well? The last time I checked Jesus didn't think too highly of capital punishment, or war.

    21. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1

      No, God does. His Bible does. His value of human life does.

      You have GOT to be kidding me. God completely wipes the world clean of all life (save a chosen few) in a flood, orders the Hebrews to go to war and to murder the survivors, gives long lists of rules that end with "then they shall be put to death", and that's just the introduction! If you want to argue that God cares about the fate of our souls and as part of that orders us not to commit murder that's fine, but from a Biblical viewpoint mortal life is a trivial matter.

      I simply find it impossible to support abortionists (democrats) as a Christian, regardless of (relatively) petty economic or foreign policies.

      But you know, about as certainly as you possibly can, that even with significant Republican majorities that abortion will remain legal, and very few things in that area will change. On the other hand, with different leadership we might have avoided the Iraq war entirely - saving tens or even hundreds of thousands of lives, and possibly giving us the manpower to make Afghanistan work; health care reform (if done properly) could save thousands of American lives. And just to make it really crazy: better sex ed, cheap or free birth control, letting gays and single people adopt, and better health care could easily lower the number of abortions preformed, but because most people that support those things still want abortion legal, you're willing to support those that give token speeches about the evils of abortion, while doing everything possible to make sure that women still have reasons to get them.

    22. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by getsprouted · · Score: 1

      The Bill of Rights contains the establishment clause. In the Constitution itself there is a strict prohibition against a religious test for public office:

      "... but no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States." -- Article VI

      That looks to me like an unambiguous statement about the relationship between church, or better, *religion* and state.

      As for other ambiguities in the Constitution, the document was forged out of numerous compromises part of what the opposition saw as an illegal effort to nullify the Articles of Confideration. The document was made intentionally ambiguous so that opposing parties could read into it what they wanted and argue for their positions after its adoption. The original drafters just needed to get it signed because the Confederation was failing.

      These same conservatives talk about upholding the Constitution and returning to the founders' intentions. The founders argued with one another more than modern Americans do, and the Constitution legitimates slavery and denies womens' suffrage.

      Finally, the opening paragraph of the Constitution states the intent of the signers to ensure the "promotion of the general Welfare." That could very well be interested to support the intervention of government in public health.

      Apologies for the asides, but people should read the damn document before they spill tears for it.

    23. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by tyrione · · Score: 1

      The Bill of Rights are most certainly part of the original US Constitution. The First Amendment is what he is looking for that declares, explicitly, that thou shalt not bare any Religion within Government, commandment crap. It speaks volumes to the person for never grasping language and bothering to read Jefferson, Madison, and more on their intent with the amendments.

      TO AVOID THE USUAL FATE OF NATIONS

      Reply to Wilson's Speech:
      ``Centenial'' [Samule Bryan] wrote in the Freeman's Journal (Philadelphia), October 24, 1787

      ....The new plan, it is true, does propose to secure the people of the benefit of personal liberty by the habeas corpus; and trial by jury for all crimes, except in case of impeachment: but there is no declaration, that all men have a natural and unalienable right to worship Almighty God, according to the dictates of their own consciences and understanding; and that no man out, or of right can be compelled to attend any religious worship, or erect or support any place of worship, or maintain any ministry, contrary to, or against his own free will and consent; and that no authority can or ought to be vested in, or assumed by any power whatever, that shall in any case interfere with, or in any manner controul [original spelling], the right of conscience in the free exercise of religious worship: that the trial by jury in civil causes as well as criminal, and the modes prescribed by the common law for safety of life in criminal prosecutions shall be held sacred; that the requiring of excessive bail, imposing of excessive fines and cruel and unusual punishments be forbidden; that monopolies in trade or arts, other than to authors of books [Copyright law] or inventors of useful arts, for a reasonable time [USPTO], ought not to be suffered; that the right of the people to assemble peaceably for the purpose of consulting about public matters, and petitioning or remonstrating to the federal legislature out not to be prevented; that the liberty of the press be held sacred; that the people have a right to hold themselves, their houses, papers and possessions free from search or seizure; and that therefore warrants without oaths or affirmations first made, affording a sufficient foundation for them, and whereby any officer or messenger may be commanded or required to search suspected places, or to seize any person or his property, not particularly described, are contrary to that right and ought not to be granted; and that standing armies in time of peace are dangerous to liberty, and ought not to be permitted but when absolutely necessary; all which is omitted to be done in the proposed government.

      There is so much information that became the US Constitution in this one page from the Debates On The Constitution, Part I compiled by the Library of America that anyone who claims there is no Separation of Church and State has a comprehension problem.

      Amendment I

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

    24. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      The US Constitution means what it says: it forbids precisely the establishment of a state religion.

      "Amendment 1 - Freedom of Religion, Press, Expression. Ratified 12/15/1791.
      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

      It's not hard to understand this, if you even briefly study the world the Constitutional framers lived in, and the context of English government at the time.

      This has NOTHING to suggest that the founders intended a secular state; in fact, church services were held in the congress for years.

      I would also argue that this clause should make the government religion-blind; churches should have no special tax status certainly, nor be treated in any way differently than any other corporation or association of individuals.

      --
      -Styopa
    25. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      The question I have for you is if you have schools that includes Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, etc. what kind of prayer or religious symbols would you allow in the school.

      Whatever people want. I think kids are smart enough to know if Mrs. McGrooty's prayer is her prayer, or a prayer mandated by the school corporation (the State). As things stand now, Mrs. McGrooty can't pray out loud in school without getting sacked. "She tried to lead us in prayer, then she said we were dismissed for Christmas Break!"

      Allowing a dominant Christian culture to take over may be intimidating to members of other religions and the non-religious, something the Federal Government is required to protect you against in public life.

      Wait, what? The Fed is required to protect everyone from the evils of religion... not even the evils of religion, but just the implicit self-created intimidation when you're around religious folk? Where'd that amendment come from? The Fed is supposed the stay out of citizens' ways and let them sort it out (unless things turn violent... wait, civil protection is local government's job. I guess the Fed is supposed to STAY THE F*#% OUT ALWAYS).

    26. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The constitution does not ban establishing religions. It prohibits the government from making laws that dictate terms to religions. The government is unable to define what the principles of a religion are, to ban a religion or to assign an official state religion. This does not mean that the country was not founded with christian values in mind, or that laws based on religious ideals are unconstitutional. It only means that the government cannot involve itself in ones worship in any way.

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof...

      It only prevents the government from making a law that deals with religion.

    27. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Theswager · · Score: 2, Informative

      if you read the first amendment in a historical vacuum then yes is forbids an establishment and does not explicitly speak about 'separation'. However if you read what almost all of the major 'founding father' figures were writing at the time, and what they said about it afterwards it is obvious that they intended to separate church and state affairs. Of the major 'founding fathers' that everyone hears about (Franklin, Jefferson, Washington, Paine, Madison, Adams, etc.) they were all secularists at the very least but many of them were outspoken Deists who were nothing if not hateful of organized religion both philosophically and as it relates to governance. Furthermore 'separation' is an arbitrary distinction from a lack of establishment, both of those words have different meanings depending on who is arguing at a given moment and those meanings always meld to fit whatever agenda they are pushing.

    28. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Second Amendment says "...the right to bear arms shall not be infringed", but you could just respond that that is ambiguous, as it doesn't specify whether they mean "arms" as in weapons, or "arms" as in the upper extremities.

      Or more realistically, bearing arms is possible without owning them. Which arms? Why can't I own a tank? Serious question...

    29. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking of willful ignorance, the exact text of the second amendment says:
      "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
      See how the first part of that sentence modifies the second part? Somehow the gun fanatics never quote that all important qualifier in the very same sentence.
      That's the trouble with most "literalists". They use a literal interpretation of only the text that suits them, even chopping off sentences right in the middle.
      So, what are we to make of the whole sentence in this day and age? The ambiguity doesn't have anything to do with appendages, you ignorant git.

    30. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It makes a lot more sense without automatically assuming incorporation under the 14th amendment. The big government lovers were the federalists that wrote the constitution.The states rights, limited government anti-federalists wrote the bill of rights to REaffirm that the constitution was strictly limited to only exactly what it says the federal government can do.
       
      While the bill of rights is a great list of freedoms that every state government SHOULD take a good look at and incorporate into their own constitution, the Bill of Rights was a double check against the federalists to ensure the Federal government would never interfere with state business. The Bill of Rights when you consider it in context says "States reserve the right of establishment and limits on speech and press as they please with out interference of the Fed", "We will arm or disarm our citizens as we please without interference of the Fed", so on and so forth. The fact that the Fed is now "incorporating" the bill of rights as to be restrictions against the states as the federal government sees fit is to completely NULLIFY the Bill of Rights entirely and wipe out its intent by the anti-federalists.
       
      This isn't to say that the states independently are not totally fucked up, but 1) States need to take some responsibility to fix their own problems, and 2) Each states needs to be protected from the really stupid ideas of other states; with the hope that if a state actually does something right the other states have the freedom to choose to follow their example OR citizens have the right to leave their state and go to the less fucked up one. AND, probably most importantly, to any degree states are unlikely "do the right thing" voluntarily, I have much less faith that the Fed is going to do it better.
       
      Freedom to make mistakes hope for and a chance at progress. The alternative is only one where life is fair by virtue that your neighbor is suffering just as much as you are.
       
      Long ago and far away that was what it once meant to be a liberal.

    31. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Christianity has got everything to do with Christ, and not much to do with Jesus.

    32. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      GP is still right though. A militia consisted of people with chopped off upper extremities is pretty much useless.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    33. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ignorant indeed. You left out some words in your quote.

      Amendment II

      A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

      Pretty cut and dry.

    34. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "No person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President;"
      With the positioning of the commas in that sentence it says that you had to be alive at the time the Constutitution was adopted (circa 1787) in order to be eligible to be president.

      No person except a natural born Citizen (or a Citizen of the United States (at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution)) shall be eligible to the Office of President;

      Say what? Or you meant

      No person except a natural born Citizen (or a Citizen of the United States) (at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution) shall be eligible to the Office of President;

      Either way, one comma is a stand in for two parenthesis. I would go with the placement that makes sense and reflects intent.

    35. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I can't see how a board of education allowing textbooks stress "the role of Christianity in American history" counts as a "law" or how it establishes a religion,"

      You're hung up on the word "establishes". It doesn't mean founding a new religion or something. It means government promoting a state religion -- i.e. supporting one particular religion versus not supporting others. In the context of the European history of the day it is pretty clear the people who wrote the constitution wanted something completely different. There they had state religions. If government supports one particular religion it is in effect establishing a special status for that religion. If you read the writings of the people who wrote the constitution it's pretty clear they wanted government to be completely out of the religion business itself, and likewise they wanted government out of the people's business when it came to religion too. While it may get phrased as "separation of church and state", and that phrase isn't in the constitution, it is very clear what their intent was. Furthermore, it is very clear that separation of church and state is the fairest way to allow all citizens to enjoy whatever religion they want -- keep government out of religion.

      The danger in the textbook scenario is that the significance of other religions in American history will be neglected, and, particularly in the case of some of the people who wrote the constitution in the early history of the USA, the non-religious nature of some of them might be ignored. It's important too. Public education is funded and implemented by government. The standards are being crafted by representatives of government. The school board representatives are bound by the laws that apply to government, and they aren't supposed to be establishing a special status for a particular religion by saying it deserves emphasis in education.

      While it would be entirely appropriate to explore the influence of religion (which would inevitably include a lot about Christianity because it is a *large* influence then and now), singling out Christianity for attention is a bit odd given that other religions and non-religion certainly had an important influence on American history.

    36. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by wealthychef · · Score: 1

      True, and maybe I'm making a distinction without a difference. I guess I'm saying that preventing a Congressman or group of Congressmen from engaging in religious practices or citing religious beliefs in their decisions is going too far, but that no law that has the intent to support a particular religious view, such as modifying textbooks to mention Christianity, should be allowed.

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    37. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God is more interested in our eternal being. We could probably argue God's perspective of human life, but I doubt someone who does not even believe in God actually cares to understand. But let me add this quick note: He willingly sent Jesus and Jesus willingly died so we would have a chance at heaven. Again, if anyone claiming to be Christian wants to argue abortion, go ahead.

      I don't know what it would take to make abortion illegal, but I know that passively accepting it won't help (and I'm outraged about my tax money supporting it), just as you won't passively accept the war. And the war IS unavoidable. Even Obama continues to surge into Afghanistan. I think if there was a way to avoid the war, Obama would have brought the troops home. You seem to forget the massive bi-partisan support the war originally had. Oh, and just so you know, it's the terrorists that are still taking lives over there, not the coalition soldiers.

      My point remains: Someone who has a personal relationship with God cannot in good conscience be a democrat.

    38. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by iPhr0stByt3 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, why? Are the democrats NOT in favor of abortion?
      On a personal level Jesus made a point to forgive, but He never spoke on either war or capital punishment (very common in those times) on a government level. I will agree with you though that God generally would prefer us not to fight, but I don't see anything in the Bible condemning violent bahvior when it comes to protecting one's own society/nation.

    39. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      I would also argue that this clause should make the government religion-blind; churches should have no special tax status certainly

      If only for one reason churches should not be taxed, if you're taxed then you have a seat in politics. Some, though not all, church leaders have gotten into trouble because they've spoken out on political issues as the church's leader. I have no problem with them speaking out as a private citizen, even Rabbis, Priests, and Mullahs pay taxes. But as soon as they start telling church goers in sermons who to vote for, they've gone to far. The problem with this is what defines "too far", where is the line?

