Well, that means the churches will just have to put their nativity scenes on their own property, just like they do in pretty much every other town in America.
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Atheist messages displace CA park nativity scenes
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Originally posted by AdminAssistant View Post...just like they do in pretty much every other town in America.
It's completely fine that they trounced on other people's First Amendment rights, just because those people happen to be religious.
It's totally okay when it's religious people.
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They didn't trounce on anybody's rights. They exploited a system to send a message. As I've said on this thread many times, city/public property is not the place for religious messages, no matter how well-meaning or traditional. Also, the jerks didn't ruin anything. The city realized that to be completely fair and unbiased might open the spaces up to hate groups and other undesirables, so they ended the tradition.
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Originally posted by AdminAssistant View PostAs I've said on this thread many times, city/public property is not the place for religious messages...
Parks have a special dispensation within the legal framework to be specifically places where people can go to speak without fear that because the land is public property that they will be shut down.
A public park is the exact place where such speech should be allowed and encouraged and the petulant destruction of a forum for people to do just that is, quite frankly, anti-American no matter what your religious observance or lack there-of.
^-.-^Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
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Originally posted by Andara Bledin View PostAnd every time you say that about a public park, you will be wrong.
Parks have a special dispensation within the legal framework to be specifically places where people can go to speak without fear that because the land is public property that they will be shut down.
A public park is the exact place where such speech should be allowed and encouraged and the petulant destruction of a forum for people to do just that is, quite frankly, anti-American no matter what your religious observance or lack there-of.
^-.-^
Personally, I'm tired of religion in general. I hate hearing about it, and get the heebie-jeebies whenever I'm forced to step foot on religious property. I would be very uncomfortable and irritated to see a bunch of religious images on public property - property that my tax money helps to upkeep. I don't care what people do on their private property (since it's private and has nothing to do with me), but public facilities are a totally different story.
Why can't the cages be decorated other ways? Just make them beautiful - they don't have to be religious in any way. As long as they bring people together and make them feel warm and fuzzy, then they've fulfilled their purpose.Last edited by Seifer; 11-21-2012, 07:32 AM.
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It doesn't matter who funds a public park; public parks are given special dispensation for people to exercise free speech (which includes all kinds, even the kind people don't like) because of the very nature of what parks are.
As for the fact that the images were religious: that's actually irrelevant. Religious speech is part of free speech. You can't say, "Oh, we have free speech here, except for that speech that isn't non-theistic."
Plus, the spaces that were used for the display were rented out to the various people who put up the displays, so 'your tax money' wasn't touched.
As for how you feel around religion: also irrelevant.
Last year, they did a lottery to allow others to have an opportunity to rent the spots and the anti-religious side of things acted like douchebags in an effort to pretty much spoil it for everybody involved. Some were left intentionally empty, others were decorated in a very anti-religious manner, while a few were decorated with the aim of spreading non-religious warm fuzzies - those, however, were very much the minority.
^-.-^Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
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Well, as you said, they were rented out, so the renters could do what they jolly well wanted with them, and that's why the city ended the practice. As the article states:
The Council also feared that the open lottery could become, as Patch put it, "nightmarish" with "a gigantic sign proclaiming the Holocaust didn't actually happen or Leatherface standing over baby Jesus."
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Originally posted by Andara Bledin View PostIt doesn't matter who funds a public park; public parks are given special dispensation for people to exercise free speech (which includes all kinds, even the kind people don't like) because of the very nature of what parks are.
As for the fact that the images were religious: that's actually irrelevant. Religious speech is part of free speech. You can't say, "Oh, we have free speech here, except for that speech that isn't non-theistic."
Plus, the spaces that were used for the display were rented out to the various people who put up the displays, so 'your tax money' wasn't touched.
As for how you feel around religion: also irrelevant.
Last year, they did a lottery to allow others to have an opportunity to rent the spots and the anti-religious side of things acted like douchebags in an effort to pretty much spoil it for everybody involved. Some were left intentionally empty, others were decorated in a very anti-religious manner, while a few were decorated with the aim of spreading non-religious warm fuzzies - those, however, were very much the minority.
^-.-^
I doubt parks are completely free speech, though. I'd assume they have regulations, because you don't want people to get too crazy in them (since they are for the public).
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Originally posted by Seifer View PostI suppose my feelings about religion are irrelevant in this matter. The fact that you feel the anti-religious side were douchebags is irrelevant, too. They were doing what the religious side were doing - renting out space and doing with it what they pleased. Therein lays the problem with renting out space in a park - if you don't set up rules (and according to you they can't, since it's a park and people can say/show whatever they want) then people will abuse the system to get their views out there.
