Originally posted by Jason
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Mega-churches VS the IRS
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I'm in two minds about this - I'd like to see criminals harried by the coppers, but I'm also amused by the whole idea of the attending policeman saying that it must have been god's will before walking off.
'Cause it'd be funny."Nam castum esse decet pium poetam
ipsum, versiculos nihil necessest"
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Originally posted by Nekojin View PostI seem to have missed the part in the Bible that states, "Thou shalt vote Republican, and advertise for their campaigns."
Keep the politics out of religion, keep the religion out of politics. Pastors using their pulpit to advocate political issues or politicians is little more than using the influence of their station to push a personal agenda.
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Originally posted by Hyena Dandy View PostYeah, let 'em die.
'Cause it'd be funny.
I've been thinking about this and it would be hard to restrict it to the real arseholes of the pulpit world, but it would be good to do. People such as Westboro, for example.
"So, a gang of bikers broke in, sprated graffiti everywhere, crapped in the pews, and tore the place apart? Must have been god's displeasure for you not campaigning against gays enough."
RapscallionProud to be a W.A.N.K.E.R. - Womanless And No Kids - Exciting Rubbing!
Reclaiming words is fun!
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Originally posted by Jason View PostYou do know "seperation of church and state" doesn't exist in the US constitution.
^-.-^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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I don't know if I'm necromancing I can't tell in this phone. But since I have been thinking about this anyway... one thing that bothers me is of you start taxing churches then the Mega churches which make millions will... Make slightly less. The churches already struggling, which don't get rich by appealing to fear, may have to close. The ones that AR causing problems are in general the ones that aren't going to get hit as hard.
And I still find "don't solve crimes because ha ha stupid Christians" to be a disgusting sentiment.
Now that I can actually see the time stamps, I do apologize for the necromancy.Last edited by Hyena Dandy; 05-06-2014, 12:45 AM."Nam castum esse decet pium poetam
ipsum, versiculos nihil necessest"
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Originally posted by Hyena Dandy View PostNow that I can actually see the time stamps, I do apologize for the necromancy.
As to finding it disgusting the whole 'silly christians, no help for you!' thing, that depends for me on the christian - or theist of any sort. If we're talking about someone who's got a personal faith and doesn't inflict it on others, whilst I might disagree with their position, I don't really have a problem with them. I'd be disturbed if someone refused general public services because they thought the sky was green or that pixies lived at the bottom of the garden.
If someone said that another person should act in a certain way because of the first person's beliefs, or should be denied some service because of those same beliefs, then I would think in those cases there are grounds for saying that accepting public services that they want or do deny to others is hypocrisy.
For me, it's like that meme that does the rounds every so often showing an orthodox jew with the caption, "Does not eat bacon, doesn't stop you eating bacon." I can respect that sort of position where someone's only inconveniencing themselves with their rules.
The sticking point comes when you have to decide whether a religion or religious person is interfering in politics or not. Religions by their nature tell people what to do. I'll admit that part of my comment above is driven by ire at the pick and mix christians who try to control others and deny them the rights that are generally accepted for others.
I don't say that every idea coming from a religious person is automatically a bad one, but I'd like a decent reason to accept a position that would affect others.
It's the reason that's the important bit. I wouldn't deny a concept coming from a religious politician to improve the social security system if it helped people. If they said that it had to happen because Jesus, then I'd have a fair bit of trouble accepting anything else they came up with as it might be based on similar principles that I don't find acceptable. Jesus wasn't overly fond of fig trees, if you believe the bible. Should a politician ban fig trees for that reason? Should that be considered an acceptable reason for deciding on things that affect others? Where do we draw the line and who decides that?
In the UK we don't have so much of an issue as religious belief has waned here over the centuries. In the US, it's pretty much a requirement for high office to admit to faith of some sort, and religious groups have had significant impact on others.
Unless I hear a better argument, if a faith is campaigning for things that affect others based on their religion, I'd be up for them paying taxes. If it only affects them (whether that being wearing purple headbands, or not reproducing), then that's their problem.
RapscallionProud to be a W.A.N.K.E.R. - Womanless And No Kids - Exciting Rubbing!
Reclaiming words is fun!
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Originally posted by Duelist925 View PostThey provide a necessary public service that practically everyone uses, and furthermore, public schools are tax funded--it'd be silly to tax them.
Unfortunately, this is a requirement of the state/country to ensure that every kid is actually learning the same thing more or less, and also to allow governments to track student progress. At the same time, it also flies in the face of the part in the Australian constitution that states that states shall not fund religion.
There are very few private schools in Aussieland that are not religious ones. The ones that aren't tend to either:
-Be for a specific group of students (at-risk kids, Aboriginal children, bilingual school, special school)
-Montessori.
-Steiner/Waldorf. (Some public schools will run streams in either program, when this happens, the schools are required to allow ALL students to receive the same opportunities if they wish ie they can't forbid students from learning a stringed instrument while the Steiner kids are required to do so)
-Run some other alternate program that I can't list here. (usually "progressive" education groups)
-Run a program that is NOT religious, but shows some elements of it. (For instance, there's one school where meditation is actively encouraged and is part of their day)
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Originally posted by Stitchwitch View Post
I read this as Statler/Waldorf and was wondering if they teach kids to sit in a balcony and heckle people.
DOHOHOHOHO!!! XD
Originally posted by Rapscallion View PostHmm, anyone else think that the thread title would make a great monster movie?
Rapscallion
WHERE CAN I BOOK TICKETS.
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Originally posted by Stitchwitch View PostI read this as Statler/Waldorf and was wondering if they teach kids to sit in a balcony and heckle people.
The Steiner/Waldorf system does branch into the artsy-fartsy-new-age-hippy kind of territory, but it does have some benefits to it.
Montessori is more self-directed, go-at-your-own pace, encouraging independence type thing. The difference is that unlike Steiner, Montessori doesn't have a set curriculum per se and as long as the topic fits into the curriculum, it will be covered.
ETA: to elaborate on my earlier post, quite a few schools are run on Montessori principles, but cannot call themselves truly Montessori for one reason or another. These sometimes are known as "progressive" schools.Last edited by fireheart17; 05-25-2014, 02:39 PM.
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