      Falcon

    40. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      I do think the Christian right is probably closer to matching the views of most of the founding fathers than those advocating for a complete divorce from all concepts of religion by governments.

      Many of those Founding Fathers were Deists not Christians.

      What the founding fathers overtly intended was to prevent having a national church or religion, which was essential in what at the time was a society with many fundamentally different religious ideas and institutions (including Quakers and Unitarians).

      Here I agree.

      Objectively, it is a bit hard to see a difference between someone who sues the school district because they teach evolution and someone who sues the school district because a teacher leads a prayer.

      There are big differences between them, one is science and can be tested and possibly falsified whereas the other relies on faith.

      Falcon

    41. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      There is already an establishment of a particular branch of religions in including God though...

      And where in the Constitution is "God" found? I'll increase your odds of finding by saying you can use the Declaration of Independence too.

      Falcon

    42. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Generally this is interpreted as meaning you are free to practice the religion of your choice, but the government cannot coerce you into practicing any specific religion. Have atheists taken this too far in arguing against prayer or any kind of religious symbols in school? Yes.

      Allowing prayer in school is forcing religion on students in one way or another. In elementary school I went to a public, not private church rule, school and I had a wooden ruler forcibly applied to my hands when I refused to pray in school. The same for "under God". Heck I even knew Christians who refused to say it, to them it was taking God's name in vain. I also saw others who could not handle the peer pressure of others to pray in school. If you want to allow a moment of silence that's fine with me but no led prayers.

      Have atheists taken this too far in arguing against prayer or any kind of religious symbols in school? Yes.

      Would those same Christians who want to take religious symbols to school and have prayer allow Muslims their prayer? Or a Wiccan take their pentagram and pray?

      Falcon

    43. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by nschubach · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying there is and I agree that there's not. I'm mainly agreeing that I think it's improper to put "God" on Federal money, pledges, etc. which pretty much "establishes" a particular branch of religious belief. After reading my post, I realize I could have added more substance.

      Also, the declaration of independence does mention "Nature's God" in the preamble but it doesn't really dictate that as an establishment, more of a statement of inclusion. (Also, the capitalization of "creator" in the first sentence of the second section (the famous one) could constitute religious belief in a higher power... thus alienating atheist citizens)

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    44. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by nschubach · · Score: 1

      No laws supporting any religion should be allowed. Showing favoritism toward any religion will only encourage other religions to request the same, or attack us for supporting it.

      Religion is a personal belief and cannot be taken away from anyone, nor shall it be enforced. No Atheist is trying to "remove God" from the lives of US citizens, they are simply trying to remove it from the government.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    45. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      Devout Muslims are expected to face Mecca and pray 5 times daily. While I believe the religion allows some flexibility in timing, it is not at all unreasonable to allow them to pray by themselves while at school, as long as it is not disrupting the learning experience of other students. Likewise, it is not unreasonable to allow Christians, Jews, or whatever a chance to pray, as long as no one is forced to participate. Most school prayer lawsuits confront the gray area around the question "At what point does the free exercise of my religion start to become perceived by others that don't believe as I do as coercion towards them to participate?" I profess to be a Buddhist, but I have no problem with listening to others talk about their religion, or even inviting my daughter to attend their church. It's called "tolerance"; our founding fathers had it, but lately it appears to be in short supply.

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    46. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1

      God is more interested in our eternal being.
      That was exactly my point - there are plenty of ways to argue that God doesn't want us to kill, but "because he values (mortal) human life" isn't one of them.

      Oh, and just so you know, it's the terrorists that are still taking lives over there, not the coalition soldiers.
      That has to be the single most obviously wrong statement I've ever hear about either war. I don't even know what kind of craziness to attribute it to: Do you really believe that we're firing bullets, launching missiles, and dropping bombs and magically never hurting anyone? Do you just not count opposing forces as people and somehow think that no civilians get killed by our actions? Or do you just think that because we're "on the right side" that the people killed by our actions don't count?

      And the war IS unavoidable. Even Obama continues to surge into Afghanistan.
      I was specifically talking about the Iraq war. Don't change the subject.

      I think if there was a way to avoid the war, Obama would have brought the troops home.
      Those are different things - just like pregnancy, avoiding one to start with is quite different than stopping it in the middle. :)

      You seem to forget the massive bi-partisan support the war originally had.
      And how large must support for abortion rights be among Christians before you change your mind?

      My point remains: Someone who has a personal relationship with God cannot in good conscience be a democrat.
      And other people use the same type of logic to support the idea that they couldn't be a republican.

    47. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I simply find it impossible to support abortionists (democrats) as a Christian, regardless of (relatively) petty economic or foreign policies.

      This is so stupid. The bible says nothing about abortion. It says nothing about life being sacred.

      "Pro lifers" are not concerned about protecting the "sanctity of life," they're only concerned about controlling other people.

    48. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      I understand what you mean, but the Sabbath is more generally known as Saturday, not Sunday. Just FYI.

    49. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      Last I checked, most Christians consider Sunday the Sabbath. I think the Seventh-Day Adventists changed to Saturday for some reason.

    50. Re:"I reject notion of separation of church and st by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Also, the capitalization of "creator" in the first sentence of the second section (the famous one) could constitute religious belief in a higher power... thus alienating atheist citizens

      If only the scientific theory of Evolution had been proposed before the DOI was written instead of about 80 years later, it could also mean evolution.

      Falcon

  131. Re:It's about time by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 0

    No, they are volunteers, not the government.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  132. Yawn... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And in other breaking news, China has decided to censor the internet.

  133. Re:It's about time by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 0

    So... how many fire fighting gigs do they budget for?

    ???

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  134. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about those highways that deliver goods and services to your hill-billy ass? Yup, I bet you loved your telephone company until the evil government broke it up in the 80s. I bet you absolutely hate the idea of health insurance, car insurance, and home insurance and instead chose to hoard your assets in the event of a unlikely circumstance. I'm also sure you detest the technology fostered by the redistribution of wealth by the federal government. It goes on and on and on. It's okay; you're ignorance is just one more thing we can fix to make the world a better place!

  135. Text Books Useless Anyway by oakwine · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I grew up in Dallas long ago when text books were even more conservative. I do not remember anyone being influenced by the views therein. Everyone knew that the text books were simple strokes for bears of little brain. The bears of little brain understood this as well, so in the end nobody paid much attention to text books. By age 16 I had read Darwin's Origin of Species and The Voyage of the Beagle. I was surprised that neither those who were pro evolution nor those who were anti evolution had bothered to do so. So I ignored both camps. College in Massachusetts, much the same. Students might be on the side of "science" but had remarkable little knowledge of science itself. Probably what is needed is text books that can also double as toilet paper. At least that way you could get some use out of them.

    1. Re:Text Books Useless Anyway by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Where did you go to college in Massachusetts?

    2. Re:Text Books Useless Anyway by oakwine · · Score: 1

      MIT, Eli. Ref your signature, the bizarre coincidence of Nazi and Nazirite, English Bible spelling. I also remember, either in The Source by James Michener, or The Exodus by Leon Uris, that the new Israeli government needed an air force and found that what they could afford was a bunch of Messerschmitt 109s which were at the time very surplus and very cheap. They arrived with swastikas still painted on the stabilizers. In spite of several attempts to paint the swastikas out of existence, they continued to shine through after the new paint had dried and set. Might want to look this one up.

    3. Re:Text Books Useless Anyway by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      You're really telling me that MIT and Harvard students had little knowledge of science?

      Ref your signature, the bizarre coincidence of Nazi and Nazirite, English Bible spelling. I also remember, either in The Source by James Michener, or The Exodus by Leon Uris, that the new Israeli government needed an air force and found that what they could afford was a bunch of Messerschmitt 109s which were at the time very surplus and very cheap. They arrived with swastikas still painted on the stabilizers. In spite of several attempts to paint the swastikas out of existence, they continued to shine through after the new paint had dried and set. Might want to look this one up.

      My signature refers to political comparisons, not logos on planes. There's a tendency nowadays to compare Israel and Zionists to the Nazis as part of a broad, semi-conscious effort to demonize Israel, Zionism, and Jews. Mike Godwin coined his own law as an antidote to the number of specious Nazi comparisons on Usenet, and I'm mutating it to point out the specious Nazi comparisons made about Israel.

  136. Re:Anonymous Coward by pnewhook · · Score: 1

    Godless liberal countries with universal healthcare like Canada and Finland have the best graduation rates in the world. Sorry Texas conservsatives, youre on the losing side of history.

    I know you are kidding, but godless Canada? We actually have a God reference in our anthem, something the US anthem lacks.

    --
    Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
  137. Best not complain about it by presidenteloco · · Score: 0, Troll

    or it'll be our goddamned god-given right to shoot you full of holes and pump the oil out of you, boy.

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  138. Re:BACKLASH against unchecked liberalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Libertarian wing, thank you for clarifying. The Libertarian Party, proper, is staffed with kooks, (with Ron Paul types, I agree.)

    Those of us eating the Republican Party alive are currently focused on getting candidates elected that will deliver the following three things, in order:

    1) Draconian spending cuts - balanced budgets aren't enough, start paying debts. No such thing as "non-discretionary"
    2) Drastic tax cuts - bet on the private sector to pull you out of recession
    3) Handle defense. Maybe increase, maybe decrease - but just take the job seriously

    Some people I've dealt with put #3 before #2. If that's all we disagree about, I'm happy. Collectively, we have no social agenda, we're going Big Tent style to win big and focusing primarily on finances.

    I personally don't cry foul about the notion of transfer programs and government services getting the axe. The main reason why I think this is my opinion that Big Government is very poor at service delivery and represents a poor investment. It is also my opinion that Big Government hopelessly twists our economy (see: our suicidal monetary policy, effects of Medicare/Medicaid/gov't regulation on the medical industry, our schizophrenic tax system, etc.)

    I don't ascribe to the notion that "socialist/big/progressive government hasn't been done right, yet" as an explanation for why those styles of government ultimately collapse of their own weight. It's my contention that Big Government is impossible to get right: human nature and power-hungry individuals in the system always prevent any real good from getting done. I know there is PROMISE in big government, but the follow-through always falls way short of the promise.

    I believe this is why the American style of government was originally structured the way it was, having a weak central government and strong states. The centralized power is attractive, but doesn't scale well. I know at the state and local level, I have a better chance at wringing the responsible party's neck when I'm not happy. When power rests with nameless bureaucrats, then I have no neck to wring.

    Go ahead and label me "mean" or "cruel" or whatever, in my opinion the Big Government model does not work and takes too much of our freedoms, economic and otherwise. I say, transfer power to local/state governments and try to vote yourself gifts there, if you'd like - I'll be sure to fight you or move somewhere else that values personal responsibility and freedom.

    Put another way: living in the world, by and large, sucks. It sucks less here in the States because we value (or at least USED to value) freedom and liberty and justice. By and large, people are good natured and healthy and can take care of themselves, so leave them alone. A reduction of my freedom on promises of even less suckyness doesn't square in my mind with history - in fact, itsatrap.

    I am not advocating anarchy and no government and no regulation and no government spending, I'm just looking for a vast rollback of those things.

    Going meta on this discussion for a moment. It is at this point is when liberal friends of mine always pull out the sob stories about someone who needs big gov't to save them (or they pull out the personal insults to try to get their way.) I've always felt this was just ivory tower brow-beating and lacked much substance. Anyhow, sorry to diverge there.

    kthxbye

  139. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So they operate under communist philosophy then?

  140. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, basically, I could just not donate and get free fire protection? Cool.

  141. They have no idea.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At first blush, this seemed like it was going to something terrible for the children. Then I thought about it a moment and realized that the students they intend to indoctrinate with christian-biased books are most likely going to be using the internet to assist their assignment research ....good luck with that Texas!

    -Oz

  142. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like my fire department. Now, I don't know about yours, but my fire department is not socialistic. See, the local fire department where I live is a private organization made up of volunteers. They operate by running fund raisers and otherwise getting donations.

    Brilliant solution! All we have to do to prevent the spread of socialism is to break up all the metropolitan areas that are too big it properly police and provide rescue services to through the use of voluntary donations.

    I don't doubt that you have a voluntary fire department. Unless your town has voluntary police forces, postal workers, and has no roads that were put through with state or federal monies, then you are entirely missing the point.

  143. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When was the last time you paid a fire department invoice for rescuing your life and property?

  144. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I haven't gone to a public library in the past 15 years to do anything more than give them my excess books.

    As for the fire department, my fire department is a private company which I can contract annually, or I can pay them a large sum of money should they need to put out my house.

    Public education? No, I don't like it.

  145. Re:BACKLASH against unchecked liberalism by jjohnson · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Okay, good luck with that. I think you vastly overestimate your ability to remake the Republican party (and vastly underestimate the space you're sharing in your traditional coalition with social conservatives), but we'll see what the next ten years bring. If you actually succeeded as you outline above, it sounds like it would be pretty good--but this isn't a new philosophy, and it has its own history of failing in practice. Everyone thinks every entitlement should go--except their favorite. The enduring image of tea partiers I have is an old lady being interviewed, and saying she wants the government to keep its hand off her Medicare. The cognitive dissonance is breathtaking.

    As an aside, if you'd started with something this calm and thoughtful, rather than the snotty, liberal bashing you began with, you might get more reasonable discussions.

    --
    Anyone who loves or hates any language, platform, or manufacturer, doesn't know what they're talking about.
  146. haha hilarious by unity100 · · Score: 1

    its a travesty, but rousseau, voltaire, montesqieu were even bigger proponents of secularism than jefferson. for starters, all of these come before jefferson, and have influenced jefferson and his generation. not to mention that their writings have practically kickstarted the enlightenment movement in late 18th century. hilarious.