I doubt parks are completely free speech, though. I'd assume they have regulations, because you don't want people to get too crazy in them (since they are for the public).Some People Are Alive Only Because It's Illegal To Kill Them.
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Originally posted by Seifer View PostThey were doing what the religious side were doing - renting out space and doing with it what they pleased.
Therein lays the problem with renting out space in a park - if you don't set up rules (and according to you they can't, since it's a park and people can say/show whatever they want) then people will abuse the system to get their views out there.
The problem wasn't the message that the Atheist organization was sending in the spaces they used. It was that they used their "speech" to stifle the "speech" of other organizations in using a limited public resource. If they had released the spaces that they won and didn't use (I seem to recall that they ended up using 3 of the 18 lots that they won?), there wouldn't have been a problem. Heck, if they'd released most of the spaces, and reserved a few to show a "null message," there wouldn't have been a problem.
Ultimately, the underlying problem was that one actor acted in bad faith, in order to stifle the people they oppose. That's pretty much the very opposite of "free speech."
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Originally posted by crashhelmet View PostThey shouldn't have to set up rules to keep things civil or respectful. What some of those on the anti-religious side did in this was basically take a shit in the pool so that no one could swim in it. They ruined it for everyone.
I would have preferred the atheist organization use positive atheistic messages instead of the angry ones. Atheists already have a bad rap in parts of the country - it's better to leave a positive impression rather than a negative one.
Originally posted by Nekojin View PostIf that was all they were doing, there never would have been a problem in the first place. They set up an array of shills to bid for them, in order to maximize the number of spaces they can get. The rest of the bidders, who were doing it honestly, got shafted on it.
That's not being unfair, that's being unprepared.
Originally posted by Nekojin View PostTypically, we don't set out laws and rules until there's a perceived problem. Last year was the first time a Lottery drawing was used for the spaces; they didn't think that anyone would use shills and deception to garner more spaces than they actually intended to use.
Originally posted by Nekojin View PostThe problem wasn't the message that the Atheist organization was sending in the spaces they used. It was that they used their "speech" to stifle the "speech" of other organizations in using a limited public resource. If they had released the spaces that they won and didn't use (I seem to recall that they ended up using 3 of the 18 lots that they won?), there wouldn't have been a problem. Heck, if they'd released most of the spaces, and reserved a few to show a "null message," there wouldn't have been a problem.
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How exactly did they use deception? Individuals were allowed to bid for up to 9 spaces, so that's what they did. Two individuals ended up winning the maximum, so they got 18 in total. That's not deception - that's playing with the rules allotted. That's how lotto works - you purchase as many chances as you can to raise your odds of winning. It seems to me like no one thought the churches would have much competition.
The people who bid on 9 certainly expected that, if they won, they would get 9. If they knew they can't fill 9, they shouldn't have bid on them."Nam castum esse decet pium poetam
ipsum, versiculos nihil necessest"
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Originally posted by Seifer View PostHowever, that wasn't happening when the churches were the only ones decorating the spaces for 57 years.
The churches didn't hide the display from the public. The rules were posted online, even.
But one man has been waging his own little battle to get the entire display shut down for years because he fails to understand (like most people, apparently) that Free Speech reigns supreme in public parks (barring specifically outlawed actions and very special circumstances) and he feels that his opinion as an anti-theist is more valid than any other position.
Personally, I think the guy is a self-righteous prick and I hope his victory turns Pyrrhic.
^-.-^Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
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Originally posted by Andara Bledin View PostThis was hashed over back when the thread was new: The only reason the churches had no competition was because nobody was competing.
The churches didn't hide the display from the public. The rules were posted online, even. ^-.-^
Was it a dick move for the winners not to decorate all of their rented space? I suppose so. Was it their right to do so? Yes. They rented those spaces, and they did what they wanted with them - nothing.
Again, it would be nice if everyone could get their space and decorate it with their own message. I don't know how they'd get it so no one group was represented more than another, since it seems there was only one display for the Jewish community to begin with.
Originally posted by Hyena Dandy View PostThey used deception by bringing in as many people as possible in a widely co-ordinated effort with the intention of simply taking things up and doing nothing with them.
The people who bid on 9 certainly expected that, if they won, they would get 9. If they knew they can't fill 9, they shouldn't have bid on them.
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You're arguing the wrong argument here, Seifer. You're absolutely right that what they did was completely within the rules. But there's a difference between "legal" and "right." What they did was completely legal, and completely wrong. And that's what we're talking about here - the fact that they were utter dicks for no better reason than to spoil things for the others.
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