    1. Re:haha hilarious by IICV · · Score: 1

      So? They also removed the emphasis on "Enlightenment" from the requirement, and added Aquinas and Calvin. Without the emphasis on Enlightenment philosophy and with the addition of those two horribly out of place philosophers, it's just a grab-bag of names - it doesn't require that the students be taught the principles of the Enlightenment, which were the foundation of modern scientific efforts. Instead, you'll probably see textbooks that take a "fair and balanced" view of Enlightenment vs pre-Enlightenment thought, or something like that.

    2. Re:haha hilarious by unity100 · · Score: 1

      what im saying is, any kid who gets into voltaire, rousseau, montesqieu will become an enemy of church, leave aside being a pursuer of enlightenment. they wont even become deists, like many of your founding fathers were.

    3. Re:haha hilarious by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Last I heard, the conservatives were trying to find an explanation for the separation of powers in John Calvin and original sin-- absurd, as there are many references to Montesquieu in the Federalist Papers. I'm glad that he hasn't been excise completely, but his inclusion is probably part of a larger criticism of Jacobinism and all things French.

  147. Mod parent up by howardd21 · · Score: 1

    They are right, stop judging people as groups. It is just wrong and makes you look stupid and small minded, unable to comprehend diversity among similar people.

    --
    no comment
  148. Education in the USA by Maclir · · Score: 0, Redundant

    And people wonder why the standard of education provided in the USA is slipping compared to the rest of the world, and the country is rapidly losing its technology lead. How long before the USA is a country of Luddites and ignorant bumpkins?

  149. Re:Anonymous Coward by demonlapin · · Score: 1

    You could just provide vouchers in lieu of public schools, and give the fundamentalists the finger as you sent your kids to whatever hippie school you ever wanted. See? Liberalism need not be wedded to socialism.

  150. History outside of Texas? by mattwad · · Score: 1

    I graduated HS in 2003 and until the 8th grade in San Antonio, we were taught Texas History, and something called "Social Studies", which was mostly about contemporary national politics. The curriculum may be biased, but a first step should include teaching kids earlier on about the rest of the world. Seriously, before arguing, all you non-Texans should first realize that most Texans are still silently plotting how we can secede from the Union.

    1. Re:History outside of Texas? by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      Go ahead, secede. Watch those federal dollars that welfare-queen state Texas gets go back home to Illinois, New York, and Massachusetts. We don't need you, you need us to prop you up. That goes for the rest of the South too, and deep down, the citizens down there know it, which is why there's still a lot of resentment towards states like "Taxachusetts" or Illinois. Because if it wasn't for us, youd still be all barefoot and sharecropping for "Colonel/Judge Beauregard Stonwall Custis LeeTolliver in the big house on the hill"

    2. Re:History outside of Texas? by Chili-71 · · Score: 1

      by mattwad (1643895) writes: Alter Relationship on Friday March 12, @09:33PM (#31460586)
      ...most Texans are still silently plotting how we can secede from the Union.

      Damn, I knew there was a reason I was thinking of moving to Texas.

  151. Letter to Mexio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Dear Mexico (no one is particular, just all of Mexico),

    Please come pick your child up, like right now, he's being a pain in the ass and the other kids in the playground, except Alaska, want him to shut up. Please come get your child, because we're tired of dealing with him for the last 100 years (take New Mexico too, he gets uppity sometimes too, we'd like to keep Arizona).

    Sincerely,

    New England

  152. Re:Anonymous Coward by Nimey · · Score: 1

    Funnily enough, that's the sort of thing the Bolsheviks did when the Mensheviks tried to have calm, rational meetings with them.

    Before the Mensheviks were shipped off to the Gulag or purged, I mean.

    --
    Hail Eris, full of mischief...

    E pluribus sanguinem
  153. I know the answer by zogger · · Score: 1

    they had a bad case of humorrhoids

    1. Re:I know the answer by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      Hi Zogger I can't remember now if it was the repository, the depository or the suppository.

  154. Re:Anonymous Coward by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

    Hip hop in schoolbooks? Disgusting.

    I disagree. It's better that the children learn about hip hop now from their school, rather from their "homies" in their "hood". ;-)

    --
    You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  155. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you like the fire department?

    Sure, I guess. They protect my life and limb from public hazards—grass fires, my neighbor's burning house, etc.—so they serve pretty much the same function as the police or the army.

    The public library? Public education?

    No, they're shit! Really, this is what you're using as an example of good socialism? "Without socialist policies, who would provide your children with disco-era textbooks and Apple II's?"

  156. Re:It's about time by demonlapin · · Score: 1

    Do you like the fire department? The public library? Public education? Guess what...you like socialism! We really need to throw away the false dichotomy between Capitalism and Socialism. There is room for the two to coexist. I am a Christian myself, but I will fight to the death to prevent a Theocracy of any kind from taking hold in the United States.

    If you think a public safety mechanism like a fire department is socialism, then "socialism" has no meaning. Fire departments, police departments, armies... these are not argued against by any sane person I've ever met, from communist to Randroid. Public libraries? You know, I can't recall anyone arguing against those, either, since they're very cheap ways to provide the public with means to educate itself. (Also: they're run by local governments, not the feds.) Public schools? Well, now you're talking about something where there's no reason to believe that the government can do the job better than anyone else. We don't generally give poor people food; we give them food stamps. We don't give them housing; we give them housing vouchers. There's not really a way to provide "library vouchers", but it's pretty easy to provide school vouchers.

  157. Re:Oh Noes! by Nimey · · Score: 1

    It's funny seeing how conservatives react to this, as if it's some sort of game of revenge.

    Pretty schoolyard of them, isn't it?

    --
    Hail Eris, full of mischief...

    E pluribus sanguinem
  158. Re:Anonymous Coward by timmarhy · · Score: 1
    omg so you run into a problem and instantly give up! omgz all we can do is walk and cry about how the nasty republicans out voted us!!!

    holy fuck, talk about just throwing in the towel. get more liberals on the board, work on individuals that might turn into a swing vote if talked with away from the group.

    inspite of what you seem to think here on slashcrap, groups of people are NEVER 100% polarised on any topic. every person will have a different view and who can be bargined with to get a mutually benefical outcome.

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
  159. Re:It's about time by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A group of people helping their fellow man without expectation of pay?
    Men cooperating with men to fight the dangers that we face in our lives?
    People paying for their service only when they want to and when they can afford it?

    This is nothing but socialism, and should be stamped out at every available opportunity! I am raising a personal militia to take down these socialist bastards!

    (Any support will be greatly appreciated.)

    --
    You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  160. Re:It's about time by demonlapin · · Score: 1

    If you think that "socialism" is the word for anything government-funded, then it has no meaning.

  161. ive also posted by unity100 · · Score: 1

    so someone moderate parent insightful please.

  162. Read my sig, pitchpipe by sconeu · · Score: 1

    I believe that my sig (which I've had for years) indicates exactly what you are saying.

    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  163. Re:It's about time by earthforce_1 · · Score: 1

    > you will all be "under god" as you are burning in hell.

    Which god? I don't believe any of these fairly tales, but I would laugh my head off at the very thought of you waking up in the afterlife and facing Zeus, Odin, or Vishnu.

    And in any case, I would rather spend eternity in Hell than spend forever in worship and obedience of a megalomaniac dictator. Kind of like an eternity in North Korea.

    --
    My rights don't need management.
  164. Re:Anonymous Coward by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

    They're working on that too. There's a vocal bunch of assholes who want to replace The Star Spangled Banner with "God Bless America" as the official national anthem.

    They already put "under God" in the pledge of allegiance which wasn't in there when my Father and Mother learned it as kids.

  165. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Exactly! I've been saying stuff like this for years.

    You don't like the condition of the roads in your area?
    Get together with your neighbors, have a bake sale to raise money, buy some construction equipment, put on a hard hat and start paving.

    You don't like that the your area isn't as safe as it could be?
    Get together with your neighbors, have a bake sale to raise money, buy some guns (or sack of doorknobs), set up a jail, and start serving justice.

    You don't like that you drinking water is unsafe?
    Get together with your neighbors, have a bake sale to raise money, put on a hard hat to build a waster water treatment center and then starting cleaning our water.

    And the list goes on and on.

    I don't understand why we pay taxes when it is so obvious that the alternative of a system of private voluntary organizations seems so straight forward and easy to implement. All you have to do is get together with neighbors and have fund raisers! My god, what could be simpler???!!!

    PS - I like peanut butter chocolate brownies.

  166. Really? Afghanistan is your example? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Yes it is, it has been less than 10 years since the Taliban lost power and was kicked out of Kabul and Afghanistan isn't a strict Islamic nation. Heck the Taliban has to pay and or scare some of those it gets support from.

    Falcon

  167. Conservative? by tizzo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Did you look at some of the stuff they objected to? That they tagged as "conservative"? The Times objects to the teaching, for example, that we are a constitutional republic rather than a democracy - which is an objectively true fact. They object to teaching that the free enterprise economic system works best in the absence of limited government intervention - which is another objectively true fact. Someone else here objected to the rejection of a liberal's amendment trying to explain that the founders favored a separation of church and state, when it is objectively false that they did. Imagine if those bad bad conservatives tried to teach the objective fact that bans on prayer in schools (public or otherwise) are in direct violation of the constitution.

  168. Re:It's about time by DesScorp · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Do you like the fire department? The public library? Public education? Guess what...you like socialism!"

    That's a pretty disingenuous argument, and assumes that if you support any level of public funding for something, that you should support all levels. Because I find my post office and fire department necessary in no way means that I find government ownership of banks, automakers, and medicine necessary. The founders wanted things like a postal service, and at the same time said "the government that governs best is that which governs least". Kind of hard to govern least if the government pays for everything, no?

    "e really need to throw away the false dichotomy between Capitalism and Socialism."

    The dichotomy isn't false, and is in fact, pretty stark.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  169. Holy Shit! by gbutler69 · · Score: 1

    I get it now. American politics is now dominated by the "Bloods" and the "Cryps"! Oh, Southpark, how prescient are you?

    --
    Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
  170. A true expert on history: an engineer gone dentist by clemenstimpler · · Score: 1

    I'm quite sure that an engineer gone dentist is the right person to decide on a social science curriculum: This is the leader of the conservative majority. I think the next Oscars should be awarded by the United Brotherhood of Carpenters.

  171. This is why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why we need a complete separation of State and Education.

  172. healthcare debate by falconwolf · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "With affordable health care, the Honorable Gentleman Senator of Michigan could be able to remove that hairy wart from his ass."

    There's one thing I noticed in the health care debate, none of the Democrats proposed voters get the same health care as congress gets. Perhaps that's because they know it will bankrupt the nation.

    Falcon

    1. Re:healthcare debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "With affordable health care, the Honorable Gentleman Senator of Michigan could be able to remove that hairy wart from his ass."

      There's one thing I noticed in the health care debate, none of the Democrats proposed voters get the same health care as congress gets. Perhaps that's because they know it will bankrupt the nation.

      Falcon

      Yes, because every country with universal health care is bankrupt.

      This is what I don't understand about America. The world is full of good examples of public health care, and yet it continues to insist that if America tried it, then it would be the Apocalypse.

    2. Re:healthcare debate by portnoy · · Score: 2, Informative

      There's one thing I noticed in the health care debate, none of the Democrats proposed voters get the same health care as congress gets.

      Actually, Congress uses an insurance exchange system (the FEHBP) that serves as the model for the Democrat's health care overhaul -- the FEHBP has a variety of plans in the exchange, and they can pick the one that best suits their needs. In fact, the Democratic plan actually states Congress and their staff will have to move from the FEHBP to the main insurance exchanges.

    3. Re:healthcare debate by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      There's one thing I noticed in the health care debate, none of the Democrats proposed voters get the same health care as congress gets.

      There's a good number of Democrats in Congress that are in favor of a single-payer system that would give everybody the same health care. It's just that there aren't enough of them to get it passed.

      Though this reminds me of a particularly evil fact: some health insurers have been known to tag famous or important people (celebrities, congressmen, etc.) as VIPs in their records systems, and to instruct their personnel to be considerably more lenient when handling their claims. Apparently the health insurers don't want the publicity or political consequences of denying a celebrity or congressperson's claim...

    4. Re:healthcare debate by Pros_n_Cons · · Score: 1

      This is what I don't understand about America. The world is full of good examples of public health care, and yet it continues to insist that if America tried it, then it would be the Apocalypse.

      can't speak for other Americans but the accumulation of debt that is being racked up is reason for me not to want it. In the middle of trillion dollar debt you want to flood the hospitals with "free" health care? Dont get me wrong it sounds nice but under my current plan I pay practically nothing through my company and am covered very well minus a few things.(things i CHOSE not to pay extra for).

      I'm more and more frustrated with this "socialist" type of system. this woman at work with 4 kids getting 15k back in taxes between her and her "husband" who's really just a guy who screws her and knocks her around while i PAY 18k a year in taxes and watch her buy rims/car stereo/furniture with it. It makes me want to puke. seriously. Cause i dont pop out kids like a pez dispenser and I got a good job i should be penalized so immigrants can flood my state and buy rims? sorry i call bullshit. The less you make, the less educated you are, the more kids you have. the more the system should penalize you, not reward you. We're encouraging people to take seasonal work and breed like rabbits so they can get the same paycheck as you and me.

      oh something else fun? she refused our companys healthcare plan cause she gets it for "free" anyway. Sometimes i think she tells me all this just to piss me off. Amazing i can quit my job in IT, get a job picking grapes 3 months outta the year and have basically the same standard of living after the CARE programs, welfare, tax refunds, gov housing (they pay 300 a month for a new 3bdrm home) yes its small and with other project housing but its a house.
      Why dont we just all quit our jobs and live off the government unless we're making over 60k a year? or is this the plan?

      --

      -- "of course thats just my opinion, I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller
    5. Re:healthcare debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The idea that voters should receive the same health care as congress has been a central talking point in the Democrat's case for a national insurance exchange. It was once again referenced in today's Wall Street Journal:

      http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703447104575118051373585266.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_MIDDLENexttoWhatsNewsThird

    6. Re:healthcare debate by sonicmerlin · · Score: 1

      It's not free you idjit. Why don't you read the fracking bills before you mouth off?

      You know what, while we're at your stupid cost-cutting scheme, why don't we close down all public libraries? Who needs 'em? Just a huge waste of public money.

    7. Re:healthcare debate by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      There's a good number of Democrats in Congress that are in favor of a single-payer system that would give everybody the same health care. It's just that there aren't enough of them to get it passed.

      Well, that's something to be thankful for, there aren't enough Democrats in office to ramrod single-payer health care through. Excuse me if I don't want medicine rationed. Canadians and others who can afford it come to the US to get care they need because they can't get it at home. On the other hand, Canada is able to keep drug prices low because drugs are bought in bulk and prices are held down. In the US there's a law against allowing states to buy drugs in bulk. However because of its size Walmart was able to offer thousands of prescription drugs for $4 or under, now other pharmacies are doing the same. Ah, how competition lowers costs. Now only if we had competition in insurance as well.

      Falcon

    8. Re:healthcare debate by bikehorn · · Score: 1

      Isn't your nation already bankrupt?

    9. Re:healthcare debate by rhakka · · Score: 1

      I don't know where you live that people who are poor live at the same standard of living as people who make $60k/year. I can say here in maine, there is a gap where you wouldn't be able to afford the health care you get as a poor person WITH A CHILD as you would on your own for quite a range of payscales. That sucks, and it's primarily because health insurance is ridiculously expensive. but otherwise, really, it's not such a sweet deal being poor.

      the idea of penalizing people with kids though... as much as it might be nice if it made sense... just doesn't. If you don't get the kids well fed and taught while they are young, you will just end up supporting them as adults. either by welfare or in prison, your pick. the research is voluminous and thorough. You can pay now, or pay more later. You don't get to choose not to pay.

      the best bet is to make sure the kids are fed and taken care of. then you stand a chance of breaking the cycle. parenting classes are good too.

  173. liberals by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    I've heard many die-hard liberals using Jesus to try to claim that Jesus would support communism / socialism, so we should be communist / socialist.

    They are not Liberals, liberals believe in "the ideal of limited government and liberty of individuals". What these people believe in is big government.

    Falcon

    1. Re:liberals by Totenglocke · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You don't live in the US. In the US that's "classic liberalism" and collectivists are "liberals". They manipulated the change in the meaning of the word so that people such as yourself would think they stand for the polar opposite of what they actually stand for.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
  174. Re:It's about time by CronoCloud · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I've lived in areas with so-called volunteer fire departments and every single one depends on a big-town fire department that is paid for with tax dollars to come to their assistance for anything really serious. And often the "volunteer" departments will have a couple of paid firemen.

  175. History is factual by Jonathan · · Score: 1

    History is about events that happened. "God" never did *anything* that has evidence of actually happening. So why should "he" be mentioned in a book of history? Sure talk about religion. Priests and equivalent clerics had a major influence on history. But priests are human.

  176. New England tried to invade Canada Twice & Fai by skeptictank · · Score: 1

    Seriously, New England is the only place to surrender to France in the last 200 years. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invasion_of_Canada_(1775) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_of_1812

  177. Re:Anonymous Coward by Nimey · · Score: 1

    Hah. Presupposes that you're going to find an agreeable school within a sane distance without moving elsewhere.

    --
    Hail Eris, full of mischief...

    E pluribus sanguinem
  178. There are almost as many Gods by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    as there are believers

    As I've pointed out to some Christians when they've brought up Pacal's Wager, the problem is which "God" do you believe? Some of them are jealous and smite thee for idolization. So which do you believe, the one who's name can't be spoken? One of the Christian ones, or one of the Allas?

    One would think that the spectacle of Islamic Jihadism would be enough to remind us of what religion is when given free reign, but two hundred years of domesticated and tamed Christianity have encouraged the illusion that the creature has changed its nature. It hasn't. It's just biding its time...

    While true of many there are some who want to "bring it on". Much like the Taliban in Afghanistan there are Christian Talibans in the US, such as Dominionists and other Christian Reconstructionists who would have people stoned to death for adultery, homosexual actions, and other things.

    Falcon

    1. Re:There are almost as many Gods by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      There are no religious people, only two kinds of atheists: Some disbelieve all religions, some disbelieve all except one religion.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  179. Stop trying to bring sense to the whole argument by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      Future generations will likely just nuke the fundies from orbit.

      It's the only way to be sure of the continuation of the species.

    SB

    --
    It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
  180. Doesn't matter by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

    Future generations will likely just nuke the fundies from orbit.

      It's the only way to be sure of the continuation of the species.

    SB

    --
    It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    1. Re:Doesn't matter by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

        I am not going to apologize for that remark. I don't give a fuck if it offends anyone.

        The human species is at a point, right now, where if we don't decide whether or not we want to combine our efforts to survive, we won't.

        Tipping point. Global communications via the internet may provide that impetus we need to grow up as a species, or it may not.

        Some of us do care.

      SB

       

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
  181. Brother Glitch23 by jeko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Brother Glitch23,

    Jesus Christ was the Son of God and He died for my sins. We follow God by taking up our crosses and feeding the hungry, visiting the imprisoned, healing the sick and clothing the naked. We preach the good news and the acceptable year of the Lord.

    I am a Liberal, I am your Christian brother, and if you don't believe me, just go ask Pop.

    And as much as it pains me to point this out, you have some reading to do.

    There is nothing wrong with making known our history just because it has a religious foundation, except for those who hate religion.

    I'm assuming you're referencing the Puritans, since Jamestown was a fairly commercial endeavor. Your problem is that those Puritans would not have recognized you as a fellow Christian, any more than you most likely recognize Catholics as fellow Christians. If you're a Southern Baptist, Assembly of God or any other Evangelical, you'd have been shunned as a heretic.

    BTW, those Puritans you're putting on the pedestal, you might want to read a little Hawthorne, or the history of King Philips' War. The Indians saved the lives of the Puritans that first winter. The children of the Pilgrims paid them back by slaughering the Indians' children and stealing their lands. Like I said, don't take my word for it. Go spend some time with Nathaniel Hawthorne.

    "There is no reason to hide that fact unless the agenda is to try to make our country look like it was not founded on religious beliefs."

    Sigh. Start reading Jefferson. Read it long, read it hard, and read it in the knowledge that it was written by a man who spent his nights literally cutting and pasting the supernatural out of his copy of the Bible. Read it in the knowledge that the man who wrote this nation's beginning had a decades-long affair with a woman that he owned as a slave.

    If you think it's going to be diffiult to square Jefferson with your theology, tighten your seatbelt and hang on, because when you read about the unbridled debauchery that was Benjamin Franklin...

    When you can't take that any more, start in on the "Federalist Papers." They're dry, they're tedious, and they'll permanently put to bed any idea that this was meant to be a "Christian" nation.

    As far as taking "In God We Trust" off the currency, it is for the same reason as what I stated above.

    Sigh. That motto was put on US currency in 1956, during the same wave of panicked nationalist fervor that spawned Hoover and McCarthy. Are you sure the Church should be laying claim to that?

    But since we're talking about Christianity and Coins, let's go back to the book we really ought to be reading. When the Zealots asked Christ "Is it lawful to pay taxes unto Ceaser?" it wasn't a financial question. You didn't exactly file a W-2 with Rome. Taxation under Rome was a lot closer to outright mugging. Why do you think tax collectors like Zacchaeus were so hated?

    What the Zealots were really asking was "Don't you think it's time to throw off Roman bondage and establish Isreal as God's Holy Nation again?"

    Look at His answer. Give it to them. Look at His other answers. Sell all that you have, and give to the poor. If they take your shirt, give them your coat too. If they make you a slave, do more than they ask you too. Resist not evil men. Give to any who asks. Here, take this, care for this man and if you need any more, charge it to my account. I'll pay it. Put down that sword, I don't need you to fight for Me, my Kingdom is not on this world and if you're fighting over things that are here, you have missed the point. Yes, I'll die to save people who do not deserve it. I'll die to save the people who are actually killing me.

    My Kingdom. Is. Not. Here.

    Those men in Texas have forgotten this. They don't want to take up their cross. They want to lay down the law. They seek to further the Kingdom by political will, rather than by feeding the hungry, healing the sick, clothing the naked and visiting the imprisoned.

    And my real fear for those men is they'll be asked why they didn't one day...

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
    1. Re:Brother Glitch23 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the best piece of writing I've seen on the interweb in a long time. Seriously. /not a xtian.

    2. Re:Brother Glitch23 by RaigetheFury · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Brother... I find almost everything you said VERY disturbing. You literally are saying "give up, give everything away, let people walk over you and SMILE while they are doing it!". Time for a reality check. The world is not full of God fearing people... hell most people don't even believe in your god.

      See: http://www.adherents.com/Religions_By_Adherents.html and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_religious_groups

      Let me be very clear. I will not tolerate history being taught with any bearing on religion. Sure, talk about the facts, how religion was rarely used to promote good as history records but used to exploit the stupid and put the fear of god into the poor so they didn't usurp their masters/leaders. I'm much more comfortable talking about facts of history not bringing into account "facts" from a book that there are over 10,000 versions (here's just the accepted english versions http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_English_Bible_translations) written by monks who were listening to some guy who claimed to know the word of a being NOONE has ever seen only "HEARD" in 2000 years.

      I'm sorry but I don't want my kids hearing this kind of dribble. If you want your kids to hear it fine... do it in religious studies or sunday school but keep it away from HISTORY. No TRUE historian can every say "God said..." he can say "Supposedly Peter said that god said.... ". That's how history and science works. They have to be provable facts and if not you have to use the words "supposedly".

    3. Re:Brother Glitch23 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is perhaps the most meaningful post on what Christianity really stands for that I have ready in a long time.

      Thank you.

    4. Re:Brother Glitch23 by Copley · · Score: 1

      Wow! Although I don't share your religious beliefs, your writing is excellent, and summarises exactly what I've always understood to be the basis of Christian teaching.

      The warped, bastardised corruption of those teachings that we see today on TV, and spewed from the mouths of so-called Christians, is so far removed from these basic tenets of love and forgiveness as to be unrecognisable.

      --
      I am bald
    5. Re:Brother Glitch23 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I'll lay three-to-one odds that the GP was influenced by Skousen's "5,000 Year Leap," most likely as promoted by Glenn Beck. Christians and those interested in Constitutional doctrine and American history need to be aware of this poisonous little book, because it's influencing a LOT of people who haven't taken the time to actually read our country's founding documents. Among other places, it's getting passed around and discussed by a great number of Tea Party groups, and the lack of correction therein from members who ought to know better (lawyers, educators) is frightening. They're using it to fuel blind outrage, and it's working.

    6. Re:Brother Glitch23 by glitch23 · · Score: 1

      When you can't take that any more, start in on the "Federalist Papers." They're dry, they're tedious, and they'll permanently put to bed any idea that this was meant to be a "Christian" nation.

      I didn't say that the Founding Fathers intended us to specifically have a Christian nation. There is no denying we have religious roots though with "endowed by our Creator" and "Nature's God" in the Declaration of Independence.

      Those men in Texas have forgotten this. They don't want to take up their cross. They want to lay down the law. They seek to further the Kingdom by political will, rather than by feeding the hungry, healing the sick, clothing the naked and visiting the imprisoned.

      If the liberals who hate religion would ever get their way to lay down the law then all religion would be banned in this country unless it was talked about and practiced within the confines of a church or home. The atheists and others who believe in the separation of church and state are the ones who don't want to take up the cross. Go preach to someone else such as an atheist on this site. I don't need it. I'm not someone who wants to make sure all religion is hidden from view (or eradicated completely) like others on this site would prefer.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    7. Re:Brother Glitch23 by glitch23 · · Score: 1

      I'll lay three-to-one odds that the GP was influenced by Skousen's "5,000 Year Leap,"

      Never read it or heard of it so give me your money. You lost your wager.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    8. Re:Brother Glitch23 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a shame, jecko's post fell on deaf ears. As a Muslim, I wonder how can you treat your liberal christian brother like he's an atheist?

    9. Re:Brother Glitch23 by BigMeanBear · · Score: 1

      Religion is relevant to history and is any version of it that totally excludes religion is false. These Texans seem to like using God like a bludgeon, however. This always turned me off because it betrays the ideals it would otherwise seem to uphold--not to mention the commandment about not taking the Lord's name in vain.

      Also, I think the word you're looking for is "drivel". Dribble is something done in basketball or while you eat (if you're a sloppy eater).

      --
      += E
  182. Re:Texas BOE Removes Jefferson From History Standa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you have children in school in Texas, I strongly suggest moving... to one of those other states with higher taxes, less jobs, and more corruption in the government.

    Great plan.

  183. Re:It's about time by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 1

    Well, I mean, equipment can be tallied up easily enough but through the course of using gear, tools, and vehicles, they will wear out and can be damaged. More fires, more use, more maintenance required.

    Basically, I'm sort of wondering if them raise a bunch of money to cover costs and then some or if they simply raise just enough to cover current debts. I'm not sure how it is here and, while I was trying to make a pointed question, my curiosity has been piqued.

  184. Re:It's about time by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry you lived in areas where not enough people were civic minded enough to support a competent volunteer fire department. When there is a serious fire in this area, five or six or more volunteer fire companies may turn out to fight the fire. If the next town over has a government fire department it would certainly respond to a multi-alarm blaze. Of course, if the government fire department has a multi-alarm fire within its area, the nearest volunteer fire departments will turn out to help fight the fire. Where I am specifically the nearest government fire department would over 1/2 hour to get here.
    And yes, some of the local volunteer fire departments have paid fire fighters, but they aren't paid with tax dollars. They are paid out of the same fund raisers that pay for the fire hall and the fire engines.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  185. Re:It's about time by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    I don't know the details of how they do the budgeting, never having been part of one of them. However, I know of three or four that I know are approximately 200 years old (that is they were founded not long after the original volunteer fire department started by Benjamin Franklin).

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  186. Verdict? by Celestialwolf · · Score: 1

    Good news.

  187. The Rich get Richer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and the dumb get dumberer.

  188. Oh yea! More lies and nonsense. by adewolf · · Score: 1

    Funny how these fundamentalists (Christian that is) are quick to condemn any other religion, and yet here they behave like the fundamentalist Muslims. What a bunch of hypocrites passing lies off as fact. If my daughter was in public school I would make sure she knows not to believe any of it.

    --
    "The Brady Bunch is back...working homicide"
  189. This thread makes me sad.. by pablo_max · · Score: 0, Troll

    I read this thread and it makes me sad. It makes me sad for the future of my country. It makes me wonder, was it worth it to serve my country in the armed forces? I did it because I care, because I love my country and what it is supposed to stand for.
    More and more it's clear that our leaders just don't care what happens to this once great country. It also seems the people don't care either, otherwise we would have found better leaders.
    What do you people think will happen when this current generation takes over? This generation of "Global warming is hoax, evolution is a hoax, science is hoax" generation. There is a reason why my company gets most of it's engineers from Germany. Most of the current generation are mine me mine morons who expect to get time outs when things get hard.
    I literally weep when I think about what has happened to America.
    It makes me sick that a small minority of people were so easily able to fuck this whole country up.
    I always hear people say, if you don't like, leave! Well you know what, I am leaving. I am moving to Germany next month to get the fuck away from you wackos. What the fuck does that say, that I need to go to Germany to get away from crazies.
    Don't get me wrong, I love America, but right now, I hate Americans. I say fuck you, you crazy bible thumping wackos. You can have it. Enjoy your army of McDonald's workers. I'm outta here.

  190. Texas . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    . . . it's like a whole 'nother country (i.e., not yours).

    1. Re:Texas . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ". . . it's like a whole 'nother country (i.e., not yours)."

      And one to avoid like the plague. I won't even take flights that stop over there.

  191. Re:Republicans don't care about lower taxes. by glodime · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... I vote Republican because I don't want a 50% overall tax rate.

    a) If you voted for Democrat(s), you would not be supporting a 50% overall tax rate. b) While Democrats tend to vote for more government services i.e. expenditures, often without raising tax revenues to pay for it, Republicans tend to vote for eliminating tax revenues, often without eliminating government services that they finance. Neither situation is in the best interest of the citizens of the USA as they increase future taxes more than otherwise be prudent. That's one reason I consistently vote for people that are not endorsed bay any political party for the Federal or State office I'm casting my vote for. Last presidential election I voted for Mayor Cory Booker of Newark, NJ. I'm willing to vote for a Democrat or Republican that supports the public funding of federal election campaigns as advocated by fixcongressfirst.org. But only for one term.

  192. Re:Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Universal health care is a good thing. It's also socialist. Get over it.

    FTFY

  193. Gay Love in the Bible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the Hebrew scriptures were pretty clear on the subject, wouldn't you say?

    1 Samuel 20:41
    "And as soon as the lad was gone, David arose out of a place toward the south, and fell on his face to the ground, and bowed himself three times: and they kissed one another, and wept one with another, until David exceeded."

    The exact translation of that last part is under debate, but there is a fair amount of evidence that it is better translated as "until David grew large to completion." Many non-fundamentalist scholars agree that it is a reference to an erection and/or ejaculation.

    Also, 2 Samuel 1:26
    "I grieve for you, Jonathan my brother; you were very dear to me. Your love for me was wonderful, more wonderful than that of women."

    David, the second king of Israel, loved Jonathan more than women, made out with him, and they possibly had gay sex together. Not quite as clear cut as you seem to think.

  194. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fire department is NOT socialism. Public libraries are not public ownership of the means of production. There is a dichotomy between capitalism and socialism and it is not false. In a capitalist system, there cannot be central control over the economy, to have such is no longer capitalism. None of the things you mention are actually socialism.

  195. I can prove that! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At some time in the past they had enough of them to need a dedicated storage building..

  196. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I still would prefer to homeschool, if I could find materials that weren't written by and for FUNDIES! >_"

    I was homeschooled, and I'll definitely agree that the program I went through was terribly right-winged in the materials they presented. I just wanted to say that if you can look past the right-wing agenda, you should look into the "A beka" program. I'm about to finish (8 more weeks) my sophomore year in college, and I can definitely say that college has been easy (I'd almost say it's been a joke) in comparison to what I had to do in highschool. Their math and spanish programs were beastly hard.

  197. Re:Texas BOE Removes Jefferson From History Standa by HoppQ · · Score: 1

    No, you should just move to Canada!

    --
    My sig will be released in 2015 third quarter. Rating pending.
  198. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Wow. Just when I start to think there's absolutely no value in religion, I read a post like this!

    I still don't believe in the supernatural aspects, but this is spot on. The only problem is (as many others have pointed out), good people tend to do good and bad people tend to do bad regardless of what their own religion professes. Furthermore, those who most need to hear your message will not listen to it.

    Nevertheless, thank you for being a voice of sanity on behalf of Christianity!

  199. Agreed. MOD PARENT up! by jhwang · · Score: 2

    This. Thanks for writing that post. :)

  200. Re:It's about time by mqduck · · Score: 1

    Please, please don't use "socialism" as shorthand for "government services". Socialism versus capitalism is about the relationship of workers to the means of production. Just because the various Social-Democratic parties long ago abandoned socialism, that doesn't mean we should forget what the concept even is.

    --
    Property is theft.
  201. Sigh, dumb american by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    Let the superior EU mind answer these questions correctly.

    Canada is the 52nd state, it doesn't have provinces since it joined the world AKA the USA

    Egyptian obviously, all languages can be known by just adding ian to the country name. Dutchian, belgianian, englishian.

    And the president of France is the crook, not the fascist.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  202. Oh dear. by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    I have to be careful here, because I might accidently mention that Santa Claus does not exist and that would shatter your child like view of the world... oops.

    This might not be such a bad thing if it leads students to learn more. For example, in going over materials regarding the Panthers, they might learn that group exercised 2nd ammendment rights. It was the fear of Blacks with guns that led to some of the first (the first?) gun control measures in California. The law was, IIRC, signed into law by... Ronald Reagan!

    You really believe this? You really believe that this is the viewpoint that the republicans want to show? Somehow I doubt it, and that any lynchins and show trials in republican areas would quite by accident not be mentioned at all.

    No, I think you need a bit more growing up young one. A bit more exposure to how people with an agenda think and speak.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Oh dear. by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      He's making an assumption you forgot: that the kids think for themselves, whatever the adults want to show them.

    2. Re:Oh dear. by istartedi · · Score: 1

      He's making an assumption you forgot: that the kids think for themselves, whatever the adults want to show them.

      Thanks for helping out while I was away. You hit the nail pretty well there.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  203. What is it supposed to stand for? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    You mention it almost in passing but never actually examine what you believed your country to stand for.

    And that is what is wrong with these people as well. They claim to be Christians because they go to church without ever asking what Jesus Christ stood for. There is nothing in the actions of modern churches that has anything to do with the actions, as recorded in the new testament, of this mythical figure they nonetheless claim to follow. Modern Christianity is like an american wearing a Che Guevara T-shirt made in a sweatshop and sold for 90 dollars in a designer store or a white suburban guy dressing like a gangster or a hippy raging against the man while living on his dads money made by working in the weapons industry.

    Really, you can check any Christian by asking "when have you last washed the feet of a hooker". Oh, never. Never broke bread with the poor? So what makes you a Christian. "Well I go to church where I do business deals".

    Oh yeah, I do think there is a bit about that in the bible... I don't think it ends the way you think it does.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  204. Re:It's about time by tiqui · · Score: 1

    Socialism is completely incompatible with Christianity

    Reminder: "Thou shalt not covet" (don't desire what others have) and "Thou Shalt not steal" (don't take things that belong to others) and of course you could go to the bits about not feeding people who refuse to work, not placing excessive burdens on those doing the work, etc. etc. etc.

    All the New Testament instructions for charity and giving and caring for others are calls to individuals to deal properly with other individuals, and to do so because it is right rather than because of government force

    Christianity calls upon individuals to give freely from their own possessions as they see fit to those in need (this is actual charity). Christianity has nothing in common with the idea that the majority will enable a taxman to rob people against their will in order to give to both the poor (who might be poor through no fault of their own) and the lazy (who are poor because they hate work or like drugs and alcohol more than food). The Bible (New Testament) actually lumps tax collectors in with prostitutes and other unpopular sinners. It is true that some left-leaning Christians created a movement called "liberation theology" which attempted to give a moral basis to Marxism, but that appeal only works with people who have not actually read a Bible completely from cover to cover (as one generally does with books one claims are important).

    Also, the continual references to a theocracy in the context of Christianity are themselves a laughable display of ignorance. There is simply nothing in Christian theology that would lead to a theocracy The closest thing possible already happened long ago when the former Roman empire converted to Christianity The secular government of the time embraced and used the new faith with a result that was still much less than a pure theocracy but was still much more than anything advocated in the New Testament (which does not have a focus on government or law).

    I recommend a little less Dave Letterman and Jon Stewart, and a little more serious study... because that line of "We really need to throw away the false dichotomy between Capitalism and Socialism" displays a flabbergasting ignorance of both systems.

  205. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When the fire department and may of the government agencies you mention were first formed in the US they were NOT government agencies. They were supported voluntarily by donations and operated as associations. In fact, getting elected Chief of your local fire squad was considered a good starting point for entering politics. What we have now is an imperial congress continually raising taxes to add layer after layer of bureauracy to provide make-work jobs.

  206. Texas kills capitalism. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Texas killed 'capitalism'! America is no longer a capitalist country, I'm glad someone finally admitted it.

  207. Re:Anonymous Coward by pnewhook · · Score: 1

    No, you just showed how ignorant you are.

    --
    Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
  208. And that's why democrats hate you by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    We are not groups. We are individuals which means we ALL think differently, even if we do share the same label

    Why do you think democrats hate you, and find it acceptable to have openly discriminatory behavior against you ?

    The difference between republican groups and democrat groups is staggering. In any democrat meeting you get personally attacked for disagreeing on whether global warming should be capitalized or not.

    In a republican meeting :
    you say "I don't believe in global warming" - and nobody doubts the marriage status of your parents. Instead "why not ?" and an interesting discussion ensues.
    you say "I believe nuclear power is the solution to global warming" - and yet nobody suggest you are paid by the evil industry. In fact, even if you ARE paid by the nuclear industry, they're still hearing you out
    you say "we can't drill out on california's coast" and they hear you out.

    It really doesn't matter where you're coming from, even seemingly openly communist ideas are considered

    Any standpoint can get reasoned discussion in a republican meeting. I have yet to visit a democratic meeting where even minor deviations from dogma are tolerated.

    One thing I seriously wonder, is how democrats DARE to suggest they are somehow more tolerant than anyone else, on any point at all. It surely is not the case here.

    Democrats tolerate exactly one singular opinion, always in flux, always with perfectly innocent victims (no matter how many and how constantly those victims hurt others) and ever-changing villains who copulate constantly with satan and are deserving of execution-on-the-spot.

    Republicans live in a changing world, with changing understanding of the world, with many ideas, where everybody is trying to do his best for himself and his community, and where that behavior is perfectly okay.

    Individual republicans regularly have quite strong opinions on all sorts of matters, especially matters that affect them. These ideas, unlike in the democrat camp, do not match. Which is, I guess, exactly why the republican party is so tolerant.

    1. Re:And that's why democrats hate you by Hardtrance · · Score: 1

      One thing I seriously wonder, is how democrats DARE to suggest they are somehow more tolerant than anyone else, on any point at all. It surely is not the case here.

      Can't remember who said it but, "Liberals (Democrats) are tolerant of everything except intolerance".

      --
      This post is LAW where prohibited by VOID. Prosecutors will be violated.
    2. Re:And that's why democrats hate you by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Can't remember who said it but, "Liberals (Democrats) are tolerant of everything except intolerance".

      Riiiiiiight. Do you seriously believe that ?

      Let's see, don't even do this. Just imagine it. See what your own opinion is about the matter. You walk into a democrat on the street. Just any democrat activist. Anyone at all.

      Now tell him that you don't believe in global warming.

      So what is your imagination telling you happens next ?

      Is it a reasoned discussion ? Didn't think so.

      If democrats were truly "tolerant of everything except intolerance" they'd out-suicide-bomb the muslims.

    3. Re:And that's why democrats hate you by Hardtrance · · Score: 1

      Can't remember who said it but, "Liberals (Democrats) are tolerant of everything except intolerance".

      Riiiiiiight. Do you seriously believe that ?

      Well, I admit it may be a somewhat hyperbolic statement, but in principle yes I believe it.

      Let's see, don't even do this. Just imagine it. See what your own opinion is about the matter. You walk into a democrat on the street. Just any democrat activist. Anyone at all.

      Now tell him that you don't believe in global warming.

      So what is your imagination telling you happens next ?

      Ummm He laughs his ass off?

      Is it a reasoned discussion ? Didn't think so.

      I thought that all sides had pretty much agreed that global warming was a fact and that the discussion had moved on to whether or not human activity has had any effect on said warming.

      If democrats were truly "tolerant of everything except intolerance" they'd out-suicide-bomb the muslims.

      See above.

      --
      This post is LAW where prohibited by VOID. Prosecutors will be violated.
    4. Re:And that's why democrats hate you by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      I thought that all sides had pretty much agreed that global warming was a fact and that the discussion had moved on to whether or not human activity has had any effect on said warming.

      If only! No, if global warming actually happens is still hotly debated.

      Thus all the snickering and eye-rolling you'll hear from the conservative side this past winter during the blizzards. "But I thought we had global warming! Sure seems cold to me."

  209. Re:It's about time by pnewhook · · Score: 1

    Socialism is completely incompatible with Christianity

    Wow - you really don't understand either concept do you?

    Christianity has nothing in common with the idea that the majority will enable a taxman to rob people against their will

    Since you like to quote the bible, how about when Jesus said "render unto Caesar those things which are Caresar's" when they were trying to arrest him on the idea that he was encouraging people not to pay their taxes?

    It amazes me how many so called Christians have a decidedly un-Christian attitude when it comes to helping the sick and poor. Or for that matter, thinking they are justified in killing someone for stepping on their property.

    --
    Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
  210. religion and government by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    "The government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion." - John Adams

    First, that doesn't mean it wasn't founded on any religion whatsoever.

    Second, how do you explain "Creator" and "Nature's God" used in the Declaration of Independence?

    Nor does it mean it was based on any religion. As for "Creator" and "Nature's God" in the Declaration of Independence, the DOI was written by Thomas Jefferson who was a Deist, as were many other Founding Fathers. And while Deism can be said to be a religion itself it is based on reason and observation of the natural world alone, faith not needed. Hay, that sounds like science. What is kind of ironic is that in conspiracy theory circles the Founding Fathers were members of the Freemasons or wealthy groups like the Illuminati who wanted to take over the world.

    I don't have any references right now, and I'm not sure, but I'm willing to bet Jefferson only included "Creator" and "Nature's God" in the DOI because others had to approve and sign it. He had already made concessions in it, he opposed slavery and was pro equal rights and in early drafts of the DOI he wrote slaves and women had the same rights. But because some of those who were going to sign it believed in and owned slaves that was taken out. And like slaves, some thought women were property, or at least lessor than men, so that was removed as well. On the other hand TJ also thought women had their proper place and was supposed to be modest. He also owned slaves, however every slave he owned he inherited from his father or his father-in-law. He never bought a slave, but he freed some. For instance though Sally Hemming was a slave TJ left in his will that her children were to be free.

    Falcon

  211. A natural progression is to move towards by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Agnosticism.

    I think that depends on the person, there are some who become religious or more religious.

    Falcon

  212. You don't live in the US. by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Yes I do, and like Thomas Jefferson I am a Liberal. I believe in liberty and small government.

    In the US that's "classic liberalism"

    "Classical" has to used to modify "liberal" because the word "liberal" is used incorrectly in the US today. As the wiki article I linked to says "The phrase classical liberalism is used in standard academic sources to mean early liberalism". That is why I frequently correct people and provide a link to the proper meaning of "liberal" when it is used falsely, as it was in the post I replied to.

    If you're going to use a word be sure to learn the definition first. I also do that, correct people, when they use other words incorrectly. Such as "hacker", a hacker is an explorer who follows the hacker ethic. Now the definition linked to is about computer hackers whereas I use "explorer" because other things such as electronics can be hacked as well. Reporters and other writers used to be called hacks as well. And polygamy is when males and females have more than one spouse. What the Mormons practiced, and some sects still practice is not polygamy, it is polygyny, "having more than one wife at a time".

    And when I use a word incorrectly I appreciate others correcting me. I am not afraid to admit when I'm wrong.

    Falcon

    1. Re:You don't live in the US. by Totenglocke · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Wow, way to not even read my post. I never said that you were against small government, I said the reason WHY the collectivists adopted the name "liberal" was so that they could convince people like you that they ARE for small government / peoples rights.

      I also never said that the word was changed, just that in the United States, it has a different connotation due to one party hijacking the term in order to mislead others as to their intentions. That is why in America it is customary to say "classic liberal" to denote the difference between liberalism pre-DNC hijacking and the modern American usage of the term "liberal".

      Just because it's SUPPOSED to be "liberal" to mean small government doesn't mean that's what the word means in the modern USA. You won't force society to change back to the proper usage and your rant only serves to 1) confuse the average person and 2) make you out to be an arrogant prick.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    2. Re:You don't live in the US. by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      You're the arrogant prick.

      Falcon

    3. Re:You don't live in the US. by Totenglocke · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      So because I pointed out that you don't understand the modern definition of the word in the US (which yes, it is a different definition than it used to be and different from the rest of the world) and that you fail to realize that the meanings of words change over time / location (fag is a derogatory term for homosexual in the US but means cigarette in the UK, gay used to mean happy and now it means homosexual), I'm an arrogant prick? Nice to know that you concede that you messed up. I accept your apology.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
  213. Re:It's about time by dosius · · Score: 1

    A Beka is affiliated with Pensacola Christian College, not? I think that alone is a red flag for someone like me (who isn't a follower of Peter Ruckman) to keep well clear of them.

    -uso.

    --
    What you hear in the ear, preach from the rooftop Matthew 10.27b
  214. Re:It's about time by chazbet · · Score: 1

    Less Right Wing homeschooling alternatives might crop up in response to this Texas schoolbook foolishness. I'm getting worried for my (not yet school-aged) child.

  215. Re:Anonymous Coward by NewKidInTown · · Score: 2, Funny

    You know him, the AUTHOR of the DECELERATION OF INDEPENDENCE.

    I know our liberties aren't what they used to be, and I thought that they were eroding faster than ever, but I'm definitely going to start calling them the deceleration of Independence.

  216. welfare by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Amazing i can quit my job in IT, get a job picking grapes 3 months outta the year and have basically the same standard of living after the CARE programs, welfare, tax refunds, gov housing

    You must live in a generous state. After working for years, while trying to take classes for an engineering degree, I was disabled in an accident. I get less than $800 in disability and $50 in food aid a month and Medicare health insurance. For Medicare though almost $200 is deducted from my disability. I'll get aid from the county I live in to pay the premium. However I get no assistance for housing, I have to pay rent out of my disability. Unfortunately my rent has not been paid in almost a year. Fortunately my sister, who actually gets my disability, is my landlord. She owns the apartment I live in. Otherwise I'd be on the streets if not dead.

    Why dont we just all quit our jobs and live off the government unless we're making over 60k a year?

    Years before the accident that left me disabled I had one full-time job that didn't offer health insurance. I wanted some though so I shopped for some medical insurance myself. The cheapest policy I found was about 1/3 of my income, and as I was already struggling to save money for tuition I couldn't afford it. Someone suggested I check with the health department of the county I lived in for insurance. There I was told I made too much money, however I was told that if I quit my job they could give me medical coverage. The system is designed to keep people down, not to give them a helping hand so they can become financially independent.

    Falcon

  217. It's a sad day. by Syntroxis · · Score: 1

    The dumbing of America continues. I'm actually ashamed of being a 4th generation Texas.

    --
    Wherever you go, there you are.
  218. Isn't your nation already bankrupt? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Not my nation, just the one I live in has been driven bankrupt by neoconservatives, neoliberals, and socialists. Unfortunately they took over my nation.

    Falcon

  219. So conservatives are anti-intellectual? by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Some are and some aren't. Just like socialists.

    Conservatives really are under attack based on comments from people like you.

    When they do stuff like this school board does, they should be corrected. Of course that applies to those on the US left as well, such as those pushing for Obamacare.

    I will applaud the board for including Milton Friedman and Friedrich von Hayek though. Now if only more states will include them too.

    Falcon

  220. California budget by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Revenue can't be the problem because if it were, then we might have to admit we need to raise taxes or fees.

    Revenue is part of the problem but so is spending. During the booming '90s, with the state rolling in tax revenue, spending was increased a lot. However now that revenue has shrunken while spending hasn't the budget is in trouble. If the state had invested some of the money coming in when tymes were good, and was allowed to run a deficit when money was tight, it probably wouldn't be as bad as it is now.

    Falcon

  221. Yes, exactly by jeko · · Score: 1

    You literally are saying "give up, give everything away, let people walk over you and SMILE while they are doing it!". Time for a reality check.

    Yes, that is pretty much exactly what Dad told us to do:

    Matthew 5:44
    44 But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you;

    Actually, that whole chapter in Matthew pretty much sums it up; give up, give everything away, let people beat and steal from you, and BLESS them while they're doing it:

    Matthew Chapter 5:

    39 But I say unto you, That ye resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also.

      40 And if any man will sue thee at the law, and take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak also.

      41 And whosoever shall compel thee to go a mile, go with him twain.

      42 Give to him that asketh thee, and from him that would borrow of thee turn not thou away.

      43 Ye have heard that it hath been said, Thou shalt love thy neighbour, and hate thine enemy.

      44 But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you;

      45 That ye may be the children of your Father which is in heaven: for he maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust.

      46 For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? do not even the publicans the same?

      47 And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others? do not even the publicans so?

      48 Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.

    I find it easy not to steal, kill or bow down to false idols. "Love your enemies" is the hardest thing Pop ever told me to do.

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  222. homosexuality and the Bible by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    The more fun one is asking how you can be gay and be a christian. I mean, really, mon. The bible expressly tells all the people you are hanging out with that, ah, if you act on your natural impulses that they have to KILL YOU.

    I ask Christians if they can point out in the Bible where Jesus taught homosexuality was bad.

    Falcon

    1. Re:homosexuality and the Bible by Courageous · · Score: 1

      Well, no not Jesus. But the Old Testament makes it clear, and I'm not seeing that the religion has ripped their Bible in half and left the old part missing. Also, there is no part in the Bible where Jesus is quoted to have said, "please forgive my father; at one time he was a callous murdering bastard".

      C//

    2. Re:homosexuality and the Bible by pnuema · · Score: 1

      What part of "new covenant" do you not understand? Besides, if we are going to accept the Old Testament, then that means no shellfish, pork...keeping a kosher house...it's legal to own slaves, beat your wife...adulterers must be killed...talk about cherry picking!

    3. Re:homosexuality and the Bible by Courageous · · Score: 1

      While I am sure you are being facetious, as I said, Christians are welcome to tear their book in half and throw away the old part in its entirety. Be that as it may, "new covenant" has the niggling little problem that it does not ameliorate the fact that there is "no statute of limitations for murder". That's why I said Jesus is never quoted to have said...

    4. Re:homosexuality and the Bible by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      Well, no not Jesus. But the Old Testament makes it clear

      But didn't Jesus supposedly teach a different way?

      Falcon

  223. I simply find it impossible to support abortionist by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    (democrats)

    Oh, all Democrats support abortion and no Republicans do? Funny, sad really, that's one of the issues holding up the passage of the health care bill.

    Falcon

  224. defense by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    I don't see anything in the Bible condemning violent bahvior when it comes to protecting one's own society/nation.

    What danger was either Afghanistan or Iraq to the US? How about Viet Nam? East Timor? Now if you want to talk about protecting people why did Reagan and Bush Sr arm Saddam, give him chemical weapons, and allow him the massacre civilians?

    Falcon

    1. Re:defense by iPhr0stByt3 · · Score: 1

      They harbor/supply terrorists. As far as Iraq goes, we had a treaty in place that allowed us to investigate them at will and they broke that treaty. In retrospect, it would have been better not to support Iraq in their conflict with Iran, but the point was to keep Iran's military in line. At that time there was also a threat by the Soviets against northern Yemen (after they invaded Afghanistan) and Iraq was prepping to fight with Saudi Arabia to defend against them. Any president would have handled that situation in a similar manner, just as Obama continues to send more troops oversees. This is really not a partisan issue. By the way, the USA did NOT give Saddam chemical weapons. Did you just make that up?

  225. Re:I simply find it impossible to support abortion by iPhr0stByt3 · · Score: 1

    Well, at least you're not hiding the fact that democrats typically do support abortion and that's enough more me as a Christian to not support democrats. That make sense to you? And sure, there's republicans who also support abortion, but as a political party we do not.

  226. Re:It's about time by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    I live in one of the 10 largest metropolitan areas of the US, so I am not a hillbilly (not that I would mind). No, I hated the fact that the government created the telephone monopoly that it later broke up.
    I do dislike health insurance, because it isn't really insurance and the fact that it exists is one of the factors contributing to medical costs rising faster than inflation (Medicare and Medicaid are the main factors in that).
    Personally, I preferred when people helped those less fortunate than themselves out of the goodness of their hearts rather than at the point of a gun.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  227. Texas is doing fine until you consider... by vaporland · · Score: 1

    . . . the "average" intelligence level of an American 8th grade student today...

    --
    Ask Me About... The 80's!
  228. Who do you think controls the fate of the Church? by jeko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The atheists and others who believe in the separation of church and state

    Um, Render unto Ceaser that which is Ceaser's and Render unto God that which is God's? Remember Pontius Pilate's question? Are you a king? The response? My Kingdom is not of this world. As far as this world goes, our Lord Jesus Christ believed in the separation of church and state. He specifically chose not to join the Zealots who wanted to overthrow pagan Rome and found a new free Isreal loyal to God. You want to talk about evil Liberals suppressing religion, can you imagine living in a world where the cities you lived in were officially dedicated to a Pagan god?

    And Christ chose not to bother with it. He had larger concerns than temporary distractions like the rule of Rome.

    But let's suppose you got the Theocracy you want. Which Christian Church is to hold sway? Will you follow a President loyal to the Pope? No? Greek Orthodox? An Anglican, perhaps? No? Want a Good Ol' American denomination, do you? Episcopalian? Methodist? Seventh Day Adventist? Plain ol' Baptist? Church of Christ? Oh, you'll be happy so long as it's Evangelical? Really? Southern Baptist? Assembly of God? Vineyard Ministries? Got a favorite in there, do you?

    We can't even get the followers of Pat Robertson, Benny Hinn and Robert Schuller to agree on a coherent plan of action. When you try to wed civil power with Christian religious authority, it results in endless fighting. You might want to ask the British about that.

    There's a reason why the first Amendment begins with "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof..." That's why the Founding Fathers used weasel words like "Creator" and "Nature's God," because they specifically did not want to reference Jesus Christ the Messiah or Lord God Almighty Jehovah. By the way, more reading to do -- "Deism."

    If the liberals who hate religion would ever get their way to lay down the law then all religion would be banned in this country unless it was talked about and practiced within the confines of a church or home.

    Hi. Remember me? The Liberal? No one is looking to ban religion in this country. For goodness' sake, the Sheriff's office directs traffic at the churches on Sundays in my town. Our previous attorney general was the son of an Assemblies of God minister and a fervent supporter of that church. To imply that the Christian Church in America is under any kind of persecution is to dishonor the memory of all the Christians who actually were persecuted and actually did die for their Faith.

    But let's suppose it happened, let's suppose Obama really did turn out to be Lucifer's left hand, and the First Amendment got repealed next week. Let's suppose a profession of Christianity merited summary execution starting next Monday.

    Do you suppose it would endanger the Church at all? Or will you join me in believing that God Almighty alone decides the fate of the Body of Christ? By the way, that decree actually happened once. Rome decided to stamp out Christianity once and for all. All the Roman swords and lions did was fan the flame of the Word all the way across Europe.

    Do you know why? Because Men and Earthly politics do not decide the fate of the Church. God doesn't need the support of the Legislature, or the school board or the Media.

    Since this is Slashdot, after all, God ... doesn't need a starship.

    I have good news for you, Brother Glitch. God is still in His Heaven, and all the evil sandal-clad long-haired dope-smoking Liberals of the world do not pose a threat to His Church. He built that church on a rock, and the very gates of Hell will not stand against it, so I don't think Nancy Pelosi is much of a problem.

    You can relax. We're covered.

    Well, we're covered on that problem. As I continue to read the Gospels, we seem to have other issues. It seems that our Lord (Luke 4) has come to preach good news to the poor, t

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  229. Re:It's about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The dichotomy isn't false, and is in fact, pretty stark.

    Please explain to me as a European how the dichotomy isn't false when we have socialized medicine, fire departments, police departments, public libraries and public education but also one privately held company per 8 people? Now, it's none of my business what you want your country to be like but I'm annoyed by ignorance. You might also want to know that some of those socialized services are partially outsourced to privately held companies and that there also are private clinics in addition to public hospitals (they usually provide services like cosmetic surgery, which, arguably, isn't a "necessity" for anyone). A very simple example of how outsourcing of socialized services can work: I once had to take an ambulance to a hospital. Afterwards all I had to do was to sign a form that I had used that service and the ambulance service company then sent the bill to the public health insurance administration (my translation). It looked pretty much like a taxi receipt: Date, time, from where and to where and distance. Note that to avoid waste of ambulance rides, which obviously cost more to provide, you can also take a taxi and the hospital will then (assuming that the doctor agrees that you indeed had to take one and weren't just lazy) let you have the ride refunded.

  230. Re:It's about time by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

    I don't think that - if we agree on this, then the claim "The left-wing cooks have been trying to spread their socialism" in US schools is nonsense in the first place. And tell that to all the people claiming that national healthcare plans are socialist.

  231. Re:It's about time by demonlapin · · Score: 1

    National defense falls a long way outside socialism. An army is the sine qua non of a state. Likewise police forces. Nationalized health care is socialism, and I think it's disingenuous to argue otherwise - of course it's socialist; that's why its supporters like it!

    My problem is with pretending that nationalizing an industry that accounts for one sixth of GDP is just like having a police force, or a public library. I'm sure there are plenty of purists who would argue with me, but I think that the negative aspects of socialism have to do much more with its extent than with its nature - a small parasite is not really a problem, but a big one is.

  232. Re:It's about time by Bobb+Sledd · · Score: 1

    Hm. Fire Department? Not really a model for socialism any more than road systems are. There are basic services that even the most hardy of capitalists agree should be done by your "socialist" method.

    Public Library? No, because it's just a way to short-change authors by skirting around IP laws.

    Public education? Well if you intend to use that to further an idea for socialism, I won't stop you. Public education is a failure by just about all accounts. I say they should commercialize education -- and you could start by using vouchers for paying for education. Let the market decide who the best educators are.

    The problem is that when government runs things, they do not do so efficiently or even the best way, and are fraught with corruption every single time. If socialism were always the best way, then even in the road systems you wouldn't have bids proposed by local contractors to build them. It would just all be built by the government. And it would be slower, more regulated, of less quality, and cost 10x as much.

    --
    "They said I probly shouldn't fly with just one eye," "I am Bender. Please insert girder."
  233. Re:It's about time by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

    of course it's socialist; that's why its supporters like it!

    Rubbish. I for one support national healthcare, and am not a socialist. But even if it was true, your argument is a logical fallacy - whether something is socialist or not is nothing to do with "why supporters like it".

    As for your argument based on the amount being spent - the UK NHS budget around £100 billion ( http://www.hsj.co.uk/5000730.article ). The US military budget is £685 billion ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_budget_of_the_United_States ). Now the US is a factor of 5 times the population, but that still puts the US's military expenditure more than the UK's NHS. So if you think that the UK healthcare is socialist, and your criterion is the extent, then yes, you are claiming that the US military is socialist too.

    Where do you get the one sixth figure from?

  234. Re:It's about time by demonlapin · · Score: 1

    Are you a Jesuit, a trial lawyer, or both? ;)

    The military is a prerequisite of a state ("A language is a dialect with an army and navy"). It cannot be socialist, no matter its extent. A public library is, by the strict criteria, probably socialist, but it's so inexpensive that I just can't get too worked up about it. Fair enough?

    If you're talking about the government providing non-essential services directly, you're talking about socialist goals. That doesn't make them communist goals, or fascist goals, or even (necessarily) bad ideas. It doesn't mean that you're trying to go back to pre-Thatcher Britain.

    As for the one sixth, it may be a bit of an exaggeration for now, apparently. According to the WHO tables US healthcare spending was 15.3% of GDP in 2006, while 1/6 would be 16.67%. However, it has been rising as a percentage, so it's a good rough estimate. It's certainly more than 1/7.

  235. Re:Who do you think controls the fate of the Churc by CarbonShell · · Score: 1

    If I had mod points I'd give all of them to you!
    Beautiful ... and that from a lefty Buddhist.

  236. Re:I simply find it impossible to support abortion by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Well, at least you're not hiding the fact that democrats typically do support abortion and that's enough more me as a Christian to not support democrats. That make sense to you? And sure, there's republicans who also support abortion, but as a political party we do not.

    No it doesn't make sense, you paint Democrats with a broad brush but not Republicans.

    Falcon

    Oh BTW, do you also oppose capital punishment? More Republicans do than Democrats. But that's okay?

  237. They harbor/supply terrorists by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    So did the US. Don't believe me? The US protected the bombers of Cubana Flight 455, who included CIA operatives, in 1976. The year before, in 1975, the US supported Indonesia's invasion of East Timor, in which 200,000 East Timorese were massacred. In 1973 the US supported Gen Pinochet's overthrow of Chile's democratically elected government in a coup d'état Thousands of people disappeared afterwards. The US has a history of arming and supporting repressive regimes with large human rights violations.

    Heck, at the same tyme the US was supporting Saddam, the US was also arming Iran, who he was fighting against. If the US had allowed democracy in Iran, instead of aiding the overthrow of Iran's elected government and installing the Shah in a dictatorship, there would not have been the revolution in Iran in 1980.

    As far as Iraq goes, we had a treaty in place that allowed us to investigate them at will and they broke that treaty.

    What treaty was broken and when? After Scott Ritter came out and stated Iraq had no significant WMDs the Neocons in Bush Jr's admin had to besmear him for not supporting their lies.

    As for breaking treaties, the US has broken many treaties. I can think of 2 treaties Bush Jr broke or tried to break. With Starwars he was breaking the Anti Ballistic Missile Treaty with Russia. In trying to locate the permanent nuclear waste disposal site at Yucca Mount he would also have violated the Treay of Ruby Valley which granted the Western Shoshone Yucca Mount and the surrounding land. The US broke a number of treaties with the Sioux. When Andrew Jackson forced the Cherokee to march on the Trail of Tears he broke a treaty when the Cherokee.

    The US also supports Israel who has consistently disregarded UN resolutions, there was an uproar when VP Biden went to Israel and they announced more settlements in occupied territory.

    the point was to keep Iran's military in line.

    Why then did Reagan administration officials sell weapons to Iran in the Iran-Contra Affair? Quite simply they were supporting a number of different sides who were repressive.

    At that time there was also a threat by the Soviets against northern Yemen (after they invaded Afghanistan) and Iraq was prepping to fight with Saudi Arabia to defend against them.

    Afghanistan was the Soviet's Vietnam. And the same Muslims going there to fight would have fought for the Saudis as well, heck a lot of Saudis went to Afghanistan. After Saddam's invasion of Kuwait al qaeda offered to protect Saudi Arabia against Saddam. They would have caused the Soviets trouble too.

    By the way, the USA did NOT give Saddam chemical weapons. Did you just make that up?

    1. Re:They harbor/supply terrorists by iPhr0stByt3 · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't argue that the USA has made no mistakes, but your examples are mostly VERY weak. The "proof" of our actual involvement is often nothing more than accusations. And our support in these various cases was not always misplaced. We armed Iran? Well, we supported Iranian moderates who opposed Ruhollah Khomeini, which I think was ok giving the current situation. (But again, helping Iraq was not the best move in our history.) The point really is that any administration would have handled these cases the same.

      Bush did not break the starwars treaty. It's legality was disputed anyway and then the USA withdrew from the treaty appropriately, as defined therein.

      Your "sources" for the US supplying chemical weapons say nothing more than the US having knowledge that Iraq was importing biological samples. Not exactly something we could have done anything about. I mean, do you think we should have invaded them for that? I'll admit, you're not making this up, but your sources are blowing this out of proportion.

    2. Re:They harbor/supply terrorists by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't argue that the USA has made no mistakes, but your examples are mostly VERY weak.

      Very weak? I don't know what your definition of weak is, but there are photos of Donald Rumsfeld meeting and shaking hands with Saddam as part of Reagan's admin. It was confirmed by 1989 Saddam was using chemical weapons but Bush Sr didn't stop supporting him until he invaded the monarchy led country of Kuwait. Before aid to Saddam ever ended Israel had already sent jets to bomb and destroy a nuclear reactor of Saddam's. That's not very weak.

      any administration would have handled these cases the same.

      I sincerely hope not. Here the US was supposedly spreading the word about and trying to get countries to become democracy when it opposed it in some nations.

      Your "sources" for the US supplying chemical weapons say nothing more than the US having knowledge that Iraq was importing biological samples.

      More than just importing, the CDC was supplying him.

      As usual, you're making things up and ignoring or excusing facts to suit your own wants. I see no reason to continue this.

      Falcon

    3. Re:They harbor/supply terrorists by iPhr0stByt3 · · Score: 1

      Sorry,
      nothing in your arguments means very much. They're still very weak. And yes, any administration would have acted the same. And no, there's no evident that the CDC was supplying checmical weapons.

    4. Re:They harbor/supply terrorists by falconwolf · · Score: 1

      nothing in your arguments means very much. They're still very weak. And yes, any administration would have acted the same. And no, there's no evident that the CDC was supplying checmical weapons.

      I supply evidence but you supply nothing.

      Falcon

    5. Re:They harbor/supply terrorists by iPhr0stByt3 · · Score: 1

      I'm not on a crusade here and I don't have time for this every day. How 'bout this: Provide some evidence from a reputable source, then I might look into it some more.

  238. Re:I simply find it impossible to support abortion by iPhr0stByt3 · · Score: 1

    It's not that I refuse to have a conversation or make a friend with a democrat, but to those democrats I hang out with, this issue does not matter (and they are not christian). To me, as a christian, it's huge - considering the staggering number of murders this causes. And there really is no argument that as a political party, the democrats support abortion and the rupublicans oppose it. It's not MY brush painting democrats as abortionists, but rather the majortiy of abortionists within the party who give the rest a bad name. Republicans supporting abortion are rather rare (if they want to keep their position within the party). Therefore, as a Christian, I simply cannot support a democratic candidate.

    I actually support capital punishment for the statistical lives saved, but either way, it's a small number compared to abortions.

  239. Pfft. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Arguing from, with, and on scripture is pointless. For every passage you cite to justify your bias, I can find three others to contradict you.

    "Render unto Caesar..." is, like more or less the rest of the Bible, easily manipulated to suit any and all viewpoints. Especially if you pull in other passages as backup. Consider the following: Jesus was simply trying to save his skin from the mob by avoiding a trick question. Jesus didn't know the answer, but he thinks well on his feet; there was no real moral in mind. Jesus was advocating anarchy and tax resistance (everything belongs to the lord, which leaves nothing for Caesar). Jesus thinks you should only pay taxes you agree with. Jesus hates money, Jesus hates government, Jesus hates debt, Jesus hates taxes, Jesus hates civilization, Jesus hates Caesar. Et cetera.

    Wikipedia has a fairly decent summary of the more common interpretations.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Render_unto_Caesar...

    Other than that, my only objections to your arguments stem from the fact that I'm an atheist. The "militant" kind. All I would add is cynical caveats, so I'll spare you the rants and limit myself to giving the executive summaries unless invited to elaborate:

    -- Your deities do not exist. There is no evidence for them and they are inherently impossible.
    -- Jesus Christ did not exist, not even the "historical Jesus". Also, according to the Bible, Jesus was a prick, just like daddy.
    -- The Bible is just a book. A book with a long and rich history of poor translations, heavy editing and censorship, and blatant abuse and manipulation. It is not evidence of anything and cannot be used as a basis for any external argument.
    -- Faith is irrational by definition. Attempting to apply reason to it or using reason against it is a waste of time and energy. You can only hope the faithful can "save" themselves.

    The Texans rewriting history and glitch23 here are ignorant, irrational idiots. No doubt. But you've fallen into the same trap as they have. The Bible you use to support your liberal views is the very same Bible the conservatives are using to justify and encourage their own behavior. You object to their interpretations, but your assumptions are just as baseless as theirs. You cherry pick from a book of circular logic just like they do.

    Unless God or Jesus Christ decide to stop being hypocritical douchebags and put a conclusive end to the bickering themselves, the only thing we can rationally conclude is that, due to a complete lack of evidence and logical coherence, we made it all up. Boo hoo. We've got more important things to worry about than imaginary friends.

  240. It's not MY brush painting democrats as abortionis by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    It is your brush, you are the one saying it.

    I actually support capital punishment for the statistical lives saved,

    What saved lived? Where is your scientific evidence capital punishment saves lives. And where's your evidence all of those executed were guilty of murder? The Innocence Project has cases where people were convicted of murder but were later proven innocent. Unfortunately they aren't able to save every innocent.

    That's not the only reason I oppose, nor why Christians should oppose, capital punishment. Myself I also oppose it because you don't tell people isn't wrong to kill people then kill them yourself. And Christians, along with Jews and Muslim, should oppose it because it's one of the ten commandments.

    Falcon

    Oh, BTW I separated myself from Christians above because I am not one, I do not believe in any religion. I am agnostic, "a", without and "gnosis" knowledge. Or believe. Well I believe one thing, that if there is a supreme deity and it requires faith to be save, otherwise the unbeliever burns in hell for eternity, it is sadistic and deserves to be despised not worshiped.

  241. Re:It's not MY brush painting democrats as abortio by iPhr0stByt3 · · Score: 1

    That's an interesting website. I would love to have a perfect system, but that does not exist. Statistically, there is plenty evidence to suggest that capital punishment deters murderers, and in a majority of cases capital punishment is reserved for unrepentant confessions. I'm sorry for those tragic cases of innocent people being executed, but as a whole, the system works. Anyhow, I'm not really interested in debating this topic, but thanks for that resource anyhow.

    Back to the point that democrats support abortion, I'm not sure where the confusion is? Do you realize that the democratic party supports funding abortions?

  242. Re:It's not MY brush painting democrats as abortio by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry for those tragic cases of innocent people being executed, but as a whole, the system works.

    Yea the system works unless you're one of the innocents who are executed. Just as some of the USA's Founding Fathers believed, I believe it's better to let 10 guilty go free than falsely convict one innocent. Well, once you're executed there's no bring you back. At least if you're imprisoned you can be set free.

    Anyhow, I'm not really interested in debating this topic

    Okay, that's it.

    Well, I've go ahead and get this too...

    I'm not sure where the confusion is? Do you realize that the democratic party supports funding abortions?

    Not all Democrats support abortion and not all Republicans oppose it. It seems you're the one confused about that. As for funding abortions, can you point out where abortion is funded in Obamacare?

    Falcon

    Oh, I hope you understand from my use of "Obamacare" I do not support whatever health bill the Democrats approve. I've said repeatedly here and elsewhere, I oppose almost any health care bill from congress. I ask, but no one has answered, where does the Constitution of the USA give the federal government the power to pass laws and regulate health care and medicine. I ask this about the FDA as well. The one power the Constitution specifically grants the federal government is the regulation of interstate commerce. If congress and the president really wanted to do something about health care and medicine then they could use the interstate commerce clause to tell states they have to allow people to buy health insurance across state lines. I should be allowed to buy insurance from another state if I want, say for instance because it's cheaper. Another thing congress and the president can do is give individual people the same tax breaks for buy insurance as employers get for offering insurance to employees. Employers getting tax breaks but not individuals goes back to FDR and WWII.

  243. I've always liked my imaginary friends... by jeko · · Score: 1

    Arguing from, with, and on scripture is pointless.

    When I speak to my friends, I speak English. When I speak to some of my family, I use their native language instead. When my friends and family are together, I try to speak English, because it's rude to cut my friends out of the conversation, but sometimes I have to drop out of English to get my point across to my family.

    When I'm speaking to Glitch, as fellow believers we share a common song. I'm playing specific notes of scripture for specific reasons in a specific way to get my point across. I understand that cuts the resident atheists out of the conversation, and for that rudeness I apologize.

    the only thing we can rationally conclude is that, due to a complete lack of evidence

    Agreed, and Bertrand Russell said it better. Religion is the opiate of the masses, and Christianity is the philosophy of slaves. I'll go you one better and stipulate the Christian religion has been used to justify some of the more heinous wars and atrocities in history. The Crusades, the Inquisition, the Salem Witch Trials, the justification for slavery -- anyone who's ever had a repugnant idea has always pulled out a Bible and a flag to cover it. John Ashcroft spouted scripture while permitting state-sanctioned torture for the first time in the nation's history. The KKK references Genesis all the time.

    It gets even worse. I've read the Old Testament. The Book of Ezekiel is a slasher film. You think I don't understand your point? My faith is forged in a Russian crucible of doubt.

    I was born and raised in the United States of Jesusland and as a young man got so sick of the nonsense and the hypocrisy of the church that I walked away from it for decades. I mean, really, how could anyone with a brain associate themselves with people who built a "Museum of Creationism" where they put a saddle on a dinosaur?!

    Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things unseen, which means from here on out, strictly speaking, I'm talking nonsense.

    I could tell you that Science proceeds from the assumptions that the universe is observable and comprehensible -- and those are reasonable assumptions to make -- but that I believe the universe goes beyond our observation and is probably beyond our comprehension. More things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio...

    I could make those arguments in good faith, but not sincerity. Faith cannot be shown by a geometric proof; you cannot mathematically derive a belief in God. Pascal's wager is a clever dodge, and CS Lewis' arguments are so specious not even he believed them in the end.

    I find my faith at the place of the skull. I see that image in my head, I feel that place in my heart, I hear "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do" and I know the truth of it.

    I find that as my hair goes completely grey, matters become simpler. I suppose time boils my anger and ego away, and properly strips matters down to the bone. A man becomes a good husband by devoting himself to his wife, by placing her needs above his own. A man becomes a good father by giving himself over to the care of his children. It's simple. A man builds a home by joyously tearing out of pieces of his own flesh for bricks.

    Those three nails tether me to that Cross, and I feel my God's love as surely as I feel my wife's love when we are oceans apart, as surely as I know my children even without a paternity test.

    The hammering begins to all the mob's cacophony of the politicians hiding behind Him for power, and the polyester televangelists crying for money, and the idiots using him to justify their every craven impulse...

    And before we come to "It is finished," all that noise has faded to silence, and I am left alone with blood and nails and the World. What do I believe?

    I believe in a God who died to save His own creation, who died to redeem His children. I believe I want to follow my Father on that path, and that all the rest of it doesn't matt

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  244. Yup. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    The Times objects to the teaching, for example, that we are a constitutional republic rather than a democracy - which is an objectively true fact.

    Except the fact is that we have a democratic republic.

    They object to teaching that the free enterprise economic system works best in the absence of limited government intervention - which is another objectively true fact.

    Right, because Standard Oil and AT&T improved all on their own without government intervention. Because it's regulated, socialist countries that try to blow up the world economy every few decades.

    Someone else here objected to the rejection of a liberal's amendment trying to explain that the founders favored a separation of church and state, when it is objectively false that they did.

    You should have stopped digging a hole in your credibility when you passed Baghdad Bob. The founders were deeply concerned about keeping government out of religion and religion out of government. Which is why we have the first amendment. Which is why the Constitution specifically says that a religious test will never be required to hold any office.

    1. Re:Yup. by tizzo · · Score: 1

      The Times objects to the teaching, for example, that we are a constitutional republic rather than a democracy - which is an objectively true fact.

      Except the fact is that we have a democratic republic.

      Right. A democratic constitutional republic. NOT a democracy.

      They object to teaching that the free enterprise economic system works best in the absence of limited government intervention - which is another objectively true fact.

      Right, because Standard Oil and AT&T improved all on their own without government intervention. Because it's regulated, socialist countries that try to blow up the world economy every few decades.

      Recall that the breakup of AT&T is widely regarded as a mistake. No improvement has been registered there as a result of government intervention.

      Can you be more specific about "blowing up the world's economy" every few decades? Recall that the current worldwide economic crisis was driven by the housing sector in the US. Specifically by the unwise lending of money to people who should not have been considered good credit risks. More specifically still, lending that was mandated by the federal government.

      Someone else here objected to the rejection of a liberal's amendment trying to explain that the founders favored a separation of church and state, when it is objectively false that they did.

      You should have stopped digging a hole in your credibility when you passed Baghdad Bob. The founders were deeply concerned about keeping government out of religion and religion out of government. Which is why we have the first amendment. Which is why the Constitution specifically says that a religious test will never be required to hold any office.

      It is not the right that ever has or ever will favor application of a religious test for office. Recall that atheism/secularism is as much a religion as any other, and it becomes clear that a preference for these ideologies is as much a violation of the first amendment as any other kind of religious test, and is exactly the sort of thing the founders were so afraid of.

    2. Re:Yup. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Right. A democratic constitutional republic. NOT a democracy.

      Not a direct democracy.

      Recall that the breakup of AT&T is widely regarded as a mistake.

      By who, AT&T shareholders?

      No improvement has been registered there as a result of government intervention.

      You liked having high prices and paying a monthly rental for a $10 phone? When has a non-heavily-regulated monopoly ever provided low prices to a captive market?

      Can you be more specific about "blowing up the world's economy" every few decades?

      Stock market bubbles and the inevitable collapses. See: 1929, 1987, 2008. Why didn't we have a collapse between 1929 and 1987? Because of regulations that created firewalls and limited risky practices.

      Recall that the current worldwide economic crisis was driven by the housing sector in the US.

      No, it was driven by credit default swaps, that took out insurance and made bets on loans, all bundled up as AAA rated securities.

      Specifically by the unwise lending of money to people who should not have been considered good credit risks.

      Specifically, that's deliberate misdirection. You could have bought out every one of those mortgages for less than the cost of TARP. It wasn't poor people or the CRA that created a bubble just about equal to the monetary supply of the entire planet.

      More specifically still, lending that was mandated by the federal government.

      More specifically, a well debunked lie you're repeating:

      The Community Reinvestment Act, passed in 1977, requires banks to lend in the low-income neighborhoods where they take deposits. Just the idea that a lending crisis created from 2004 to 2007 was caused by a 1977 law is silly. But it's even more ridiculous when you consider that most subprime loans were made by firms that aren't subject to the CRA. University of Michigan law professor Michael Barr testified back in February before the House Committee on Financial Services that 50% of subprime loans were made by mortgage service companies not subject comprehensive federal supervision and another 30% were made by affiliates of banks or thrifts which are not subject to routine supervision or examinations. As former Fed Governor Ned Gramlich said in an August, 2007, speech shortly before he passed away: "In the subprime market where we badly need supervision, a majority of loans are made with very little supervision. It is like a city with a murder law, but no cops on the beat."

      Not surprisingly given the higher degree of supervision, loans made under the CRA program were made in a more responsible way than other subprime loans. CRA loans carried lower rates than other subprime loans and were less likely to end up securitized into the mortgage-backed securities that have caused so many losses, according to a recent study by the law firm Traiger & Hinckley (PDF file here).

      Then of course, there's all the hand waving involved in pretending that the CRA was a horrible law that caused a massive crisis - but took 30 years for it to happen.

      It is not the right that ever has or ever will favor application of a religious test for office.

      Of course it will be, since it's the free market jihadists that made a marriage of convenience with those that believe the Earth is 6,000 years old and put up museums showing humans riding dinosaurs.

      Recall that atheism/secularism is as much a religion as any other

      I'll recall you like to pretend that polar opposites are the same thing.